The Other Woman’s House (38 page)

Read The Other Woman’s House Online

Authors: Sophie Hannah

‘Do you have any idea how
fucked up
this is?' Kit says after a few minutes. He's lowered his voice to a whisper; perhaps he does care about making a good impression, even now. I remind myself that I know nothing about him, nothing that matters. ‘You say, “We'll have made use of that sixty grand already,” as if there's a profit in this for us! Yeah, we'll have made use of the sixty grand – hooray. We'll have used it to buy a house we'll lose within two to five years because we can't afford it. And Nulli, that we've taken so long to build up and poured all our effort and energy into – Nulli'll go down the tubes. By the time the sale of Melrose Cottage to a legitimate buyer completes, we'll have had, what? Two, three months of not being able to pay anybody?'

‘You're right,' I cut him off. ‘Nulli will be a casualty of the plan, almost certainly. And we'll lose both houses, Melrose Cottage and 11 Bentley Grove. On the plus side, if 11 Bentley Grove is repossessed, we might get some equity out of it, depending on what the bank sells it for. And when Nulli sells Melrose, even if it's in the process of folding by then, that's three hundred grand that'll come back to us, minus the costs associated with going bankrupt.'

‘We'll be left with nothing,' says Kit, his voice leaden with misery. ‘That's the one thing all people who go bankrupt have in common. Use your brain, for fuck's sake.'

‘I think you're being too pessimistic,' I tell him. ‘We'll get something out of it. Remember, there are two houses to sell to generate funds.'
Time to be generous
.
Incentivise him
. ‘You can
have all of it,' I say. ‘Everything we're left with at the end of all this. I meant what I said: I don't care if I end up poor and homeless.' A voice in my head – my mother's, probably – says,
It's all very well saying you don't care. You
should
care
.

But I don't.

‘I need to know the truth,' I tell Kit. ‘I may never find out, but if I do, this is how it's going to happen. This plan is the beginning of me maybe getting some answers to my questions.'

1.2 million pounds. The most expensive answer in the history of the world.

‘If I say no, you're going to divorce me, right?' Kit says.

I nod.

‘What happens to our marriage if I say yes?'

‘That depends. If I find out the truth, and the truth is that you're not a liar, not a murderer…' I shrug. ‘Maybe we can find a way back, but…' I stop. It's not fair to offer him false hope, even if it would further my cause. ‘I think our marriage is probably over either way,' I say.

‘It's what your average dimwit-on-the-street would call a “no-brainer”.' Kit's smile is shaky. ‘If my choice is between definitely losing the woman I love and only probably losing her, I'm going to have to opt for only probably.' He stands up. ‘I'll sign anything you want me to sign. Just say the word. You know where to find me.'

18
23/7/2010

‘I need you to do something for me.'

‘Hello to you too.' Charlie made a rude face at the phone. ‘I'm fine, thanks for asking. Where are you?'

‘Get hold of Alice Fancourt, arrange to see her as soon as you can. Alice Bean, sorry – she's dropped the Fancourt. Find out when she last saw Connie Bowskill and what—'

‘Who-oa, hang on a minute.' This was the sort of conversation that demanded the accompaniment of a glass of wine: cold, white, bone dry. Charlie hit the pause button on the remote control, hauled herself up off the sofa and pulled the lounge curtains closed, or as near to closed as they'd go. They didn't quite meet in the middle; she'd made a pig's ear of hanging them. Liv had said, ‘Take them down and rehang them, then – properly', but as far as Charlie was concerned, curtains fell into the category of things that only got one chance. So did sisters.

She would never have admitted it to anybody, but she was pleased to be home – queen once more of a small, badly decorated terraced house, no longer an outsider in paradise. ‘Connie Bowskill knows Alice?' she said, swallowing a yawn.

‘Alice is her homeopath,' said Simon. ‘I need to know when she last saw her, what Connie said, if she's got any idea where Connie is now.'

‘At the risk of sounding selfish, what does that list of needs
have to do with me? I was watching a DVD.' So far it was brilliant.
Orphan
. It featured a psychotic adoptee protagonist called Esther who seemed intent on killing all her siblings. Charlie identified with her hugely, though she suspected that wasn't the reaction the director had been hoping for.

‘I can't talk to Alice, can I?' Simon said impatiently.

‘You both have mouths and ears, last time I checked. You mean you don't want to talk to her.' Charlie poured herself a glass of wine, glad he wasn't there in person to see her smile. The smile faded as it occurred to her that his not wanting to speak to Alice could be interpreted in a range of ways: dislike, embarrassment, an aversion to revisiting the past. Any of those would be okay, Charlie thought, putting the wine back in the fridge.
Searing unrequited love – the kind that knows it would be magnified to greater agony by confrontation with its object
. No. Ridiculous. It was clear from his tone that Alice was a means to an end. Connie Bowskill was the one he was interested in now. And no, Charlie told herself firmly – not in that way.

‘I don't want to talk to Alice, no,' said Simon.

Neither did Charlie, but she knew what would happen if she refused: he would overcome his reluctance and do what he had to do to get the information he wanted. This was her opportunity to prevent a reunion. ‘Fine, I'll do it. Where are you?'

‘In Cambridge still.'

‘Are you coming home?'

‘No. I'm going to Bracknell to talk to Kit Bowskill's parents.'

‘Now? It'll be midnight by the time you get there.'

‘They're expecting me first thing in the morning. I'll camp in my car outside their house.' Anticipating her objection, he said, ‘There's no point me coming back just to spend a few hours in bed. I wouldn't sleep anyway.'

As if there was nothing to do in bed apart from sleep.

‘So…' He was going too fast for her. ‘Kit Bowskill gave you his parents' phone number?' Why would he do that? Why would Simon ask for it?

‘Directory Enquiries did. There was only one Bowskill in Bracknell – N for Nigel.'

‘But…you met Kit Bowskill?'

‘Yeah. Asked him three times what caused the rift between him and his folks. First two times he dodged the question. It was his third answer that convinced me he's hiding something that matters. He gave me what sounded on the face of it like a full answer, but it was all psycho-babble – used a lot of words to distract me, so I wouldn't notice he was telling me nothing. He said his mum and dad wouldn't “rally round”, wouldn't be a family to Connie when she needed them. That could mean almost anything.'

‘Might he have decided it was none of your business?' Charlie asked. She could understand Kit Bowskill's disinclination to discuss a traumatically severed relationship with a brusque detective he'd never met before.

‘No. He was scared.' After a pause, Simon added, ‘He's the bad guy. Don't ask me to prove it because I can't. Yet.'

‘You don't even know there is a bad guy.'

‘He told me Connie doesn't want to speak to me – she's angry with me for going away without telling her. Does that sound likely?'

‘Yes,' said Charlie. ‘I was angry with you earlier, when you set off to Cambridge without telling me. I could have come with you.'

‘What if he's killed her too, and that's the reason she isn't answering her phone?'

‘Pure invention, Simon.'

‘How many people do you know who cut their parents out of their lives?'

‘You're obsessed with Kit Bowskill's bloody parents,' Charlie grumbled.

‘From now on, it's my guiding principle: any time I've got two people saying different things and I don't know which to believe, if one of them's disowned the two people who brought them into this world, I'm going to believe the other one.'

‘That's…really absurd.' Charlie laughed and took a sip of her drink.

‘No, it's not.'

‘Wow – what a convincing argument.'

‘Every day of my life I think about my mum dying – every single day. I think about how free I'd feel. And then I realise she'll probably live for another thirty years.'

Charlie waited. Counted the seconds: one, two, three, four, five, six…

‘The point is, I wouldn't ever say to her, “Sorry, you're out of my life,”' Simon went on. ‘Anyone with a heart knows how it'd make any parent feel to hear those words, anyone with the ability to empathise even a
fraction
…' The breathing in between the words was louder than the words. Simon wouldn't have been willing to have this conversation in person, Charlie guessed; only the distance made it possible for him. ‘No child should ever renounce its parents, not without a rock-solid reason,' he said. ‘Not unless it's life or death.'

Charlie wasn't sure she agreed, but she made a noise that would allow Simon to think she did. ‘If Kit Bowskill doesn't want to tell you what happened, chances are his mum and dad won't either,' she said.

‘Risk I have to take.'

Accept it, Zailer: he's not coming home
.

Charlie carried her wine through to the lounge and flopped down on the sofa. Psychotic orphan Esther, fixed in place, scowled at her from the TV screen. ‘Even if the parents tell you what the rift was about, so what?' she said. ‘How can it have anything to do with Connie seeing a dead woman on a property website? Assuming she saw any such thing. I'm still not convinced – I don't care how many independent witnesses have come forward.' Her camera was sitting on the sofa arm beside her. She put down her drink and picked it up. Since getting back from Spain, she'd kept it with her all the time – next to her side of the bed while she slept, on the bathroom windowsill while she was in the bath. She was addicted to looking at her photos of Los Delfines.

‘Independent,' said Simon. ‘Interesting choice of word.'

‘Sorry?' Charlie was staring at a tiny sweaty Domingo, leaning against the trunk of the upside-down lily tree.

‘Two people see the dead woman's body on Roundthehouses: Connie Bowskill and Jackie Napier. No one else. Does it seem likely to you that the only two people to see this dead body on the website – for the brief half hour that it's up there, before it's replaced – happen to be these two people? Think of all the millions that might have seen it.'

‘
Likely?
' Charlie made a ‘silent scream' face. ‘Simon, we left likely behind several light years ago. None of this is likely. I still think it's some kind of…bizarre practical joke. There's absolutely no evidence – proper evidence, I'm talking about – that anyone's been killed, hurt, anything. Oh, my God!'

‘What? What's wrong?'

‘It's hideous. It's fucking hideous!'

‘What is?'

‘The face! In the mountain. It's so obvious now that I can see it: eyes, nose, mouth.' Charlie pressed the zoom button on her camera. ‘I asked you if it was attractive – why didn't you tell me it was a complete minger? It looks like Jabba the Hut from
Star Wars
.'

‘What do you mean, you can see it?' Simon sounded irritated. ‘You're at home.'

‘On my camera.'

‘There's no way a photograph could—'

‘It's that panoramic one, the one I took from the top terrace. Pool, barbecue, gardens, mountain – complete with ugly face.'

‘The face I saw wouldn't show up in a photograph,' said Simon.

‘Simon, I'm looking at a face here. How many faces can one mountain have?'

‘You can't tell anything from a picture,' he said curtly.

‘Did the face you saw look like Jabba the Hut from
Star Wars
?'

There was a pause. Then Simon said, ‘If you didn't see it first-hand, you can't claim to have seen it – not on the basis of a tiny photo.'

‘To whom can I not claim that?' Charlie teased him. ‘The Board of Mountain Face Classification? What does it matter if I see it too? Does it make you less special?'

‘No.' He sounded confused by her question. ‘I wanted you to see it, but you didn't. Seeing it in a photograph's not the same.'

‘No, it's different. But I can still see it.'

‘Not in the mountain.'

Charlie held the phone at a distance and blew a raspberry into
it – a long, loud one. When she put it next to her ear again, Simon was talking so quickly that she couldn't follow what he was saying. Something about someone called Basil. ‘Slow down,' she told him. ‘I missed the beginning of that. Start again.'

‘Basil Lambert-Wall,' he said breathlessly. ‘Professor Sir, the one who lives on Bentley Grove, Selina Gane's next-door neighbour. He said he'd seen Kit Bowskill before, remember, when I showed him a photo? Said Bowskill had fitted a burglar alarm for him?'

Charlie remembered. ‘And then you went to the burglar alarm company, who said they didn't recognise Bowskill and he didn't work there.'

‘You tell me you've seen a face in a mountain when you haven't – you've seen it in a photograph.' Simon's words collided with one another, as they always did when he was excited. ‘Why do you make that mistake? Because you associate the photograph with the mountain – it's such a strong association in your mind that you confuse the one with the other.'

Charlie opened her mouth to protest, but it was clear he wasn't stopping.

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