Dreaming of the Bones
BROOKE,
from ”the Wayfarers”
Kincaid tossed the last of his paperwork in his Out basket, glanced at his watch, and yawned. Only half past six. Mondays were reputed to be the longest day of the week, but this bleak Tuesday had far surpassed its predecessor in tediousness and he would be happy to go home.
Now he had only to wait for Gemma, who was out dredging up the last facts on a case that was over, bar the shouting. At least it had got her out of the bloody office, he thought as he rocked back in his chair and stretched. His phone rang and he picked it up lazily, expecting to hear Gemma’s voice. ”Kincaid,” he answered, cradling the phone with his shoulder as he tidied a few things into his drawer.
” Duncan ? It’s Alec Byrne here.” The reception was poor and Byrne’s voice faded tinnily in and out. ”Sorry about the... it’s this bloody mobile phone. There, that’s better,” he said, coming in more clearly. ”Listen, Duncan ...” Byrne sounded hesitant, almost diffident. Amused, Kincaid said, ”What’s the matter, Alec? Did you change your mind about the Lydia Brooke case?”
”No. Listen, Duncan , I’m sorry, but I’m afraid I have some bad news.”
Kincaid brought the front legs of his chair back to the floor with a thump. ”What are you talking about, Alec?” He couldn’t remember Byrne having a penchant for bad jokes.
”I happened to be in Control when the call came through, so I came myself. I recognized the name from our conversation the other day. You said your ex-wife was called Victoria McClellan?”
Kincaid knew the drill too well. His heart jerked in sudden fear. ”What do you mean was, Alec?”
”I’m sorry, Duncan . She’s dead. The medics say probable heart attack. There was nothing they could do.”
The room receded oddly and he heard a buzzing in his ears. Byrne’s voice came distantly to him, then the words seemed to assemble themselves into something that made sense.
” Duncan , are you all right?”
”There’s been a mistake, Alec,” he managed to say against the weight pressing on his chest. ”It must be a different Victoria McClellan—”
”An English lecturer living in Grantchester?” Byrne said with reluctant certainty. ”I’m sorry, mate, but I thought you should know. Can you tell me how to contact her hus—”
It couldn’t be. Byrne was wrong, there must be some silly mistake, Kincaid thought, but he heard himself saying, ”I’m on my way.” Byrne’s voice still came faintly from the handset as he replaced it in the cradle.
Struggling into his jacket in the corridor, he ran full tilt into Chief Superintendent Childs.
”Been sneaking out to the pub?” said Childs, steadying him with a hand on his shoulder. Then, as he looked into Kincaid’s face, ”I say, Duncan , are you all right? You’re white as a sheet, man.”
Kincaid shook his head and pulled away from Childs’s restraining fingers. ”Have to go.”
”Wait, lad.” Childs reached for him again with a hand the size of a ham, and it was the sheer bulk of him that finally made some impression on Kincaid’s dazed mind. ”Tell me what’s up,” Childs said. ”You can’t just go haring off like that without a word.”
”It’s Vic,” Kincaid managed to say. ”My wife... ex-wife. They say she’s dead. I’ve got to go.”
”Where?” Childs asked, to the point as always.
”Cambridgeshire.”
”Where’s Gemma? You don’t look fit to drive.”
”I’m all right. I’ll be all right,” Kincaid repeated as he slipped from his superior’s grasp like a footballer evading a tackle and dodged his way towards the lift.
Even in his shock, he realized his chief was right. He had no business driving the Midget at high speeds in bad weather, so he took the best car available from the pool, a late model Rover with a powerful engine.
All the way to Cambridge he repeated his litany of disbelief to the rhythm of his tires on the motorway’s wet tarmac. It couldn’t be Vic. Vic couldn’t die of a heart attack, for God’s sake—she was too young. It couldn’t he Vic.
Some small rational voice in his head reminded him that he and Vic both were getting near forty, they weren’t all that young. And a few months ago, the wife of one of his mates, younger even than Vic, had died suddenly of an aneurysm.
All right, it happened. Of course it happened. But not to him. And not to Vic.
His armor began to weaken as he reached the Grantchester turnoff. He
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