the same problem. I heard one of our photographers complaining he wasnât allowed anywhere near the site because of the foot-and-mouth restrictions. It looks as though the telly cameras couldnât get any closer. Have you no idea who he is yet?â
âNo oneâs come forward to claim him,â Thackeray said, taking Lauraâs hand in his and pulling her onto the sofa beside him.
âWas it an accident?â Laura asked. Thackeray shrugged, not wanting to spend time discussing death tonight.
âProbably not,â he said. âDid you have a good day?â
âIn parts,â Laura said, willing enough to distract him. So often the nature of his work hovered like a dark cloud between them.
âOnly in parts,â Thackeray said wryly. âYou talked to this Kelly Sullivan at the radio station?â
âI did, we had a chat this morning and discussed the technicalities and some ideas Iâve got for interviews. And I had a quick drink with her just now on the way home and thatâs the good part. Her boss, the station manager, is happy for me to do her segment of the early evening show for the three weeks sheâs away. I can choose the people I interview and itâll be recorded in advance so itâs not as nerve-wracking as live radio. It sounds great.â
âAnd the bad part?â
Laura shuddered and told him about seeing the Asian woman harassed on her way in to work.
âIt was horrible, Michael. I thought you had people trying to stamp on that sort of thing. Those lads were just brazen about it, and no one did anything to help.â
âExcept you, I suppose,â Thackeray said. âRushing in where angels fear to tread again? I wish youâd be careful, Laura. Gangs of lads can be dangerous. You know that.â
âThere were masses of people about â¦â
âAnd not one of them would help you? Perhaps thatâs a topic you should explore on your radio show?â
âThat is a good idea, chief inspector,â Laura said, taking what might had an offhand remark more seriously than Thackeray expected. âBut one Iâve already had, as it happens. Kelly thinks itâs a good idea too.â
âWhatâs Ted Grant going to make of this new career move?â
âIâm looking forward to seeing his face when I tell him,â Laura said delightedly. âHe canât stop me. Iâve done it before. Thereâs nothing in my contract says I canât do freelance work so heâll have to lump it. Kelly says we can do the recordings to suit me so it wonât interfere with what I do at the Gazette. Anyway, apart from picking up dead joggers on Broadley Moor, what have the forces of law and order been doing today?â
Thackeray hesitated for a moment before he spoke, choosing his quiet words with care.
âI went to see Victor Mendelson this afternoon and signed the divorce papers.â
Laura turned to Thackeray in surprise, her heart thudding and her green eyes bright with expectation. This was a subject which had been flung back and forth between the two of them for so long that she had almost despaired of Thackerayâs
ever making the vital first move towards the marriage they had discussed so often and so inconclusively that it seemed unlikely ever to become a reality.
âYou really did it?â
He nodded, although she could see from his eyes that even this first step had hurt him in some way which she could only dimly understand.
âWhat can I say?â she said softly. âThank you, I suppose. I know itâs hard for you.â
âIt feels like â¦â Thackeray shrugged wearily. âAbandoning the two of them again, I suppose. It was never their fault. This just compounds it.â
âYou canât hurt them any more. It was all over long ago.â
âI donât think it will ever be over,â he said, and she turned away, her eyes clouding again,