Dead Alone. Gay Longworth

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don’t like dungeons, they make me nervous,’ said Jones as they followed the manservant’s shiny pate. The corridor was lined with fake flame lanterns. Looking at the pieces of material flicker in the heat of the bulb, Jessie didn’t think Jones had anything to worry about. Acid-dipping homicidal maniacs didn’t shop at Christopher Wray.

      The manservant knocked on a door, a voice answered, and in they went. To a bowling alley. Jessie let out a shocked laugh. P. J. Dean looked up.

      She had known she was coming to P. J. Dean’s house, and she had known what P. J. Dean looked like. She could recall his face in her mind easier than her own. He was billboard big. She had known exactly what to expect – except her own reaction.

      Dean’s dark hair was cropped to his head. Not too fiercely – Jessie guessed a number three. His eyes were sea green, each the size of a two-pound coin and outlined by thick black eyelashes. Jessie and Jones walked slowly towards him and the two small boys by his side. The taller one was fair, the younger had dark hair. Both of them wore pyjamas. Neither of them had their mother’s colouring. Bleach blonde. Peroxide blonde. Ammonia blonde. Jessie pushed the smell to the back of her memory. She was about to orphan these children.

      ‘You go on playing, kids,’ P.J. said, ruffling their hair. The older one looked at Jessie and tried to flatten his hair back down.

      Jesus, thought Jessie, that voice. P. J. Dean was also wearing pyjamas. Bottoms only. And an old fraying dressing gown that hung open over his shoulders, chest and stomach. Jessie couldn’t help it. She looked down. Then sideways. Then at her feet. She had spent hours in the gym Thai-boxing, running and doing yoga, and in all that time she had never seen a stomach like it. It was a Fight Club stomach, disappearing into a taut V that pointed indecently to his low-slung pyjamas. As he came forward to meet them he pulled the dressing gown together and tied the cord around his waist. Only when the knot was secure did Jessie look up.

      ‘Sorry about my appearance.’ He held out a hand to each in turn. ‘P.J.,’ he said simply.

      ‘Detective Inspector Driver and Detective Chief Inspector Jones,’ said Danny Knight, pointing to each.

      ‘Chief Inspector, eh?’ P.J.’s eyes narrowed. ‘Danny, watch the kids a while. We’ll be in the studio.’

      Another corridor led to his recording studio. Among other things it was soundproof. One window looked back out to the bowling alley, another looked on to a padded recording room. Dean pulled over some chairs then pressed a button on a phone panel and spoke into it. ‘Bernie, can we have fresh coffee, orange juice and croissants.’

      The telephone replied: ‘On its way.’

      Panels of mixing decks stretched away from them, a million sliders, buttons, lights, dials, switches, plugs, meters, like a giant cockpit.

      ‘What has she done?’

      ‘Excuse me?’ said Jessie, who’d been studying her unusual surroundings.

      ‘Verity. I presume that’s why you’re here. It can’t be something I’ve done. I pay my taxes, I certainly haven’t been kerb-crawling recently, and hotels are too minimal these days to smash up. Which leaves Verity. My wife.’ He spat the last word out, but seemed exhausted by his own venom. He sighed heavily before looking out towards the bowling alley. He waved. The kids waved back.

      ‘Is she here?’ Jessie asked.

      He looked at her. ‘No. It’s a big house, but I don’t think so. You’d know if she were here – the bell never stops ringing.’

      ‘Has she many visitors?’

      ‘Not that bell. She has a staff bell, and she seems to be eternally in need of something.’

      These were definitely not the words of a loving husband. ‘When did you last see her?’ asked Jessie, sitting forward.

      ‘Just tell me what she’s done. I’ll sort it out, pay, whatever. You haven’t arrested her, have you? She doesn’t need that sort of publicity right now.’

      ‘No. The thing is, Mr Dean …’

      ‘Mr Dean?’ he looked from Jessie to Jones. ‘Oh shit. It’s serious, isn’t it?’

      Jessie didn’t know what to say.

      ‘Someone is dead,’ he said slowly. Then added angrily, ‘I fucking knew this was going to happen.’

      ‘Did your wife ever have cosmetic surgery?’

      ‘What?’

      ‘Please answer the question.’

      ‘No one’s dead? Thank God.’

      ‘Please, answer the question.’

      ‘Absolutely not –’

      ‘The truth please, not the spin.’

      P. J. Dean’s shoulders dropped. He rubbed his forehead and wrestled with the truth. ‘Where do you want me to start? Lips, hips, eyes, tits. Course, she denied it all and plugged her diet books and exercise videos. What has all that got to do with anything?’

      ‘I’m sorry to have to tell you this, but a body was found on the bank of the Thames. We traced the silicone implants to your wife.’

      He stared back at her. He didn’t move. He didn’t blink. He didn’t breathe.

      Jessie persevered. ‘I’m sorry, I know this is difficult, but when did you last see your wife?’

      Very slowly, P. J. Dean lowered his head. ‘You said no one was … Is she …? Oh my god, you think you’ve got Verity.’

      ‘Please answer the question,’ said Jessie.

      ‘Um, I was in Germany last Wednesday, got back late on Thursday, she wasn’t here, and now it’s um, Wednesday. So, just under a week.’

      Jessie looked over to Jones.

      ‘That’s bad, isn’t it?’ said P.J. ‘I don’t understand what you’re saying. You’ve found her silicone implants, what does that mean?’

      ‘We found a body, sir. We’re trying to identify who it is. Has anyone in the household spoken to her – the kids, for instance?’

      P.J. stood up and knocked on the window. Jessie noticed he was shaking. The bald man came to join them. ‘Danny, when was Verity last home – and don’t cover for her, this is serious.’

      Danny looked at the police officers. ‘She went out on Thursday night. We haven’t seen her since. She called during the day on Friday, wanting to talk to the boys, but she was incoherent. I’m afraid I wouldn’t put them on.’ He turned back to P.J. ‘Actually, she fired me, I’ve been meaning to mention it to you.’

      P.J. waved a hand, dismissing the idea of his wife firing the man. Jessie wondered whether Verity Shore had a point. Knight seemed a bit shifty to her, a bit in a hurry to go somewhere and yet a little too eager to stay. She gave him a long hard look. ‘So you haven’t seen or heard from her since Friday, when she called you,

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