the lights had finally gone out.
He allowed himself a few moments to feel sorry for his own mother. She had, after all, lost her mother today, and she would be feeling that very keenly, no doubt. And yet, until he knew exactly what was meant by the word âincidentâ, and until heâd got to the bottom of why his mother had taken his son halfway across town without telling anyone, he couldnât really feel anything towards her except anger.
*
The car skidded a little as he swung it into the wide gravel drive at Sunnyside. There was a police squad car out front, amongst others. The sight of it made his heart disco-dance around his ribcage once more.
He introduced himself at the front desk, and was ushered very quickly down a corridor towards the residential section of the building where his grandmammy had lived for the last ten years.
Once there, he was confronted with a devastating scene.
There was a uniformed officer guarding the doorway. He allowed Alex to duck under the yellow police tape and enter Aisling Clearyâs room. Mercifully, the bed was empty and had been stripped of most of the bedclothes. The bottom sheet remained and it looked clean and crisp, which gave Alex a second of reassurance. He assumed that she had died in bed; if so, then it looked like it had been peaceful enough. A bearded man in a creased suit stood next to it and was taking notes, but he didnât look overly concerned.
However, it was the other side of the room that gave cause for alarm. The patio doors near the seating area had been smashed. Not just the glass broken, as if from a thrown rock, but absolutely shattered into smithereens. Shards littered the floor, from the patio door frame to the doorway heâd just walked through. Alex crunched one underfoot as he took a tentative step forward. The reinforced plastic of the patio doors themselves had been snapped and bent inwards, as if something of considerable size, with considerable force, had barged its way into the room. A man in a white jumpsuit was inspecting the ragged edges of the carnage. Had Alex seen a vehicle being towed away from this scene, he would not be surprised: such was the extent of the mess. It looked like someone had tried to park their car in Grandmammy Aislingâs room.
Of course, the burning question was: what did that have to do with his mother and his son?
The man in the creased suit walked over, his hand outstretched. Alex took it and shook it. âYou must be Alex Holliday? Iâm Detective Sergeant Benedict Fields. Sorry for your loss.â
âThatâs okay. Whatâs happened here, detective?â
âThatâs what weâre trying to work out.â He brushed at his moustache with his finger and thumb. âThis is pretty much the scene as it was found. The only difference is I asked for your grandmother to be taken away before you arrived.â
âThank you,â Alex said instinctively, but then wasnât sure if that was what he was supposed to say. âDid she dieâ¦peacefully?â
âIâm no expert, but Iâd say so. The coroner will tell us more, but by the position of her body and the relaxed expression on her face, it looks as if she passed before this craziness happened.â He nodded to the patio doors. âHad she witnessed this I donât think sheâd have looked soâ¦content.â
âSo she wasnât in distress, or died of shock?â
âLike I said, no expert, but I doubt it. I imagine your grandmother just slipped away.â
Alex felt some relief. Part of him had dreaded the news that somehow either his son or his mother had unwittingly caused Aisling harm and brought about her downfall. That didnât seem to be the case. However, it did just lead to more questions.
âDo you know where my mother is? Or my son, Tom?â
Detective Fields tilted his head a little like a dog, and stared directly at Alex. âNo, we donât. We