And the hooded creature now standing alongside the car, head bowed and shoulders hunched, had obviously known that full well.
Slowly Joyce drove forward through the big wooden doors, which were immediately closed behind her, then switched off the engine.
She glanced quickly around her, taking Molly’s hand in hers and squeezing it tightly. It was light inside the barn. Most of the roof was missing and the rain was falling as heavily within its crumbling walls as without. The barn offered little protection from the elements, but it did, of course, effectively conceal those inside its walls, which were almost entirely still standing. Just about.
There was another vehicle parked to one side. An old blue Honda Accord. Several large Calor gas canisters were lined up along one wall, next to a tarpaulin-covered lump. She looked at it in alarm, then became aware of the large military-style tent which had been erected in another corner.
The middle panel was being unzipped.
A familiar small figure in unfamiliar clothes – military-style heavy-duty wear, too big for him – stepped through the gap. Joyce involuntarily let go of Molly’s hand.
It was Fred.
‘Mum! Molly!’ he cried, his face lighting up with joy.
Oblivious to anything except the appearance of their beloved Fred, mother and daughter both opened their car doors and jumped out to greet the boy.
Fred ran towards them. Joyce reached out and grabbed him. Then she wrapped both her children in her arms.
Eighteen
Vogel was in his office, reflecting on another disturbing day in the Tanner/Mildmay case. By the time Joyce Mildmay was being reunited with her younger son, he had known for four hours that Joyce and her daughter Molly were missing. Or, at least, their whereabouts was unknown.
Joyce’s mother, Felicity, had called the DI when Joyce and Molly had failed to turn up at the hospital. Felicity had, it seemed, plumbed the policeman’s mobile number into her phone when he’d given her his card on the day that Fred had been reported missing.
‘I’m calling you direct, Mr Vogel, because I know you will understand my concern,’ she told him. ‘They should have been here an hour ago. Joyce called to tell me she was coming to see her father, and that she was bringing Molly with her. She was determined. Aggressive, even. And I’ve been trying to call them ever since. Neither of them are answering their phones.’
‘An hour isn’t long, Mrs Tanner,’ Vogel had said, trying to sound reassuring.
He doubted he was convincing. Under the circumstances, he was inclined to agree that the woman was right to be alarmed.
‘It doesn’t necessarily mean anything ominous. Perhaps they’ve stopped off to do some shopping, or they could have had a puncture.’
As he spoke he realized he had made a pretty stupid remark. Felicity picked him up on it straight away.
‘Mr Vogel, my grandson is missing and my husband has been shot. Do you seriously think my daughter would stop off to do some shopping on her way to the hospital?’ Felicity responded sharply. ‘And if they’d had a puncture or been delayed, Joyce or Molly would have called or texted. Or at least answered their phones when I called them. No. Something is wrong. Something has happened to them.’
Vogel gave up trying to allay her fears. Clearly he wasn’t making a very good job of it.
All he said was: ‘I’ll check out what you’ve told me and get back to you.’
Nobby Clarke had returned to Kenneth Steele House as soon as it became clear that Henry Tanner would not be able to speak to her. Vogel found her in the incident room and informed her that they could now have two more missing people on their hands.
The DCI was edgier than Vogel had ever known her to be, but still reluctant to launch another missing persons enquiry.
‘Joyce Mildmay is an adult and her daughter is fifteen,’ she said. ‘They could have gone anywhere.’
‘True,’ Vogel had muttered.
But that exchange had been nearly four hours ago. During that time Vogel had organized routine checks of road traffic and emergency call data. There had been no reported incidents that might relate to Joyce and Molly or their vehicle.
Vogel had also asked for CCTV coverage of the route Joyce Mildmay would most likely have taken to Southmead to be checked. Starting with the CCTV at Tarrant Park itself. This was not a task which could be swiftly completed, and Vogel had yet to be made aware of any significant footage.
He’d also organized checks of both Molly and Joyce’s mobile phone accounts, and had already been told that neither mother nor daughter had made or received a call since five hours earlier when Molly had unsuccessfully tried to call an unidentified pay-as-you-go phone. She had successfully sent and picked up texts to that number, the content of which was as yet unknown. Molly had been in the Bristol area at the time. The location of the pay-as-you-go phone had yet to be ascertained. Neither had it yet proved possible for the tech boys to track the present whereabouts of either that phone or those belonging to Molly and her mother. The techies reported that it was probable the SIM cards had been removed from all three phones. Which was clearly disturbing.
Because of the unique circumstances, a full-scale missing persons investigation was launched far earlier than would usually be the case. Vogel felt sure that the unexplained disappearance of Joyce and Molly had to be linked to Fred Mildmay going missing, and he knew that Nobby Clarke must feel the same. Even though she was still not really sharing her opinions or much else with him.
By 6 p.m. that investigation had stalled and Vogel had had enough of waiting around. And of not being kept informed. He stormed into Nobby Clarke’s temporary office and told her so.
‘Boss, I don’t care what you say,’ he announced, ‘I’m off to the hospital. We now have three missing people. And I reckon if there’s one man who can tell us what’s going on, it’s Henry Tanner. You know damned well he holds the key to all of this. A woman and two children—’
‘One of those children is with her mother, Vogel, and she is fifteen. Let’s not over-react,’ said the DCI reasonably.
‘But what if Joyce Mildmay received a ransom demand of some sort and decided not to tell us? That fifteen-year-old and her mother could be off somewhere trying to deal with the kidnappers,’ persisted Vogel. ‘Imagine the danger that would put them in. That’s not over-reaction.’
‘Neither is it a theory we have any evidence to support,’ responded Clarke. ‘Vogel, this is a complex case. Anything could have happened.’
‘That’s what I am afraid of. And I am far more afraid than I might otherwise be because I am being kept in the dark about what’s going on.’
‘You know all you need to, Vogel.’
‘I don’t accept that, boss, and I’m going to the hospital to see Henry Tanner whether you like it or not. The old bastard must have come around again by now.’
DCI Clarke sighed wearily.
‘All right, Vogel,’ she said. ‘I give in. We’ll both go to the hospital. Though who knows whether or not Tanner will be in any condition to talk to us. And if you are good, on the way I’ll tell you what I know. Or most of it, anyway . . .’
Nineteen
Joyce felt the wet warmth of tears running down her face as she held her son close. But this time they were tears of joy.
Fred was alive, and apparently well. And he was in her arms. She vowed never to let her son out of her sight again. She knew it was stupid, and totally impractical, but at that moment of enormous relief that was how she felt.
She closed her eyes, savouring the moment.
By the time she opened them again the man who had climbed into the back of her car had removed his hoody and was standing before her bare-headed, his white-blond hair glistening in the rain. Like Fred he was wearing camouflage gear. From the apparel of both man and boy, and the khaki tent, it looked like they were playing one of those character-testing war games.
The hair was unnaturally blond, fashionably bleached and cropped. The eyes were dark brow
n instead of the familiar pale grey flecked with hazel. Both hair and eyes were the wrong colour, and the man was far too thin. Much thinner than before.
But it was him, all right. She had known it must be from the moment she’d become aware of his presence in the car. The voice had been familiar, even though muffled and distorted. And who else would have been able to so easily gain entry to her locked and alarmed vehicle? Who else would have a key?
Yet throughout the drive from Landacre to the barn hidden away in Exmoor woodland, there had been a niggle at the back of her mind telling her it couldn’t be him. He was dead. True, his body had never been found, but the police and coastguard authorities who’d recovered his abandoned boat had concluded that he was dead.
‘Hello, Joycey,’ he said softly.
His voice was no longer muffled. It was unmistakable.
She stared at him over her son’s head. Then she stepped back from Fred and rushed towards him.
She could hear herself screaming. She hadn’t intended to scream. She barely knew she was doing it. It was an involuntary reaction to what was happening.
His arms were outstretched, held akimbo as if he expected her to run into them. And she did run to him. But when she reached him she pushed his arms further apart with her own, then clenched her fists and began to pummel him as hard as she could on his chest.
‘You bastard!’ she shouted. ‘You utter bastard! I thought you were dead. Your children thought you were dead!’
Charlie Mildmay stood there and took it. He was a tall, once fit man. If Joyce had been able to grasp anything beyond the fact that he was there, that he was alive, she would have noticed how grey and drawn Charlie was. Along with the pounds he’d shed, he seemed to have lost much of his physical strength. The blows she was raining on him caused him to flinch and gasp for breath.
‘Don’t, Mum, don’t!’ Fred cried out.
Joyce carried on as if she hadn’t heard him.
Eventually Charlie took hold of her wrists and gently pushed them away. She let him do so. She did not struggle. Perhaps she began to remember the presence of her children. Children who must both be as frightened and bewildered as she was.
Her frenzied attack ended as abruptly as it had begun.
She shook off her husband’s hands from around her wrists and stepped back.
‘You let us all think you were dead, Charlie,’ she said, speaking more quietly. ‘That was evil. Wicked. How could you?’
Charlie bowed his head.
‘You let us think you were dead,’ Joyce repeated. ‘I wept over your loss. Your children wept over your loss. How could you do that to us?’
‘I’m sorry,’ Charlie said, his head bowed.
‘You’re fucking sorry?’ Joyce stormed, raising her voice.
Then she again remembered the presence of her children. She didn’t know how to deal with what was happening. She had no idea how to deal with it. But screaming at her children’s father while they stood and watched was not going to help.
She knew she should wait until they were alone before questioning Charlie, but she couldn’t stop herself. In any case, it seemed unlikely that there was anywhere to go where they could be alone, unless they were going to go off for a tramp through the wet and dripping woodland.
‘Why, Charlie?’ she asked, her voice as quiet as she could make it. ‘Why did you do it?’
Charlie looked up, and met her eyes for the first time.
‘I had no choice,’ he said. ‘You have to believe me, Joyce, I had no choice.’
His gaze shifted. He was looking over Joyce’s left shoulder at Molly, who, eyes wide, lips trembling, was still standing with one arm around Fred.
‘Baby?’ he said, his voice full of uncertainty, wondering how receptive his daughter was likely to be.
‘D-dad?’ Molly’s uncertainty was even greater. After all, she had never expected to see her father again.
‘Baby,’ Charlie repeated. This time he grinned. That old disarming grin. A tad forced, perhaps, but there all the same. A grin that split his overly thin face, a grin that lit up those erroneous eyes; eyes which were the wrong colour. Contact lenses, Joyce assumed.
Molly removed her arm from around Fred’s shoulders and ran to him, as her mother had done. But unlike her mother she did not beat his chest with her fists. Her face displayed no anger. It was as if the grief and torment of the previous six months had been washed from her very being by that one word from her beloved father:
‘Baby.’
Molly threw her arms around Charlie. He drew her to him and lifted her a few inches from the ground, as he had done since she was a toddler.
‘My darling girl,’ he murmured into her hair.
Joyce could cheerfully have throttled him. She had so wanted Charlie to be alive when they told her he had disappeared at sea. Now she was outraged. How dare he come back into their lives and behave, with Molly anyway, just the way he had before.
‘I want to know why, Charlie,’ she said.
She felt near-physical pain. There was so much anguish, and it seemed Charlie was responsible for all of it – deliberately so.
He looked up at her over Molly’s head.
‘I don’t know where to begin,’ he said.
‘I don’t suppose you do,’ Joyce responded. ‘Not only did you let us think you were dead, you took Fred from me. I thought that he might be dead too. Now you’ve more or less kidnapped me and Molly.’
She was struggling to maintain control. Her voice was growing louder and sharper.
‘Have you gone mad?’ she asked.
It wasn’t a figure of speech. She was absolutely serious. Perhaps that was it. Perhaps Charlie had lost his mind.
He shook his head.
‘I had to do it,’ he said. ‘Look, I want to tell you everything. All three of you.’
‘I think you and I should speak alone,’ said Joyce quickly.
Charlie shook his head. ‘No, the children have to know this too. It’s important for all of us. They have to know why I have done what I have done. Why I disappeared and why I have come back. If we are going to survive as a family, then they have to know.’
‘Survive as a family?’ Joyce let out a hysterical laugh. ‘After all that you have done to us? No, Charlie, you must have gone mad.’
Fred ran to her side, and pressed his small body into hers.
‘Please, Mum, listen to him,’ he said. ‘He can explain everything, really he can.’
Joyce glanced down at him, then looked enquiringly at her husband.
‘I had to tell Fred what’s been going on,’ he said.
So far as Joyce was concerned, that only made things worse. It went against her instinct to protect her son.
‘Does that include why you wrote me that letter and why you took our son from his bed and brought him out here, why you abducted him?’ she enquired coolly.
Charlie lowered his head. ‘Well, not absolutely everything, obviously.’
‘I can’t believe what you’ve done, what you are doing.’
‘Please, Mum,’ said Fred again.
‘It’s all right, Fred,’ said Joyce, though it most certainly wasn’t. Absolutely nothing was all right.
She turned to her husband again. ‘And what about today’s pantomime? What was that all about? Molly and I spent more than an hour freezing to death, waiting and hoping for Fred to turn up while you lurked in the back of our car – then you kidnapped us too.’
‘I had to do it that way,’ said Charlie. ‘I am in danger. We all could be in danger. I was terrified of anyone seeing me, recognizing me. You could have been followed. Your phones could have been tracked. I couldn’t meet you anywhere public, not even in the middle of the moors. You don’t understand. We’re safe here. Hidden away. For the time being, anyway. That’s why I had to get rid of your SIM cards. And you can’t even get a signal here, so we can’t be tracked directly to this place. I drove over the moors almost to Barnstaple this morning so that Fred c
ould text you. Risked being spotted, of course, but on the roads there was less of a risk of using the phone than there was using it near to where we were hiding out.’
Joyce could only stare at him. Charlie’s eyes were unnaturally bright. Was he on drugs? For years she’d worried about his reliance on prescription medication. Had it pushed him over the edge? Had his state of mind been so adversely affected by his excesses?
‘You are mad, aren’t you,’ she said.
It wasn’t a question.
‘I’m not mad,’ said Charlie quietly. ‘But I may have been before I staged my own death.’
Then, whilst Joyce was still trying to work out what he meant by that, he spoke again.
‘Won’t you please come into the tent,’ he said. ‘It’s dry and warm in there. We can talk properly.’
‘I don’t remember us ever talking properly, Charlie,’ said Joyce. ‘Maybe that’s the problem.’
‘Please,’ said Charlie.
‘All right, I will listen to your story. But unless you have something amazing to say to make me change my mind, I shall be driving our children home. Without you. And meanwhile, Fred, Molly, I’m sorry, but whatever your father thinks, I do need to speak to him alone.’
Charlie looked as if he were about to protest. She silenced him with an impatient flick of the wrist. ‘I mean it, Charlie. Alone or not at all.’
She looked around the ruined barn, trying to work out a way of organizing some privacy.
‘OK,’ she said, addressing her children. ‘You two go into the tent and try to keep warm. Charlie, we can sit in the Range Rover. Now, nobody argue. Please. That’s my condition for listening to you, Charlie. Else I shall take off now and go straight to the police.’
She paused, wondering if that would even be possible, or if Charlie would attempt to stop her. She decided to challenge Charlie while the thought was in her mind.
‘Assuming you don’t intend trying to prevent me or our children leaving,’ she said. ‘You wouldn’t do that, would you Charlie?’
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