‘No, I want to stay,’ she said.

He shook his head. ‘No,’ he said, his voice firmer this time.

Tracy considered him for a moment, and then stood to leave the room. Adam waited until the door closed, and then he looked at Laura and said, ‘You’re here about Jane.’

Laura nodded. ‘Yes, and I’m sorry to intrude, but we need to find out who killed her. Can you tell me when you last saw her?’

‘We split up a month ago,’ he said, but he looked away as he said it.

‘You’ve no need to pretend, Adam,’ she said. ‘We know you were still an item. We’ve spoken to her friends.’

He looked down and nodded, and when he looked up again, Laura saw that his eyes were red.

‘I wasn’t supposed to see her anymore,’ he said.

‘Why not?’

‘Her father.’

‘What do you mean?’

Adam sat down and rested his head against the top of the sofa.

‘I’d been threatened,’ he said eventually.

‘By Jane’s father?’

He nodded. ‘He doesn’t like my career choice.’

‘Which is?’

Adam looked at Laura. ‘I’ve applied to join the police.’

Laura was surprised. ‘Good choice.’

Adam scowled. ‘Don didn’t think so.’ He sighed heavily. ‘I got my degree in law, and my mother wanted me to be a lawyer, had bragged to all her friends, but there are no jobs anymore.’

‘Law isn’t the career it once was,’ she said. ‘And you chose the police because it was better than nothing?’ When Adam didn’t respond, Laura added, ‘It’s okay, I’m not on the recruitment panel. I joined because it’s all I ever wanted to be, and I haven’t been disappointed. You’ll enjoy yourself.’ As Adam nodded to himself, she asked, ‘So how did Don Roberts take it?’

He looked up. ‘Not well,’ he said. ‘He told Jane not to see me anymore.’

‘So what did you do?’

Adam blushed. ‘She was a grown woman, but her father made it difficult. She would say that she was going to a friend’s house, and then we would meet up in town. But his friends would follow her, and so she had to make really complicated journeys to get there.’ He shook his head. ‘One of his apes threatened me, told me that if I saw Jane again, Don would hurt me so that no girl would ever look at me again.’

‘Is Don that anti-police?’

‘It seemed like a gut reaction at first,’ he said, ‘but then it became about disobeying him.’

‘When was the last time you saw her?’

Adam looked down at his hands and then rubbed one palm with his thumb, as if he was wiping away a stain.

‘Last Friday, the day before she went missing,’ he said eventually, and his hand went to wipe away a tear. ‘We went to the cinema and then came back here.’ He blew out, tears running down his cheeks now. ‘Mum and Dad were out, and so we had the place to ourselves.’ He shrugged. ‘Well, you can guess what happened.’

‘Had you made any arrangements to meet up again?’

He nodded. ‘The following night.’

The night she died, thought Laura, but she didn’t say it. ‘What happened?’ she asked.

‘Nothing,’ he said. ‘We had agreed to meet in the Black Bull in town. There’s a door at the back that leads to a car park.’

Laura nodded that she knew it. She remembered it from her brief spell in uniform, when the young constables would shine torches in there after the pubs had closed, trying to frighten couples who preferred the convenience of the car park wall to the warmth of the bed.

‘She was supposed to walk straight through the pub, and then we were going to jump in a taxi and go somewhere on our own.’ He took a few seconds to compose himself. ‘I waited for more than an hour, and I tried her phone but she didn’t answer.’

‘Why didn’t you call us?’

‘What could I say,’ he said. ‘I just thought her father had caught her going out, or had followed her or something.’

‘Did you try to call her again?’

‘A few times,’ he said. ‘There was no answer, apart from just once, but no one said anything.’

That surprised Laura. ‘When was that, the answered call, I mean?’

He reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. He pressed the screen a few times, and then he looked up. ‘Monday afternoon. Just before three.’

‘We think Jane died on the way to meet you.’

Adam paused and took a deep breath to compose himself. ‘I thought maybe she had left her phone at home and her father had answered,’ he said. ‘If he had known it was me, there would have been trouble.’

‘But what about Jane’s killer? He could have been the one who answered?’

‘Maybe the killer and Jane’s father are the same person?’

‘Do you believe that?’

He shrugged. ‘He’s capable of it.’

‘How do you know?’

‘Just stuff Jane’s told me.’

‘Like what?’

He scratched the side of his mouth with his finger, and then looked to the ceiling when he heard the vacuum cleaner start upstairs. Adam’s mother was being conspicuous despite not being in the room.

‘He likes money and he likes power,’ he said. ‘He used to turn a blind eye to drug dealing in the clubs where his boys ran the doors, because he would get a cut. The agreement was that if they got caught, they’d keep their mouth shut and take the hit from the court. Except that some of them didn’t like the idea of prison, and so they told the police all about the arrangements. Those that talked didn’t work again. There was a rumour that one didn’t walk again. Now, it’s the protection rackets he likes, except that he calls it security. He’s a big man in a small world. Those who won’t pay the money get hassle from the local idiots, just juvenile stuff, like shit through the letterbox or eggs at the window, but a couple of people have had petrol poured into their hallways.’

‘So he was worried about having a policeman’s wife as a daughter?’

‘It was worse than that,’ he said. ‘She was thinking of joining too.’

Laura was surprised. ‘Did Don know about this?’

Adam nodded. ‘Now you know why he told us to split up. He thought I was a bad influence.’ He gave a small laugh. ‘I don’t think Don got the irony.’

‘Do you have a picture of Jane that we can use?’ Laura said. ‘Her family isn’t cooperating at all.’

Adam nodded and left the room. As she listened to the thumps of his feet on the stairs, Laura wondered whether everything she’d heard made Don Roberts more of a suspect. She glanced up when she heard movement in the hall, and saw that Tracy was watching her.

Adam bounded back into the room, holding a photograph. ‘Is this okay?’ he said, as he passed it over.

Laura looked down, and the corpse from an hour earlier was brought to life. She was laughing in this photograph, her hair thrown back, full of zest and life. It looked like a holiday shot, Ibiza or somewhere, her arms tanned in a pink vest, the sky bright blue behind her.

‘Perfect,’ Laura said, and for a moment she felt some of Adam’s sadness, that someone so young and beautiful could end up like she did, abused and dumped in the woods. She tried to look convincing when she said, ‘We’ll find her killer. I promise.’

Chapter Twenty-Two

Jack was outside the court when he managed to speak to Laura. Her phone had been switched off, because he had been trying to get hold of her since his conversation with Dolby, and so he had gone to court, looking out for sidebar scraps. The clock had moved onto twelve and the court had emptied, so he tried again. When Laura answered, it sounded like she was outside.

‘Jack? Look, I’m sorry I wasn’t there this morning. How was Bobby?’

‘He’s fine,’ Jack said, ‘but I’m not calling about that. It’s about the murder.’

‘I can’t tell you much.’

‘At least answer this then: what did Jane Roberts have in her mouth, and Deborah Corley?’

There was a pause, and then, ‘What do you mean?’

‘It’s okay, I’m not looking for a quote,’ he said. ‘Just call me curious.’


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