Read Child's Play Online

Authors: Maureen Carter

Child's Play (27 page)

‘Bit late for that.' He wiped a hankie round his bull neck. ‘Funeral services maybe.'

Her heart sank. ‘Christ, she's not dead is she?' He turned his mouth down, waggled a hand.
Callous sod.
‘I've a good mind to report you for that.'

‘Let me know. I'll buy the paper.' Clearly, she'd not flashed the card fast enough and/or he'd recognized her. ‘Don't try it on with me, love,' he said.

Fair dos. It had been a stupid move to make. ‘I'm sorry.' She raised a placatory hand. ‘I just can't take it in. When I left here yesterday …' She narrowed her eyes. Walker had told half a dozen yobs she'd dobbed them in to the cops.
Coincidence?

‘What?' he asked.

She shook her head. Monkey. Organ grinder. ‘Does DI Quinn know about this?'

The grimace was gormless. ‘Who?'

‘Yes, she does.' Caroline turned to see a forensics officer, tall, probably trim under the suit and – now he'd removed the headgear – definitely blond. ‘Caroline King, isn't it?' Easy authority, natural confidence, she'd bet he was top bunny. ‘Ben Cooper, crime scene manager.'

‘I've seen you around.' She smiled, shook the proffered hand. ‘Good to meet though.'
Exceptionally so.

‘I've just been on the phone with the inspector.' He smoothed a hand over mussed hair.

Lucky inspector.
‘And?'

‘As I say, she knows about the fire.'

Big help. Not. ‘It's arson, isn't it?'

‘You sound pretty sure on that score.' He nodded towards one of the transits. ‘I need to grab a case.' As they walked in step he asked, ‘Do you know something I don't, Miss King?'

Plenty. ‘I had a meeting scheduled this morning with the woman who lives here.'

‘Go on.'

‘She has a story to tell and I'm thinking …'
But how did that figure with the gang of youths?

‘That someone doesn't want it coming out?' Cooper voiced the rest of her thought. Not just a pretty face then.

‘It's possible, isn't it?'

‘I'd like to help but I think you need to speak with Sar— DI Quinn.'

So did Caroline. Pronto. And not on the end of a line. ‘Is the inspector still at the hospital?'

‘Far as I know.'

She tapped a temple. ‘Catch you later.'

It hadn't been a total punt. Not if Walker was still alive.

FORTY-ONE

‘Y
ou have to convince him it's true.' Nicola Reynolds fixed her gaze on Sarah, hands clasped in what could have been a prayer. ‘I'll get down on my hands and knees if it helps.'

‘What would have helped is you being straight with us from the word go, Mrs Reynolds.' They sat in a small room, the sort of impersonal space where doctors break bad news, cushioned armchairs round a low wooden table, anodyne prints on magnolia walls, a cheese plant that needed a dust. ‘Now you're asking me to lie as well.'

She shook her head. ‘If he believes my mother's dead, he'll let Caitlin go.' Reynolds made to touch Sarah's arm. ‘Why can't you see it?'

The DI saw a woman in danger of losing it, a woman who'd consistently misled the inquiry, a woman whose failure to tell the truth – forced or not – had led to the arson attack at Linda Walker's home, a woman who'd been told by the abductor he wanted to spit on her mother's grave. ‘But she's not dead, is she?'

Reynolds turned away, murmured something that sounded like ‘she is to me'. Sarah and Harries exchanged glances. If she'd read his right it said, ‘charge her now'. Reynolds took a few deep breaths, tried composing herself, came back with the same tune as if there had been no break. ‘I don't understand why you won't do it. He's not to know she's alive.'

Reynolds wanted Sarah to issue a news release reporting a woman's death in a house fire. It would name the victim as Linda Walker, give age, address and contain an appeal for witnesses. And, hey presto, according to Reynolds, Caitlin would walk free.

‘It's not that simple,' Sarah said. She'd no intention of letting the perp get away with it. Her brief was to put the bad guys away, not give them a get-out-of-jail-free card.

Reynolds tightened her mouth. ‘If your daughter's life depends on it, anything's simple, inspector.'

Anything?
Hasten your own mother's death? The chances of the arson being a random attack were so infinitesimal that Sarah wouldn't even give the thought house room. What she had to establish was if Reynolds was in any way implicated.

‘Please, inspector, if you back me up on this, I'll do whatever you want.'

‘The fire was started deliberately.' Sarah stared at Reynolds. ‘What I
want
is you to tell me what you know.'
Because without that – no chance, don't even think about a deal.

‘Honest to God, I …' Maybe she was sick of lying; maybe she'd heard the tacit corollary; maybe she really would do anything to help Caitlin. Sarah struggled not to wince as she watched Reynolds rake her hair with her fingers. ‘OK, inspector. I'll tell you everything.'

‘How could she do it, boss?'

Nicola Reynolds had put the word out round the Monkshead estate. No names, no pack drill, just ‘the woman at number 22 is a child killer'. Pass it on. Rough justice. Lynch-mob mentality. Faceless vigilantes. The estate had no end of likely suspects but they'd close ranks, plead ignorance, and if the squad couldn't gather the evidence, they'd get away with attempted murder as well as arson. If she wasn't a cop, Sarah could almost admire the woman's duplicity.

‘You heard her, Dave. When she said anything …' Sarah pointed the fob at the Audi. ‘Is your motor here?' She wanted them travelling together.

‘It'll be OK.' Harries nodded at the police business notice in the MG's window. ‘Y'know you're wrong, boss,' he said, fastening the seat belt. ‘It wasn't absolutely anything. Reynolds drew the line at murder.'

‘Only by her own fair hand, Dave.' Reynolds had learned from a puppet master: the abductor had ordered her to do his dirty work, and she'd passed on the assignment. ‘I can't see the courts making any distinction.'

Incitement was just one of the charges Reynolds would face, in addition to obstruction, perverting the course of justice, withholding evidence, plus a few more. But ‘would' was the operative word. She was at liberty but under police guard for a while. The DI had decided to issue a bogus news release announcing Walker's death. Last night's appeal had signally failed to flush out the bastard. Maybe Walker's obituary notice would do the trick. Meantime, Beth Lally and Jed Holmes were sticking to Reynolds like super-glued honey. There'd be no more secret sweet talking with the abductor.

‘Actually, boss, when I say how could she do it …?'

She picked up a telling inflection, cut him a glance. ‘You're thinking she had help?'

He shrugged. Said he couldn't see Reynolds bonding with the Monkshead lowlife somehow. ‘You need to know how to approach people like that, how to connect.'

She nodded, pensive. ‘The descriptions she came up with were crap too.' Totally worthless in terms of identifying anyone. Because she couldn't? ‘Let's hang fire an hour or two with the news release. Apply a bit more pressure on her.' Switching on the engine, she told him to give the press office a bell then have a word with Beth. Reynolds needed to be pushed on the accomplice angle. ‘Good thinking, Dave.' Her smile faded as a BMW with its lights flashing headed down the parking bays, blocked the Audi's exit. She caught a glimpse of the driver. ‘Tell me it isn't, Dave.'

‘It isn't Brad Pitt, boss, but …'

It was Caroline King. Sarah lowered the window. ‘I could probably do you for speeding.'

‘Please, Sarah, no dicking round. Is Linda Walker dead?'

There was something in King's voice, the look in her eye that made Sarah ditch the obvious comeback. ‘No. Why?'

‘Because I don't think she killed anyone.'

FORTY-TWO

‘T
his is on condition you keep it buttoned. Clear?' Sarah glanced in the mirror at the back-seat passenger.

‘Yes, ma'am.' Caroline gave a mock salute.

‘I'm serious. One word out of place and that's it.' Letting King hop in had seemed like a plan back at the hospital. The DI and Harries had already been pushing it to get to Worcester for nine-thirty. The reporter appeared to be sitting on a story that for once Sarah thought worth hearing. They'd discussed Walker's shock retraction en route but with only the one line to go on – apart from speculating – they couldn't really take it any further. That wasn't the case with the yobs that had milled round outside Walker's home. Caroline had half-decent descriptions and Harries had phoned in the details. By now they would have been circulated to door-to-door teams and patrol cars on the estate. Rightly or wrongly, Sarah had reluctantly yielded to King's request: the reporter was being allowed to keep a watching brief on the Crawford interview.

‘Nice pad.' King gazed up at a pristine terrace in a Worcester side street a stone's throw from the cathedral. The black door looked as if it had just had a paint job; the brass lion knocker glinted as Harries did the needful.

‘Remember what I said,' Sarah warned. The reporter pulled an imaginary zip across her lips.

For a man in his eighties, Ted Crawford wasn't in bad shape. Around six-two and with a rangy frame, his slight stoop could be habitual rather than down to age. He ran a spade-like hand through a shock of white hair. ‘Police? The wife said. Come in, come in. She's out shopping as per.' He led them down a narrow hall to a sun room at the back of the house, lots of wicker furniture, padded floral cushions, plants on every surface. A pair of wire-framed glasses lay on an opened newspaper. ‘Doreen left a pot of coffee.' Crawford pointed to a tray on a table with three cups and saucers. ‘I'll go and grab anoth—'

‘Not for me, Mr Crawford,' Caroline said. ‘I've already drunk my own weight in the stuff. In fact …'

He smiled. ‘Upstairs, last door on the right.'

Once she'd got the intros over, Sarah elaborated on why they were there. That a Birmingham teenager's abduction could be linked to the babe-in-the-wood murder. A woman in Small Heath had been outed as Pauline Bolton's killer and arsonists had fire-bombed the house. Watching Crawford carefully, she let the silence ride for a while. He flexed his jaw a couple of times before wiping his eyes with a hankie. Sarah thought the moistness was down to age rather than emotion.

‘Well, inspector, if anyone should bear a grudge, then I guess you've come to the right place.' She was intrigued it was the first thought in his head, or at least the first he voiced. Her raised eyebrow asked for more. He blew ripples on the surface of his drink, all the while holding Sarah's gaze. When King re-entered, no one reacted. Muttering an apology, she took the seat next to Harries.

‘However,' he said, ‘I can assure you the fire's nothing to do with me. If you really want to know, even back then I felt sort of sorry for Susan Bailey. It was clear from the start that she'd killed little Pauline. Like a cornered rat, she was desperate for a way out and thought I'd do.' He gave a hollow laugh. ‘I can see you're having difficulty with that, inspector. But trust me, I was there.'

Unsmiling, Sarah nodded. ‘Tell me about it.'

He placed the cup on the tray. Apart from adding colour and a sense of place and the blazing summer heat, his account didn't differ with anything she'd read. God knew what she'd hoped for. A mad axe murderer hiding up a tree wearing a name badge?

‘Was there never any suggestion that someone else could have carried out the killing?'

‘Apart from me?' He stroked finger and thumb down his chin. ‘Not as far as I know.'

She asked about other people around at the time, whether he thought any of them could be seeking revenge after all these years. Chin cupped in hand, Crawford shook his head. ‘What I do know, inspector, is that Pauline's murder damn nearly killed her parents. They had to keep going, of course, because of the other kids, but …' His spread palms invited her to fill in the blanks.

Sarah nodded. ‘We've spoken to the surviving siblings.' And eliminated them from the inquiry. ‘The eldest daughter, Grace, died twenty years ago.'

‘How?'

‘The inquest recorded an open verdict.'

‘Top herself, did she?' He didn't wait for an answer she wouldn't give anyway. ‘Poor kid went off the rails after the murder. I always reckoned she blamed herself, being the big sister and that. Grace doted on Pauline.'

‘Define “off the rails”.'

‘Drinking, smoking, hanging round with lads. Left home at sixteen. Last I heard she'd got herself pregnant.'

‘You seem very well-informed, Mr Crawford.'

‘Village life, inspector. People knew their neighbours in them days. Not like now when—'

‘You lived there?' She was surprised, assumed the workforce travelled to the site each day. The question also stemmed a lecture she could do without.

‘Eventually. I moved in to one of the new houses.' He gave a lop-sided smile. ‘Least I knew it was well built.'

In Crawford's shoes – given the proximity of the girls' families – it would have been the last place Sarah would choose. ‘That couldn't have been easy?'

‘Didn't worry me. The Baileys did a moonlight flit before the case even got to trial. I think the Boltons saw me as a victim too.' He eased a finger round his collar. Sarah doubted the gesture was unwitting.

‘OK, I think that's it for now, Mr Crawford. If you could just give us your sons' details we'll leave you in peace.' He baulked at first, eventually gave Dave the names then slipped the glasses on to read their numbers off his phone. Two lived in the States, a third in Manchester. As Sarah gathered her bits, Crawford half rose in his chair.

Other books

Wrangled and Tangled by Lorelei James
Hunting Fear by Hooper, Kay
Comfort Food by Kitty Thomas
The Eternal Highlander by Lynsay Sands, Hannah Howell
Ambush Valley by Dusty Richards
Undead and Unsure by MaryJanice Davidson
Midnight Vengeance by Lisa Marie Rice
World of Water by James Lovegrove
Cyber Cinderella by Christina Hopkinson
My Candlelight Novel by Joanne Horniman


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024