Extract: What His Wife Knew by Jo Jakeman

This entry was posted on 25 March 2022.

The enthralling, page-turning new thriller from the internationally acclaimed author of Sticks and Stones.

 


 

Stage One of Grief

DENIAL

 

CHAPTER ONE

Beth Lomas

 

Sorry.

Just one word on the back of a discarded envelope. I told

the police that no way, never, not in a million years was that

a suicide note.

I said, ‘You’re going to have to trust me. I know him better

than you do, and I know that Oscar would never take his own

life.’

His writing was as familiar to me as my own. There was a

cat’s tail swirl on the S and the Y, followed by a single X. A

kiss. Perhaps he’d used the last of the milk, or forgotten to

take the bins out. Something silly and forgivable that we’d

laugh about in time.

‘You idiot,’ I’d say, punching his shoulder. ‘You scared me

half to death.’ And he’d wrinkle his nose in that way he did

when he was embarrassed, and I’d rest my head on his chest.

I shouldn’t have told the detective about the note on the

kitchen table, propped between the salt and pepper grinders.

The slump of her shoulders and the downturn of her mouth

made it clear that DC Lowry Endecott’s mind was made up.

‘I know what you’re thinking, but it isn’t that,’ I said.

‘Then why’s he apologising?’ she asked.

‘We argued. No, not really, that sounds too strong. We’d

had words on Friday night. He left the house before I got out

of bed yesterday, making the most of the last day of good

weather, you know. He told Gabe – that’s our son – that he

was going for a hike and he’d see him that evening. The note

was an apology for the argument, you see. That’s all. Please, I

beg you. You have to find him. What if he’s hurt? Don’t give

up on him now.’

‘Can I ask what the argument was about?’ Endecott said.

She was tenacious, I’ll give her that, but I couldn’t allow

her to get side-tracked.

‘It was something about nothing. One of those silly spats

all couples have from time to time. I can’t even remember

what started it.’

Was that the first lie I’d told her? Of course I could remember

the argument, I could remember it word for word, and

that’s why we had to find Oscar so I could take it all back.

We’d been inseparable since the day we met. Beth and Oscar.

Oscar and Beth. You couldn’t have one without the other

because we came as a pair. People envied us because Oscar and

I, well, we were still going strong after all these years. My heart

fluttered, and I caught my breath, every time I saw him unexpectedly

in a crowd. I didn’t know who I was without him. So

much of me was tied up in him that it made no sense to me

that he wasn’t here by my side as the storm clouds tumbled in,

talking about making sure the drains were clear of leaves.

Endecott was dishing out platitudes she’d learned on a

training course that were meant for other families, not people

like us. She was trying to prepare me for the worst but she

should have saved her breath. I had to believe they would find

him while I stayed home and waited.

And waited.

Waited, while the rest of the world carried on laughing, and

bickering, and attaching importance to matters that were so

insignificant I wanted to scream, ‘How can you pretend the

world isn’t in turmoil?’ And so I prayed, I pleaded and I begged.

If Oscar could be delivered safely home, I would never take

him for granted again. Never snap, never scold, never nag.

 


“Endecott assured me they were searching in the right area now. It was a matter of time, and a matter of clinging on to the little hope we had left.”


 

I wanted to be out there looking for him, but I was no asset

to the search party of two dogs, the Peak Rescue Team, and a

drone. Oscar’s car was in a lay-by in the shadow of Wilders

Pass. The keys were in the ignition, which wasn’t like Oscar

at all. Me? Sure, I often leave keys in the outside of doors or

the insides of cars, but I’m forgetful like that. Oscar remembers

everything; the names of his employees’ kids, the number

plate of his first car, even the way someone slighted him eight

years ago. He’d never forget to come home to us.

Endecott assured me they were searching in the right area

now. It was a matter of time, and a matter of clinging on to

the little hope we had left. But with plenty of crags and caves,

Oscar could be anywhere. The Peak District was treacherous

terrain for those who weren’t familiar with the landscape but

Oscar and his brother, Harvey, had made these hills their playground

from the moment their mother cut her apron strings.

The Limestone valleys of the White Peak with stepping-stones

across rivers, and the dramatic ridges and gritty moorland of

the Dark Peak made up over five hundred square miles of

land, and somewhere, in the midst of it all, my husband was

waiting for me to find him and bring him home.

Harvey was heading up the search party. Though he volunteered

for the Peak Rescue Team, and had located countless

climbers who were injured or lost, he’d never imagined that,

one day, he’d be looking for his own brother. If anyone could

find Oscar, it would be Harvey. He was the level-headed one

of the two. He and Oscar shared that unbreakable bond that

meant they loved and fought fiercely, and Lord help anyone

who got between them. The Lomas brothers were a team to

be reckoned with. They climbed together, holidayed together,

and ran a business shoulder to shoulder. They were terrible

practical jokers, always setting the other one up through

prank phone calls and in-jokes.

Though they were equal business partners, it was Oscar who captained that ship. Harvey

preferred to take a less visible role, but you couldn’t have one

without the other. Oscar was as extroverted as Harvey was

introverted. Oscar was flamboyant where Harvey was measured.

They each needed the other for balance. Harvey was the

one who talked about projected income and cost-saving

measures while Oscar went after orders they couldn’t fulfil

and expanded their premises without planning permission.

Harvey knew as well as I did that the possibility of Oscar

taking his own life . . . well, there was no possibility. It was

ridiculous the police were even considering it.

The coming storm was all anyone was talking about. News

reporters would have us believe that three months of rain

would be falling in the space of forty-eight  hours. Flood

warnings were already in place. People in picturesque market

towns were dragging sandbags into doorways and driveways,

buying in extra milk and bread with tins upon tins of store

cupboard essentials. But Oscar knew all of this, we’d watched

the news together, commented on how impossible the roads

would be. Oscar took risks, it was one of the things I loved

about him, but never with the weather. I knew he would’ve

been home by now if it was within his power.

 


“I supposed Oscar had taken himself off somewhere to sulk, still angry with me for the way I’d reacted to our quarrel.”


 

Judge me if you must, I don’t care, but I didn’t report him

missing until lunchtime even though I hadn’t seen him since

Friday night. Though I was concerned, and tried his phone

twice, I didn’t immediately assume the worst. Why would I?

I supposed Oscar had taken himself off somewhere to sulk,

still angry with me for the way I’d reacted to our quarrel. He

could have stayed the night with Harvey and Miriam after

one too many brandies. It wouldn’t have been the first time.

‘Have you checked with family and friends?’ Endecott asked.

‘No one has heard from him since Friday night when his

brother spoke to him on the phone. His parents are on their

way up from Cornwall now. They’ve not heard from him at

all this week. There’s not really anyone else to call. They’re a

tight-knit family. Sorry, not they. I mean we.’

DC Endecott said I had to be patient and, as anyone who

knows me will tell you, patience is something I excel at. There’s

power in my patience. No one can bide time, fill time, or spend

time as I do. Patience brings all good things to bear and, as my

father used to say, time has a way of burying your enemies.

I’d just taken a dozen lemon and blueberry muffins out of

the oven. They were cooling alongside the tray of chocolate

brownies. Oscar would be hungry when he came home. I

bake. It’s what I do. I bake to celebrate, to console, and to

nourish. You can chart my stress levels by how much time I

spend in my kitchen.

It might’ve been the heat from the oven, or the tension in

the house, but there didn’t seem to be enough oxygen left

in there for me. I flung open the door but the air was just as

thick outside. My clothes were sticking to me as I slipped into

the garden, pulling at the neck of my T-shirt.

My bra strap was twisted and digging into my shoulder but I didn’t alter it.

The pain was a welcome focus; a domestic cilice.

Clouds gathered over the hills, dark heads together in collusion,

plotting destruction. The wind ruffled my hair as I sat

heavily on the bench. I looked over my shoulder and saw our

daughter at the window on the second floor. Honey’s face

was intent on the horizon as if she could spot her father and

guide him home. She was the beacon in the window. If anyone

could bring Oscar back to us, it’s her.

The patio door slid open and I snapped my eyes shut.

‘Mrs Lomas?’

The first drops of rain fell on my head.

‘Beth?’ Louder this time. The detective’s feet tapped down

the three steps towards me but I didn’t look at her. I could tell

that she judged me for not reporting Oscar’s disappearance

soon enough, and for baking cakes while rescue teams risked

their lives. The slight arch of her right eyebrow had suggested

she thought me careless for misplacing something as precious

as a husband. She was everything I wasn’t. Organised, resilient,

strong, authoritative. I bet she’d never gone to pay for groceries

and realised she’d left her purse by the kettle, or put petrol

in her diesel car, never forgotten that the clocks had gone back

and ended up an hour late for an important meeting. I would

hazard a guess that she’d never been late for anything, whereas

I couldn’t remember when I’d ever been on time.

I opened my eyes.

‘Sorry,’ I said. ‘Just needed a moment. Is there any news?’

It was the same question I’d asked half a dozen times

already.

But this time the answer was different.

‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I’m afraid there is.’

Sorry.

 

Extracted from What His Wife Knew by Jo Jakeman, out now.

 

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