Sixty-Four
Donna put down the note and ran her hands over the paper, as if trying to smooth out the creases. She was shaking slightly. Julie could see the tears in her eyes as she re-read the sheet of paper, touching her dead husband’s name with her fingers as she read.
‘Oh, Chris,’ she murmured quietly, wiping one eye with the back of her hand.
He loved you. Then why did he have an affair?
Jesus, even now it plagued her. She lowered her head.
‘Donna, are you all right?’ Julie asked, slipping one arm around her sister’s shoulders.
Donna nodded.
‘We have to go,’ she said, sucking in a deep breath, folding the note again. She looked at the small key on the table, then dropped that into the envelope with the note.
‘No one can be trusted,’ Julie said, echoing the words on the paper. ‘You were right not to call the police.’
‘Is my paranoia catching?’ Donna laughed humourlessly. ‘I’ve said it to you before, but I’ll say it again. If you want to leave I’ll understand, but you’re the only one I can trust now.’
Julie touched a hand to her cheek.
‘We’ll do it together,’ she said softly, holding Donna’s gaze. The older woman stood up and the two of them embraced, holding each other tightly, neither wanting to let go, united in their grief and also in their determination.
‘Come on,’ said Donna finally. ‘Let’s get to that bank.’
In the daylight Julie could see the holes in the road which, the previous night, she’d only been able to feel. The surface was badly pockmarked and the car bumped and bounced over the uneven thoroughfare, its journey only becoming smoother as they reached the main road that would lead them into Chichester itself.
Along the way they passed through one or two collections of houses masquerading as villages. The sun managed to escape the shackles of dark cloud every now and then; when it did, glorious golden light fell across the countryside. But for the most part the land remained in shadow.
As they drew close to the outskirts of Chichester itself rain clouds were gathering. As Julie finally found a parking space close to the bank the first droplets of rain were striking the windscreen of the car, like oversized tears.
The two women hurried across to the main doors of the bank. It was quiet inside. At the ‘Enquiries’ desk a young man with a strange, flattened haircut looked up from behind the counter. He smiled, ran swift appraising eyes over both women and coloured immediately.
‘Can I help you?’ he asked.
‘I want to see the manager, please,’ Donna told him.
‘Can I ask what it concerns?’
‘Could you just fetch him, please? It is important. Tell him my name is Donna Ward. My husband was Christopher Ward.’
The young man nodded and scuttled off, returning a moment later with a much older man in tow. The older man regarded the two women expressionlessly for a moment, then stepped forward. Donna made quick introductions. The man told her in a broad Scots accent that he was Maurice Langton, the manager. Then he invited them both through into his office.
‘I was very sorry to hear about your husband, Mrs Ward,’ Langton said, closing the door of his office and ushering them towards two chairs.
‘My husband kept a safety deposit box here, didn’t he?’ Donna said. She reached into her handbag and took out the key. ‘I need to see the contents.’
‘There are one or two forms to be signed first ...’ Langton began but Donna cut him short.
‘That’s all right,’ she said briskly. ‘It’s important.’
Langton looked at her for a moment, then reached into his desk. He produced the necessary documents and handed them to her, pointing out where she should sign. She did so and handed them back to him, her irritation scarcely hidden.
Langton realized her impatience and ushered them out of the office towards another door, which he opened with a heavy key he took from his pocket. Beyond it fell a flight of stone steps which led down to the bank’s vault. The walls on either side of the stairwell were dazzling in their brightness. Led by the bank manager, the two women descended to a corridor and more antiseptically white walls that seemed to crowd in on them like banks of snow. Langton led them through two more doors, finally coming to a small room with a desk and two chairs. To the right was another door; beside this one stood a uniformed man in what looked like a Securicor outfit. He looked impassively at the trio of visitors as they approached.
Julie waited outside while Donna and Langton passed through the last door into the vault itself. She saw hundreds of drawer facings, row upon row of safety deposit boxes. Langton led her to the one she sought.
‘Your key, Mrs Ward,’ he said.
Donna just stared at the box.
‘I need your key,’ he said, almost apologetically.
She nodded, handed it to him and watched as he put her key into one of the locks and the duplicate he carried into the other, turning both simultaneously. He pulled the drawer free and carried it outside for her, setting it on the desk.
‘Just call me when you’ve finished,’ he said and stepped back.
Donna sat looking at the box for long moments. Then, finally, hands quivering slightly, she reached for the contents.
All it contained were two envelopes.
Two flat, white envelopes.
‘What the hell is this?’ said Julie. ‘This is the big secret?’
Donna slipped the envelopes into her bag and called Langton back over.
‘Did you know what was inside the box?’ she asked him.
The manager looked aggrieved at the suggestion he might be privy to the contents of one of the high-security lockers.
‘You knew there were just two envelopes in there?’ she continued.
‘I had no idea what was in there,’ he said.
‘Was my husband alone when he brought them in?’ Donna wanted to know. Or did he have another woman with him?
‘Most certainly,’ Langton told her. ‘Is there something wrong, Mrs Ward?’
She shook her head, thanked him for his co-operation and then headed for the way out. Julie followed closely behind. They passed back the way they had come, past the gleaming white walls and up the stairs. Donna thanked Langton again and the two women left the bank.
Inside the car, Donna glanced at the two envelopes then slipped them into her handbag.
‘Get us home,’ she said, ‘as quick as you can.’