smiled.
‘Where’s Dave?’ Donna asked.
‘Getting himself a drink. I told him to get you one, too.’
‘Jackie, I couldn’t drink. Not now,’ Donna protested.
‘Yes, you can,’ Jackie said quietly. ‘A brandy will help you relax.’ She turned and saw Dave Turner entering the room, a glass in each hand. He smiled at Donna and made his way past a group of guests standing by the door talking.
As he stepped clear of them another man almost walked into him.
Donna frowned as she saw him.
It was one of the men who had been standing at Chris’s grave when the car had brought her away, she was sure of it.
The man apologized to Dave and made his way out of the room, followed by a companion.
Another of the trio of mourners she’d seen as she’d left the cemetery. Donna was certain of it. She still didn’t recognize them.
Turner handed her the brandy and watched as she sipped, wincing as it burned its way down to her stomach.
‘Thanks, Dave,’ she said. He smiled down at her. ‘That guy you just bumped into. Did you recognize him?’
‘Should I?’ Turner wanted to know.
‘I can’t place him. I saw him at the cemetery, him and two other men. I knew all of Chris’s friends, or so I thought, but I can’t seem to put a name to those three.’
‘I wouldn’t worry about it,’ Jackie told her, squeezing her hand again. ‘Drink your brandy.’ She smiled.
Donna took another sip, wincing again, then she got to her feet, looking around the room.
From one corner, hidden from her view, Martin Connelly watched intently.
‘Have you seen Julie anywhere?’ Donna wanted to know.
Jackie shook her head.
‘I’ll be back in a while,’ Donna said, excusing herself.
She made her way across the room, pausing to speak to Chris’s publisher, then to a couple of magazine editors he’d been friendly with. More condolences were offered.
She found more people in the hallway. They smiled politely at her as she passed, making her way upstairs, anxious to be away from everyone, wondering how long it would be before the guests started to leave. She paused on the landing for a moment and exhaled deeply. The top storey of the house seemed quieter, the atmosphere heavier. Donna crossed to her bedroom and entered.
Julie looked up in surprise as her sister entered.
Tears had stained her cheeks and her mascara had run, causing ugly black marks around her eyes. She wiped self-consciously at them as Donna entered, a worried expression on her face.
‘I’m sorry, Donna,’ Julie said, wiping her face. ‘I didn’t want this to happen. I didn’t want you to see me like this.’
Donna crossed to her and the two women embraced.
‘I wanted to be strong for
‘Stay here for a while if you want to,’ Donna said.
‘It’s me who should be saying that to you,’ Julie told her, waving away the suggestion. ‘I told you, I’m okay now.’
‘You don’t have to feel sorry for missing him, too, Julie. A lot of people will,’ Donna told her.
The younger woman nodded slowly and stood up. She glanced at her reflection in the mirror and shrugged.
‘Perhaps I’d better just touch up the worst bits first,’ she said, smiling thinly.
Donna smiled too and walked out of the room.
She stepped back in only seconds later.
‘Julie,’ she said, her voice low, her expression troubled, ‘did anyone else come up here with you? Follow you up here?’
‘Like who?’ Julie wanted to know.
‘You haven’t heard anyone come up here since you did?’ Donna persisted.
‘No,’ Julie replied, looking puzzled. ‘Why do you ask?’
Donna stepped back onto the landing, followed by her sister. The older woman was looking down the short corridor towards the door which was normally kept shut.
‘I think there’s someone in Chris’s office.’
As the two women approached the door, Donna noticed it was indeed ajar. From inside there was very little sound; just the soft rustling of paper on paper. Occasionally there came the furtive squeaking of a drawer or filing cabinet. Then there was silence.
Donna pushed the door open and stepped inside.
The man turned slowly and looked directly at her.
He was tall, his hair short and dark, cropped close at the nape of his neck. He had a thin face which rested on a very thick neck. Instead of looking surprised by the discovery, he met Donna’s gaze with one of such intensity as to make
‘What the hell are you doing in here?’ she snapped, looking first at the man and then at the office.
He still had a piece of paper in his hand, taken from one of the open drawers in Chris’s desk.
‘Who gave you permission to break in here?’ Donna hissed angrily.
The man smiled.
‘I’d scarcely call it breaking in, Mrs Ward,’ he said, his lip curling contemptuously. ‘I realize that perhaps I should have asked your permission first, but you seemed otherwise engaged.’ He made a theatrical show of dropping the piece of paper back onto the desk.
‘Get out of here now,’ she said, her angry stare never leaving the man.
‘If you’d just let me explain,’ he began.
‘There’s nothing
The man looked at Julie, then back at Donna.
‘I was looking for something which belonged to me,’ he said evenly. ‘Your husband and I had been working together. He’d borrowed some reference books from me.’
‘Working together?’ Donna said incredulously. ‘Chris always worked alone. He never mentioned you or anyone else that he was working with. What’s your name?’
‘Peter Farrell. Your husband must have mentioned me at some time,’ the man said, smoothing his short hair down with a large hand.
Donna shook her head.
‘Why were you going through his papers?’ she demanded.
‘I told you,’ Farrell insisted. ‘I was looking for the books I lent him. I didn’t want to trouble you. You seem to have enough to worry about.’
‘Thanks for the concern,’ Donna said, sarcastically. ‘So, instead of worrying me you thought you’d just come up here and break into my husband’s office?’
Farrell laughed and shook his head.
‘Don’t laugh at me, you bastard,’ Donna snapped. ‘If you’re not out of this room, if you’re not out of this