‘So there’s nothing to show that Janey had hurt the boy?’ said Blake fiercely.
Dog hesitated. Then he said quietly, ‘Father, be as comforting as you can, but until we can see our way clearer, it would be wrong to promise certainties.’
The gazes locked. It was Dog who turned away first, unable to meet the pain and anger he saw in the priest’s eyes.
‘I’ll get the local force to send someone round,’ he said. ‘It won’t be long before the press get onto her, I imagine, and it’ll take a uniform to fight those boys off. Take care of her, Father.’
He made for the door. At the telephone table he paused, wondering whether to ring the local station. Better to call personally as he passed. There would be anger there if they’d heard Parslow’s statement especially as Denver already suspected he’d been holding out on him earlier. He shrugged. The anger of colleagues was nothing compared with the pain he was leaving here.
He noticed he’d moved the telephone index slightly off square. Carefully he realigned it before he left.
It was the least he could do for Mrs Maguire.
Worse, it was probably the most.
13 (#ulink_5a5b0e95-85a9-5a8b-bc1b-d6fc03f40f71)
The trip south was no better than the trip north. It felt like the wee small hours when Dog hit home territory, but his dash clock told him it was only eleven.
He saw the Romchurch sign, but kept his foot hard on the accelerator. When you’re on a rush, you don’t eat, you don’t crap, you hardly breathe. Just play. Gospel according to Endo.
Basildon. He looked at a map as he drove, located the college. Five minutes later he was parked on the verge by the main gate.
The college occupied a flat windswept site south of the A127. There was still agricultural land here but it would have taken an unreconstructed East Ender, or an estate agent, to call the location rural. The lights of housing prickled in all directions and there was a constant drone of traffic from the arterial road.
But, set in a couple of acres of playing fields, and emptied now for the Christmas vacation, these inelegant boxes of concrete and glass still managed to chill Dog’s heart like a Gothic mansion.
There was a hoarding by the gate bearing a diagram of the complex. He studied it, located the warden’s flat, then slipped through the gate. There was a caretaker’s lodge just inside but he didn’t want either the bother or the disturbance of explaining his presence so he cut away from it across the grass to minimize sound. The rain had finally stopped and the skies were clearing. Tendrils of mist from the sodden ground curled around his ankles and from time to time he stumbled in the tussocky grass. He doubted if this was doing his expensive shoes much good. Or his career.
He reached the block where the flat was located. The main double glass door was locked, but presumably the warden would have her own personal entrance. Even a college lecturer was entitled to a private life.
He moved cautiously along the flagged walkway running alongside the building. He had to make a full circuit to the other side before he found what he was looking for. There was a car park here with a solitary car parked in it, right outside a conventional single door with a bell push.
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