He pulled up in front of the porch and Blezzard leaned forward to look.
âYou're right,' he said. He got out and led the way inside, pushing the door open and standing stock still just inside the hall.
âSomeone wasn't a happy bunny.' He took out his mobile and called for backup and the CSI. âQuestion is, what were they looking for? Or didn't they care?'
âBoth,' Alec said flatly. He headed for the stairs.
âHey, leave it to CSI, we don't know what . . .' He sighed, followed Alec up the stairs.
Alec headed straight for Karen's room. The door was open and Alec didn't bother to cross the threshold. The mess downstairs had been bad enough; broken furniture, torn curtains, cushions with their insides ripped out and spilled on the floor, but that was petty and amateur compared to the considered and thorough effort of destruction that had taken place here.
Everything in Karen's room had been ruined. Alec recognized tiny fragments of soft toy and dressing gown and flowered bedcover. Someone had taken a knife to the lot in a rage of stabbing and ripping and slashing. Dust motes from the strata that had fallen so softly for so many years now hung in the air, illuminated by weak sunlight that was now uninterrupted by the yellowed nets.
âWhat was this?'
âKaren's room. He closed it up and left it as it was when she died. Everything was just as she left it.'
âWell, not now, it's not. You think Gavin Symonds did this?'
âI do. I also think he killed Brian Rawlins.'
âSomething of a stretch, isn't it? We don't know the two of them had even met.'
âNo,' Alec admitted. âWe don't. Yet.'
TWENTY-SEVEN
G
avin wasn't sure what to do. He wasn't sure of anything much any more, only that he was tired and desperate and wanted to find a way out of the mess he was in.
Above all, he was angry. At himself, at Brian, at Susan and Eddy and, oddly, most of all at his father. All his troubles had started that night when his father had driven the car that had caused the accident that had killed Karen Thame and her friends, and that had ruined everything because that had led to Eddy Thame coming after his father and ruining everything all over again. And Gavin could do nothing.
It was all wrong. All wrong and Gavin wasn't making it any less wrong. But what could he do?
He hadn't meant to kill Eddy; or had he? Gavin couldn't really tell any more. Had he meant to kill Brian? Frankly, he didn't know that either and he didn't care any more. He just wanted a bit of peace.
âYou think this is what Gavin Symonds might have been looking for, then?' Blezzard asked as he studied the maps and the coins Alec had found in the little tin box.
âWell, I think he hoped there was more to it. The way I read it is that Eddy wanted Kevin to see all this, to share in it, but for some reason he kept quiet about it.'
âMaybe Eddy knew someone else was after this. Did Gavin threaten him? The way I understand it is that Gavin didn't know anything much about any of this until yesterday evening.'
Alec nodded, realizing he was right. Eddy hadn't hidden the books in Kevin's bag because he was afraid someone â Gavin â was after them. That couldn't be the case because no one
had
been after them. No, maybe Eddy's habit of semi secrecy was the only reason. Maybe . . . âMaybe he had just wanted to surprise a friend? Kevin would have found the notebooks, would have understood what they were all about and the two of them would have gone chasing after the rest. I think we were wrong. There was nothing sinister; it was just Eddy being Eddy. Bloody obtuse.'
âDoes that fit with what we know about him?'
âIt fits. After the first time I spoke to him, Susan told me that in some ways he was sharp as a tack, in other ways he was a bit touched. No, she put it differently, but that's what she meant. Nothing we found out about Eddy contradicts that. DI Bradford said he disintegrated, just fell apart after Karen's death and never really recovered. Bradford seems to think that persecuting Gavin's father gave Eddy back his purpose in life. It focussed him. Gavin seems to have been driven by the same motivation; he focussed on Eddy.'
âThey'd both lost people they loved.' Blezzard picked up the coins and examined then thoughtfully. The locket, too, came under scrutiny. âAnything inside?'
âNo. I suppose there might have been at some time. Eddy wrote about the Kirkwoods in his book. He'd found a load of original documents, letters and such, so he was able to find out a bit about what happened to them. Catherine got away, but she had to leave a lot of her treasure behind. Eddy was convinced there was more than this and I think he was probably right. I also think it's long gone by now.'
Blezzard dropped the locket back into the box. âSo,' he said. âWhat next? I suppose we go next door to talk to Susan Rawlins again. Dean is tracking down Gavin Symonds' mother, so seeing her will be the next move, and I'm hoping we'll have a positive ID on the body in the car. What we have to do is think what Gavin Symonds' next move will be. Will he go home? Does he have anywhere to be, anyone to miss him?'
âNo,' Alec said firmly. âIf he had, then what his father did or didn't do would have faded in importance. The hurt would have been diluted.'
âIt wasn't for Eddy,' Blezzard argued. âFrom what I've seen, a lot of people cared about Eddy, but the obsession with James Symonds didn't diminish, did it?'
âBecause Eddy only gave a little bit of himself to any one person. No one had it all, not after Martha and Karen. You'd need to talk to an awful lot of people to get a complete picture of Eddy Thame.'
TWENTY-EIGHT
L
ate that afternoon and much to Alec's surprise, he was driving north again, and with Blezzard in the passenger seat. Naomi had once again been left behind and Alec could see that she was far from pleased, but once Blezzard had suggested Alec go with him to see Gavin's mother, both he and Naomi knew there was no way he could refuse.
âAnd this is the man who talked about leaving the force,' Naomi said acidly.
âWell, that was the way I felt. Actually, it's still the way I feel, but we're in the middle of this now. I can't just walk away.'
âOf course not.' Naomi sighed. âLook, go, I'll be OK, just don't be too long and you owe me dinner somewhere other than The Lamb tonight.'
âAnything you say.'
Blezzard had talked to the local officers and had got a little background on the Symonds family, which he shared with Alec on the way. âFather was well known. Banned twice, lost his licence again three months before he got back in the car and killed himself. Gavin has a record. Petty theft and he got into a few fights. Nothing serious though, and the last incident on file is back when he was twenty-two. He moved away after that, probably came back for the funeral.'
âDo we know where he moved to?'
âAs yet, no. Hopefully the mother will fill in the details.'
âDo we know anything about her?'
âShe has no record, that's all I can say.'
A red-brick house on the outskirts of Bristol proved to be the home of Gavin Symonds' mother and her new partner. The house was small, modern, identical to the others in the row and fronted by a patch of grass.
âHousing association,' Blezzard said. âSome kind of shared ownership thing, if I remember right. It was the biggest of its kind locally so it got on to the local news.' He smiled. âThat's why I know.'
Glancing up and down the street Alec noticed the quiet tidiness of the area. Identical houses, identically mown in front. No sign of kids, but then it was still school time. He guessed the cul-de-sac would be filled with kids playing at the end of the day, but now the sense of desertion and stillness was quite profound. They had called ahead and told Mel Symonds that they were on their way. She had sounded wary but oddly resigned. It was a tone Alec had encountered so often before: oh, no, not
more
trouble . . .
She opened the door as they turned towards the house, recognizing them for what they were. Another sign that Alec was familiar with. Blezzard introduced himself and Alec, flashing his ID and taking it as read she would not ask to see Alec's. She didn't, which was just as well, he thought. Right now the most official document he had on him was a choice of driving licence or library card.
âCome in,' she said. âRoom at the end of the hall. Go in.'
The hall was narrow, stairs going up, kitchen off to one side. It looked, from Alec's quick glance, to be clean. Long years of being offered tea in other people's houses raised awareness of such matters. It was odd to have the kitchen at the front of the house, he thought, imagining the variety of cooking smells that would waft out on to the street at mealtimes.
The back of the house was given over to a room that ran the full width. Dining table at one end, large telly at the other. Patio doors on to a small square of garden. The floral curtains matched the cushions on the sofa, Alec noticed as he sat down.
âThank you for seeing us.'
Two policemen on the sofa, Mel in the chair. A pack of cigarettes lay on the chair arm and she fiddled with them for a moment and then sat forward, with her hands between her knees, and studied both men carefully, as though comparing them to specimens she'd encountered before.
She was probably in her early fifties, Alec thought, but she looked older and more tired than a woman of that age should do. The bleached blonde hair didn't help, too harsh for the rather pale skin. He guessed she had been a blonde in her youth. She was thin and her hands were nervous, clasping and unclasping then sliding between her knees as she rocked forward.
âWhat's he done,' she said, her tone flat and almost bored, though Alec knew it was more resignation than disinterest. âI knew he'd bring trouble the moment he came back.'
âHe'd been living away, Gavin?'
âYeah. Went six, seven years ago. It's been just the odd phone call since, the odd birthday card when he remembered. I think he stayed in touch with his dad better, but I was glad to see him go, if I'm honest.'
âYou didn't have a close relationship, then?'
She laughed. âNo, he was his daddy's boy, never mine. And then I went off and lived with Malc and he didn't forgive me. He said he understood that his dad was difficult. I mean â' she rolled her eyes â âdifficult. He hit me. He hit Gavin, but Gavin had this idea in his head that it wasn't always like that. That his dad changed, and he was forever trying to get back to this time when everything had been all right. Been good.'
âBefore the car crash that killed Karen Thame and her friends.'
Her eyes flickered towards the pack of cigarettes, but she resisted.
âWe know your husband caused the accident,' Blezzard went on. âHe admitted as much in the suicide note.'
She nodded, barely. âI always thought he did,' she said. âBut I didn't want to know. You get what I mean.'
âFour teenagers died that night,' Alec said. âIt's very likely that at least one of them would have survived if he'd called for help.'
âHe was afraid he'd get in trouble.'
âHe let them die because he was afraid he'd get in trouble? Oliver Bates, Jill Wellesley. Sara Coles. Karen Thame.'
âI know their bloody names, so don't start on me.' The sudden burst of anger was unexpected and intense. âI didn't kill them. I wasn't driving. I didn't cover it up.'
âWhere did Gavin go to?' Blezzard changed tack.
She shrugged. âHe got into building. Labouring. Birmingham then Leeds, I think. I didn't take much notice. He wasn't here, the rest didn't matter.'
âHe was your son. Weren't you concerned?'
âHe was an adult, supposedly. Old enough to make his own way. Oh, don't you dare judge me. His dad was violent and self-centred and Gavin was the same. I had a second chance at being happy and I took it. I'd done my bit, he couldn't say I didn't.'
âAnd he came back for the funeral?'
She nodded. âI thought I'd better let him know, and I sent a letter to the last address I had, but he'd heard from somewhere else. He turned up at the funeral and I told him no way was he stopping here. He could go to his dad's place.'
âThat was the family home, originally?'
âIf you could ever call us a family, yeah. He said he still had a key so I let him get on with it. He can keep the place, for all I care.'
âAnd that's when he found out what Eddy Thame had been doing?'
A shrug this time.
âYou didn't know?'
âI didn't put it together. Look, I left close on ten years ago. I've not kept track of what his dad did since. He was never an easy man; he got worse as time went on. I took my chance, I got out. Then Gavin left. I don't know what went on with his dad after that.'
âBut you've not remarried?'
She shook her head. âOnce bitten,' she said. âWe get on fine. We're happy, but I know men. They get a ring on your finger and that's it. They change. While he still thinks I can walk, he keeps trying to make me want to stay. I know men.'
On that note they left, there being nothing more to say.
âDo you think she knows more about any of this?' Blezzard asked as they settled back into the car.
âNo. If she did she'd have closed her eyes and chosen not to see. So, she can't tell us where Gavin might be; let's see what his father's house can tell us.'
Symonds senior had kept the family home. Red-brick again and also terraced, but this time Victorian. Uniformed officers awaited their arrival and opened the door without aid of a key.