In what used to be empty fields around Gallows View, a new housing estate was under construction, scheduled for completion in a year’s time. Banks could see the half-dug foundations scattered with puddles, the piles of bricks and boards, sun glinting on idle
cranes and concrete-mixers. One or two streets had been partially built, but none of the houses had roofs yet.
Number seven Daffodil Rise really stood out from the rest of the houses on the street. Not only had the owners put up a little white fence around the garden and installed a panelled, natural-pine-look door, complete with a stained-glass window-pane (lunacy, Banks thought, so easy to break and enter), they also had one of the few gardens in the street that lived up to the flower motif. And because it had been a long summer, many of the flowers usually gone by the end of September were still in bloom. Bees droned around the red and yellow roses that clung to their thorny bushes just under the front window, and the garden beds were a riot of chrysanthemums, dahlias, begonias and gladioli.
The front door was ajar. Banks tapped softly before walking in. He had told Susan Gay over the radio that she should talk to the parents and try to confirm whether the drawing might be of their son before he arrived, but not to tell them anything until he got there.
When Banks walked in, Mrs Fox was just bringing a tea-tray through from the kitchen into the bright, airy living-room. Cut flowers in crystal vases adorned the dining-table and the polished wood top of the fake-coal electric fire. Roses climbed trellises on the cream wallpaper. Over the fireplace hung a framed antique map of Yorkshire, the kind you can buy in tourist shops for a couple of quid. Along the narrowest wall stood floor-to-ceiling wooden shelving that seemed to be full of long-playing records.
Mrs Fox was about forty, Banks guessed. Sandra’s age. She wore a loose white top and black leggings that outlined her finely tapered legs, with well-toned calves and shapely thighs—the kind you only got at that age from regular exercise. She had a narrow face, and her features seemed cramped just a little too close together. Her hair was simply parted in the middle and hung down as far as her shoulders on each side, curling under just a little at the bottom. The roots were only a slightly darker shade of blonde.
Mr Fox stood up to shake hands with Banks. Bald except for a couple of black chevrons above his ears, with a thin, bony face, he wore black-rimmed glasses, jeans and a green sweatshirt. He was exceptionally skinny, which made him appear tall, and he looked as
if he had the kind of metabolism that allowed him to eat as much as he wanted without putting on a pound. Banks wasn’t quite as skinny himself, but he never seemed to put on much weight either, despite the ale and the junk food.
Tea poured, Mrs Fox sat down on the sofa with her husband and crossed her long legs. Husband and wife left enough space for another person to sit between them, but Banks took a chair from the dining-table, turned it around and sat, resting his arms on the back.
“Mr and Mrs Fox were just telling me,” Susan Gay said, getting her notebook out, “that Jason looks like the lad in the drawing, and he didn’t sleep here last night.”
“She won’t tell us anything.” Mrs Fox appealed to Banks with her small, glittering eyes. “Is our Jason in any trouble?”
“Has he ever been in trouble before?” Banks asked.
She shook her head. “Never. He’s a good boy. He never caused us any problems, has he, Steven? That’s why I can’t understand you coming here. We’ve never had the police here before.”
“Weren’t you worried when Jason didn’t sleep here last night?”
Mrs Fox looked surprised. “No. Why should I be?”
“Weren’t you expecting him?”
“Look, what’s happened? What’s going on?”
“Jason lives in Leeds, Chief Inspector,” Steven Fox cut in. “He just uses our house when it suits him, a bit like a hotel.”
“Oh, come on, Steven,” his wife said. “You know that’s not fair. Jason’s grown up. He’s got his own life to live. But he’s still our son.”
“When it suits him.”
“What does he do in Leeds?” Banks cut in.
“He’s got a good job,” said Steven Fox. “And there’s not many as can say that these days. An office job at a factory out in Stourton.”
“I assume he’s also got a flat or a house in Leeds, too?”
“Yes. A flat.”
“Can you give DC Gay the address, please? And the name and address of the factory?”
“Of course.” Steven Fox gave Susan the information.
“Do either of you know where Jason was last night?” Banks asked. “Or who he was with?”
Mrs Fox answered. “No,” she said. “Look, Chief Inspector, can’t you please tell us what’s going on? I’m worried. Is my Jason in trouble? Has something happened to him?”
“I understand that you’re worried,” Banks said, “and I’ll do everything I can to hurry things up. Please bear with me, though, and answer just a few more short questions. Just a few more minutes. Okay?”
They both nodded reluctantly.
“Do you have a recent photograph of Jason?”
Mrs Fox got up and brought a small framed photo from the side-board. “Only this,” she said. “He was seventeen when it was taken.”
The boy in the photo looked similar to the victim, but it was impossible to make a positive identification. Teenagers can change a lot in three or four years, and heavy boots do a great deal of damage to facial features.
“Do you know what Jason did yesterday? Where he went?”
Mrs Fox bit her lip. “Yesterday,” she said. “He got home about twelve o’clock. We had sandwiches for lunch, then he went off to play football, like he usually does.”
“Where?”
“He plays for Eastvale United,” Steven Fox said.
Banks knew the team; they were only amateur players, but he’d taken Brian to see them once or twice, and they had demonstrated the triumph of enthusiasm over talent. Their matches had become quite popular with the locals, and they sometimes managed to draw two or three hundred to their bumpy field on a few acres of waste ground between York Road and Market Street.
“He’s a striker,” said Mrs Fox, with pride. “Top goal scorer in North Yorkshire last season. Amateur leagues, that is.”
“Impressive,” said Banks. “Did you see him after the game?”
“Yes. He came home for his tea after he’d had a quick drink with his mates from the team, then he went out about seven o’clock, didn’t he, Steven?”
Mr Fox nodded.
“Did he say whether he’d be back?”
“No.”
“Does he normally stop here on weekends?”
“Sometimes,” Mrs Fox answered. “But not always. Sometimes he drives back to Leeds. And sometimes he doesn’t come up at all.”
“Does he have his own key?”
Mrs Fox nodded.
“What kind of car does he drive?”
“Oh, my God, it’s not a car crash, is it?” Mrs Fox put her hands to her face. “Oh, please don’t tell me our Jason’s been killed in a car crash.”
At least Banks could assure her of that honestly.
“It’s one of those little Renaults,” said Steven Fox. “A Clio. Bloody awful colour, it is, too. Shiny green, like the back of some sort of insect.”
“Where does he park when he’s here?”
Mr Fox jerked his head. “There’s a double garage round the back. He usually parks it there, next to ours.”
“Have you looked to see if the car’s still there?”
“No. I’d no call to.”
“Did you hear it last night?”
He shook his head. “No. We usually go to bed early. Before Jason gets back, if he’s stopping the night. He tries to be quiet, and we’re both pretty heavy sleepers.”
“Would you be kind enough to show DC Gay where the garage is?” Banks asked Steven Fox. “And, Susan, if the car’s there, see if he left the keys in it.”
Steven Fox led Susan out through the back door.
“Does Jason have a girlfriend?” Banks asked Mrs Fox while they were gone.
She shook her head. “I don’t think so. He might have someone in Leeds, I suppose, but …”
“He never mentioned her or brought her here?”
“No. I don’t think he had anyone steady.”
“Do you think he would have told you if he had?”
“I can’t see any reason why he wouldn’t.”
“How do you and Jason get along?”
She turned away. “We get along just fine.”
Susan and Steven Fox came back from the garage. “It’s there all right,” Susan said. “A green Clio. I took the number. And no keys.”
“What is it?” Mrs Fox asked. “If Jason wasn’t in a car crash, did he hit someone? Was there an accident?”
“No,” said Banks. “He didn’t hit anyone.” He sighed and looked at the map over the fireplace. He couldn’t really hold back telling them any longer. The best he could do was play up the uncertainty aspect. “I don’t want to alarm you,” he said, “but a boy was killed last night, probably in a fight. DC Gay showed you the artist’s impression, and someone suggested it might resemble Jason. That’s why we need to know his movements and whereabouts.”
Banks waited for the outburst, but it didn’t come. Instead, Mrs Fox shook her head and said, “It
can’t
be our Jason. He wouldn’t get into fights or anything like that. And you can’t really tell from the picture, can you?”
Banks agreed. “I’m sure you’re right,” he said. “He’s probably gone off somewhere with his mates for the weekend without telling you. Kids. No consideration sometimes, have they? Would Jason do something like that?”
Mrs Fox nodded. “Oh, yes. Never tells us owt, our Jason, does he, Steven?”
“That’s right,” Mr Fox agreed. But Banks could tell from his tone that he wasn’t quite as convinced as his wife about Jason’s not being the victim. In his experience, mothers often held more illusions about their sons than fathers did.
“Does Jason have any friends on the estate he might have gone out with?” Banks asked. “Anyone local?”
Mrs Fox looked at her husband before answering. “No,” she said. “See, we’ve only been living in Eastvale for three years. Since we moved from Halifax. Besides, Jason doesn’t drink. Well, not hardly.”
“When did he get this job in Leeds?”
“Just before we moved.”
“I see,” said Banks. “So he hasn’t really spent much time here, had time to settle in and make friends?”
“That’s right,” said Mrs Fox.
“Does he have any other relations in the area he might have gone to visit? An uncle, perhaps, someone like that?”
“Only my dad,” said Mrs Fox. “That’s why we moved here, really, to be nearer my dad. My mam died two years ago, and he’s not getting any younger.”
“Where does he live?”
“Up in Lyndgarth, so he’s not far away, in case of emergencies, like. Eastvale was the closest town Steven could get a transfer.”
“What kind of work do you do, Mr Fox?”
“Building society. Abbey National. That big branch on York Road, just north of the market square.”
Banks nodded. “I know the one. Look, it’s just a thought, but does Jason spend much time with his grandfather? Might he be stopping with him?”
Mrs Fox shook her head. “He’d have let us know, Dad would. He’s got a telephone. Didn’t want one, but we insisted. Besides, Jason would’ve needed the car.”
“Would your father know anything more about Jason’s friends and his habits?”
“I don’t think so,” said Mrs Fox, fidgeting with her wedding ring. “They used to be close when Jason were a young lad, but you know what it’s like when kids grow up.” She shrugged.
Banks did. He well remembered preferring the company of his grandparents to that of his mother and father when he was young. They were more indulgent with him, for a start, and would often give him a tanner for sweets—which he’d usually spend on sherbet, gobstoppers and a threepenny lucky bag. He also liked his grandfather’s pipe-rack, the smell of tobacco around the dark-panelled house, the tarnished silver cigarette case with the dint where a German bullet had hit it, saving his grandfather’s life—or so his grandfather had told him. He had loved the stories about the war—not the second, but the first— and his grandfather had even let him wear his old gas mask, which smelled of rubber and dust. They had spent days walking by the River Nene, standing by the railway tracks to watch the sleek, streamlined
Flying Scotsman
go by. But all that had changed when Banks entered his teens, and he felt especially guilty about not seeing his granddad for a whole year before the old man died, while Banks was at college in London.
“Are there any other family members?” he asked. “Brothers or sisters?”
“Only Maureen, my daughter. She’s just turned eighteen.”
“Where is she?”
“Nurses’ training school, up in Newcastle.”
“Would she be able to help us with any of Jason’s friends?” “No. They’re not particularly close. Never were. Different as chalk and cheese.”
Banks glanced over at Susan and indicated she should put her notebook away. “Would you mind if we had a quick look at Jason’s room?” he asked. “Just to see if there’s anything there that might help us find out what he was doing last night?”
Steven Fox stood up and walked towards the stairs. “I’ll show you.”
The tidiness of the room surprised Banks. He didn’t know why—stereotyping, no doubt—but he’d been expecting the typical teenager’s room, like that of his son, Brian, which usually looked as if it had just been hit by a tornado. But Jason’s bed was made, sheets so tightly stretched across the mattress you could bounce a coin on them, and if he had dirty washing lying around, as Brian always had, then Banks couldn’t see it.
Against one of the walls stood shelving similar to that downstairs, also stacked with long-playing records and several rows of 45s.
“Jason likes music, I see,” Banks said.
“Actually, they’re mine,” said Steven Fox, walking over and running his long fingers over a row of LPs. “My collection. Jason says it’s okay to use the wall space because he’s not here that often. It’s mostly sixties stuff. I started collecting in 1962, when ‘Love Me Do’ came out. I’ve got everything The Beatles ever recorded, all originals, all in mint condition. And not only The Beatles. I’ve got all The Rolling Stones, Grateful Dead, Doors, Cream, Jimi Hendrix, The Searchers… If you can get it on vinyl, I’ve got it. But I don’t suppose you’re interested in all that.”