Page 24 of The Last Party

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“Did you know Rhys Lloyd?” The reporter gets straight to the point, his colleague setting a readying hand on his camera.

“Is that why you’re here?” Ffion furrows her brow. “I’d have thought you’d be at the vigil.”

“What vigil?”

“Up Pen y Ddraig mountain. There’s a path leading up from the lake, and halfway up, there’s a little stone hut where Rhys used to sing, before he was discovered. Someone lit a candle in his memory and now there are hundreds there. They’re having a sort of service for him this morning so the children can sing in his memory.” Ffion closes her eyes briefly, one hand flat against her heart. “It’s going to be so beautiful.”

For two men who don’t look in peak condition, they sure can move.

Ffion retraces her steps and heads back toward the lake, where Leo’s waiting for her. “Sorry, manic morning.”

“Late night?”

Ffion spent last night watching reruns ofCall the Midwifewhile Seren skulked in her room on YouTube and Mam did the accounts for the holiday cottages, but she finds herself giving Leo a lopsided smile—the sort of smile that saysWouldn’t you like to know?It’s habit, this playing to type—the FfionWylltof long ago. The comparison makes her feel cold.

“Are you all right? You look as if you’re having a stroke.” Leo nods toward the boathouse. “What’s the skinny on Steffan Edwards?”

“The business has been here forever. Busy in the summer, dead in the winter, like most places around here. Steff took over from his dad a few years ago.”

“Reliable?”

Ffion starts walking toward the boathouse. “Completely.” She stoops to pick up an empty bottle of vodka from outside the workshop door. “Unless he’s had a drink.”

When Steffan Edwards Senior died, young Steff went on a bender that lasted five days. The locals were largely sympathetic, but when he threw up in the font at Emyr Williams’s christening, enough was enough. An intervention was staged, and whatever was said was enough to make Steffan Edwards pack in the drink for good.

Until now.

“How’re you doing, Steff?” Ffion says. The man’s eyes are bloodshot, and although he doesn’t seem drunk, he certainly isn’t sober.

“Investigating Rhys Lloyd’s death, are you? No comment.”

“We wanted your advice, actually.” Flattery gets you everywhere. “No one knows the lake better than you.”

Steff stops work, but his fist is tight around the wrench.

“The victim washed up by the jetty yesterday morning,” Leo says. “We think he’d been in the water for less than ten hours. If he went in by The Shore, could—”

“Victim? That man’s a victim of nothing!”

“Could the water have carried him to the jetty?”

Steffan doesn’t answer.

“This is a police inquiry, Mr. Edwards,” Leo says.

The boatman looks away, then shrugs. “There’s a current. Runs past The Shore. If he’d gone in from there, he’d have ended up down the bottom, not across by the jetty.”

Leo brings up a satellite view of Llyn Drych on his iPad and takes a digital pen from his pocket. “Can you show me how the current flows? Where would the vict—” He stops. “Where would the deceased have to have been in order to end uphere?” He marks the jetty with a red cross, then hands Steffan the pen.

Steffan leans over the map, wafting stale booze and sweat, and draws a series of curved lines across the screen. “He’d have been higher up. Here. Or here.”

“Can you point out the access points?” Leo says. “Anywhere you can get a vehicle to?”

Steffan adds half a dozen crosses around the edges of the lake, pinching the image and moving it to find the coves he wants. He draws a huge cross in the middle of the lake. “More likely he went in here.”

“From a boat?” Leo says.

Ffion raises an eyebrow. Check out Einstein. “Got any out on hire?” she asks Steff, but she knows the answer already. It’s winter: the boathouse is only open for repairs. If Rhys was killed on a boat, it didn’t come from here.


Tags: Clare Mackintosh Mystery