the front page of his pad. It had no notes in it at all, although slivers of paper remained in the spiral binding where heâd recently torn them out. Sometimes the clearest picture of a person came from the smallest things: the way heâd set his pen and paper down parallel to one another pointed toward a meticulous mind; the way heâd torn out the last notes in the padâas if to keep them away from prying eyesâsuggested a suspicious one too. He looked at me. âCould you tell me what you were doing on or around Monday afternoon this week?â
It was Thursday now. Healy had found the body on Tuesday. So police obviously believed, probably on the advice of the pathologist, that ithad either washed up or been dumped twenty-four hours before that. Heâd have had a hard job narrowing down time of death if the body parts had been in water for long; âimmersionâ meant skin started to wrinkle and loosen during the first week, and by the second week it started to detach completely. The fact heâd been able to be so accurate meant Healyâs theory could have been right.
The body had been frozen.
âI was here,â I said.
âAt home?â
âAll day. Healy can back me up on that.â
Rocastle looked over his shoulder. Healy nodded.
âWhy did you move down here?â
âI like it down here.â
âYou didnât have any particular reason?â
âMy parents lived in the village. This was their house.â
He nodded, making more notes. I flicked a glance at what he was writing, but it looked like it was some sort of shorthandâexcept I knew shorthand and I couldnât decipher it.
A system only he can translate: a way to disguise his thoughts
.
âSo you werenât down in the village at all?â
âNo.â
âAnd you didnât see anything?â
âAs in?â
âAs in, anything worth reporting.â
I frowned. âLike I just said, I was here all day.â
âSo thatâs a no?â
âObviously itâs a no.â
He nodded, made some notes. âYou donât look bedridden.â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
âIâm just wondering why you stayed inside all day on Monday.â
I studied him. I was tempted to say
Because I wanted to
, but it was best I kept him onside for the moment. âSome days I still feel tired.â
âHow do you mean?â
I lifted up my T-shirt, and for a moment Rocastle looked surprised. Then he saw the pink scarring on my stomach. âItâs been five months. Sometimes itâs still painful.â
âI see.â He glanced at his pad. âSo youâre sure?â
âAbout what?â
âThat you didnât see anything?â
He wrote something else down, on a fresh line and in a fresh jumble of words. I glanced at Healy for a moment, and in his face I saw the same expression I must have had.
Heâs trying to lead me somewhere
. Finally, when Rocastle looked up, there was nothing in his face. An unreadable blank.
âMr. Raker?â
âWhat?â
âYouâre absolutely positive you didnât see anything?â
But now heâd tilted the question in a different direction. No longer an attempt to bait me, or even really an accusation. Just an innocent point of clarification. I studied him for a second time, trying to decide exactly what his play wasâand then it came to me.
âMr. Raker?â
âYou already knew Iâd been stabbed.â
âIâm sorry?â
âYou already knew all about me.â
A flash of something in his faceâjust a split second of reactionâbut there long enough for me to see that Iâd been right. Heâd done background checks on all the people in the villageâand Iâd been the one with a file. The missing people Iâd found, the killers Iâd ended up hunting, the detectives Iâd had to cross. All my
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