The Child (Kate Waters #2)(96)



“Has Emma talked to you? Never a good idea to talk to a reporter. I used to be a lawyer and I always told my clients to avoid the press like the plague. No offense . . .”

Kate laughed unconvincingly. “Good advice in some cases, I imagine. But the stories I’ve been writing about Alice have uncovered some important facts.”

“Hmm,” Jude Massingham said. “But not the truth, I think. Slippery thing, the truth.”

“Er, yes. There have been some setbacks in the investigation—the police would be the first to admit that.”

“Would they? That was never my experience,” Jude said with a tight smile.

“Look, something has emerged this morning that I want to tell Emma, but she’s not picking up her phone,” Kate said, trying to move the conversation onto firmer ground.

“I have no idea where she is,” Jude said. “I’m not her keeper. What has emerged?”

“Can we come in, Ms. Massingham?” Kate said. “It’s a bit public here. Don’t want your neighbors overhearing things.”

“Oh, all right,” Jude said. “Mind the step.”

They sat in a tight group in and on the two armchairs. No drinks were offered.

“Right,” Jude said. “What has happened?”

“I don’t know if Emma has told you, but the police have done some new DNA tests.”

“No, we’re not really talking at the moment,” Jude muttered.

“Well, the tests show there is a match between Emma and the baby on the building site.”

“No,” Jude blurted and held her head in her hands. “It can’t be. How could she have had a baby without me knowing?”

“She hid it from you, Ms. Massingham. And from your boyfriend, Will Burnside.”

“What has she told you about him?” Jude said quietly, the tension in the room thickening.

“Exactly what she told you.”

“I didn’t believe her. I said terrible things to her. Said she was ill and jealous,” Jude said, almost to herself.

“But she was telling the truth, Ms. Massingham. Did you really not suspect anything?”

The older woman shook her head. “No, of course not. Do you think I would have turned a blind eye to something like that? You don’t know what it was like. I loved Will. Adored him. And it is hard to imagine that the man you love could do something so despicable. Could you believe that of someone you love, Miss Waters?”

Kate instantly pictured Steve confessing and shook her head.

“You see how difficult it would have been. It still is. I need some time to think about this. And to talk to Emma.” She seemed to be talking to herself.

Kate leaned forwards to ask another question, but Jude suddenly exclaimed: “I knew it couldn’t have been the Irving baby.”

“How did you know?”

Jude looked flustered. “Well, that baby disappeared ten years before they say the body was buried. The whole police investigation has been cack-handed if you ask me.”

“But the match with Angela Irving,” Joe said. “What about that?”

“Lab cock-up,” Jude said. “I used to hear about it happening from colleagues with criminal practices when I was working. Test tubes in wrong racks, contamination from other samples, that sort of thing. There’s always room for human error.”

“But there are lots of checks and balances to the process,” he said. “I’ve been reading up on it. It’s really interesting, actually—”

“I’d like to tell Emma,” Kate said, cutting him off. “I’m a bit worried I can’t get hold of her. Her friend Lynda said she was on the tube into town this morning.”

“Was she? How odd. She never comes into town if she can help it. Too many people,” Jude said and fell silent.

“I suppose we could ring her husband,” she offered. “He’ll be at work. I’ve got a number for him. Emma wrote it in my address book in case of emergencies.”

She dialed slowly, punching the numbers deliberately, and waited. “Paul, it’s Jude. I’m trying to get hold of Emma. Do you know what she’s doing today? Right. Well, she’s not. She was seen on the tube this morning. Right. Well, if she calls you, will you tell her to give me a ring? Yes, and you. Bye.

“He thought she was working at home this morning. Sounded a bit rattled when I said about the tube. She’s not in great form at the moment. As you probably know,” Jude said, her tone accusatory. Her voice shaky.

When Kate and Joe got outside, Kate’s phone rang.

“It’s Andy Sinclair, Kate,” he said. “I’m trying to reach Emma Simmonds. She seems to have disappeared. You don’t know where she is, do you?”





SEVENTY-EIGHT


    Jude


TUESDAY, MAY 1, 2012

When the phone rang late that night, Jude snatched it up. “Emma?” she said.

“Jude, it’s Harry,” the voice said. “Sorry to disturb you, but I’m worried about Emma.”

“We’re all worried about her,” Jude said. “I’ve had the press here, asking for her, too.”

Jude felt shaky and she sat down too quickly on her chair, jarring her elbow and dropping the phone.

Fiona Barton's Books