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and he said to her, "Wait here." He'd got the door of the pickup open, but he pushed it shut and walked over to the Austin.

"Morning, Gordon," the bloke said. "It's going to be dead hot again, isn't it?"

"It is that," Gordon replied. He said nothing more because he reckoned things about the visitor would be made clear for him soon enough.

And so they were. The man said affably, "We need to have a chat, you and me."

MEREDITH POWELL HAD phoned in ill to her place of employment, going so far as to plug her nose in order to simulate a summer cold. She didn't like doing this and she certainly didn't like the example it set for Cammie, who watched her with wide-eyed curiosity from the kitchen table where she'd been spooning Cheerios into her mouth. But there'd seemed to be no alternative.

Meredith had paid a call at the police station the prior afternoon and had got exactly nowhere. The conversation had gone a route that had ended with her feeling a perfect fool. What did she have to report that equated to grave suspicions and doubts? Her friend Jemima's car in a barn on the property where she'd lived with her partner for some two years, Jemima's clothes boxed up in the attic, Jemima with a new mobile phone to prevent Gordon Jossie from tracking her down, and the Cupcake Queen deserted in Ringwood. None of this is like Jemima, don't you see? had hardly impressed the plod she'd spoken to at the Brockenhurst station, where she'd stopped and asked to see someone "on a matter of extreme urgency." She'd been given to a sergeant whose name she didn't recall and didn't want to recall, and at the end of her tale he'd enquired rather pointedly that couldn't it be, madam, that these people were merely going about their daily lives without reporting their movements to her because this was none of her business?

Of course, she'd prompted this remark herself by admitting to the sergeant that Robbie Hastings had spoken to his sister regularly since her removal to London. But still, there had been no reason for the sergeant to look upon her as if she'd been something unsavoury that he'd found on the sole of his shoe. She wasn't a busybody. She was a concerned citizen. And wasn't a concerned citizen - a taxpayer, mind you - supposed to let the police know when something was off? Nothing sounds off to me, the sergeant had said. One woman leaves and this bloke Jossie finds another. How's that measure up to fishy, eh? Way of the world, you ask me. And to her declaration of for God's sake, he'd told her to take her troubles to the main station in Lyndhurst if she didn't like what she was getting from him.

Well, she wasn't about to put herself through that, Meredith decided. She'd phone the main station but that was all. Then she would take matters into her own hands. She knew that something was going on out there and she had a fairly good idea where to begin digging to find it.

To do this, she needed Lexie Streener. So she made her phone call to the graphic-design firm where she herself was employed, talked about a rotten summer cold that she didn't want to pass on to the other employees, and after offering a few artificial sneezes so that Cammie would not suffer damage from this brief exposure to her mother's prevarication, she set out to fetch Lexie Streener.

Lexie hadn't needed the slightest persuading to take a day off from the hair salon, where her future as the Nicky Clarke of Ringwood wasn't exactly arriving on the wings of Mercury.

Her dad was off selling coffee, tea, biscuits, and such from his caravan in a lay-by on the A336, and her mum was slipping tracts on the fourth beatitude under the windscreen wipers of cars waiting for the Isle of Wight ferries on Lymington Pier where, she reckoned, she had a captive audience who needed to hear about what constituted righteousness in the current world situation.

Neither of them would have any way of knowing that Lexie had done a runner from work - not that it mattered much to them anyway, Lexie groused - so it was no big deal for her to ring Jean Michel's hair salon, groan her way through an excuse of sicking up all night long after a bad beef burger, and then ring off

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