Nightingale decided to drive down to the boarding school after lunch. He grabbed his raincoat and tossed it over his shoulder as he walked to Jenny’s desk. ‘If Robbie calls, tell him to try my mobile.’ ‘Have you got your hands-free fixed up?’ ‘Sort of.’ ‘What does that mean?’ ‘I tuck it between my neck and my shoulder. That counts as hands-free.’ ‘You’ll lose your licence, Jack. The cops don’t want you smoking and phoning while you drive.’ ‘To be fair, I don’t do both at the same time. Why not come with me?’ She frowned up at him. ‘Because?’ ‘Because I’ll need a cover story. A guy on his own might look a bit out of place, but we could say we’re parents looking for a school for our kid.’ Jenny’s eyes narrowed. ‘Parents?’ ‘It’s just a cover story.’ Her eyes narrowed a bit more. ‘How old is our child?’ Nightingale shrugged. ‘I don’t know. Eight? Nine?’ ‘You’d tell them that I’m the mother of an eight-year-old?’ ‘You married young.’ ‘You’re an idiot sometimes. First, I doubt anyone would believe I was the mother of an eight-year-old. I bloody hope not, anyway. And second, I really hope that no one would believe for one minute that you and I were…’ She shuddered. ‘It was just an idea,’ said Nightingale. ‘A better idea would be for you to go on your own and say that your wife is overseas. You’re looking at schools before she comes over with the kid.’ She flashed him a tight smile. ‘That sounds a lot more realistic.’ Nightingale raised his hands in surrender. ‘Then that’s what I’ll do,’ he said. ‘Can you get me directions to Rushworth School?’ ‘Why don’t you get yourself a GPS?’ asked Jenny. ‘I don’t trust them,’ he said. ‘But you trust a computer printout?’ She shook her head in amazement and turned to her computer. After a few minutes on the internet she printed out a map and gave it to him. ‘What about running me out in the Audi?’ asked Nightingale. ‘I’ll pay for the petrol.’ ‘As much as I’d love to, I’ve got to file our VAT returns today and I’m still working my way through the stack of receipts you gave me this morning.’ Nightingale took the map from her. The school was about sixty miles away. ‘Suppose I’d better set off, then,’ he said. His MGB was in a multi-storey a short walk from his office and five minutes later he was heading west. Traffic was light and it took him just over ninety minutes to drive to the school. It was a large grey stone building, two wings either side of a columned entrance, with a grey-slated roof. Off to the left were tennis courts and a hockey pitch. Nightingale parked in the staff car park and went to reception where he told a stern-faced woman the cover story that he’d been rehearsing on the drive down. He and his wife Jenny were moving back to the UK from Australia and bringing their nine-year-old daughter with them. Nightingale worked for a bank that meant he had to travel a lot, and Jenny was a high-powered lawyer so they had decided that Zoe would be best boarding. Nightingale actually felt quite sorry for the hypothetical young girl for being saddled with parents who clearly didn’t give a toss about her. The stern-faced woman gave him a glossy brochure and a print out of the fees. He tried not to show surprise at the huge amounts being charged and asked if it would be possible to speak to the headmaster. ‘Headmistress,’ said the woman, archly. She waved him to a line of wooden seats. ‘I’ll see if Ms Cunningham is available.’ Nightingale was kept waiting for fifteen minutes but when Ms Cunningham did eventually arrive she was very apologetic. She was in her early thirties, with shoulder length blonde hair and bright red lipstick that matched her fingernails. She was wearing a dark green suit with a skirt that ended just above the knee, and matching green heels. She wasn’t wearing a wedding ring