Here, in daylight, in the stale-beer bar of the Red Lion, talking to a policewoman with a towel on her head, it sounded like a case for Scooby-Doo.
DS Rice glanced at her watch.
‘I don’t think he likes children,’ Steven said carefully.
‘Why do you think that? Did he say something?’
‘Kind of. He told me people hurt children.’
‘But that’s true. Sadly. Isn’t it? People sometimes
‘Yes. But …’ He struggled to explain and finally couldn’t. ‘It was just the
‘That’s a serious allegation, Steven. Do you have any proof of that?’ DS Rice was looking at him sharply now, as if she was about to get angry with him.
‘Not really,’ he said finally.
‘And what reason do you have to think he might have taken the children?’
‘Just … I don’t know.’ That was never going to be enough, he knew. ‘Just a feeling really.’
DS Rice looked at her watch quite openly this time. ‘OK, Steven. Is there anything else?’
He shook his head. He knew he’d failed. She’d already lost interest.
‘Well, thanks for coming in to speak to us, all right?’
‘OK,’ he said. ‘But I’m not making it up.’
‘I didn’t say you were.’
He thought she kind of
Then she glanced down at his scuffed school bag. ‘You off to school now?’
‘Yes.’
‘OK,’ she said. ‘Anything else you want to tell us, you just come to the mobile unit in the car park, all right? Anything you think could help with finding the children. OK? After nine.’
‘OK,’ he said.
‘Thanks, Steven.’
Elizabeth Rice watched Steven Lamb leave the bar, hoisting his backpack on to his shoulders as he went. She didn’t remember what it was to be a child, but one thing he’d said
It made her think of being sixteen and telling her mother that a neighbour, Mr Craddock, had made suggestive remarks to her at the bus stop on her way to school one day. She’d known Mr Craddock since she was small, and always thought he was a nice man. In the summer he would let Elizabeth walk his dog, Fuzzy, because her parents wouldn’t let her have one. Once he’d shouted at some boys who’d been teasing her. He always waved and smiled, and his wife did too.
And then that day at the bus stop – when she was sixteen years old – he’d asked her if they spanked her at school.
‘No!’ She’d laughed. The idea was silly. Nobody got spanked at school any more. Even the word was laughable. ‘They just give us detention.’
‘What about at home?’ Mr Craddock had said. ‘Does your daddy spank you?’
‘No,’ said Elizabeth, and hadn’t laughed, because suddenly this was making her feel uncomfortable.
They’d got on the bus together and she remembered how she’d hated the fact that he’d come up the steps behind her, knowing that he must be looking at her bare legs under the school skirt she’d always insisted on wearing just a little too short. Feeling that Mr Craddock had moved from the column marked ‘Nice Man’ to the one marked ‘Pervert’ in the mental list she kept. A list that seemed to be growing in direct proportion to her breasts.
It had been a week before she’d told her mother about it.
‘I’m sure he was just joking,’ her mother had said.
‘He wasn’t,’ Rice could hear herself saying now. ‘It was the
Now the grown-up Elizabeth Rice watched the boy pass the small leaded window, head down, frowning.
She went upstairs and dried her hair – which
‘Steven Lamb?’ he said, prissily rubbing his fingers and thumb together to dislodge crumbs.
‘Yes,’ said Rice. She thought that Reynolds might be a lot more attractive if he didn’t always have the continental breakfast. Croissants weren’t manly.
‘He’s that kid who nearly got killed by Arnold Avery.’
‘I
‘Interesting,’ mused Reynolds, raising a Roger Moore eyebrow.
Rice didn’t ask why. That was what Reynolds wanted and she hated playing silly games, in or out of a relationship. If it really
It only took a moment …
‘It makes you wonder what effect that might have on a child.’
‘What do you mean?’
Reynolds leaned back away from his croissant – torn, never sliced – and put his splayed fingers together under his nose.
‘I don’t know,’ said Reynolds slowly, but in a tone that said he