This was worse than an affair.
She still wanted to die.
He shook his head stupidly, seeing horror in his mind the way he’d never seen it in a movie.
Lucy stood up almost straight and spoke quietly.
‘It’s my choice.’
He hit her.
He hit her with a heavy hand on the end of a long arm that swung fast. The blow spun her round and knocked her on to her knees on the couch – her face bouncing off the wall they’d repainted together the week they moved in. Summer Dawn, the colour was called. And as Lucy curled, sobbing, Jonas noticed with detachment the smear of blood that now sullied the horizon above the back of the couch.
He leaned over her, putting one hand on the wall beside the blood, the other on the arm of the couch.
‘No,’ he said again.
Jonas looked around to see Steven Lamb in the hallway.
The boy stood there tightly clutching the strap of the DayGlo sack on his shoulder with both hands, as if it was keeping him from falling from a great height. Even from across the room and in semi-darkness, Jonas could see he was shaking.
‘Just
‘Steven, get out!’ Lucy wept at him from between her hands.
But he didn’t. He just stood there and shook, staring at Jonas.
‘Leave her
Jonas stood up and Lucy hunched away from him.
Without even looking at her again, he strode across the room.
Steven Lamb backed into the hall table and knocked over the vase of drooping carnations. He watched Jonas coming with a look of resigned terror on his face, then at the last second he stepped aside as he realized he was not coming for
Jonas brushed past him without a glance, and closed the front door quietly behind him.
Steven sank slowly to the cold flagstone floor, with his back against the banister, and hugged his knees to his chest.
Lucy looked up from the couch and saw that Jonas was gone and Steven was sitting in the hallway.
She touched her mouth where warm salt leaked from her lip, and tried to stop sobbing.
She backed off the couch awkwardly and dropped to her knees and crawled across the floor, not trusting her legs to carry her across the room. She knelt beside the boy in the hallway and put her arms around him.
‘It’s OK,’ she told them both. ‘It’s OK. Jonas was just upset, sweetheart. He didn’t mean it. He was just very upset and frightened.’
But Steven didn’t respond to her touch or even appear to see her. His eyes were still fixed in the middle distance, a deep frown splitting his forehead. Lucy felt liquid soaking her knees. She looked down and realized it was the water from the flowers. He was sitting in it.
‘Steven,’ she said. ‘What’s wrong?’
He did not respond and Lucy started to worry seriously about something other than herself and Jonas. She shook him by the shoulders and saw him blink, so did it again and raised her voice, making it sharp – her playground-duty voice.
‘Steven! Talk to me, please! What happened? What’s wrong?’
Finally the boy turned his haunted eyes towards her.
His lips trembled as he whispered:
‘Nothing.’
Reynolds laid out his case on the cheap brown bedspread.
He had almost everything he needed.
He could hardly wait until the case here was officially closed so that he could go and see the Chief Super with his damning evidence. The thought of how that interview would unfold consumed Reynolds like porn.
He knew there might not be an actual promotion in snitching on his boss, but he was sure there would be
He anticipated taking Lucy Holly’s statement with pure pleasure. At last, hearing critical words coming out of a mouth other than his. Around colleagues he’d always been discreet, but every little eye-roll, every murmur of discontent, every sudden cessation of chatter when Marvel walked past, he’d squirrelled away like winter nuts to sustain him whenever he felt he was all alone and that nobody else noticed what was going on. Even now the Senior Investigating Officer was probably knocking it back in the musty farmhouse with Joy Springer. It made Reynolds ashamed to be a policeman.