city like wildfire. The history books refer to it as the Calcutta Killings.' He gave a snort of derision. 'Makes it sound like a bank robbery, or some idiot gunning people down in a supermarket.' Shaking his head in disgust, he said, 'They've no idea. You see horrors enough in your job, I dare say, but I hope you never see the likes of those days. Six thousand bodies in the streets by the time it was all over. Six thousand bodies rotting, or burning in the fires that smoldered for days, You could never forget the smell. It clung to your skin, the roof of your mouth, the inside of your nose.' He drank deeply, as if the beer might wash the memory of the taste from his mouth.
'Jasmine would have been only a child,' Kincaid said, doing some mental arithmetic. 'Why should she have felt guilty?'
'Jasmine's father was a minor civil servant, a paper pusher, with a reputation for not being particularly competent. He was in charge of evacuating a small residential area, a sort of civil defense sergeant.' The Major drank again, and Kincaid fancied he heard the edges of his words beginning to slur. 'He bungled it. Only a few families got out before the mob poured through the streets. I've wondered since if he put his own family first, or if he just turned tail to save his own skin.'
Kincaid waited silently for what he now guessed was coming. He felt the rough, brown fabric of the sofa under his fingertips, smelled a faint spicy scent that might have been the Major's aftershave, overlaid with the odor of beer.
'It took me three days to find my wife and daughter, and then I only recognized them by their clothes. I won't tell you what had been done to them before they died-it doesn't bear thinking of, even now.' The rims of the Major's eyes were as red now as if they'd been lined with a pencil, but he still spoke slowly, reflectively. 'I thought nothing of it when Jasmine first moved here, Dent's a common enough name, after all. It was only when she began to tell me about her childhood that I realized who she must be.' He smiled. 'Thought someone up there,' he raised his eyes heavenward, 'was playing some kind of practical joke on me, at first. Then the more I came to know her the more I wondered if she'd been sent to me as a replacement for my own daughter. Silly old bugger,' he added, the words definitely slurring now. Then he looked directly into Kincaid's eyes and said more distinctly, 'You see I couldn't have told Jasmine, don't you, Mr. Kincaid? I wouldn't have hurt her for the world.'
Kincaid finished his beer and stood up. 'Thank you, Major. I'm sorry.' Letting himself out the back way, he climbed the steps to Jasmine's flat and stood a moment at the top, looking down into the garden. The Major's roses were only visible as dark shapes in the light from the flat's windows. Roses as tribute to Jasmine, and perhaps to his long-dead wife and daughter as well. Kincaid felt sure that the Major had carried their deaths inside himself for most of a lifetime, a tightly wrapped nugget of sorrow. Perhaps his contact with Jasmine had begun a much-needed release.
Lights came on in the house behind the garden. Through the windows the illuminated rooms were as sharp and clear as stage sets, and Kincaid wondered what secret despair their inhabitants hid under their everyday personas. Someone drew the curtains, the glimpse into those unknown lives vanishing as quickly as it had appeared. Kincaid shivered and went in.
He closed the last journal slowly and returned it to the shoebox. A glass of wine stood half-drunk on the coffee table-he'd become so absorbed in reading that he'd forgotten it.
The final journal entry was dated the week before Jasmine's death and occupied the last page in the book.
Kincaid stood and stretched, finishing his wine and carrying his crepe wrappers into the kitchen. After leaving Jasmine's flat he'd changed into jeans and sweater and walked up Rosslyn Hill to the crepe stand. The young man in the open booth poured batter and wielded his spatula with the dexterity of an artist, his arms bare against the evening chill. 'Ham? Cheese? Mushrooms? Bell peppers? Fancy anything else, then?' he'd asked, the questions not interrupting his concentration or the smoothness of his movements. Kincaid had watched, his back turned deliberately to the Haagen-Dazs shop, determined not to think of Jasmine and rum-raisin ice cream.
Now he washed out his glass and stood irresolutely in his kitchen, tired from the day's driving, too restless and unsettled to contemplate sleep. After a long moment he picked up his keys from the counter and went downstairs to Jasmine's flat.
He'd left a lamp on earlier for the cat, chiding himself for being a fool. Weren't cats supposed to see in the dark? And he doubted very much whether Sid found comfort in the familiar light.
Everything looked just as he had left it, looked just as it had looked a week ago when he and Gemma had searched the flat from top to bottom. Nevertheless, he started again, lifting the mattress on the hospital bed, feeling under the armchair cushion, running his hands behind the rows of the books on the shelves. He moved to the secretary, examining each nook and slot as carefully as he had the first time.
People's lives accumulated the oddest detritus, he thought, staring at the items littering the top drawer. Stubs of old theater tickets, aged and yellowed business cards, receipts for things bought and forgotten long ago, all mixed with a jumble of pens, pencil stubs and scraps of paper.
What would he leave behind in his flat if he were to walk in front of a bus tomorrow? What would some anonymous searcher make of his dusty collection of paperback science fiction, or the sixties' and seventies' records he couldn't bear to give away even though he no longer owned a turntable?
What would they make of the wedding photos stuck in the back of his bureau drawer? Of Vic, with her Alice- in-Wonderland hair and pale, innocent face-Vic, who had sabotaged much of his trust and naive faith in human nature? He should thank her, he supposed-neither quality would have proved advantageous to a rising career copper.
The school reports and drawings, term papers and rugby trophies his mother had boxed away in her Cheshire attic with other childish souvenirs. What had Jasmine done with the mementos of her childhood? He'd found no snapshots or letters, nothing from the years in India or Dorset except the journals.
He moved into the bedroom. Jasmine's silky caftans brushed against his fingers as he felt along the back of the wardrobe. To one side hung business suits and dresses, their shoulders covered with a film of dust, as were the stylish pumps neatly arranged in the wardrobe's floor.
Finding nothing there, he sat down on the small stool before the dressing table and stared at his reflection in