Daisy in Chains(52)



‘So I can just write her off as another fruitcake obsessive?’

‘Looks like it. So what are you up to? Anywhere close to the station? Fancy a coffee? Lunch?’

‘I’m miles away. Thanks, Pete, I’ll be in touch.’





Chapter 44


From the office of

MAGGIE ROSE

The Rectory, Norton Stown, Somerset

Wednesday, 16 December 2015

Dear Hamish,

OK, I’ll admit that I’m intrigued. Not by you – all you’ve given me are impossible-to-prove conspiracy theories – but there are discrepancies surrounding your case and one of them is Zoe Sykes.

I visited her family home today. It was interesting.

Let’s be clear, I am making no promises. For what it’s worth, I still believe you to be guilty. I’m just curious to dig a little deeper. If you can go along with that, I’ll try to clear my diary so that I can visit you on Friday.

Best wishes,

Maggie





Chapter 45


Email

From: Anne Louise Moorcroft, Ellipsis Literary Agency To: Maggie Rose

Date: 17.12.2015

Subject: Hamish Wolfe Dear Maggie,

I’ve had over a dozen emails and phone calls from journalists wanting to know if Hamish Wolfe is now your client. They’ve all requested interviews, or failing that a comment at least. And social media’s going nuts.

Anything you can share?

Anne Louise


From: Maggie Rose

To: Anne Louise Moorcroft, Ellipsis Literary Agency Date: 17.12.2015

Subject: Hamish Wolfe Dear Anne Louise,

He is not my client, although I am having my third meeting with him tomorrow and that could change. I’ll give you the nod and you can send out the usual press statement.

Maggie





Chapter 46


DAYLIGHT DOES NO favours for the Grey Mare at Bishopstone. It is a night-time pub, meant for live bands and overflowing pint glasses, for cigarette smoke creeping in from the smokers’ area out back. It is a pub that needs crowds pressed together, shouting into each other’s ears, coughing with the effort of making any audible sound. It is a pub for sports, on the huge wide-screen TV, for noise, for broken glass, for soon-forgotten fights in the doorways and furtive shags in the ladies’ loo. It is a pub where drugs are sold, if you’re lucky, dropped into an unguarded drink if you aren’t. It is a pub where smart women take their mai tais into the toilets with them.

In the daylight, every stain on the paisley patterned carpet is visible, and tangible. Every surface seems covered with a thin film of grime. With eight days to go before Christmas, even the festive decorations look shop-soiled.

Steve Lampton leads the way from the bar, carrying his own drink, and Maggie’s. He insisted on paying for them. He always does.

‘I’m loving your local.’ Maggie brushes crisp crumbs off the fake Tudor chair seat and sits, thinking of yet another dry-cleaning bill.

He grins and she sees his teeth have improved since the last time they met. He’s had them professionally cleaned and whitened, private dentistry he can now afford, making up for years of prison neglect.

‘It’s a bit of a dive,’ he admits. ‘But I only have an hour off work and I can’t lose my bonus, not this time of year.’

Since his release in 2007, Lampton has been forced to take one temporary contract after another. His jobs usually only last until one of his co-workers finds out who he is.

‘You actually his lawyer, then? That Wolfe bloke?’ Steve pulls out a chair and sits before gulping down most of his double Scotch. He always drinks quickly and, whilst he never really shows it in other ways, Maggie wonders if she makes him nervous.

‘Not yet. I’m thinking about it.’

He pulls a face that is half smile, half sneer. ‘You will.’

‘What makes you say that?’

‘You can’t resist a challenge. And Wolfe’s even prettier than me.’

She doesn’t argue. Lampton might be very easy on the eye, especially now he’s eating properly and working out regularly. He looks younger than his forty-five years, as though prison somehow pickled him. Wolfe, on the other hand, is in a league of his own.

‘Are those highlights in your hair?’ she says, because she doesn’t really want to talk about one of her men, with another of them. In prison, Lampton’s hair was always a dark, dirty blond. Now, even in the dim lights of the pub she can see the lighter streaks.

‘You can talk,’ he tells her.

‘What happened on the thirtieth of October, Steve? In this pub, if my memory serves.’

His face clouds. ‘Misunderstanding.’ His eyes, that haven’t left hers since she arrived, drop to the greasy tabletop.

‘You were cautioned. A woman made a complaint.’

He looks up again, bravado restored. ‘I misread signals. It happens. No harm done.’

‘I disagree. If you get arrested again, I can’t help you. I won’t even try.’

The knuckles of his hand whiten as he tosses back his head and makes a show of polishing off the drink. When he puts the glass down, he’s smiling again. ‘I got something for you,’ he says. ‘Christmas present.’

‘Will I like it?’

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