had something to do with her death…'
'We haven't ruled out the possibility of anyone's involvement, but it's early days yet. What can you tell me about Dawn's boyfriend?'
'Not much. I know his name's Alex, and that he sells porcelain in Portobello Market. I've never met him.'
'It's a small world, the market. He shouldn't be too difficult to trace. Did he know about Dawn's pregnancy?'
'I doubt Dawn had said anything to him. She didn't know what she was going to do.'
Glancing at her watch, Gemma saw that it was just after noon. The Portobello Market would still be in full swing, giving her a good opportunity to track down Alex the porcelain dealer.
As she thanked Natalie for her help and took her leave, Natalie stopped her with a touch, her eyes filling again with tears. 'Could you let me know when you find out who did this? I don't want to hear it on the news.'
'It's a promise,' Gemma answered, and vowed to keep it.
Bryony stood beside Marc at the serving table, ladling hot vegetable soup into bowls. He added wheat rolls and apples to the trays before passing them on to the hungry and indigent waiting patiently in the queue. Clients, he preferred to call them, as he was providing them a service, and feeling the term identified them in a more positive way than saying 'the homeless' or 'the needy.'
How like Marc, she thought, to show such sensitivity to the delicate nuances of self-respect. Here, he was in his element, always ready with an interested expression, or a kind word. And they responded, these 'clients.' For many he provided the first step towards rejoining mainstream life, but he had no less patience for those who would never leave the streets and the meager existence they provided.
Through the glass-fronted doors, Bryony could see those shoppers who'd been resolute enough to make it to the bottom end of the Portobello Road, and now milled round the graffiti-decorated pedestrian mall that had been built adjacent to the Motorway flyover. Marc's soup kitchen was only a few doors from the old Portobello School, with its two entrances marked separately for girls and boys.
'You're quiet today,' he commented, when the last person had moved through the queue, a withered woman who favored him with a beatific toothless smile. 'I'm sure we always have a bigger crowd on Saturdays when you come.'
'Sorry. It's this business about Dawn Arrowood and Alex.'
'I know,' he replied somberly. 'I haven't quite taken it in myself. But you know what really worries me? Fern. Now poor old Fern thinks she's going to save the day with Alex, and I doubt very much that's going to happen. And I'm not sure how convincingly sympathetic she can be, considering the fact that she despised Dawn Arrowood.'
'I can't say I blame her, under the circumstances. And she never had a chance to get to know Dawn- not that
'I doubt that would have mattered to Fern. I only hope Alex won't slap her down too hard.'
'Fern's a grown woman- there's no law that says she can't make a fool of herself.' Bryony heard her words hit a bit too close to home and flushed. The memory of Gavin's dig yesterday about her efforts to impress Marc still stung. 'I just can't believe that Dawn is dead. She was right there in the clinic yesterday morning, worrying over her cat, with Gavin putting on his usual dog-and-pony show for her- you know how he is with pretty women-'
'An ordinary day, then.'
'Except that Dawn always tolerated Gavin; she managed to ignore his advances graciously, if you know what I mean. But yesterday she seemed a little edgy, and when she came out of the examining room she looked like thunder. Didn't even hear me when I said good-bye.'
'Maybe Gavin finally went too far.'
Bryony shrugged. 'I've always assumed Gavin's all bark and no bite.'
'Could she have been upset about the cat?'
'It was just the usual abscessed bite. Tommy gets in fights, the little bugger.' Bryony filled a second bowl of soup for a frail young man whose retriever looked in better shape than he did.
'Marc,' she said slowly, 'I've been meaning to ask you something, then with everything that's happened this morning it flew right out of my mind.' She glanced at him, trying to gauge his responsiveness, then forced herself to go on. 'Could I set up a weekly clinic for your clients' animals?'
'Here?'
She nodded. 'I thought maybe on Sunday afternoons.'
'But, Bryony, you know they couldn't pay.'
'Of course not. But I could fund it myself in the beginning- it's my time that's the most expensive factor- then, if it takes off, I thought I could solicit donations in the neighborhood.'
'But Bryony, it's too much-'
'I could only do vaccinations and minor injuries and illnesses, I know that, but surely that's better than no care at all.'
'No, I mean it's too much for you. I don't think you realize how much of your time and energy this could take-'
'How can
'No, you're absolutely right. I sounded a self-righteous prig, telling you you weren't up to the task, and I owe you an apology.' One of his rare smiles lit his face. 'I think it's a splendid idea, and that you're equally splendid for thinking of it. When shall we start?'
Gemma left the car in the police station car park, knowing that the likelihood of parking anywhere near Portobello Road on a Saturday would be nil. As she walked along Ladbroke Road towards the market, she found that although the rain had stopped it was bitterly cold, and the bare branches of the trees were pearled with droplets.
By the time she reached the top end of Portobello Road, she was shivering, and she looked in envy at the one-way tide of shoppers, their brisk steps and bright eyes revealing an insatiable appetite for a bargain. But here the narrow, curving street held only flats and a few posh shops; they had a ways to go before reaching the stalls and arcades packed with imagined treasures.
She came to a complete halt in front of the entrance to the Manna Cafe, run by St. Peter's Church. Why not have some lunch and a hot drink to warm her up? Edging her way through the milling pedestrians, she crossed the pretty little courtyard and pulled open the cafe door, relaxing instantly as the warmth and cooking aromas enveloped her.
A half hour later, having devoured a hot bacon sandwich, she nursed a cup of tea and thought about what she had learned. Karl Arrowood was certainly shaping up odds-on favorite for prime suspect, and that was without taking into account the statistical likelihood that he had murdered his wife. If he'd had a vasectomy, and he'd suspected or discovered that his wife was pregnant, that certainly gave him motive. Opportunity was a given; he could even have been waiting for Dawn when she arrived home. What Gemma needed was corroboration, and if Arrowood had threatened his wife, Dawn might have told her lover.
When her waitress, a woman with pale Fraulein-like plaits wrapped round her head, brought her bill, Gemma said, 'Do you by any chance know a porcelain dealer called Alex? Youngish, I think, and nice-looking?'
'That'd be Alex Dunn,' the girl said in an accent nearer East London than East Germany. 'I know he lives up the road, in one of the mews, but I've no idea which flat.'
'Do you know where he trades in the market, then?'
'Um, I think his stall's in the arcade just down the road on the left, before you get to Elgin Crescent. Just ask anyone in the arcade. They'll point him out for you.'