then?â
âLetâs list the people we know.â
It wasnât a very long list: Will at the gallery, our neighbours, our local fishmonger who for some reason looked after us particularly well, the boss of our favourite restaurant, a couple of local shopkeepers, the dreaded Fenella and the others we knew vaguely from the pub scene.
âThat old hag Fenella is capable of anything, I reckon,â said Carl with feeling.
But we both knew the truth well enough. Apart from any other considerations, everyone on our rather pathetic list had one thing in common: they knew absolutely nothing about Carl and me and our past. They had no motive that we could possibly imagine and no knowledge to harm us with.
âIt has to be someone from before, thatâs the only logical answer,â said Carl.
I shrugged again. âBut there isnât anybody, is there?â
When we came to live in St Ives, Carl and I had discarded our old lives like a pair of worn-out shoes. For so long now there had just been each other. There was nobody left from the past, not for either of us. There could not be.
We were sitting together at the table in our single downstairs room. Carl walked to the window, which looked into the narrow alleyway outside. Only the upstairs room, that bit higher up, had the wonderful sea view over the rooftops.
âI donât know what to do,â he said softly, almost as if he was talking to himself. I was not used to uncertainty in Carl. He always seemed so strong.
âThe police?â I suggested tentatively.
âI donât think so,â he said. âDo you?â
I shook my head. The last thing either of us wanted to do was to answer a load of questions from the police.
We were both silent for a moment, then Carl turned away from the window. He sat down beside me again and put his arm round me. I could tell that his moment of indecision was over. He seemed right back to his normal strong self. âItâs you and me, girl,â he said in his lovely slow drawl. âYou and me against the world. Thatâs the way itâs always been and thatâs the way it always will be â which is just fine by me. We donât need anyone else, not now, not ever.â
He kissed me and I managed a smile.
âCâmon,â he instructed suddenly. âLetâs conduct our own investigation.â
He led me down the hill through the town to the Logan Gallery.
âFor goodnessâ sake, Carl, you donât suspect Will, do you?â I asked.
Carl shook his head. âHe knows everybody, doesnât he? We need all the help we can get.â
I understood what Carl was up to. He wanted to do something, however potentially fruitless, rather than just sit around waiting for another letter, heaven forbid, to arrive.
Will greeted me with the usual bear-hug. I pushed him away more abruptly than normal and noticed a fleeting expression of hurt surprise in his eyes, but he quickly recovered and offered us coffee. Carl had no time for it that day. He didnât mess about. He produced the letter at once and handed it to the gallery boss.
Will glanced at it quickly. He looked absolutely shocked and appeared to be momentarily rendered speechless.
âAny ideas? Somebody scratched the same sort of stuff on the van, as well,â Carl explained.
Will just shook his head. âWhy have you shown me this? What does it mean?â he enquired.
âI havenât the faintest idea what it means, but itâs upset Suzanne terribly and itâs not doing me a great deal of good either,â replied Carl.
Will nodded. âIâm not surprised,â he said.
âLook, Will, I have to find out whoâs doing this.â
âHave you been to the police?â
Carl shook his head. âI reckon I should be able to sort it out. Look at the postmark. Penzance. Itâs somebody local.â
Will studied the letter and the envelope. âWords cut