“Jake did. He’s my little miracle. It made me think about your kids, and how you need help.”
Kate took a deep breath, opened the book, and found the title page. She signed her name between Enid’s and Peter’s names. She blew on the ink to make sure it was dry and wouldn’t smudge, and she closed the book.
“Thank you,” said Marnie.
“You should ask for two and a half grand. I had a look last night, and there’s a bloke in America who sold this book with just Peter’s signature for three thousand dollars on eBay,” said Kate.
Marnie nodded. They sipped their tea in silence for a moment.
“I saw on the news about that lad and Noah Huntley. They mentioned Jo too. Do you think they’ll reopen the investigation?” asked Marnie.
“I hope so. We’re still working on the case . . . I think that the commune on Walpole Street is the answer. The missing guys that Joanna was investigating lived there. Quite a few of the men we’re looking at visited the commune and then invested in the hotel, but the owner, Max Jesper, and his partner, Nick Lacey, seem to be evading us.”
Marnie frowned and sat back in her chair.
“What?” asked Kate.
“Nick Lacey?”
“Yes. Didn’t I mention him before?”
“No.”
“Do you know him?”
“No, but the name sticks in my mind.”
“Why?”
“You know I told you that the day after Jo went missing, I backed into that brand-new BMW? The guy who owned it was called Nick Lacey.”
“There’s probably more than one Nick Lacey,” said Kate, trying not to get too excited. “What did he look like?”
Marnie shrugged.
“I don’t know. I left my details under his windscreen wiper. And then I only heard from his solicitor . . . I don’t know what possessed me to own up. I should have just driven off. It cost me a fortune to claim on my insurance and his. I lost my no-claims bonus,” she said.
“Do you remember Nick Lacey’s address?” asked Kate, her mind moving fast. If it was the same Nick Lacey, why would he have been parked outside the morning after Joanna went missing?
“No, but I keep stuff. I might still have the claim forms,” said Marnie. She got up and went to a drawer in the kitchen. It was full of paperwork, and she started to dig around. Marnie then went out into the corridor and down to the living room, where she opened the door. Kate heard her opening drawers and cupboards; she came back a few minutes later with a piece of paper.
“Here, this is it. The insurance claim papers,” said Marnie, handing the sheet of paper to Kate. “He’s local, Nick Lacey. He’s got a Devon and Cornwall address.”
44
Tristan had just arrived at the office and was making coffee when Kate burst in holding a piece of paper. She went straight to her laptop, opened it, and started typing.
“Morning?” said Tristan.
“Sorry! Morning,” said Kate. He joined her at her laptop. “Look at this,” she added, handing him a piece of paper.
“It’s a car insurance claim form between Marnie Prince and Nick Lacey?” he said, reading it. He watched as Kate logged on to the UK Companies House website, where you could check the details of people who are limited company directors. She found the entry for Nick Lacey. There was a list of confirmation statements going back to 1997.
“What are confirmation statements?” asked Tristan.
“Every year, company directors have to either confirm their details are the same, or they have to update any changes,” said Kate. “What’s his address on the form?”
“Thirteen Maple Terrace, Exeter, EX14,” said Tristan. He looked up. Kate had the same address on the screen.
“Jesus. It’s the same Nick Lacey,” said Kate.
“What’s happened?”
Kate told him about visiting Marnie and finding out that Nick Lacey owned the car that Marnie had reversed into the morning after Joanna went missing.
“Nick Lacey owned a top-of-the-range BMW. Maple Terrace is miles away. It’s a posh area of Exeter. Why would he be parking his car on the Moor Side Estate?” asked Kate. “And Marnie said she backed into Nick Lacey’s car early in the morning, the day after Joanna went missing, so he could have parked there the night before.”
“Bev said her car was stolen from the same place on the night Joanna went missing,” said Tristan.
“It’s too much of a coincidence. Nick Lacey is linked to the commune, which links to David Lamb and, potentially, Gabe Kemp, and their deaths are linked to Hayden Oakley.”
Kate called up the case files on the computer.
“What are you looking for?” asked Tristan.
“I want to get it straight in my head where everyone was on the night Joanna went missing. Can we print off everyone’s statements?”
“We don’t have a statement from Nick.”
“No, I want to see the details of where Fred, Bev, and Bill were, and Marnie . . . There’s something bothering me—an idea.”
Kate got up from the chair, and Tristan sat down. He pulled up the police statements from Fred, Bev, Marnie, and Bill and printed them off.
Kate went to the whiteboard and wiped it clean.
“Okay. Let’s start with Joanna. She was at work on Saturday, September seventh, 2002. How did she get to work?”
“Fred said she took their car, which was a blue Ford. She left around eight thirty in the morning, and we know she was at work all day. She left work at five thirty p.m. and walked up to the Deansgate multistory car park. She was photographed close to the bus stop at five forty-one p.m., and that’s the last known sighting of her.”
“Okay, on to Fred. He’s at home all day. Having it away with Famke in the afternoon. He’s expecting Joanna home at six, but she doesn’t show up. He tries Joanna’s phone a few times after six p.m., and it’s switched off. He then phones Bev, who is at home in her flat on the Moor Side Estate . . .”
“Then they—” started Tristan.
“Hang on, let’s deal with where Bill and Bev were up to that point,” said Kate.
Tristan flicked through the statements until he found Bev’s. “Okay. Bill and Bev went to Killerton House in Devon on Saturday the seventh. It’s a National Trust house twenty miles outside Exeter. They left at nine a.m. . . .”
“How did they get there?” asked Kate.
“By car. Bev picked up Bill in her car, and then they drove to Killerton House, arriving just after ten a.m. They spent the day there until four p.m., when they came back because Bill was called into work.”
“Where?”
Tristan could see Kate was getting impatient.
“Do you want to switch? I’ll write on the board?” he said.
“No. Sorry, I’m not annoyed with you. I’ve just got this niggling thing in my head. You know when you know something, but it’s just out of your grasp?”