attention.
She was an odd-looking woman: broad-shouldered, square and stocky from the waist up, with long skinny legs. Her round face, if it were all that you saw of her, would make you think she must be fat, but she wasn’t. Looking at her made Simon realize how well designed and coordinated most people’s bodies and faces were. He didn’t think he’d ever seen anyone before whose top half clashed so markedly with their bottom half, and both halves with their face.
Having said all that, Hannah Blundy wasn’t ugly. Her features were inoffensive, and her shiny dark-brown shoulder-length hair was attractive. It looked like hair Simon had seen on TV advertisements and rarely in real life.
“I never believed him,” she said. “Whatever ‘Riddy one-eleven one-eleven’ means, or even if it means nothing, he must have gotten it from somewhere, otherwise why those letters? Why those numbers?”
“So you knew it was his password?” asked Sam.
Hannah nodded. “I made him tell me what it was. I told him mine. If he had no secrets from me, why would he mind me looking on his laptop? He said it was just random, Riddy111111. It was a lie, but I can’t prove it. I . . . Please, if you find out . . .” She bit her lip and looked down at the floor, as if she’d lost confidence in the rest of her sentence.
Simon took a step toward her. “Find out what?”
“About the password. What it means. I want to know.”
“More than you want to know who murdered your husband?”
“Simon . . .” Sam murmured.
“No, I want to know that too,” said Hannah. She looked surprised. “Of course I want you to find out who killed Damon. That’s part of it, I’m sure, and the password is part of it. I never imagined the police might one day help me solve the mystery. This is my chance.” She sniffed, wiped her face with the back of her right hand.
Since she didn’t seem stupid, Simon assumed she would haveknown as soon as she discovered his dead body that the unlawful suffocation of her husband would attract serious and immediate help from detectives. And her “one day” suggested something that had been bothering her for a long time, not a crime that had been committed between half past eight and half past ten this morning. Therefore . . . the mystery Hannah Blundy was referring to couldn’t be Damon’s murder. That, in her eyes, was the chance to solve the puzzle; it wasn’t the puzzle itself. Interesting .
“What do you mean, Hannah?” Sam asked. “This is your chance for what?”
“To find out the truth that my husband was so determined to keep from me,” she said, staring down at her feet. “Whatever it is, I hope it’s what got him killed. If it wasn’t—if that was something completely different and unrelated—then whatever you find out about the murder won’t help me. I’d given up hope of ever knowing, but now . . .” She stopped with a ragged gasp, wide-eyed. “Promise me you’ll tell me the truth if you find out.”
“The truth about what?” Simon asked.
“Why Damon pretended to love me,” said Hannah.
“CHARLIE, HAVE YOU GOT a minute?”
Sergeant Charlie Zailer was on her way to the canteen for a cup of tea and a cake, if there were any left that had icing and didn’t look too dry and stale. She turned round and saw DC Chris Gibbs in the corridor behind her. He was smiling a better man’s smile: gracious and innocent. It bore no resemblance to anything Charlie was used to seeing on his face. Instantly, she was on her guard. He wanted something, and, without knowing what, Charlie wasn’t inclined to give it to him.
“Not really,” she said. “I’ve got an early evening meeting.” Which would be fine if there was going to be wine there, but there wasn’t. The provision of refreshments was not the Culver Valley Cultural Awareness Action Group’s strong point. “Why?”
“It’s the Damon Blundy murder. Something’s cropped up on the CCTV. Simon and Sam are still at the
Melissa Eskue Ousley
Robert Lipsyte
Cathy Glass
Jamie Begley
Rachel D'Aigle
Janelle Taylor
Jacqueline Woodson
Michael Malone
Kelly Meding
Sara Craven