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She beat her hands against her knees.
"What did it matter once he was dead?"
Roz took the cigarette from Olive's fingers and stood it on the table.
"Why didn't you tell the police you thought it was your father who had done it? Sergeant Hawksley would have listened to you. He already suspected your father."
The fat woman stared at the table.
"I don't want to tell you."
"You must, Olive."
"You'll laugh."
"Tell me."
"I was hungry."
Roz shook her head in perplexity.
"I don't understand."
"The sergeant brought me a sandwich and said I could have a proper dinner when we'd finished the statement." Her eyes welled again.
"I hadn't eaten all day and I was so hungry," she wailed.
"It was quicker when I said what they wanted me to say and then I got my dinner." She wrung her hands.
"People will laugh, won't they?"
Roz wondered why it had never occurred to her that Olive's insatiable craving for food might have been a contributory factor in her confession. Mrs. Hopwood had described her as a compulsive eater and stress would have piled on the agonies of the wretched girl's hunger.
"No," she said firmly, *no one will laugh. But why did you insist on pleading guilty at your trial?
You could have made a fight of it then. You'd had time to think and get over the shock."
Olive wiped her eyes.
"It was too late. I'd confessed. I had nothing to fight with except diminished responsibility and I wasn't going to let Mr. Crew call me a psychopath. I hate Mr. Crew."
"But if you'd told someone the truth they might have believed you.
You've told me and I've believed you."
Olive shook her head.
"I've told you nothing," she said simply.
"Everything you know you've found out for yourself.
That's why you believe it." Her eyes flooded again.
"I did try at the beginning, when I first came to prison. I told the Chaplain but he doesn't like me and thought I was telling lies. I'd confessed, you see, and only the guilty confess. The psychiatrists were the most frightening. I thought if I denied the crime and didn't show any remorse, they'd say I was sociopathic and send me to Broadmoor."
Roz looked at the bent head with compa.s.sion. Olive had never really stood a chance. And who was to blame at the end of the day? Mr. Crew?
Robert Martin? The police? Poor Gwen even, whose dependence on her daughter had mapped Olive's life. Michael Jackson had said it all: "She was one of those people you only think about when you want something done and then you remember them with relief because you know they'll do it." It had never been Amber who set out to please, she thought, only Olive, and as a result she had grown completely dependent herself. With no one to tell her what to do she had taken the line of least resistance.
"You'll be hearing this officially in the next few days but I'm d.a.m.ned if you should have to wait for it. Mr. Crew is on bail at the moment, charged with embezzlement of your father's money and conspiracy to defraud. He may also be charged with conspiracy to murder." There was a long pause before Olive looked up.
The strange awareness was back in her eyes, a look of triumphant confirmation that made the hair p.r.i.c.kle on the back of Roz's neck. She thought of Sister Bridget's simple a.s.sertion of her truth: You were chosen, Roz, and I wasn't. And Olive's truth? What was Olive's truth?
"I know already." Idly Olive removed a pin from the front of her dress.
"Prison grapevine," she explained.
"Mr. Crew hired the Hayes brothers to do over Sergeant Hawksley's restaurant.
You were there, and you and the Sergeant got beaten up. I'm sorry about that but I'm not sorry about anything else. I never liked Mr.
Hayes much. He always ignored me and talked to Amber." She stuck the pin into the tabletop. Bits of dried clay and wax still clung to the head.
Roz arched an eyebrow at the pin.
"It's superst.i.tious rubbish, Olive."
"You said it works if you believe in it."
Roz shrugged.
"I was joking."
"The Encyclopaedia Britannica doesn't joke." Olive chanted in a sing-song voice: "Page 96, volume 25, general heading: Occultism." She clapped her hands excitedly like an over boisterous child and raised her voice to a shout. *"Witchcraft worked in Salem because the persons involved believed in it." She saw the frown of alarm on Roz's face.
"It's all nonsense," she said calmly.
"Will Mr. Crew be convicted?"
"I don't know. He's claiming that your father gave him the go-ahead, as executor, to invest the money while the searches were made for your nephew, and the b.u.g.g.e.r is' she smiled grimly *if the property market takes off again, which it probably will, his investments look very healthy." Of the other charges, only the conspiracy to defraud Hal of the Poacher had any chance of sticking, purely because Stewart Hayes's brother, a far weaker character than Stewart, had collapsed under police questioning.
"He's denying everything, but the police seem fairly optimistic they can pin a.s.sault charges on both him and the Hayes boys. I'd give anything to get him for negligence where your case was concerned. Was he one of the people you tried to tell the truth to?"
"No," said Olive regretfully.
"There was no point. He'd been Dad's solicitor for years. He'd never have believed Dad had done it."
Roz started to gather her bits and pieces together.
"Your father didn't kill your mother and sister, Olive. He thought you did. Gwen and Amber were alive when he went to work the next morning.
As far as he was concerned, your statement was completely true."
"But he knew I wasn't there."
Roz shook her head.
"I'll never be able to prove it but I don't suppose he even realised you'd gone. He slept downstairs, remember, and I'll bet a pound to a penny you slipped out quietly to avoid attracting attention to yourself. If you'd only agreed to see him, you'd have sorted it out."
She stood up.
"It's water under the bridge, but you shouldn't have punished him, Olive. He was no more guilty than you are. He loved you. He just wasn't very good at showing it. I suspect his only fault was to take too little notice of the clothes women wore."
Olive shook her head.
"I don't understand."
"He told the police your mother owned a nylon overall."
"Why would he do that?"
Roz sighed.
"I suppose because he didn't want to admit he never looked at her. He wasn't a bad man, Olive. He couldn't help his s.e.xuality any more than you or I can help ours. The tragedy for you all was that none of you could talk about it." She took the pin from the tabletop and wiped the head clean.
"And I don't believe for one moment that he would ever have blamed you for what happened. Only himself. That's why he went on living in the house. It was his atonement."
A large tear rolled down Olive's cheek.
"He always said the game wasn't worth the candle." She held out her hand for the pin.
"If I'd love him less I'd have hated him less, and it wouldn't be too late now, would it?"
TWENTY.
Hal was dozing in the car outside, arms crossed, an old cap pulled over his eyes to block out the sun. He raised his head and surveyed Roz lazily from under the brim as she tugged open the driver's door.
"Well?"
She dumped her briefcase on the back seat and slipped in behind the wheel.
"She shot my version down in flames." She gunned the engine into life and reversed out of the parking slot.
Hal eyed her thoughtfully.
"So where are we going?"
"To tear strips off Edward," she told him.
"He's had nothing like the punishment he deserves."
"Is that wise? I thought he was a psychopath." Hal pulled the cap over his eyes again and settled down for another snooze.
"Still, I'm sure you know what you're doing." His faith in Roz was unshakeable. She had more bottle than most of the men he knew.
"I do." She inserted the tape she had just made into the deck and rewound it.
"But you don't, Sergeant, so c.o.c.k an ear to this.
I'm inclined to think it's you I should be tearing strips off. The wretched child because let's face it, that's all she really is, even now was starving, and you promised her a "proper dinner" when she'd finished her statement. No wonder she couldn't confess fast enough. If she'd told you she hadn't done it you'd have kept her waiting for her food." She turned the volume up full blast.
It took several rings of the doorbell before Edward Clarke finally opened the door to them on the burglar chain. He gestured angrily for them to go away.
"You have no business here," he hissed at Roz.
"I shall call the police if you persist in hara.s.sing us."
Hal moved into his line of sight, smiling pleasantly.
"Detective Sergeant Hawksley, Mr. Clarke. Dawlington CID. The Olive Martin case. I'm sure you remember me."
A look of dejected recognition crossed Edward's face.
"I thought we'd done with all that."
"I'm afraid not. May we come in?"
The man hesitated briefly and Roz wondered if he was going to call Hal's bluff and demand identification. Apparently not.
The ingrained British respect for authority ran deep with him.
He rattled the chain and opened the door, his shoulders slumped in weary defeat.
"I knew Olive would talk eventually," he said.
"She wouldn't be human if she didn't." He showed them into the sitting room.
"But on my word I knew nothing about the murders.