Authors: J. M. Gregson
Then they retraced their steps along the ridge and began the descent. As they left the last of Crinkle Crags, the cloud dropped like a damp grey blanket around them and there was a sudden fierce shower. It seemed that nature wished to remind them that this could be a dangerous as well as an invigorating place. They were soon out of the cloud as they descended, and their clothes dried quickly in the steady breeze. They made rapid, easy progress back towards the car they had parked on Wrynose Pass.
They grabbed a meal in Ambleside, where Percy bought Cumberland sausage as a culinary reminder of their first days in Lakeland together. Silence dropped in over tired limbs as they drove the car to the M6 and so south to Brunton and to work. They were passing Lancaster when Lucy said sleepily, âAlfred Wainwright came from Brunton, you know. He worked in local government there. Then he discovered the Lakes.'
âAs we have done all over again, together,' said Percy dreamily. It was an uncharacteristically sentimental vein for him. As if to correct himself, he added a moment later, âThe best backside in Britain will be even more muscular and rounded, after all that effort.'
âKeep your brain alert and your eyes firmly on the road, please.'
When they reached Percy's ageing semi-detached house in the old cotton town, they made mugs of tea, unpacked swiftly and prepared to tumble into bed and into sleep. âThat bathroom's as cold as ever. I'm going to do something about it before next winter!' said Lucy as she emerged in her nightdress and leapt breathlessly beneath the duvet.
There was no reply from Percy. He'd been checking the messages left on his phone. The last of them was from the detective sergeant who was his bagman, now that the rules of the police service prevented him from working with his wife. He listened carefully, then pressed the repeat button. DS Northcott's deep, dark brown voice said urgently, âWe've got a murder, Guv. High profile, at Claughton Towers. Tommy Bloody Tucker's been out to it. He's making a right balls-up. We need you, Guv.'
âA
murder, Peach.' A prominent local businessman killed in sensational circumstances. And you weren't there.' Superintendent Thomas Bulstrode Tucker made it into an accusation.
âNo, sir. Do you think the killer chose his moment? Waited until I was safely off the premises?'
âThis is no time for frivolity, Peach. Murder is a very serious business.'
This was also no time for Percy to meditate on his senior's penchant for the blindin' bleedin' obvious. âI understand you attended the scene of crime yourself, sir. Used surprise tactics.'
âSurprise tactics?' Tucker assumed the baffled-goldfish expression which always gave Percy a dubious pleasure.
âWorking at the crime face, sir. You usually prefer to cogitate in your office here and provide us with your overview of the situation.' Or sit on your idle arse in this ivory tower and produce fuck-all, if you take the alternative and majority view.
âIf I cannot attend the scenes of crimes as often as I once did, that is one of the crosses I have to bear, Peach. Much as I should prefer to adopt the hands-on approach, none of us can be in two places at once.'
âNo, sir. Not even you can manage that.' Peach smiled bleakly, as if he had discovered some form of consolation.
The man he had long ago named Tommy Bloody Tucker stared at him suspiciously over the tops of his rimless glasses. He said again, âYou weren't here, Peach.'
âNo, sir. I was enjoying two days of my precious leave, sir. Attaching it to the weekend to give us a blessed four days in a quiet hotel in Coniston and some walking in the high hills, sir.'
âYes. Well, as I sayâ'
âScafell Pike on Monday, sir. Crinkle Crags yesterday. Before returning refreshed to the fray, as you suggested.'
âMe? I don't think Iâ'
âAnd in the evenings, sir, good food and drink, and then connubial bliss. I find there's nothing like a damned goodâ'
âYes. There's no need for any more detail, thank you.'
âNo, I'm sure there isn't, sir. I've no doubt you know all about connubial bliss, sir. Enough said.' Peach stared at the ceiling, as if he could see there an evocation of his chief in congress with his formidable wife Barbara, whose Wagnerian proportions had led Percy to christen her Brunnhilde Barbara. He shook himself violently, ridding himself of the vision with difficulty. âBut enough of pleasure, sir. Are you near to an arrest?'
Tucker's jaw dropped further at this outrageous suggestion. âNo, Peach, I am not. And even to suggest that an arrest should be possible at this stage shows how little you appreciate the complexities of this case. You should be out there beginning your belated enquiries, not wasting my time with accounts of your squalid activities in Cumbria.'
âI'm sorry, sir. I understood that you had asked to see me or I should not be here. I have already visited the scene of the crime this morning. I was expecting you to brief me on the current progress of your investigation.'
â
Your
investigation, Chief Inspector Peach. I have held the breach in your most inconvenient absence. I am now formally handing over the responsibility for this case to you. I shall maintain my overview and conduct whatever media briefings are appropriate. You will be the person with responsibility for the conduct of this enquiry. Is that clear?'
âCrystal clear, sir. I seem to remember you reminding me last year that the first thirty-six hours on a case are always the most crucial. What can you report to me from this period?'
âMe? Well, I . . .'
âDS Northcott tells me you let people leave the scene of this death almost immediately. Is that correct?' Peach's black eyebrows arched impossibly high beneath the shining bald pate.
âThere were important people at this gathering, Peach. It was already ten o'clock when I got there. They were anxious to get away to their homes. I could foresee that they were going to become fractious.'
âI see, sir. I knew you would have a good reason for letting obvious suspects leave so quickly.'
âThere were no obvious suspects, Peach. This was a killing in a car park, with the banqueting hall in chaos during a break before the speeches.'
âYes, sir. You didn't think it politic to keep behind even the occupants of the top table where the victim had been sitting for a few brief questions before they left?'
âNo I didn't, Peach. These are influential people. They can do the police image a lot of damage in this town, unless we handle this case sensitively.'
âYes, sir. Sensitively, you say. I'm not sure sensitivity is my forte, sir. You wouldn't consider reversing your decision and retaining the case in your own capable hands, sir?'
âNo, I wouldn't. Get out of here and get on with it!'
âVery well, sir. What have you done to date?'
âMe? Well, I put house-to-house enquiries into immediate action, yesterday morning.'
âI see. I wouldn't have thought house-to-house would be the most productive line of investigation, with a crime committed amongst sixty-two people at a dinner at Claughton Towers. But that just shows how stereotyped my thinking is, I suppose. That's where a chief superintendent's superior intellect and imagination tells. Have you conducted any interviews, sir?'
âNo. I thought I'd leave that for you, Peach. You know that I don't like to tread on people's toes.'
âYes, sir. Your use of the first thirty-six hours after the crime has been quite subtle, sir. Low-key. Whoever did this must be baffled by your tactics.'
âI've put you in the picture. I think you should be on your way now, Peach.'
âI agree, sir. We don't want the scents to get cold, do we?'
Chief Superintendent Tucker stood looking out over Brunton from the window of his penthouse office after his DCI had left. He'd had this problem for years now: he'd like to put that insolent man Peach in his place, but he needed the results the man provided to bolster his position as Head of the Brunton CID section. He sighed, sat down behind his desk and shut his eyes. Two more years and he'd be rid of all this and retired on a fat pension â provided they didn't find him out before then.
Two floors below him, Peach brightened. He'd spotted his old friend Jack Chadwick writing his report in the CID section.
The two had been colleagues once as detective sergeants, before Chadwick had been shot and wounded in a bungled bank robbery. His wounds had brought him much sympathy and an aborted career. He'd continued as a uniformed sergeant for several years, carving out a reputation for himself as a scene of crime officer. He was a civilian now, but still doing the same job, still the best man to conduct a thorough investigation of a crime scene that Peach had ever known.
His face brightened a little when he saw Percy. âThank God you're back. I never thought you'd hear me say that. Don't let it go to your head.'
âYou had Tommy Bloody Tucker to contend with.'
âThe man's a wanker. I used to think you exaggerated. He's every bit as bad as you said.'
âIt's best not to let him get under your feet.'
âI didn't. I told him to piss off â well, as good as. I'm a civilian now. I don't have to put up with wankers like T B Tucker.'
âSo what did you find for us?'
âPrecious little. We've bagged all sorts of interesting little items, but the car park at Claughton Towers is a public place. Most of them were probably there before this happened. We've got five different fag-ends, but it's the first outdoor spot people come to when they slip out for a smoke. I doubt whether any of them belongs to your killer. Two of them have got lipstick on.'
Peach noted without comment the assumption that their killer would be a man. It was no more than a statistical assumption. Over ninety per cent of killings where a firearm was involved were by men. But until they knew otherwise, he wouldn't rule a woman out. The use of a pistol meant that no physical strength had been required. This big man O'Connor could feasibly have been shot by a woman, or even a child, though it seemed there'd been very few of those around.
Percy looked at the polythene bags on the other side of the little alcove. There was what looked like a hair grip, a couple of fragments of soil which might just have come from the sole of someone's shoe but probably hadn't, a ballpen which could be fingerprinted if it had anything to do with this crime. No used condoms, which were often collected from more remote spots, thank God. âWhat do you know of the victim?'
Chadwick smiled grimly. âLess than you, I'm sure. Successful businessman. Popular figure, as you'd expect an ex-international sportsman to be. Also a dodgy bugger, according to the police grapevine.'
Peach grinned. âYou keep in touch, then. We've been watching him. So has the Drug Squad.'
âYou won't need to watch the poor sod any more. Someone had it in for him.'
âOr someone paid to have him killed.'
âContract killer?' Jack Chadwick pursed his lips. âEntirely possible. A single bullet through the temple. No wasted ammunition. No extra noise. Mind you, even an amateur would have realised he was dead after one shot. This was a Smith & Wesson. You don't need two slugs with those. Not when you hold the pistol against a man's head.'
âThe bloke who lives in the entrance lodge didn't see any vehicle drive out. Not until much later, when everyone left.'
âI wouldn't rely too much on that. Johnny Wilson lives in the lodge; he was always a dozy bugger.'
An ex-copper whom they both knew. Many ex-officers took on low-level security jobs when they left the service. Peach grinned ruefully. âOne of the doziest. And he wasn't even on duty at the time.'
Chadwick said thoughtfully, âIf I'd been hired to kill O'Connor, I don't think I'd have brought a car on to the site. There are plenty of quiet spots around the edge of the property where you could leave a car and enter on foot, if you were up to no good. Vehicles give people away.'
âThanks, Jack. You're making this very easy. I gather it was well into the next day before Tommy Bloody Tucker got you out there.'
Chadwick joined with enthusiasm into the condemnation of inefficiency from above. âHe hasn't a bloody clue, that man. Tucker let the lot of them go without questions, I'm told. He makes you look like a genius, Percy.'
âGeniuses need help, Jack. Or should that be genii? What can you give me?'
Chadwick shook his head gloomily. âBugger all, probably. We've got the slug, so forensics will match it to the weapon if you ever find it â which I don't believe you ever will. We've got prints from the door-jamb and the handle, but some of them are sure to be O'Connor's and I'd lay five to one that none of them is chummy's. A man like O'Connor is going to have lots of enemies; you'll have lots of candidates for your killer.'
Chadwick left on that thought, with a smile which evinced considerable satisfaction.
It was happening, at last. It seemed a long time since Jim O'Connor had been so brutally removed from her. Sarah had been expecting to speak to the police ever since then; she knew enough about these things to know that they always spoke with the wife first. She would be the leading suspect, until they knew otherwise. That chief superintendent hadn't seemed to know what to do. She'd been surprised when he'd allowed them all to go home, even more surprised when the next day had dragged past without any request to see her.
Jim had died on Monday night. It was midday on Wednesday when the police finally came to see her. The senior CID man who came seemed anxious to make up for lost time. Perhaps because she had watched too many TV series, she had somehow expected a grave, experienced man nearing the end of this service. This man wasn't particularly young, but he was a bouncing rubber ball of energy who seemed to have to force himself to sit still and speak to her quietly. The tall black man he introduced as Detective Sergeant Northcott looked as hard as nails, but he stood very still until she asked him to sit, a calming presence compared with his chief.