Diamond Solitaire

Read Diamond Solitaire for Free Online

Book: Read Diamond Solitaire for Free Online
Authors: Peter Lovesey
places."
    "Oh, forget it"
    After an interval he said, "Are you awake, Steph?"
    She sighed. "I am now."
    "I was thinking about the kid."
    "Which kid?"
    "The Japanese girl I got sacked over. Why would anyone abandon a kid like that? She was nicely dressed. Clean. In no way neglected."
    "Perhaps she ran away from home."
    "And turned up on th& seventh floor of Harrods? I can't believe that"
    "Fretting over it won't help," said Stephanie. "She's not your responsibility."
    "True."
    He was silent for a while.
    She was almost asleep when he said, "There must be a way of keeping all the pieces in one place."
    "Mm?"
    "The jigsaws. I was thinking if I were to help in the shop—"
    She sat upright. "Don't you dare!"
    "I was going to say I could do the
    "I was going to say I could do the jigsaws there, and if pieces went missing at least we'd know they were on the premises."
    "If you so much as set foot in that shop, you'll leave it on a stretcher when I've finished with you, Peter Diamond." A bold claim—considering she was about 98 pounds and he 252, but she knew what havoc he would wreak—innocently, let it be said—in all that clutter. She'd known when she married him that he was accident-prone. He was badly coordinated. Some fat people are graceful movers. Her husband was not. He knocked things over. In the street he failed to notice curbstones. Hazards like dog-mess seemed almost to seek him out.
    "This getting old—I don't care for it," he said at breakfast next morning.
    "Fishing?" Stephanie said.
    He gave a shrug.
    "All right, I'll say it. You're not that old."
    "Too old for work, apparently."
    "Snap out of it, Pete."
    "You want to see them lining up for unemployment benefit. Younger men than me. Much younger, some of them. Kids, straight out of school."
    She heaped streaky bacon on his plate. "Things could be worse."
    "You mean one of those unemployed kids could be ours."
    She looked away, and he cursed himself for being so boorish. In her first marriage, to a shop manager, Steph had miscarried three times. She'd lost another baby when she married Diamond. That time she'd suffered complications that were finally resolved by a hysterectomy. Surgery had been the cure-all in the early seventies. She'd lost her womb, but not the maternal urge. Before he met her she'd taken on the role of leader to a pack of Brownies. Did it for years, and did much more than Baden-Powell had ever intended. Always willing to be a second mum to small girls whose parents neglected them. They were all young adults now and she still wrote to some of them.
    He put his hand over hers and said, "Sorry about last night, love."
    Her face creased into a bewildered look. "Last night?"
    "In bed."
    She stared at him with wide eyes.
    "The jigsaw piece."
    "Oh!" She laughed. "I'd forgotten that. I thought you were on about something entirely different. It didn't make sense at all."
    The day was fine after more than a week of overcast skies and rain, so instead of joining the queue in the library again, he called in at the news agent's, treated himself to his own copy of the Evening Standard and took it into Holland Park to read. Finding that nothing in the jobs columns grabbed him, he put the paper aside and basked in the sun for a while on one of the wooden benches facing the pond beside the Orangery, watching people walk their dogs and push their prams along the length of the arched cloister. Everyone but he had some accessory, some visible reason for being in the park. A model airplane, a tennis racket, a camera, a spiked stick for picking up waste paper.
    He got up decisively. Hell, he had no cause to be idle. He'd remembered an urgent job of work. Overnight a couple of air bubbles had appeared on the freshly emulsioned kitchen ceiling. Stephanie hadn't said anything, but he was sure she'd noticed them. He'd see if he could rub them out with sandpaper.
    At home, trying to be tidy, he spread the sheets of the Standard across the kitchen floor below the bit of

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