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Authors: Anthea Fraser

BOOK: Thicker Than Water
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Both Judy and Elaine phoned a couple of times, but there was nothing to report. Callum gathered they were all at the Nelsons’, waiting for news. Good that they had each other, he thought. Bob had suggested Callum go home to join them. ‘You look done in,’ he’d said. But Callum had replied that he’d come here with Josh, and he wasn’t going home without him. Though he didn’t say so, he also felt Bob needed his support, such as it was, as much as Elaine needed Judy’s.

The atmosphere in the small room was warm and steamy, and an overwhelming tiredness descended on him. It was an effort to keep his eyes open, but his drowsiness was shot through with shafts of fear that kept jerking him fully awake. Bob said little, sitting forward with his clasped hands between his knees, staring at the floor.

From time to time, groups of policemen, their uniforms sodden with rain, came in to report progress and briefly warm themselves before returning to the search. Radios buzzed, phones rang, and muted conversations were held. Time ceased to have any meaning. Outside, daylight had faded, and their reflections were imposed on the darkness beyond the glass, a mirrored world giving a false impression of normality.

But then, as they were becoming used to the lack of progress, a seemingly routine phone call elicited a quite different response. The man who had taken it rose quickly, went to knock on one of the interior doors, and disappeared inside, closing it behind him. Bob gripped Callum’s arm painfully as both men strained unsuccessfully to hear what was being said.

Minutes later, the door opened and a grim-faced sergeant stood there. ‘Could we have a word, Mr Nelson?’ he said.

Both Bob and Callum had come to their feet.

‘Say what you have to,’ Bob said harshly.

The sergeant cleared his throat. ‘Perhaps you’d like to sit down, sir.’

‘The hell I would. Get on with it, man.’

‘I have to tell you that the body of a boy has been found just outside the village.’

Bob swayed, Callum’s breath was sucked forcibly out of him. They both stared wordlessly at the man.

‘Of course, it might not be your son,’ the sergeant continued, ‘but I have to tell you the description and clothing fit with what you told us.’ He paused. ‘I’m so very sorry,’ he added in a low voice.

‘How—?’ Bob choked to a halt.

‘I’m afraid it’s impossible to say at this stage.’

‘For God’s sake, man! I’m not asking for a pathologist’s report! Had he been hit by a car, or what?’

The sergeant struggled for a moment with official caution, but compassion won over. ‘We’ll be regarding it as a suspicious death,’ he said.

Bob stood unmoving, and it was Callum who whispered disbelievingly, ‘You mean he was killed
deliberately
?’

‘I must go to him,’ Bob said, his voice loud in the silent room, but the sergeant shook his head.

‘I’m sorry sir, the surrounding area has become a crime scene. Only authorized personnel—’

‘Authorized personnel?’ Bob’s voice cracked. ‘I’m his
father
, for God’s sake!’

The policeman said gently, ‘He’ll be taken to the mortuary, sir. You can see him there.’

Buffeted by myriad questions, Bob randomly selected one. ‘How long has—?’

‘Again, we’ll need time to ascertain that, sir.’

He nodded. ‘Of course.’

Callum said violently, ‘I don’t believe this! It
can’t
be Josh!’

Bob turned a white face towards him. ‘We have to hope to God it’s not. But in the meantime, what do I tell his mother?’

The rest of that terrible day and night passed in a merciful blur. The police having decided neither of them was fit to drive, they were taken home in a police car, with officers following in their own vehicles.

Afterwards, Callum retained only a few vague impressions of that homecoming: Elaine’s low, despairing cry; Judy’s white face; the three children who, having refused to go to bed, were curled up asleep on the sofa, blissfully unaware of the tragedy. But over and above it, his agonizing sense of guilt weighed heavily on him. He had been responsible. He should not have let this happen. Though he gave Elaine a fierce hug of sympathy, he could not meet her eyes. How could she not blame him?

It was Josh, of course. They had known that all along, but final confirmation came when Bob and Elaine went to the mortuary to identify him. In the days that followed, even worse horrors emerged. The boy had been sexually assaulted and strangled, though death might have been inadvertent, resulting from an attempt to silence him.

Bob, good friend that he was, made a point of coming round to tell Callum that he and Elaine did not hold him responsible, that Josh’s darting back for a coke could as easily have happened when he was with them. But despite those reassurances, Callum doubted if Elaine would ever forgive him. How would he and Judy feel, if something unspeakable had happened to Luisa in the Nelsons’ care?

The following day, Callum was summoned to the local police station, where samples of his blood and DNA were taken – ‘just routine’, he was assured – and a much more intensive questioning took place, this time conducted by CID.

His account of Saturday was once again gone over minutely, presumably in case he contradicted himself, but fear only kicked in when the senior man said casually, ‘You see, Mr Firbank, we’re in a difficult position here. As I’m sure you realize, we have only your word for the sequence of events. Is there any way of proving you returned to the main street after the second dodgem ride? Might you, for instance, have gone for a stroll in the opposite direction, where the whale’s tooth was found?’

God in heaven, Callum thought, appalled, were they actually putting him in the frame for this? And immediately came the annihilating realization that had they known about his past, they might indeed be looking no further.

He swallowed, forced himself to say, ‘Of course we went back. It was looking like rain, and in any case I had a headache and was anxious to get home.’

The detective tried another tack. ‘You were fond of him, weren’t you? Took him about a lot?’

Callum flushed angrily. ‘I’ve known him all his life. Of course I was fond of him.’

‘Perhaps overfond? Perhaps, away from the crowds and suddenly alone with him, your feelings got the better of you? And when he resisted your advances, you lost your temper?’

Callum came to his feet, colour suffusing his face. ‘That’s a filthy thing to say!’

‘It’s a filthy thing to have happened. Please sit down, Mr Firbank. Now, take us through what you tell us was your last sighting of Josh. You were on your way back to the car?’

‘God, how many more . . . ?’ He broke off, and wearily, mechanically, retold his story. ‘I should have gone with him, I know,’ he ended miserably. ‘I fully accept that.’

He looked up, hope dawning. ‘The man on the coke stall! He’ll confirm I came looking for him.’

‘Oh, he did. But he hadn’t seen Josh, had he? If he was already dead, you could have been establishing an alibi.’

And so it went on, hour after hour, until, having asked him not to leave town without notifying them, they finally released him. Drained, resentful and frightened, Callum was free to go home. He would, he knew, remain a suspect until the real killer was found. And, among all those crowds, what hope was there of that, especially when the heavy rain must have obliterated vital traces?

The following day he returned to the office, grateful for the familiarity of work surroundings and the scheduled business meeting, which would require undivided attention. The murder had, of course, made the headlines of the local paper, and although Callum’s own name didn’t appear, his staff knew of his friendship with the Nelsons, and were quick to offer their sympathy.

It was unfortunate in the extreme that Clive Benson happened to be at the meeting, even more so that he had his back to the door as Callum entered the room. In a sudden lull, his voice came clearly.

‘The boy was with Firbank, I hear? I always thought there was something unhealthy about that relationship.’

The appalled silence and the frozen look on the faces of his companions must have alerted him, because he spun round to find himself face to face with Callum.

Above the ringing in his ears, Callum heard himself say calmly, ‘I hope you’re prepared to repeat that in front of my lawyer, Benson.’

Recovering from his initial shock, Benson began to bluster. ‘Look, Firbank, it was an off-the-cuff remark. In bad taste, I grant you, and I apologize, but we’re among friends, aren’t we? No need to take it any further.’

‘Your definition of friendship doesn’t coincide with mine,’ Callum replied. ‘That was slander, as you know damn well, and in the present circumstances I’ve no option but to defend myself.’

‘Gentlemen, gentlemen,’ the chairman intervened from the other side of the room. ‘If we could take our places, please.’

For an instant longer the two men’s eyes remained locked, and it was Benson who first looked away. In silence, those present filed to their seats.

Elaine took the cold flannel Bob handed her, and pressed it against her burning eyes.

‘Penny was asking me about Callum,’ she said. Penny Turner was the family liaison officer assigned to the Nelsons.

Bob frowned. ‘What about him?’

‘Oh, how long we’d known him, and so on.’

‘Bloody cheek. Poor Callum’s crucifying himself with guilt as it is. Josh was like his surrogate son – you said so yourself.’

‘She asked how I’d describe him. Said she knew he was a friend, but to imagine I’d just met him, and say how he struck me. You know, it was surprisingly difficult.’

‘It would be with anyone. What did you say?’

‘I tried to be dispassionate. Said he was a bit of a workaholic, that he was devoted to Jude and the kids, that he’d been very kind to Josh.’ Her voice trembled on her son’s name, and Bob pressed her hand. ‘He’s quite a complex character, though, isn’t he, when you think about it?’

‘We all are, I suppose.’

‘She also asked how much he saw of Josh, where he took him – things like that.’

Bob shook his head in annoyance. ‘She means well, no doubt, but I think we’d be better off without her. I don’t like her being here all the time, nosing around and trying to stir things up.’

‘That’s hardly fair,’ Elaine protested.

‘Anyway, darling, you should try to get some sleep. Have you taken the pills?’

Elaine nodded. ‘I don’t like doing, but they seem to help.’

She stood up, tossed the flannel through the open door of the en suite, and climbed into bed. Then, suddenly, she stopped.

‘Oh, my God!’

‘What?’

‘I’ve just remembered something Josh said last week. I wasn’t really listening, but – oh, my God!’

Bob sat on the bed next to her, taking hold of her hands. ‘
What
did Josh say? Tell me.’

‘We were in the car, and he suddenly said, suppose someone likes you –
someone older
– but you didn’t want to be with him. What could you do?’ She stared at Bob. ‘He was talking hypothetically, wasn’t he? Not about
himself
?’

Bob moistened suddenly dry lips. ‘What did you say?’

‘I fobbed him off,’ Elaine said aridly. ‘I was only half listening, and my mind was on something else. I think I said to make an excuse.’

Bob straightened. ‘Well, he couldn’t have meant Callum,’ he said stoutly, ‘because he certainly liked being with him.’

‘Yes,’ said Elaine doubtfully. ‘Of course he did.’

Eight

Callum told Judy about Benson that night. He hadn’t intended to – he was too ashamed – but when he got into bed, he started shaking, and she was alarmed.

‘Oh, darling, stop blaming yourself,’ she implored, holding him close. ‘It was the most horrible thing to happen – unbelievably awful – but no one blames you. You really mustn’t shoulder all this guilt.’

‘You do still love me, Jude?’ he demanded urgently. ‘Even after all this?’

The old insecurity, she thought, her heart going out to him. ‘
Of course
I love you! More than ever, after what you’ve been through.’

Gradually he relaxed against the warmth of her, probing his anxieties like a sore tooth. ‘People are saying pretty dreadful things,’ he went on after a minute.


What
people?’

‘Benson, for one.’

She made a dismissive sound. ‘Don’t take any notice of him; he’s in a class of his own.’

‘The trouble is, he made his opinion known at the meeting today.’ And he related what had happened.

‘You must take him to court!’ she cried furiously. ‘How
dare
he spread vicious rumours like that?’

‘But if I do,’ Callum said wearily, ‘even more people will hear about it, and might wonder if there’s something in it. You know what they say: no smoke without a fire.’

‘That’s just giving in to him.’

‘But it’s not only Benson; the police were hinting at much the same thing.’

Judy burst into tears. ‘I can’t bear this!’ she sobbed. ‘As if it’s not bad enough grieving for little Josh and the ghastly thing that happened to him, without other people digging the knife in.’

It was his turn to soothe her, and as his caresses became more urgent and she quickly responded, both of them sought and found some measure of comfort in each other’s bodies.

Sandra Lomax watched her seven-year-old son slowly climb the stairs.

‘I’m really concerned about Mikey,’ she told her husband. ‘This murder’s hit him extremely hard.’

‘Well, it’s not surprising,’ Tim replied. ‘Damn it, it must have happened while we were actually there. They’re offering counselling at school, aren’t they?’

‘Yes, but it doesn’t seem to be helping much. Thank goodness they break up at the end of this week, and we’ll be away for Easter. It’ll help to take his mind off it.’ She paused. ‘He didn’t know this boy personally, did he?’

‘I doubt it; Josh Nelson must have been in year eight – they wouldn’t have come into contact.’

‘That’s what I thought; I could have understood it better if they’d been in the same class. I’ll have another chat with him after his bath, and try to help him put it into perspective.’

‘And just where is the perspective, when a kid at your school gets murdered?’

Sandra sighed, and did not reply.

Why did children always look younger in bed? she wondered half an hour later, as she sat on the edge of her son’s bunk. Something to do, perhaps, with the rosiness left over from bath time. She’d read the next chapter of their current book, but she could tell he’d not been listening, and his face had a haunted look that disturbed her.

‘Darling,’ she began tentatively, ‘are you still thinking about Josh? He’s safe now, you know. No one can hurt him any more.’

The large grey eyes came back to her, but he didn’t say anything.

‘Do you talk about what happened, at school?’ she probed.

‘A bit.’

‘You didn’t know him well, did you?’

A shake of the head.

Sandra said gently, ‘Mikey, is there something in particular that’s upsetting you? Something we haven’t talked about?’

A look of apprehension flashed across his face.

‘Mikey?’

Slowly, he nodded.

‘You can tell me, darling. Let me try to help.’

He was plucking at the edge of his duvet now, not meeting her eyes.

‘It often helps to talk about things, you know.’

She was about to give up, to kiss him goodnight and return downstairs, when he said suddenly, ‘I saw him, Mummy.’

Sandra frowned. ‘How do you mean?’

‘I saw Josh, at the fair.’

She leaned forward, covering his small hands with her own. ‘When did you see him? At the pillion rides?’ Though Mikey was below the required age and height, she knew he and Tim had gone to watch.

‘Yes, but again later. When me and Daddy were on the way back.’

Sandra’s heart started thumping. ‘Tell me about it.’

‘He was talking to Dave Harris,’ Mikey said unwillingly.

‘And who is Dave Harris?’

‘He plays football for the school, and Dan says he’s a prefect.’

Sandra’s mouth was dry. Could this be as important as she was beginning to suspect?

‘Did you hear what they said?’ she asked carefully.

‘Only a bit, because it looked like rain and Dad was making us hurry. But I heard Dave say he had his bike round the corner, and he’d give Josh a ride.’

‘And – did Josh seem pleased?’

Mikey shook his head. ‘He said someone was waiting for him, but Dave took his arm and said it wouldn’t take long.’

‘So – what happened?’ Sandra asked, every nerve taut.

But Mikey was shaking his head. ‘I don’t know. We’d gone past by then.’

She drew a deep breath. ‘Darling, why didn’t you tell us this before?’

His eyes were wide. ‘He’s a
prefect
, Mummy. You can’t tell on prefects!’

‘Oh, baby!’ There were tears in Sandra’s eyes as she scooped him up in her arms. ‘Don’t worry about it any more. Tomorrow, we’ll go down to the police station and you can tell them what you saw. I’m sure they’ll be very interested.’

‘Callum.’

‘Bob?’ Callum tensed, gripping the phone. ‘How are—?’

‘Thought you’d like to know they’ve got someone in for questioning.’

Heat washed over him, but he answered wryly, ‘Don’t count your chickens; they took me in, remember.’

‘But that was just for the background,’ Bob said dismissively, and Callum didn’t disabuse him. ‘This is a senior kid at school; he was seen talking to Josh – must have been when he went back for the coke. As yet, none of this is official, but rumour has it this boy had his own bike nearby, offered Josh a ride, and wouldn’t take no for an answer. And that prompted someone to come forward to report seeing a bike roar down the road running parallel to the main street, with a kid without a helmet riding pillion.’

Callum closed his eyes. ‘Well, that’s great news, Bob. Do you think they’ll charge him?’

‘No doubt they’re processing his DNA as we speak, but it sounds pretty conclusive. Especially since Josh’s friends are saying this boy had been pestering him after football.’

Callum frowned. ‘You’d think one of the staff would have noticed.’

‘I don’t suppose it was obvious. But on the bright side – if there is one – it looks as though we’re a step nearer getting some justice for Josh. God, if I could lay my hands on that murdering little pervert!’

‘I’d be right behind you,’ Callum said.

After replacing the phone, he leaned, palms down, on the table, deluged by a enervating wave of relief. Thank God, he thought, oh, thank God! The odds against a breakthrough had seemed a hundred to one; but Fate had intervened. Perhaps now he could grieve naturally for Josh, with no undercurrent of fear. Which, as Bob said, had to be a step forward.

Schoolboy charged with fellow pupil’s murder
, ran the headlines, but though a detailed report followed, the identity of the suspect was withheld. The alleged killer was a juvenile, and as such, granted anonymity by the law. Phoebe and Luisa, however, under no such restriction, had already supplied their parents with a name; it was common knowledge at school that Dave Harris had been taken into custody.

Callum found it helped to know the killer’s identity – the word ‘alleged’ he ignored, having no doubt this boy was the culprit. It made the arrest more concrete, somehow, to have a name to focus on, and he hoped passionately that the maximum sentence would be imposed. Not only had this boy subjected Josh to unspeakable horrors, he had caused Callum himself to be considered as a suspect.

His musings were interrupted by Judy putting her head round the door, and he told her the news.

‘That’s wonderful!’ she exclaimed, giving him a relieved hug. ‘I’m sure it will help Bob and Elaine to know who was responsible. Actually, I looked in to tell you Mother’s been on the phone in quite a state, having recognized the name of the school. She was even more shocked to hear you’d been involved, and invited us over for Easter – to get away from it all, as she put it.’

Just as well, Callum thought, that the police had lifted their restrictions on his movements; it would have been difficult explaining to his mother-in-law that not only had he been with the murdered boy, but was suspected of killing him.

‘Did you accept?’ he asked.

‘I said we’d discuss it, and ring her back.’ She added diffidently, ‘Actually, I’d rather like to. I know it’s selfish, but at the moment I dread seeing the Nelsons in their garden, and we’re more likely to do that over the long weekend. I think it would be good for the girls, too, to get away for a while. It’s all been pretty close to home, in more ways than one.’

Callum nodded. He was well aware that while Bob had been understanding throughout, he had fences to build with Elaine, though that must wait till the initial sharpness of grief had alleviated. For no matter how one looked at it, if he hadn’t taken Josh to the motorbike display, he would in all probability still be alive.

‘Fine,’ he said. ‘If you’d like to go, we’ll go. I’ll have to be back for the Tuesday, because there’s a business dinner I can’t get out of, but there’s no reason why you and the kids shouldn’t stay on all week, if your mother would like that.’

Judy brightened. ‘I know she would. Are you sure you wouldn’t mind?’

‘Of course not; I could come over and collect you the following weekend.’

Judy dropped a kiss on the top of his head. ‘You’re a star! I’ll ring straight back and arrange it.’

Callum was surprised, and a little guilty, to find how much easier he felt in his mother-in-law’s house. It wasn’t that he put Josh and his family completely out of his mind, merely that, at this distance, they weren’t constantly at the forefront.

Daphne Leadbetter, small, stout and bustling, had twice been widowed, but she’d made an interesting life for herself in the local community, chairing several committees and doing voluntary work. David, her son by her first marriage, lived nearby with his family, and Daphne had a standing invitation for Sunday lunch, which, of course, would include Easter.

‘I checked with them, naturally, before inviting you,’ Daphne said, when Judy broached the subject. ‘They’d love to see you all.’

So despite everything, Easter was a relatively happy, family occasion, incorporating church, an Easter egg hunt, and a suitably festive lunch. David had been ten at the time of his mother’s remarriage, so there was a considerable age gap between him and Judy, and his children were correspondingly older. Giles, the eldest, with whom Callum had played computer games at his engagement party, was now in the army and had a family of his own. The younger two, a boy and a girl, were home from university for the Easter break, and regarded with awe by their young cousins. Nineteen-year-old Emma in particular was the focus of interest, and indulged them by letting them experiment with her make-up. Even Nathan, at twenty-two, was unusually patient, having been apprised by his parents of their recent trauma.

Bank Holiday Monday was taken up with a country walk followed by a pub lunch, and later that afternoon, Callum packed his bag for his return home.

‘It’s better to leave now, and avoid the heavy traffic later on,’ he said.

‘I’ll miss you,’ Judy told him, going out with him to the car.

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