room to play, clumping up the stairs with her walking stick, Les a couple of steps behind her. Mrs Wilson was terrified of letting Bruce out of her sight, but it was the only way we could talk freely. Bruce's kidnapper hadn't hurt him, she said, which was something, at least.
Mrs Wilson finally answered my question. 'It was a phone call.'
'On your landline?'
She nodded.
'Has anybody called since?'
'I don't know.'
I'd called Les, but I had his mobile number from when he'd rung me and I'd used that. It was a long shot, but worth a try. We could get Mrs Wilson's phone records, but it would take a while.
'Erica, would you mind checking?' I asked. 'See when the last call came in and if there's a number?'
'The phone's by the window,' Mrs Wilson said.
Erica moved off to see what she could find.
'Carry on,' I said to Mrs Wilson.
'The man told me I had to sneak away. Deliver the money this afternoon. And if I told anyone, or anyone followed me…' She cleared her throat. 'He said there would be a real finger arriving in the post.'
'Was it your own idea to ditch your car?'
'No, he told me to. Said you'd be looking for it.'
'Tell me about his voice,' I said.
'From around here,' she said. 'Middle-aged.' She shrugged. 'Nothing that stood out.'
Erica came back.
'Any luck?' I asked.
'Public phone,' she said. 'Might be CCTV coverage.'
Somehow, I doubted it. This guy was too smart.
Mrs Wilson agreed. 'You're not going to catch him, are you?' she said.
30
I couldn't believe I was doing this.
It was Mrs Wilson's idea. And of course it made sense to her.
She'd sent Erica upstairs to fetch Bruce. Erica came back with Dr Snow and Les.
The shrink came up to me, walking stick hardly touching the ground. She grabbed my elbow and dragged me over to the corner of the room.
'This is a terrible idea,' she said. Erica must have told her what Mrs Wilson was planning. 'You have to stop her.'
'How?' I waited a second or two but she didn't say anything. 'You're the expert. Show me.'
Dr Snow clumped over to Mrs Wilson. I followed, stood close by so I could hear what they were saying.
'Bruce has been through an ordeal,' Dr Snow was saying. 'I don't think he wants to talk about it.'
'You don't think it might help him?'
'No, I think it'll make it harder for him.'
'Bruce says he's fine.' Mrs Wilson's cupped hand drew an arc in the air next to her. Around shoulder height. 'Somebody needs a haircut, I think.' She was smiling as she looked up again. 'He doesn't mind.'
'But I don't think-'
'Bruce is doing it, Dr Snow. It doesn't matter what you think.'
Dr Snow nodded, hunched her shoulders, then moved off to take a seat on the corner of the settee.
31
'What do you want to ask him?' Mrs Wilson said to me.
I wasn't sure where to look. I slowly became aware that I was scratching an eyebrow repeatedly. And it wasn't even itchy.
'Shouldn't you get your notebook out?'
I did as Mrs Wilson suggested. At least it gave me something to do with my hands.
'Could you ask Bruce if he can describe the kidnapper?' I asked.
Mrs Wilson turned her head and whispered something. Then she said to us, 'Bruce was wearing a blindfold. He didn't see the man.'
We were quiet for a while.
'What else?' Mrs Wilson said.
'What about at the school? Didn't Bruce see him then?'
She whispered again.
'He was tall,' she said.
'What was he wearing?' Erica asked.
Again, Mrs Wilson leaned down. 'A suit.'
'What colour?' I asked.
'Grey.'
'How old was he?'
'Bruce says he was older than Mummy.'
The questions went on for about ten minutes. Ten very long minutes.
'That's great,' Erica said at last. 'But I think we need to get back to the station now.'
32
In the car, Erica said, 'I don't know whether to laugh or cry.'
33
When I sat down at my desk in the CID office, I noticed the drawer was open.
'Some arsehole's been fiddling with my stuff,' I said to Erica.
I spotted something inside that I didn't recognise. A piece of purple cardboard. I tugged the drawer out.
I pulled out the cardboard. Inside was a Halloween-style severed finger. Or there would have been, if the plastic hadn't been torn open and the finger removed.
Erica reached into the desk and picked up a magazine. It was a magazine I'd never seen before. A sailing magazine. She flipped through it. Some pages fell out. Words missing from the headlines. Some scraps landed on the desk. Random words with one or two letters cut out.
'Shit,' she said. 'What else have you got in there?' She stuck her hand back in the drawer.
'It's Dutton,' I said. 'Up to his usual. Thinks this is funny.'
'That's not usual.' Erica held up a brick of cash. A tight little bundle of crisp new fifties. 'How in the name of Christ did you get this, Collins?'
When I looked around the room, I saw that all my colleagues were watching me, looking for an answer.
I swallowed. My throat hurt.