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The Silkworm(68)

By:Robert Galbraith

Right, what about-?' he said, and hesitated. They had never before acknowledged the existence of Kathryn Kent.

His girlfriend coulda got at it any time, couldn't she?' said Leonora, as though she had read his mind.

You knew about her?' he asked, matter-of-fact.

Police said something,' replied Leonora, her expression bleak. There's always been someone. Way he was. Picking them up at his writing classes. I used to give him right tellings-off. When they said he was  –  when they said he was  –  he was tied up-'

She had started to cry again.

I knew it must've been a woman what done it. He liked that. Got him going.'

You didn't know about Kathryn Kent before the police mentioned her?'

I saw her name on a text on his phone one time but he said it was nothing. Said she was just one of his students. Like he always said. Told me he'd never leave us, me and Orlando.'

She wiped her eyes under her outdated glasses with the back of a thin, trembling hand.

But you never saw Kathryn Kent until she came to the door to say that her sister had died?'

Was that her, was it?' asked Leonora, sniffing and dabbing at her eyes with her cuff. Fat, i'n't she? Well, she could've got his credit card details any time, couldn't she? Taken it out of his wallet while he was sleeping.'

It was going to be difficult to find and question Kathryn Kent, Strike knew. He was sure she would have absconded from her flat to avoid the attentions of the press.

The things the murderer bought on the card,' he said, changing tack, were ordered online. You haven't got a computer at home, have you?'

Owen never liked 'em, he preferred his old type-'

Have you ever ordered shopping over the internet?'

Yeah,' she replied, and his heart sank a little. He had been hoping that Leonora might be that almost mythical beast: a computer virgin.

Where did you do that?'

Edna's, she let me borrow hers to order Orlando an art set for her birthday so I didn't have to go into town,' said Leonora.

Doubtless the police would soon be confiscating and ripping apart the kind-hearted Edna's computer.

A woman with a shaved head and a tattooed lip at the next table began shouting at a warder, who had warned her to stay in her seat. Leonora cowered away from the prisoner as she erupted into obscenities and the officer approached.

Leonora, there's one last thing,' said Strike loudly, as the shouting at the next table reached a crescendo. Did Owen say anything to you about meaning to go away, to take a break, before he walked out on the fifth?'

No,' she said, 'F course not.'

The prisoner at the next table had been persuaded to quieten down. Her visitor, a woman similarly tattooed and only slightly less aggressive-looking, gave the prison officer the finger as she walked away.

You can't think of anything Owen said or did that might've suggested he was planning to go away for a while?' Strike persisted as Leonora watched their neighbours with anxious, owl-like eyes.

What?' she said distractedly. No  –  he never tells  –  told me  –  always just went …  If he knew he was going, why wouldn't he say goodbye?'

She began to cry, one thin hand over her mouth.

What's going to happen to Dodo if they keep me in prison?' she asked him through her sobs. Edna can't have her for ever. She can't handle her. She went an' left Cheeky Monkey behind an' Dodo had done some pictures for me,' and after a disconcerted moment or two Strike decided that she must be talking about the plush orang-utan that Orlando had been cradling on his visit to their house. If they make me stay here-'

I'm going to get you out,' said Strike with more confidence than he felt; but what harm would it do to give her something to hold on to, something to get her through the next twenty-four hours?

Their time was up. He left the hall without looking back, wondering what it was about Leonora, faded and grumpy, fifty years old with a brain-damaged daughter and a hopeless life, that had inspired in him this fierce determination, this fury …

Because she didn't do it, came the simple answer. Because she's innocent.

In the last eight months a stream of clients had pushed open the engraved glass door bearing his name and the reasons they had sought him had been uncannily similar. They had come because they wanted a spy, a weapon, a means of redressing some balance in their favour or of divesting themselves of inconvenient connections. They came because they sought an advantage, because they felt they were owed retribution or compensation. Because overwhelmingly, they wanted more money.

But Leonora had come to him because she wanted her husband to come home. It had been a simple wish born of weariness and of love, if not for the errant Quine then for the daughter who missed him. For the purity of her desire, Strike felt he owed her the best he could give.

The cold air outside the prison tasted different. It had been a long time since Strike had been in an environment where following orders was the backbone of daily life. He could feel his freedom as he walked, leaning heavily on the stick, back towards the bus stop.

At the back of the bus, three drunken young women wearing headbands from which reindeer antlers protruded were singing:



They say it's unrealistic,

But I believe in you Saint Nick … '



Bloody Christmas, thought Strike, thinking irritably of the presents he would be expected to buy for his nephews and godchildren, none of whose ages he could ever remember.
 
 

 

The bus groaned on through the slush and the snow. Lights of every colour gleamed blurrily at Strike through the steamed-up bus window. Scowling, with his mind on injustice and murder, he effortlessly and silently repelled anyone who might have considered sitting in the seat beside him.





40




Be glad thou art unnam'd; 'tis not worth the owning.

Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher, The False One



Sleet, rain and snow pelted the office windows in turn the following day. Miss Brocklehurst's boss turned up at the office around midday to view confirmation of her infidelity. Shortly after Strike had bidden him farewell, Caroline Ingles arrived. She was harried, on her way to pick up her children from school, but determined to give Strike the card for the newly opened Golden Lace Gentleman's Club and Bar that she had found in her husband's wallet. Mr Ingles's promise to stay well away from lap-dancers, call girls and strippers had been a requirement of their reconciliation. Strike agreed to stake out Golden Lace to see whether Mr Ingles had again succumbed to temptation. By the time Caroline Ingles had left, Strike was very ready for the pack of sandwiches waiting for him on Robin's desk, but he had taken barely a mouthful when his phone rang.

Aware that their professional relationship was coming to a close, his brunette client was throwing caution to the winds and inviting Strike out to dinner. Strike thought he could see Robin smiling as she ate her sandwich, determinedly facing her monitor. He tried to decline with politeness, at first pleading his heavy workload and finally telling her that he was in a relationship.

You never told me that,' she said, suddenly cold.

I like to keep my private and professional lives separate,' he said.

She hung up halfway through his polite farewell.

Maybe you should have gone out with her,' said Robin innocently. Just to make sure she'll pay her bill.'

She'll bloody pay,' growled Strike, making up for lost time by cramming half a sandwich into his mouth. The phone buzzed. He groaned and looked down to see who had texted him.

His stomach contracted.

Leonora?' asked Robin, who had seen his face fall.

Strike shook his head, his mouth full of sandwich.

The message comprised three words:



It was yours.



He had not changed his number since he had split up with Charlotte. Too much hassle, when a hundred professional contacts had it. This was the first time she had used it in eight months.

Strike remembered Dave Polworth's warning:

You be on the watch, Diddy, for signs of her galloping back over the horizon. Wouldn't be surprised if she bolts.

Today was the third, he reminded himself. She was supposed to be getting married tomorrow.

For the first time since he had owned a mobile phone, Strike wished it had the facility to reveal a caller's location. Had she sent this from the Castle of Fucking Croy, in an interlude between checking the canapés and the flowers in the chapel? Or was she standing on the corner of Denmark Street, watching his office like Pippa Midgley? Running away from a grand, well-publicised wedding like this would be Charlotte's crowning achievement, the very apex of her career of mayhem and disruption.

Strike put the mobile back into his pocket and started on his second sandwich. Deducing that she was not about to discover what had made Strike's expression turn stony, Robin screwed up her empty crisp packet, dropped it in the bin and said:

You're meeting your brother tonight, aren't you?'

What?'

Aren't you meeting your brother-?'

Oh yeah,' said Strike. Yeah.'

At the River Café?'

Yeah.'

It was yours.

Why?' asked Robin.

Mine. The hell it was. If it even existed.

What?' said Strike, vaguely aware that Robin had asked him something.

Are you OK?'

Yeah, I'm fine,' he said, pulling himself together. What did you ask me?'

Why are you going to the River Café?'

Oh. Well,' said Strike, reaching for his own packet of crisps, it's a long shot, but I want to speak to anyone who witnessed Quine and Tassel's row. I'm trying to get a handle on whether he staged it, whether he was planning his disappearance all along.'

You're hoping to find a member of staff who was there that night?' said Robin, clearly dubious.