thinking on my part, I'm afraid.

It's funny how much we depend on our bodies without ever really thinking about it. Cells and organs chug away, blood runs, heart pumps. We worry endlessly about accidents and falls and catching things. Betrayal from within is the last thing we expect.

And cancer is the most insidious enemy, the body turning on itself like some secret cannibal. How could this happen and I not know it? Not feel it? Not sense a spot of decay stretching fingers outward?

Radiation and chemotherapy, the consultant says.

Will I poison my body's hideous child? Dear god, I feel so bloody helpless.

Sometimes I go hours without thinking of it. I manage to pretend I'm like the others, whole and healthy, manage to pretend that the decision to grant planning permission on some project is of earth-shaking importance, pretend I care whether the new cafe has better chips than the old, pretend anything other than my own body matters.

It comes out in tufts, in handfuls, like plucking a bird. Decorates the bottom of the tub with long, dark swirls, fills combs and brushes with thick mats. I've thought of putting it out in the garden for the birds to use in their nests. How absurd.

May would laugh, tell me I'd got my comeuppance. She berated me often enough for my vanity. I've taken to wearing caps, a beret mostly, like a travesty of a French peasant. Can't bear to see Theo.

New clerk at the office while I was away for the last course of treatment. Such a lame duck, with her missing buttons and terribly fair skin that flushes whenever anyone speaks to her. She watches me when she thinks I'm not looking, her expression one of… what? Not pity, I've seen that often enough. Concern? It's very odd.

They've washed their hands of me, abandoned me to Morpheus. So sorry, can't do any more for you, let us get on to someone who will feel properly grateful.

Too weak now to work, left without much fanfare. What did I expect?

Meg Bellamy's come, first bringing cards and flowers from the office, then on her own when the rest of the staff's communal guilt began to fade.

Reading Eliot again. These long, golden autumn afternoons do seem to have an almost physical presence, an existence separate from my experience.

I've been rereading all my favorites, folding the stories around me like the comfort of old friends.

The Major and I have developed a routine. We don't speak of it, of course, that would be somehow stepping beyond the bounds of propriety, but we observe it faithfully nonetheless. On fine afternoons I sit on the steps and watch him work in the garden, then when he begins to clean his tools I make tea. Sometimes we talk, sometimes not, comfortable either way. On one of his most loquacious days he volunteered a little history: he served in India, in Calcutta, during and after the war. Must have been the colonial manner that struck a chord when I first met him. He would have been a young officer when I was a child, might even have known my parents, considering the incestuous nature of the compound.

Since they stopped the treatments my hair's come in again, thick and short, like a child's, and as I've lost weight my breasts have shrunk to almost nothing. I've become androgynous, a fragile shell of skin and muscle wrapped around memories.

I shall need a nurse soon.

Chapter Sixteen

'You didn't know he served in India?' Gemma swiveled in Kincaid's chair, having usurped it when she arrived before him at the Yard.

'Until Jasmine died I'd hardly passed the time of day with him,' Kincaid said rather defensively from the visitor's chair on the other side of his desk. 'Why would I have thought to ask him that? And if you're going to take over my office,' he added, 'make yourself useful and put out a request for his service records.'

The phone rang as Gemma reached for it, the distinctive double-burr stilling her hand for a moment in mid- air. Lifting the receiver, she said, 'Superintendent Kincaid's office' in her most efficient manner, then pulling pad and pen toward her began to write. 'I'll pass it along. Ta.' She reread her scribbled notes, then looked at Kincaid. 'A Mrs. Alice Finney left a message for you with the switchboard. Said there was no need for you to call her back, she just wanted to tell you she remembered his name. It was Timothy Franklin.'

'That's it?'

Gemma raised an eyebrow. 'What's that all about?'

'A boy that Jasmine seems to have been involved with just before she cleared out of Dorset like the hounds of hell were after her. Give Dorset Constabulary a ring and see if they can trace him. And while you're at it,' he continued before she could protest, 'get on to the Constable at Abinger Hammer. Theo Dent doesn't have a driver's license- I checked-but I'd like to know if he bought a ticket at the local station last Thursday night, or if he called a taxi, or if anyone else might have driven him to a different station or loaned him a car.' He stopped, waiting for Gemma's pen to catch up. 'And find out if he owns a bicycle.'

'I don't think-'

'I know you don't, but I'd like to check it out anyway. Theo Dent may be as innocent as Mother Teresa, but Jasmine's death bailed him out too bloody conveniently for my liking. Don't worry,' he added with a grin, 'we'll get on to our Roger. This morning, in fact. We've an appointment with the head at his old school before lunch. It was the best I could do. No college or university, and he never seems to have held a steady job.'

'Somehow that doesn't surprise me,' Gemma said acidly.

'Did you drive this morning?'

'No. You?'

He shook his head. 'We'll sign a car out, the sooner the better. There's one stop I'd like to make along the way.'

Kincaid watched Gemma's obvious enjoyment as she eased the Rover through traffic. 'Makes a nice change, doesn't it?'

'A covered wagon would be an improvement over my Escort,' she said as she slipped into a parking space along Tottenham Court Road. 'Not bad for a Thursday morning. I expected to have to queue for it. And thank heavens the rain's stopped.' The thin haze covering the morning sun showed promise of burning off in the course of the day.

Martha Trevellyan answered the door almost before the sound of the buzzer had died away, showing not the least surprise at finding coppers on her doorstep. Kincaid wondered if she'd seen them crossing the road from the flat's front window.

'Sergeant James.' She smiled at Gemma and motioned them in. 'I hope I look a bit more business-like than the last time you dropped by,' she said, gesturing to her sweater and skirt. 'I've even managed make-up. What can I do for you?'

Kincaid introduced himself, then said, 'Just a quick question-won't take up more than a moment of your time.' He looked around at the neat living/office area, thinking that the lack of personal clutter matched Martha Trevellyan's brisk manner. He sensed, though, that some of the briskness might be manufactured, and that Martha

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