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DS01 - Presumed Dead

Page 16

by Shirley Wells


  “Is that fancy car out front yours?”

  So that’s why he’d dashed outside in a T-shirt, to see who was snooping around.

  “It is, yes.”

  The man nodded, unimpressed. “You’ll be better off walking the last bit then.”

  “Right. Thanks.”

  Dylan returned to his car, guessing that he was still being watched.

  As he drove, he repeated the directions to himself. He made a right turn after the Nag’s Head and soon found himself on a narrow track that was under snow.

  He reversed and returned to the pub’s car park. No way was he risking his Morgan on that.

  It was cold, and the snow crunched underfoot, but the sky was blue. He found the allotments easily enough. The snow couldn’t hide the fact that some, most in fact, hadn’t been touched for years. A few were immaculate.

  A man was clearing snow from one of the plots and Dylan wandered over, careful to keep to what looked to be paths. It seemed ridiculous to be on an allotment in this weather.

  “Excuse me, but I’m looking for Ian Champion. I was told he might be here.”

  “You were told right then. What can I do for you?”

  Before Dylan could answer, a young girl, no more than three years old, came out of the shed clutching a tiny pink spade.

  “Good girl,” Champion told her. “You clear that bit, eh?” He turned back to Dylan with a smile. “It all helps.”

  The child kicked her way through the snow in bright pink Wellington boots and began clearing a small path.

  “What can I do for you?” Champion asked again. He looked fit, and his healthy skin colour suggested he liked to spend his time outdoors, but he couldn’t be described as handsome. He was quite short, probably about five feet seven or eight, and the little hair he had left was mostly grey. A couple of missing teeth made his face look lopsided.

  “My name’s Dylan Scott and I’m trying to find out what happened to your ex-wife, Anita.”

  “Anita? Good God.” Twice he opened his mouth to speak, and twice he closed it again. “Well!” he managed at last.

  “I’m a private investigator.” Dylan decided honesty was the best policy. “Your daughter, Holly, is paying me.”

  “My daughter?” The expression on his face was difficult to fathom. A mix of surprise and wistfulness? “Holly’s not my daughter, Mr. Scott.”

  “Sorry?”

  “I said Holly isn’t my daughter.”

  There was no resemblance whatsoever, but what did that mean? Nothing, in Dylan’s view. People said he looked like his mother, but he’d never spotted any similarities. And no one seemed able to decide if Luke looked like him or Bev.

  All the same, Ian Champion’s comment shocked him.

  “But I thought—You were married to Anita, weren’t you?”

  “Oh, yes. For three years.” Champion plunged his spade into the snow.

  “Granddad—”

  “Chloe, love, how about you build another snow castle, eh?” He strode into the shed, the girl following him, and emerged with a pink bucket. “There you go, sweetheart.”

  “I love you, Granddad!”

  Laughing, Champion swept the child into his arms, kissed her on the cheek and set her down on her feet again. “And I love you, too.”

  “Your granddaughter?” Dylan asked. “She’s adorable.”

  “Yes. Mind, I nearly had a fit when my Emma said she was expecting. Sixteen she was, only just out of school. Still, we wouldn’t be without young Chloe now.”

  “I’m sure.” Dylan watched Chloe for a few moments, but he was still coming to terms with more important matters. “You were saying that Holly isn’t your daughter?”

  “Anita was eighteen when she fell pregnant,” he said on a heavy sigh, “and I was twenty-four. We’d been going out together for about a month and thought we ought to get married. Anita wasn’t the type to settle down, but she did her best.”

  His gaze rested on some distant spot. “Life was okay,” he said. “Not great, but okay. We both thought the world of Holly, and I suppose that kept us together.”

  Dylan had dozens of questions, but he kept silent.

  “When Holly was three she had an accident. She was with Anita, round at Anita’s friend’s house. Yvonne had the dishwasher open and—and there was a knife sticking up. Holly tripped and cut her throat. She lost a lot of blood.” He drew in a deep breath. “We were at the hospital when we found out that she wasn’t my daughter. Blood types, you see.”

  He fell silent.

  “You say we found out, Mr. Champion. Neither of you had any idea?”

  “No. Well, I suppose Anita must have wondered. She must have, mustn’t she?”

  “Perhaps.” Dylan was unsure how to answer that.

  “It made no odds to me,” Champion said. “I couldn’t have loved Holly more.”

  “Then I admire you.” Dylan didn’t believe him. “If I found out that my son was someone else’s—” He offered a shrug.

  “I’m not saying I wasn’t angry. I was furious at first. I felt as if I’d been taken for a right fool.” The hint of a smile curved his mouth. “It was impossible to be angry with Anita for long, though.”

  “But you walked out anyway?”

  “Walked out? Oh, no. It wasn’t like that. Anita didn’t want me around, you see. As soon as she knew Holly wasn’t mine, that was it as far as she was concerned. She had no need for me in her life. And there was no arguing with her.”

  Which didn’t fit with the story Holly had given Dylan. According to her, he’d walked out on his family. Mum said it was no surprise. Said it was a relief really. They’d both been kids when they got married.

  “And you never tried to contact either of them?” Dylan tried to keep the amazement from his voice.

  “I tried phoning, but Anita would have none of that. I wrote to Holly, sent her cards and things—they were all returned unopened by Anita. In the end, I gave up. You have to. For your own sanity.”

  Champion crossed to where his granddaughter was struggling to empty her bucket of snow.

  Once that was done, she was filling it again.

  “Two years later, I met Jean,” Champion said, rejoining Dylan. “We had Emma, Joe and Tom.” He sighed. “I put Anita and Holly from my mind. I had to. It was too painful.”

  “So did Anita tell Holly that you’d abandoned them?” That didn’t sound like Anita. Not, Dylan reminded himself, that he’d known the woman.

  Several emotions flitted across Champion’s face—sadness, regret, anger. “All I know is that Anita believed it was best for everyone, especially Holly, if I had no more contact with them. Is that what Holly thinks? That I abandoned them?”

  “That’s what she told me.”

  Once again, Champion had to go to his granddaughter’s aid. When he came back, he nodded back at the girl. “Chloe’s the same age as Holly was when—when she had the accident.”

  Dylan nodded. He’d thought as much.

  “How is she?” Champion asked. “Holly, I mean.”

  “Fine. Working hard. She’s a teacher.”

  “A teacher? My!” He smiled at that. “She always was bright. And I expect Anita’s sister, Joyce, pushed her hard. I can’t say I ever took to Joyce. Still, she’s done a good job raising Holly by the sound of it.”

  “You knew she’d been taken in by Anita’s sister then?”

  “Oh, yes. There was right hoo-ha when Anita went missing. The police were here wanting to know why I’d had nothing to do with them and why I hadn’t been paying maintenance toward Holly. They seemed to think I’d ducked out of my responsibilities.” His eyes sparked with indignation. “I told them about the accident and how Anita hadn’t wanted anything to do with me after finding out that Holly wasn’t mine.”

  “And they accepted that?”

  “They checked it out through our medical records—mine and Holly’s.” His eyes were moist. “It was daft really, but I’d started to believe that Holly
would be coming to me. After all, my name was still on her birth certificate. But I had no job, they knew I wasn’t Holly’s biological father—and then Anita’s sister, Joyce, stuck her oar in. Social services decided that I had no claim and that a blood relation—especially a blood relation who could offer a good, steady home life—was a better option for Holly.”

  “And yet you’d been her father and bonded with her for the first three years of her life.”

  “That’s exactly what I said, but it meant nothing to them. And perhaps they were right. After all, Holly didn’t even remember me.” He smiled, but it obviously took a great deal of effort. “And look at her now. A teacher, eh?”

  “Yes, and she’s eager to find out what happened to her mother.”

  More than eager. She was obsessed.

  “I suppose that’s understandable, but after all this time—” Champion shook his head as if he felt that, after so long, it was an impossible task. “Even for Anita, it’s bloody odd, though. Holly meant the world to her, and I know for a fact that she wouldn’t have left her.”

  “A lot of people believe she did exactly that.”

  “No way. That’s what the police reckoned and I told them it was nonsense. Anita had a reputation, I’m not denying that, but she used to play on it a lot of the time. It was almost as if she enjoyed her notoriety.”

  “She went to Morty’s on the night in question,” Dylan said. “No one’s seen her since.”

  “Morty’s?” Champion rolled his eyes. “What a place that was. Watered-down drinks. Everyone off their heads. She sometimes dragged me there, but I hated the place.”

  “On the nights you didn’t go, who would have kept her company?”

  “She knew lots of people there. Often her girlfriends—there were four of them, Sandra, Yvonne, Maggie and Brenda—would have a night out. There was Colin Bates, too. He worked there as a bouncer. Him and Anita were friendly because they’d known each other a long time. They went to school together. Matt Jackson was another who was at school with her, and another who used to fancy her.” He pulled a face. “Most men did. I was a bloody fool to think she’d be content with a bloke like me.”

  Dylan couldn’t think of anything to say that would have sounded sincere. “I’ve spoken to most of those people, but not Matthew Jackson. He’s living in France now or so I believe.”

  “Is he? That’s news to me. He was a mechanic when I knew him. He was a good one, but he’d always try and make a few quid here and there. You had to watch him.”

  Dylan nodded. “Anyone else you can think of?”

  “No one special. Oh, there was Sean Ellis—”

  “The DJ?”

  “Yes. He fancied his chances with Anita. He used to see what was going on at the club, too. Well, he would, wouldn’t he? He used to sit in a metal cage thing playing his music. He always knew who was with someone they shouldn’t have been with.”

  Chloe was bored and tugging at her grandfather’s trousers.

  Ian Champion bent down and picked her up. “Her mum’s working. My wife, too. I used to work for a local builder, but he’s had to lay everyone off. Still, I’ll soon find another job. Meanwhile, I’m number one babysitter.”

  “And enjoying every minute of it?”

  “Yeah,” he admitted. “I know they can be difficult, demanding, but they soon grow up, don’t they?”

  “They do. Right, I’ll leave you to it.” Dylan hunted in his pockets for a piece of paper, found an old receipt for a newspaper, and wrote his name and phone number on it. He really would have to get some business cards printed. “If you think of anything that might help, will you let me know?”

  “I will, yes.” Champion examined the paper, then put it in his inside jacket pocket. “Holly—you’ll tell her hello from me?” He looked embarrassed. Awkward.

  “I will.” Dylan ruffled Chloe’s blond curls before walking back to his car.

  As he walked, he wondered if Ian Champion’s story was accurate. Why would Holly say he’d walked out on them? Because it was what she’d been told? So whose story should he believe? Anita’s or Ian Champion’s?

  Had Ian Champion walked out in disgust when he discovered that Anita had been unfaithful? He wouldn’t be the first. Or the last. So why lie about it?

  Hours later, when Dylan was back in his hotel room, he took a thick sweater from his bag and pulled it on. Ridiculous when you had to put on more clothes when you came inside.

  He was still musing about the Champions and trying to decide which of the three were lying.

  Had Anita lied to her daughter? Had Ian Champion lied to him this afternoon? Or had Holly lied to him?

  Dylan supposed it was no big deal. If people didn’t lie, he wouldn’t have a job. All the same, he didn’t like to be taken for a fool.

  He pulled his chair closer to the enormous radiator and called Holly Champion. He thought she might be working, but she answered within three rings.

  “Dylan, how’s it going?”

  “Slowly.” He didn’t want to hurt her feelings, but hell, feelings did get hurt. It was life. And it was she who wanted the truth. “I saw—” He was about to say “your father,” but changed his mind. “I saw Ian Champion today.”

  “Oh? Why? What does he have to do with anything?” She didn’t sound pleased. Perhaps she thought he was wasting his time and her money.

  “Who knows? But according to him, he wasn’t the one who wanted your parents’ marriage to end?”

  “What? He walked out on us!”

  “He claims, and I can’t think why he’d lie, that your mother wanted him gone. Do you remember having an accident and going to hospital when you were about three?”

  “I should do,” she replied. “I’ve still got the scar to prove it.”

  “What happened?”

  “I tripped over at Yvonne Yates’s house,” she said in a matter-of-fact way, “and landed, neck down, on the dishwasher. Or, more accurately, on a carving knife that had the blade sticking up.”

  “Hmm. That’s what Ian Champion told me.”

  “So?”

  “He also said that, while you were in hospital, blood tests confirmed that he wasn’t your biological father.”

  Silence met his statement. A silence so long that, in the end, Dylan had to check if the phone line was still live. “Holly? Are you still there?”

  “Yes. Yes, of course. I don’t know why he’d say that.”

  “Perhaps it’s true.”

  “More likely he’s invented that story so he didn’t have to stay with us, so he never had to hand over any money to my mother.” Her voice was scathing. “People will think better of him that way. He could hardly tell people he was a piece of shit who turned his back on his wife and daughter and never bothered with them again.”

  Dylan was taken aback by the strength of her feelings. He’d never heard her swear, and it wasn’t an experience he wanted to repeat. “According to him, he wanted to stay with you both. Also according to him, he phoned often, but your mother wouldn’t speak to him. He claims, too, that he sent you letters and cards but that your mother returned them to him unopened.”

  Silence met this statement, too.

  “Then he’s lying,” she said at last. She spoke far more calmly now.

  “Why would he do that?”

  “How should I know? You’re the private investigator.”

  “He has a three-year-old granddaughter now. I met her, too. She idolises him. He seems to be a happily married family man who enjoys pottering on his allotment.”

  “Does he?” No interest whatsoever.

  “He seemed proud when I told him about you—that you were a teacher.”

  “Proud?” She gave a short, humourless laugh at that. “Why would he be proud? If, as he’s telling everyone, he’s not my father, there’s nothing for him to be proud of. And as he’s had nothing whatsoever to do with my upbringing, it’s irrelevant anyway.”

  If she truly believed her father had walk
ed out on her, Dylan supposed she had every right to feel angry. “He spoke of you fondly. And he told me to say hello from him.”

  “Did he indeed?” Still no interest. “Exactly why did you go to see him?”

  “When people disappear, family members are usually the ones in the know. Now, while I agree that he’s been out of the frame for a good many years—well, you never know, do you?”

  Like everything in life, including murder, family members were always the first place to start.

  “And did he tell you anything useful?” she asked.

  “Not really.”

  “Then it was a waste of time, wasn’t it?”

  Dylan ran his free hand over the warm radiator. Had it been a waste of time? He didn’t think so. “We’ll see. But other than that, there’s nothing to report.”

  “Well, thanks anyway. Thanks for the work you’re doing, I mean. I appreciate it, I really do.” Ian Champion was forgotten and she was her usual sunny self again. “You’ll get there in the end, Dylan. I just know you will.”

  Dylan wished he was as confident.

  He wanted to press her for more information about her mother, about the possible identity of her real father—if indeed Ian Champion wasn’t her natural father—but he decided to quit while he was ahead. She would be able to tell him nothing. As far as she was concerned, her father was Ian Champion, a cowardly man who had walked out on his family.

  Dylan wasn’t convinced. He believed Ian Champion’s story.

  “I’ll be in touch,” was all he said.

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Eureka! Dylan had been hoping to meet up with Stevie, and he was pleased to see his new friend in Asda, gazing at iPod accessories.

  “Breakfast?” Stevie’s eyes lit up at the sight of Dylan.

  “Why not?”

  They took the escalator to the first floor and, when Stevie had his breakfast and Dylan his cup of tea, they sat at what was becoming Their Table.

  Dylan wasn’t sure what he wanted from Stevie. That was the problem, of course. With Stevie, you had to ask questions that had a simple yes or no answer. Stevie observed, he knew about people, but getting that information from him would have tested the patience of angels. Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained.

 

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