question. Two words were enough to confirm Lindsayâs presumption that those pale limbs didnât belong to an American. Mutton dropped on to his stomach on the sand, head down between his front paws.
Lindsay paused, hands on hips, breathing slightly harder than she needed to. If she was going to have to take off, better that the other woman thought she was more tired than she was. âYou have the advantage of me, then,â she said, a frosty imitation of Mel Gibsonâs proud Scottish dignity in Braveheart .
âMeredith Miller sent me. I . . . Iâm afraid I have some bad news.â
The accent was Estuary English. It had never been one of Lindsayâs favorites, always reminding her of spivvy Tory MPs on the make. Distance hadnât lent it enchantment. She wiped away the sweat that had sprung out on her upper lip. She cocked her head to one side and said, âI know Pennyâs dead, if thatâs what you mean. It made the papers. Who are you?â
The woman opened her satchel and Lindsay rose on to the balls of her feet, ready for fight or flight. The past sheâd tried so hard to bury in California had conditioned her responses more than she liked to admit. Especially when she was dealing with people with English accents. But nothing more threatening than a business card emerged from the bag. Lindsay took it and read, âDGM Investigations. Sandra Bloom, senior operative.â There was an address with an East London postcode that would have rendered the whole card a joke before Canary Wharf started to fill up. Now, it signalled that Sandra Bloomâs
company thought they were out at the leading edge of private investigation, light years away from the bottle of bourbon and the trilby.
âDGM?â Lindsay asked.
Sandra Bloomâs mouth twisted in a wince. âDonât get mad?â
Lindsay nodded. âMust have seemed like a good idea at the time. So whatâs all this about, Ms. Bloom? What are you doing here? Whatâs your connection to Meredith? And why are we standing in the middle of a beach when we live in a world that has more phones, faxes and modems than hot dinners?â
Sandra looked faintly embarrassed. âI donât know exactly what it is that Ms. Miller does for a living . . .â
Lindsay interrupted with a snort of ironic laughter. âJoin a very large club.â
â. . . but whatever it is, itâs made her rather paranoid about normal methods of communication,â she continued regardless.
Lindsay nodded. âRight. I remember the lecture. Menwith Hill, Yorkshire, England. One of the biggest listening posts in the world, run to all intents and purposes by the US government. Who routinely monitor phone calls, faxes and computer traffic. Iâve always found it hard to get my head round the idea. I mean, the sheer volume of it. Some days I donât have time to read my own e-mail. The thought of ploughing through everybody elseâs . . . Anyway, yeah, itâs starting to make sense. Okay, I understand why Meredith wouldnât want to entrust anything sensitive to any form of telecommunication. And given the news in todayâs paper, I donât have to be whatâs-her-name with the crystal ball on the national lottery to figure out it must be something to do with Penny. So whatâs going on?â
Sandra pushed her hair back from her face in what was clearly a regular time-buying gesture. âMs. Miller and her lawyer have sent me over from London . . .â
âHang on a minute,â Lindsay butted in again. âWhatâs with the âlawyerâ bit? I didnât even know Meredith was in London, never mind that sheâd got herself a lawyer.â
âMs. Miller has a lawyer because she seems to think sheâs about to become the policeâs number one suspect in their inquiry into the murder of Penny Varnavides,â Sandra blurted out in a rush, clearly
deciding it was