‘Hmm?’ said Rice. She was looking at the computer screen. Reynolds had checked the history and
‘I said, do you think the notes were written at the scenes?’
‘Why?’
‘Because they’re tailored to the children abducted.
Rice pouted in thought and then nodded. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I agree.’
‘Thank you,’ he told her with a sarcastic eyebrow.
‘But taking Kylie and Maisie off the bus was pretty random,’ mused Rice. ‘He can’t have planned that. Maybe he just carries notes around with him and leaves whichever one suits the situation.’
Reynolds frowned and made a noise with his tongue that drove her nuts.
‘He’s only scribbling a note, not icing it on a birthday cake.’
‘Regardless,’ said Reynolds, ‘we should consider both scenarios. If he writes them at the scene, or has them prepared for any eventuality, that’s one thing. But if he wrote them in anticipation of abducting particular children, then that’s another thing entirely. It means he chose those children. Maybe watched them.’
Rice nodded. ‘We’ve already asked the parents about anyone who might have been hanging around before the abductions. Nobody remembers anything.’
‘That doesn’t mean he wasn’t there,’ shrugged Reynolds. ‘My point is, if he
‘And it’s a link they’d hardly reveal.’
‘Exactly.’ Reynolds nodded. ‘Would you mind having a little dig, Elizabeth?’
Of course she didn’t mind. How could she? He was the inspector and she was the sergeant.
26
LUCY HOLLY HAD BEEN buried without him.
Her body had been retained for more than a month for forensic examination as part of the investigation into the murders in Shipcott that winter, but Jonas had still been in hospital by the time it was finally released for interment. Her parents had arranged and paid for the funeral, but had been kind enough to have her buried in Shipcott, even though they lived in Surrey. They had always liked Jonas, and he had no other family of his own. When he eventually got home and realized what had been done in his absence, he was overwhelmed with gratitude. They still called him now and then – Lucy’s mother encouraging and practical, and her father quietly useless but no less kind.
Six months after the burial, the undertaker had called Jonas to let him know that the grave had ‘settled’ and that a headstone could now be erected in the little churchyard of St Mary’s, where his parents were also buried. For weeks after the call, Jonas had nightmares – and sometimes horrific daytime visions – of what the ‘settling’ of the grave really meant: that the flesh that had been Lucy had decomposed and liquefied and was now leaking from the crushed coffin into the Exmoor sod.
He’d thought of a thousand words to be carved on her stone, but in his shattered state the poetic always ran away from him and into maudlin doggerel, and so finally he’d kept it simple:
LUCY JANE HOLLY
Born April 21, 1982
Died January 29, 2011
Missed Every Day
The undertaker had provided an ugly stainless-steel jar with holes in the lid for flowers, which Jones never used and generally hid behind the headstone. Instead he’d installed two bird feeders – one filled with nyjer seeds and the other with peanuts – which attracted the blue tits and goldfinches to Lucy’s grave for most of the year. In the winter he’d hung a coconut shell filled with fat, and had often seen a robin there too.
From Lucy’s grave, it was fewer than twenty paces to the church door where they’d stood for their wedding photos.
Today Jonas had brought new peanuts.
But as soon as he got to the wooden gate of the churchyard, he saw there was someone already at Lucy’s grave.
Jonas immediately took his hand off the heavy iron handle and stayed within the shadow of the stone-built arbour.
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