A Suitable Vengeance - By Elizabeth George Page 0,112

the paper. "We need to find Tommy." "Why?" "To call off the search."
Chapter 20
After nearly two hours, they found him on the quay at La moma Cove. He was squatting on the edge, talking to a fisherman who had just docked his boat and was trudging up the harbour steps, three coils of greasy-looking rope dangling from his shoulder. He paused halfway, listening to Lynley above him. He shook his head, covered his eyes to examine the other boats in the harbour, and with a wave towards the scattering of buildings set back from the quay, he continued his climb. Up above, on the road that dipped into the cove, St. James got out of the car. "Go back to Howenstow," he told Cotter. "I'll ride in with Tommy." "Any message for Daze?" St. James considered the question. Any message for Lynley's mother seemed a toss-up between relieving her mind about one set of circumstances only to fire her worries about another. "Nothing yet." He waited as Cotter turned the car around and headed back the way they had come. Then he began the descent into La morna, with the wind whipping round him and the sun warming his face.

Below him, the crystalline water reflected the colour of the sky, and the small beach glistened with newly washed sand. The houses on the hillside, built by Cornish craftsmen who had been testing the strength of the southwest ern weather for generations, had sustained no damage from the storm. Here, that which had been the ruin of the Daze might not even have occurred. St. James watched as Lynley walked along the quay, his head bent forward, his hands deep in trouser pockets. The posture said everything about the condition of his spirit, and the fact that he was alone suggested either that he had disbanded the search altogether or that the others had gone on without him. Because they'd been at it for hours already, St. James guessed the former. He called Lynley's name. His friend looked up, raised a hand in greeting, but said nothing until he and St.

James met at the land end of the quay. His expression was bleak. "Nothing." He lifted his head and the wind tossed his hair. "We've completed the circuit. I've been talking to everyone here as a last-ditch effort. I thought someone might have seen them getting the boat ready to sail, or walking on the quay, or stocking supplies. But no one in any of the houses saw a blasted thing. Only the woman who runs the cafe even noticed the Daze yesterday.'

"When was that?"

"Just after six in the morning. She was getting ready to open the cafe - adjusting the front blinds - so she can't have been mistaken. She saw them sailing out of the harbour."

"And it was yesterday? Not the day before."

"She remembers it was yesterday because she couldn't understand why someone was taking the boat out when rain had been forecast."

"But it was in the morning that she saw them?"

Lynley glanced his way, flashed a tired but grateful smile.

"I know what you're thinking. Peter left Howenstow the night before, and because of that, it's less likely he's the one who took the boat. That's good of you, St. James. Don't think I haven't considered it myself. But the reality is that he and Sasha could have come to Lamorna during the night, slept on the boat, then taken her out at dawn."

"Did this woman see anyone on deck?"

"Just a figure at the helm."

"Only one?"

"I can't think Sasha knows how to sail, St. James. She was probably below. She was probably still asleep." Lynley looked back at the cove. "We've done the whole coastline.

But so far, nothing. Not a sighting, not a garment, not a sign of them." He took out his cigarette case and flipped it open.

"I'm going to have to come up with something to tell Mother. But God only knows what it'll be."

St. James had been placing most of the facts together as Lynley spoke. His thoughts elsewhere, he'd heard not so much the words as the desolation behind them. He sought to bring that to an immediate end.

"Peter didn't take the Daze," he said. "I'm sure of it."

Lynley's head turned to him slowly. It looked like the sort of movement one makes in a dream. "What are you saying?"

"We need to go to Penzance."

Detective Inspector Boscowan took them to the officers' mess. "The yellow submarine,"

he'd called it, and the name was very apt: yellow

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