“He used the car as normal after that, and then one night they found it crushed on the eastbound lane of the A329. It had been hit by a truck, apparently, although the other vehicle was never traced. Brian died instantly.” She fell silent and wiped a tear from her eyelash.
“I’m sorry to ask you these things,” said Mary. “Did you ever drive it yourself?”
“Once. I didn’t like it.”
“I know the feeling. I have a colleague with an Allegro I have to drive.”
“It wasn’t that. There was something else. Something
Mary knew what she meant. “The odometer went backward, didn’t it?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Aldiss quietly, “yes, it did.”
“What news?” asked Ashley, turning down the volume on “Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time).”
Mary sat in the passenger seat and opened her phone. “The driver was killed and the car destroyed in an accident on the A329 three years ago. The odometer went backward on that car, too.”
She texted Jack: CAUTION ALLEGRO MILEAGE APPROACHES ZERO MARY, then snapped her cell phone shut.
“What does it mean?”
“I’ve no idea. Have a look at the other owners first thing tomorrow,” said Mary. “I’d like to know how many of them are still with us.”
“I’ll get onto it. So… back to my parents’ place?” he asked, positively — and literally — swelling with expectation.
“Yes,” said Mary a bit absently, “drive on.”
They drove the short distance to Pangbourne and pulled into a very ordinary-looking estate, the proliferation of seventies Japanese sedans giving it a very time-warped appearance.
“Is the whole neighborhood alien?” asked Mary.
“Pretty much,” he replied. “Very few people want to live next to us, although I’ve no idea why—we make good neighbors.”
Ashley got out, ran across the roof and opened the door for Mary before she could do it herself.
“Thank you,” she said graciously.
“My pleasure,” said Ashley, “and
“I wouldn’t dream of it.”
28. What Jack Did That Night
Seediest hotel in Reading: The thirty-eight-room Bastardos on Station Approach holds this dubious distinction, having been awarded the coveted Five-Bedbug Award by
Jack parked the Allegro in the street a few doors down from his house and tried to catch a glimpse of Madeleine through the kitchen window. He could see shadows moving around behind the curtains, but little else. He hadn’t spoken to her at all that day and wondered whether she would still be pissed at him for being a PDR or, worse, not telling her. It was the least of his worries. If Bartholomew really
His cell phone rang. “Yuh?”
“I have information for you,” said a woman’s voice on the other end.
“Really?” responded Jack, well used to crank calls.
“Yes, really. About Goldilocks. Hotel Bastardos, room twenty-seven, half an hour,
He frowned and looked at his watch. It was a little past nine, and he thought of calling Mary to back him up, but if she and Ash were on a date, he didn’t really want to disturb them. He thought of calling Madeleine, then decided not to. It was the wrong decision, of course, but he had made up some very compelling arguments in his own head, so thought he’d go and see what his mystery caller had to say for herself and put off the fight that Madeleine would surely give him for at least an hour.
The Hotel Bastardos was the grottiest hotel in a series of grotty hotels located near the railway station. It was in a shabby state of disrepair. The interior was grimy and smelly, cheap and nasty, decorated badly or not at all. The rooms were small and cheerless, the windows cracked and grimy, the curtains stained and torn. The hot water was patchy, the electricity unreliable and the food lamentable. Rooms could be hired for the month, week, day or hour, and the only room service anyone got was the sort that usually follows a call to one of those brightly colored cards you find in telephone booths. This was
Jack trotted up the stairs, past the landing where the Easter Bunny had once held him at bay with a stream of hot lead from her M-16. It was over a decade ago, and she’d done her time. People were often fooled, he mused, by the one day in the year on which she did charitable work—the rest of the time she was the rabbit from hell. He topped the stairs and turned left down the hallway, along the threadbare carpet and to room twenty-seven. He stood to one side and rapped on the door. There was a muffled “Enter!” from within, and he pushed open the door.
The room was poorly furnished and dimly lit; a forty-watt bulb was burning in a lamp on the sideboard, a scarf lying across the shade to diffuse the light. A neon sign flashed outside the window, and the hum of the air- conditioning units on the roof next door gave the room a certain degree of noir charm. Jack had arrested a murder suspect in this same room seven years previously, but it might have been yesterday; the room hadn’t changed a jot. The same old wallpaper, the same badly painted woodwork.
There was a figure on the bed.
“Hello, Jack.”
“Good-bye, Agatha.”
Jack turned on his heel and walked back out the door and down the staircase, seriously pissed off. Why couldn’t she leave him alone? He’d heard that Briggs and Agatha had marital difficulties, but he didn’t see why
A familiar voice said, “Where have you just been?”
Jack stopped. There was a figure in the shadows of the bus stop outside the hotel entrance. His heart froze. It was Briggs, and he looked a bit drunk—and not at all happy.
“Good evening, sir. A contact called me with information, but it was nothing.”
“You expect me to believe that?”