local sub-station because of the weather.â
I woke up just after seven the following morning, full of the joys of spring. We were due to go back to London after lunch, so I decided to sneak out for an early morning walk in the copse. I dressed without waking Diana and slipped out of the silent house.
The path from the house to the copse was well-trodden. There had been no fresh snow since Christmas Eve, and the path was well used, since it was a short cut both to the Dower House and the village. There were even mountainbike tracks among the scattered boot prints. The trees, an elderly mixture of beech, birch, alder, oak and ash, still held their tracery of snow on the tops of some branches, though following the storm a mild thaw had set in. As I moved into the wood, I felt drips of melting snow on my head.
In the middle of the copse, thereâs a clearing fringed with silver birch trees. When she was little, Diana was convinced this was the place where the fairies came to recharge their magic. There was no magic in the clearing that morning. As soon as I emerged from the trees, I saw Edmundâs body, sprawled under a single silver birch tree by the path on the far side.
For a moment, I was frozen with shock. Then I rushed forward and crouched down beside him. I didnât need to feel for a pulse. He was clearly long dead, his right hand blackened and burned.
I canât remember the next hours. Apparently, I went to the Dower House and roused Evie. I blurted out what Iâd seen and she called the police. I have a vague recollection of her staggering slightly as I broke the news, but I was in shock and I have no recollection of what she said. Diana arrived soon afterwards. When her mother told her what had happened, she stared numbly at me for a moment, then tears poured down her face. None of us seemed eager to be the one to break the news to Jane. Eventually, as if by mutual consent, we waited until the police arrived. We merited two uniformed constables, plus two plain-clothes detectives. In the words of Noël Coward, Detective Inspector Maggie Staniforth would not have fooled a drunken child of two and a half. As soon as Evie introduced me as her daughterâs partner, DI Staniforth thawed visibly. I didnât much care at that point. I was too numbed even to take in what they were saying. It sounded like the distant mutter of bees in a herb garden.
DI Staniforth set off with her team to examine the body while Diana and I, after a muttered discussion in the corner, informed Evie that we would go and tell Jane. We found her in the kitchen drinking a mug of coffee. âI donât suppose youâve seen my husband,â she said in tones of utter contempt when we walked in. âHe didnât have the courage to come home last night.â
Diana sat down next to Jane and flashed me a look of panic. I stepped forward. âIâm sorry, Jane, but thereâs been an accident.â In moments of crisis, why is it we always reach for the nearest cliché?
Jane looked at me as if I were speaking Swahili. âAn accident?â she asked in a macabre echo of Dame Edith Evansâs âA handbag?â
âEdmundâs dead,â Diana blurted out. âHe was struck by lightning in the wood. Coming home from the village.â
As she spoke, a wave of nausea surged through me. I thought I was going to faint. I grabbed the edge of the table. Dianaâs words robbed the muscles in my legs of their strength and I lurched into the nearest chair. Up until that point, Iâd been too dazed with shock to realise the conclusion everyone but me had come to.
Jane looked blankly at Diana. âIâm so sorry,â Diana said, the tears starting again, flowing down her cheeks.
âIâm not,â Jane said. âHe canât stop my child growing up in Amberley now.â
Diana turned white. âYou bitch,â she said wonderingly.
At least I knew then what I had
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