something else. The investigation into the bank by the FSA. I’d thought it purely routine. Had told Sam as much. Ted Barker had assured me so. Although … he’d been worried enough to write to me about it, I realized suddenly. To alert me. Something Ted said months ago, at a dinner party at his house in Esher, came winging back; something about how the female high-flyer in the office sailed close to the wind. He’d said it with a smile as he’d mixed me a gin and tonic, but I’d detected a worried tone. It hadn’t meant much at the time. I’d never met the high-flyer. But they’d dropped her pretty smartly, hadn’t they? The bank? The moment Phil had died? I was aware of Mark looking at me.
‘She was dishonest,’ I whispered.
‘That’s what they say. And whatever it is she’s done, I can believe it. She’s a wrong ’un, that one. Anyway, she’s in police custody now.’
I stared up at him. ‘Emma Harding is in
‘I just said so, didn’t I?’
‘Yes, but …’ I struggled with the concept. ‘She can’t be in
He shrugged. ‘Thieving’s thieving, whoever you are.’
‘They took her in that night?’
‘No, just questioned her. Came back for her this morning. Seven o’clock they was on her doorstep. If you don’t believe me, love, ask Rob, the kennel boy. We was out back with the bitch pack, at the far end of the meadow. Watched as she answered the door in her dressing gown, then disappeared, white-faced, to get dressed. When she came back down the path to the police car she looked like she’d been shot.’
‘I bet she did.’
‘Her husband looked pretty grim too. He was in the hall, behind her. Rob said if ever a man needed a drink it was him.’
‘Oh, God.’ I inhaled sharply. ‘Simon. He must be devastated!’
‘I’d say so.’
My mind whirred as I tried to assimilate all this. Emma Harding, arrested. ‘He’s a good man, you know.’
‘Aye, but a foolish one. Not the first to fall for a pretty face, though, I’ll grant you.’
‘He fell years ago,’ I muttered.
‘I know he did. Thinks he’s getting the same girl. And in a way he is. She was a bitch then and she’s a bitch now.’
I looked at him, surprised. ‘You knew her then?’
‘I went to school with Emma Harding. The local village one, for all her airs and graces. She’d take the sweets from your desk and the rubbers from your pencil case. She was on the make then and she’s still on it now.’
We were silent a moment. I thought of her down at the police station. In a bare interrogation room, perhaps; a plain-clothes officer questioning her, a solicitor beside her. Or perhaps parochial stations like ours didn’t deal with fraud? Elsewhere, maybe. Somewhere distant. Was she frightened? No, defiant, I imagined. Ice cool. Head high, lips pursed. My heart began to beat. It certainly didn’t bleed for her, though.
‘Will he stand by her, d’you think?’
‘Simon Devereux? No idea. But as you say, he’s all right, so I imagine he might. Perhaps not the publicity he was looking for, though, eh?’ He picked up the empty mugs and made for the kitchen. ‘MP’s wife in police custody?’
‘No. No, I’m sure it wasn’t.’
As I pulled out of the farmyard, my mind was churning. Emma Harding, the career woman, the one who rode to hounds, and who I now knew to have a painted face, a sharp manner, and a way with men, was in police custody. But why? What had she done? Taken a quick backhander? Made a bit on the side? Got greedy? Except … she was well off, doing well, why take the risk? I couldn’t believe it was worth it. But perhaps she got her kicks from not getting caught? Like she did with my husband. He hadn’t been worth it either. I purred down the lane, hands gripping the wheel. And was that why she’d dropped her claim on Phil’s will, I wondered suddenly. Because she knew she was about to be investigated? She wouldn’t want to attract even more attention, would she? Oh no, she’d drop that like a hot potato.
Shaken, I turned onto the road that ran alongside the common. I paused briefly, engine running, outside the brick and flint cottage where Emma and my husband had shacked up for years. Where she’d cavorted with him under the eves in that bedroom, perhaps. I glanced up at the window. Sashayed downstairs in a dressing gown – silk, no doubt. And on occasion – when he’d come home from work and told me he wasn’t hungry – had made him supper, wine glass in hand, humming along to a mellow CD, no fractious children to put to bed. The house, where she’d not only cooked his supper, but his books too. And from whence she’d finally been led away. In handcuffs? No, unlikely. Should have asked Mark. And I’d been married to a man who loved her.