Abby drove up the headland. To her right was open grassland, with a few clusters of bushes and one dense copse of short trees, ending in chalk cliffs and a vertical drop to the English Channel. One of the sheerest, highest and most certain drops in the whole of the British Isles. To her left, there was an almost uninterrupted view over miles of open farmland. She could see the road threading through it into the distance. The tarmac was an intense black, with crisp broken white lines down the centre. It looked as if it had all been freshly painted for her today.
Detective Sergeant Branson had told her earlier that Ricky had made a mistake choosing this location, but at this moment she could not see how. It struck her as a clever choice. From wherever he was, Ricky would be able to see anything that moved in any direction.
Maybe the detective had just said it to reassure her. And she sure as hell needed that at this moment.
She could see a building about half a mile away on her left, at almost the highest point of the headland, with what looked like a pub or hotel sign on a pole. As she got nearer she saw the red-tiled roof and flint walls. Then she could read the sign.
BEACHY HEAD HOTEL.
Drive into the car park of the Beachy Head Hotel and wait for me to contact you, were his instructions. At exactly 10.30.
The place looked deserted. There was a glass bus shelter with a blue and white sign in front of it, on which was written in large lettering: THE SAMARITANS. ALWAYS THERE DAY OR NIGHT, with two phone numbers beneath. Just beyond was an orange and yellow ice-cream van, which had its sales window open, and a short distance further on there was a British Telecom truck, with two men in hard hats and high-visibility jackets carrying out work on a radio mast. Two small cars were parked by the rear entrance to the hotel; she assumed these belonged to staff.
She turned left and pulled up at the far end of the car park, then switched off the engine. Moments later, her phone rang.
‘Good,’ Ricky said. ‘Well done! Scenic route, isn’t it?’
The car was rocking in the wind.
‘Where are you?’ she said, looking around in every direction. ‘Where’s my mother?’
‘Where are my stamps?’
‘I have them.’
‘I have your mother. She’s enjoying the view.’
‘I want to see her.’
‘I want to see the stamps.’
‘Not until I know my mother is all right.’
‘I’ll put her on the phone.’
There was a silence. She heard the wind blowing. Then her mother’s voice, as weak and quavering as a ghost’s.
‘Abby?’
‘Mum!’
‘Is that you, Abby?’ Her mother started crying. ‘Please, please, Abby. Please.’
‘I’m coming to get you, Mum. I love you.’
‘Please let me have my pills. I must have my pills. Please, Abby, why won’t you let me have them?’
It hurt Abby almost too much to listen to her. Then Ricky spoke again.
‘Start your engine. I’m going to stay on the line.’
She started the car.
‘Accelerate, I want to hear the engine running.’
She did what he said. The diesel clattered loudly.
‘Now drive out of the car park and turn right. In fifty yards you’ll see a track off to the left, up to the headland itself. Turn on to it.’
She made the sharp left turn, the car lurching on the bumpy surface. The wheels spun for an instant as they lost traction on the loose gravel and mud, then they were up on the grass. Now she realized why Ricky had been so specific in instructing her to rent an off-roader. Although she did not understand why he had been so concerned it should be diesel. Fuel economy could scarcely have been something on his mind at this moment. To her right she saw a warning sign that said CLIFF EDGE.
‘You see a clump of trees and bushes ahead of you?’
There was a dense copse about a hundred yards in front of her, right on a downward slope at the cliff edge. The bushes and trees had been bent by the wind.
‘Yes.’
‘Stop the car.’
She stopped.
‘Put the handbrake on. Leave the engine running. Just keep looking. We are in here. I have the rear wheels right on the edge of the cliff. If you do anything I don’t like, I’m throwing her straight back in the van and releasing the handbrake. Do you understand that?’
Abby’s throat was so tight it was a struggle to get her voice out. ‘Yes.’
‘I didn’t hear you.’
‘I said, yes.’
She heard a roar, like wind blowing on a phone. A dull thud. Then there was movement in the copse. Ricky appeared first, in his baseball cap and beard, wearing a heavy fleece jacket. Then Abby’s heart was in her mouth as she saw the tiny, frail figure of her bewildered-looking mother, still in the pink dressing gown she had been wearing when Abby had last seen her.
The wind rippled the gown, blew all her wispy grey and white hair up in the air so it trailed from her head like ribbons of cigarette smoke. She was rocking on her feet, with Ricky gripping her arm, holding her upright.
Abby stared through the windscreen, through a mist of tears. She would do anything, anything, anything at all, to get her mother back in her arms at this moment.
And to kill Ricky.
She wanted to floor the accelerator and drive straight at him now, smash him to pulp.
They were disappearing back into the trees. He was jerking her mother along roughly, as she half walked, half tripped into the copse. The shrubbery was closing like fog around them.
Abby gripped the door handle, almost unable to stop herself from getting out of the car and running across to them. But she hung on, scared of his threat and now even more convinced that he would kill her mother, and enjoy doing so.
Maybe, with his warped mind, he would value that even more than getting his stamps back.
Where was Detective Sergeant Branson and his team? They must be close. He had assured her they would be. They were well concealed all right, she thought. She couldn’t see a soul.
Which meant, hopefully, that Ricky couldn’t either.
But they were listening. They would have heard him. Heard his threat. They wouldn’t rush the copse and try to grab him, would they? They couldn’t risk him letting his van go over the edge.
Not for a few fucking stamps, surely?
His voice came back on the line. ‘Satisfied?’
‘Can I take her now, please, Ricky. I have the stamps.’
‘This is what you do, Abby. Listen carefully, I’m only saying it once. OK?’
‘Yes.’
‘You leave your engine running and you leave your phone on like this, in the car, so I can hear the motor. You get out of the car and you leave the door wide open. You bring the stamps and you walk twenty steps towards me and then you stop. I’m going to walk towards you. I’m going to take the stamps and then I’m going to get into your car. You are going to get into the van. Your mother is in the van and she’s fine. Now this is where you have to be very careful. Are you taking this in?’
‘Yes.’
‘By the time you get to the van I will have looked at the stamps. If I don’t like what I see, I’m driving straight over to the van and I’m going to give it one hard nudge over the edge. Are we clear?’
‘Yes. You will like what you see.’
‘Good,’ he said. ‘Then we won’t have a problem.’
Without wanting to move her head too much, in case he was watching her through binoculars, Abby glanced as much as she could around her. But all she saw was bare, windblown grassland, a small, curved brick structure, an observation point of some kind, containing some empty benches, and a few solitary bushes, none big enough to conceal a human. Where were Detective Sergeant Branson’s people?
After a couple of minutes, she heard Ricky again. ‘Get out of the car now and do what I told you.’
She pushed open the door, but it was a struggle against the wind. ‘The door’s not going to stay open!’ she shouted back at the speaker, panicking.
‘Wedge it with something.’
‘With what?’
‘Jesus, you stupid woman, there must be something in the car. A handbook. A rental docket. I want to see you leave that door open. I’m watching you.’
She pulled the envelope of rental documents out of the door pocket, pushed the door open and waved them in the air, so that he could see. Then she climbed out. The wind was so strong, a gust almost blew her over. It tore the door from her hand, slamming it. She yanked it open again, folded the envelope in two, making a thicker wedge, grabbed the Jiffy bag, then closed the door as far as it would go against the wedge.
Then, with the wind tearing painfully at the roots of her hair, hurting her ears, ripping at her clothes, she walked twenty very unsteady paces towards the copse, eyes darting in every direction, her mouth dry, scared stiff but burning with anger. She could still see no one. Except Ricky now striding towards her.
He held his hand out to take the bag with a grim smile of satisfaction. ‘About fucking time,’ he said, snatching it greedily from her.
As he did so, with all her strength and all the pent-up venom she felt for him, she swung her right foot up as hard as she could between his legs. So hard it hurt her like hell.