'Can we sit down?'

Instead of answering, Tim shuffled over to the nearest orange chair and sat, resting his hands on the scarred wooden arms.

Kincaid pulled a chair around so that he could face him and tried again. 'Do you mind if I call you Tim?'

A blink, and after a long pause, 'Timmy.'

'Okay, Timmy.' Kincaid cursed himself for the false heartiness he heard in his own voice. 'I want to ask you about someone you knew a long time ago.' Timmy's eyes had strayed to the soundless television. 'Timmy,' Kincaid said again, as normally as he could. 'Do you remember Jasmine?'

The dark eyes left the television and focused on Kincaid, then a smile lit Tim's face and transformed it. ' 'Course I remember Jasmine.'

It was a few seconds before Kincaid realized that the expected How is she? What's she doing? responses were not going to follow. 'You were friends, weren't you?' he asked, wishing he had more knowledge of how Tim Franklin's mental disorder affected his thought processes. Was his memory intact?

'We're mates, Jasmine and me.'

'You went around together, didn't you, in the village?'

Tim nodded, his gaze drifting back to the television.

Kincaid tried a little more aggressive tack. 'But your mum and Jasmine's Aunt May didn't like your being friends. They tried to stop you from being together, didn't they?'

Tim made no response and Kincaid grimaced in frustration. 'Do you remember Jasmine leaving, Tim? Did that upset you?'

Although Tim's eyes remained fixed on the telly, one of the hands which had been resting loosely on the chair arm clenched convulsively. Under his breath he muttered, 'Pretty hair. Pretty hair. Pretty hair.'

The woman in the wheelchair moaned. Kincaid looked around, startled. He had forgotten about her as completely as if she'd been a piece of furniture. She moaned again more loudly and Kincaid felt the hair on the back of his neck rise. The sound carried primitive pain, more animal than human.

Tim Franklin began to shake his head, although his eyes never left the television. The back-and-forth motion grew faster, more agitated, as the woman's moans increased in frequency.

Kincaid stood up. 'Tim. Timmy!'

'No-no-no-no-no,' Timmy said, head still moving, both fists now clenched and pounding on the chair arms.

Fearing that the situation would soon be completely out of control, Kincaid rushed to the door and called out into the corridor, 'Nurse. Nurse!'

Her white-uniformed figure appeared around the corner. She smiled cheerfully at him. 'Things getting a bit out of hand, are they? First thing to do is to get Mrs. Mason back to her bed.' Kincaid stepped aside as she entered the room, still talking. 'It's all right, dear, we'll just have a little nap now,' she said soothingly as she wheeled the woman's chair to the door. 'Be hours now before we get that one settled down,' she added, nodding her head toward Tim. 'You'll not get anything else out of him.'

Kincaid looked back as he followed her from the room. Tim Franklin was still pounding and chanting, his head jerking to a rhythm Kincaid couldn't hear.

Chapter Eighteen

The hands on the Midget's dash clock read straight-up six o'clock when Kincaid pulled up to the curb in Carlingford Road. He killed the engine and sat in the silent car, unable to shake the depression that had ridden him all the way back from Dorset. If he'd listened to Gemma he wouldn't have wasted a day on a fool's errand and still be facing what he'd dreaded in the first place. Telling himself there was no point in putting it off any longer, he still stalled, taking his time locking the car and fastening the tarp over its cherry-red paint.

There was no answer to his knock on the Major's door. He waited a moment, then climbed the stairs and let himself into Jasmine's flat. A sleek, black body wrapped around his ankles as he turned on the lamps. 'Hullo, Sid. You doing okay, mate?' Reaching down, he stroked Sid's head until the cat's green eyes closed to contented slits. 'Be patient, you'll get your supper.'

Kincaid unlocked the French doors and stepped outside. The Major knelt before the roses he'd bought in Jasmine's memory. Only the pale fabric of his trousers across his buttocks and the rhythmic motion of the hand holding the trowel made him visible in the dusk. Kincaid descended the steps and crossed the square of garden, then squatted beside him. 'You're working late. The light's almost gone.'

The Major gave one last dig with the trowel and sat back, hands on his knees. 'Weeds. Can't keep up with 'em this time of year. They'll take over like the Day of the bloody Triffids if you give 'em an inch.'

Kincaid smiled. Maybe the Major had another secret occupation even less likely than choral singing-an addiction to watching late-night B movies on the telly. 'I wondered if I might have a word with you.'

The Major looked at him for the first time. 'Of course. Let me just wash up.' He stood up, his knees popping audibly. Kincaid trailed behind him as he cleaned his trowel in the work area under the steps, then followed him into the kitchen as he washed his hands and scrubbed his nails.

The small kitchen was spotlessly clean, the countertops bare except for a marked-down bag of potatoes and an unopened carton of beer. 'Like one?' the Major asked as he wiped his hands on a tea towel, and when Kincaid nodded he twisted two tops off and stowed them neatly in the bin under the sink. 'Pensioner's luxury,' he said after he'd taken a swallow and smacked his lips. 'Pinch pennies on necessities in order to buy good beer once or twice a week.' He smiled, his teeth still strong and white under the toothbrush mustache. 'Worth it, though.'

They went into the spartan sitting room. The Major switched on a lamp and motioned Kincaid to a seat on the sofa while he took the armchair himself. The brown, nubby fabric on the arms of the chair had patches rubbed shiny with wear and its seat cushion bore a permanent indentation. Kincaid imagined the Major sitting there evening after solitary evening with his bottle of beer and the telly for company, and he was more loath than ever to say what he knew he must. 'Major, I understand you served in India after the war.'

The Major regarded him quizzically. 'Understand from whom, Mr. Kincaid? I don't believe I've ever mentioned it.'

Kincaid, feeling as though he'd been caught out in a distasteful act of voyeurism, fought the urge to apologize. 'I'm conducting a murder investigation, Major, and as unpleasant as I may personally find it, I've had to check background on everyone who had even the slightest connection with Jasmine. We called up your service records. You were stationed in Calcutta during the time that Jasmine's family lived there.' He waited for the explosion, but none came.

After a moment the Major took another swallow from his beer and sighed. 'Aye, well, I'd have mentioned it myself if I'd known it was of any importance to you. It was all a very long time ago.'

'But you told Jasmine?'

'Aye, and wished I had not.'

'Why was that, Major?' Kincaid asked quietly, setting his beer on the end table and leaning forward. For the first time he noticed the age spots patterning the Major's callused hands.

'Because I couldn't tell her the whole truth and it created a falseness between us. She might not have noticed, but I could never feel as comfortable with her after that.' He paused, and when Kincaid didn't speak he went on after a moment. 'I'm a god-fearing man, Mr. Kincaid, but I don't believe the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children. To my mind, God wouldn't be so bloody unfair. But Jasmine now, I thought she would see it differently, would take it upon herself, and she'd had her share of suffering, poor lass.' Taking a final pull on his beer, he held up the empty bottle and raised an eyebrow at Kincaid.

Kincaid shook his head. 'No, thanks.' He waited until the Major returned from the kitchen with a fresh bottle, then said, 'What would Jasmine have taken upon herself, Major?'

The Major stared at the beer bottle as he rotated it delicately between his fingertips. 'Do you have any idea what happened in Calcutta in 1946, Mr. Kincaid?' He looked up, and Kincaid saw that his pale blue eyes were bloodshot. 'Muslims seeking partition attacked and killed Hindus, and the rioting that followed spread through the

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