He left it at that. He got to his feet. At the hut’s doorway, he paused, one small matter left unclear to him. He said to Reeth, “Have you watched me all these years, Mr. Parsons? Has that really been the extent of your life? How you’ve defined yourself? Waiting till I had a boy the very same age as Jamie was when Jamie died and then moving in for the kill?”
“You don’t know what it’s like,” Reeth said. “But you will, man. You bloody sodding will.”
“Or did you find me because of…” Ben considered this. “Because of Adventures Unlimited? The purest chance, reading the newspaper somewhere?wherever you were?and seeing that story poor Alan worked so hard to arrange. Was that it? That story in the Mail on Sunday? Then dashing here and establishing yourself and waiting, because you’d got so bloody good at biding your time. Because you thought?you believed?that if you did to me what you were so sure I’d done to you, that would…what? Give you peace? Close the circle? Finish things properly? How can you believe that?”
“You’re going to know,” Reeth said. “You’re going to see. Because what I’ve said here?every word of it, man?is speculation. I know my rights. I made a study of my rights. So when I walk out of here?”
“Don’t you see? It doesn’t matter,” Ben replied. “Because I’m walking out of here first.”
He did so. He closed the door behind him and strode along the path towards the steps. His throat ached with the strain of holding back everything he’d been holding back?even without acknowledging that fact?for so many years. He heard his name called, and he turned.
DI Hannaford joined him. She said, “He’s made an error somewhere, Mr. Kerne. They always make an error. We’re going to find it. No one thinks of everything. I want you to hang on.”
Ben shook his head. “It doesn’t matter,” he said again. “Will it bring Santo back?”
“He’s got to pay. That’s how this works.”
“He’s already paying. And even if he isn’t, he’s going to see the only thing there is to see: There’s no peace for him in what he’s done. He can’t scrub it from his brain. None of us can do that.”
“Nonetheless,” Hannaford said. “We’ll be pursuing this.”
“If you must,” Ben said. “But not for my sake.”
“For Santo’s sake, then. He’s owed?”
“He is. God, how he is. He’s just not owed this.”
Ben walked from her, making his way along the path and up the stone steps to the top of the cliff. There, he followed the South-West Coast Path the short distance to the pastures they’d crossed, and he returned to his car. They could do with Jago Reeth or Jonathan Parsons what they wished to do or, indeed, what they were able to do within the confines of the law and the rights he said he knew so well. For whatever they did or did not do would not be sufficient to absolve Ben of the burden of responsibility that would always be his. This responsibility, he saw, went far beyond Santo’s death. It was described by the choices he’d made time and again and what those choices had done to mould the very people he’d claimed to love.
In days to come, he knew he would weep. He couldn’t now. He was numb. But the grief of loss was inescapable, and he accepted that for the first time in his life.