clients – but now his concentration was absolute, entirely different from what it once would have been. He was intent upon every name, trying to remember it from the client list, and when he didn’t know one he stopped longer, waiting for one of the company names constantly echoing in his mind, not knowing what he would do if he heard it. Which he didn’t.

It was almost thirty minutes before he reached Jack Jennings, grouped with the house and office staff. Carver only intended a passing greeting but Jennings separated himself from the others and said: ‘Everything’s out of the house, for when Mrs Carver needs to come with the realtor.’

‘I’m grateful,’ thanked Carver.

‘And sheriff Hibbert stopped by. He says he can’t understand it, but his forensics guys haven’t picked up a single clue from the way the house was trashed. He asked me to tell you: tell you he was sorry and that he’d see you up in Litchfield.’

There was really nothing Hibbert could have told him, thought Carver. He looked beyond Jennings, to the office staff. ‘Where’s Janice?’

‘She got upset at the service,’ said Hilda. ‘She’s gone home.’

Security would have the combination code to her safe, Carver guessed. He couldn’t wait until the following day to retrieve the valise. Or finally to go through its contents to understand, if he could, the importance of BHYF and NOXT.

Carver tensed for Jane to say she would return to Wall Street with him but she didn’t, accepting his promise not to be longer than an hour. Security did have the code and Carver’s relief began at the sight of the valise and settled when, inside his own locked office, he found what he initially believed to be everything intact. It only took him fifteen minutes to realize it wasn’t. He’d counted the folios he had taken from Northcote’s nightstand and the six spreadsheets were there but they, in themselves, were incomplete for both BHYF and NOXT. There was, though, a pattern. It was classic double-accounting, with sufficient reworked figures to see that already-substantial profits were being hugely inflated, doubling or even trebling the returns. Which didn’t make sense. These were the sort of massaged, fraudulent figures that he’d accused Northcote of creating when they’d had their confrontation over the three other companies, meant to be produced at a stockholders’ meeting or just prior to a flotation, to boost share prices and investors’ confidence. But BHYF and NOXT were clearly shown on the papers in front of him to be private, non-stockholder companies with inaccessible registrations in Grand Cayman, certainly not businesses about to offer themselves on a publicly scrutinized, monitored market. It was a jigsaw. A jigsaw with too many pieces still missing. He’d only skimmed the other spreadsheets in Northcote’s safe, everything far too brief to learn what he needed to know. His linking denominator in all five companies was this inexplicable inflation. Where was the bridge, the conduit joining it all together, making it understandable? Still hidden, he answered himself.

Geoffrey Davis, the firm’s lawyer, answered the internal telephone himself and said at once: ‘I didn’t expect you back this afternoon.’

‘One or two things to look at,’ said Carver. ‘Let’s talk about the Chase.’

‘What about it?’

‘Do we have a safe-deposit facility there as well as the firm’s account?’

‘George did.’

After so many blocked alleys Carver’s feeling was more of hope than expectation. ‘In his name? Or the firm’s.’

‘The firm’s.’

‘So I’ve authority to access it?’

‘Might be an idea to advise their security director. You want me to do that?’

‘Right away,’ said Carver.

‘Too late today. Tomorrow OK?’

‘First thing,’ said Carver.

It was time to get back to as much normality as possible, Carver decided, replacing the telephone. Hilda had to reestablish his diary. And devise a way for her and Janice Snow to work together. And he had to see Alice, with more reason than normal. He needed to hear what she was so excited about. She must have been directly beside the telephone from the quickness with which she picked it up.

‘I’d hoped it would be you,’ she said. ‘Kind of expected it.’ She wouldn’t tell him on the phone how much more she’d discovered. One of the few rules between them – the most important rule of all – was always to be honest and she hadn’t been: not exactly dishonest, not talking to him about how she learned some of the things that had made her successful. Still, better disclosed when they were face to face.

‘I certainly didn’t expect to see you there today.’

‘Jane’s very beautiful.’

‘I don’t want to go this route.’ Alice’s phrase, he remembered.

‘Sorry. You OK?’

‘No. There’s a lot I want to talk to you about.’

‘A lot I want to talk about to you, too.’

‘Tomorrow?’

‘When?’

‘Early. I’ve got to go to the Chase in the morning. I could come straight on from there.’

‘Still nothing?’

Carver hesitated. In some manner, somehow, she’d involved herself, obviously wanting to help. But potentially endangering herself, which in every way – at all costs – he had to stop her doing. ‘Things still to check out. You haven’t done anything more, have you?’

Now the hesitation was from her end. ‘I’m looking forward to our talking tomorrow.’

‘That isn’t an answer.’

‘I think I know how it’s done.’

Which was more than he did. ‘You told me that already. And I told you to stop.’

‘What time tomorrow?’

‘Just stay in the apartment until I get there. And don’t do anything else until I do.’

‘How about I love you?’

‘I love you. So please do as I ask.’

‘I love you too.’

That wasn’t a proper answer either, thought Carver. He was soon to find others, though. Some of which he wanted to know and others which he didn’t.

Jack Jennings was waiting at Northcote’s West 66th Street apartment, as they’d arranged, and said at once: ‘I think I’ve found what you’re looking for,’ which he had.

The safe was in Northcote’s study, fitted behind a cupboard as it had been in Litchfield. This was a much more modern model, although still key-operated, and the last remaining unidentified Litchfield key, the odd red one, fitted perfectly. It contained far more than Litchfield, although it took Carver far less time to absorb. There were a lot more photographs of Northcote and the unknown Anna, whose surname he discovered from three of the accompanying documents to be Simpson, and other photographs he looked at intently but failed to recognize. And there were five spreadsheets which he guessed, without comparing, to be part of what he’d found in the nightstand at Litchfield.

Carver sat at Northcote’s desk almost too long, the BHYF and NOXT material of least interest, as he realized it couldn’t be taken from here, not tonight at least. When he told Jennings he’d be back early the following morning the butler said he hoped everything was all right and Carver said he hoped it was, too.

With the extra staff, and the nurses who were still there, the East 62nd Street apartment seemed very overcrowded: when Carver went to enter the dining room that night, one of the Litchfield maids helping Manuel stood aside to let him in as he held back to let her out and Manuel completed the confusion by colliding into her, from behind.

Jane said: ‘I’m taking four back to Litchfield with me.’

‘That’ll help.’

‘They can live-in there but you need to check the apartments here.’

I know.’ He’d actually forgotten. Remembering was part of returning to normality, he told himself.

Manuel led the maid back in with the serving trays, his irritation obvious at what he clearly regarded as an

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