Authors: Nick Oldham
He remembered that the dining room had escaped most of the devastation because the door had been closed and the fire brigade had landed within minutes. It was in here he would stay.
Stepping back into the hall, he heard that same noise again.
A moan. Could have been the wind, but sounded almost human.
A shiver of apprehension went down his spine. It was a bit ghostly. Maybe Sally was back already, haunting the place.
He heard it again.
Not the wind. It was coming from behind the dining-room door.
He trod carefully on the burned, sodden carpet that squelched as his weight came down on each foot. His hand went to the door knob, which he gripped.
Again, the moaning sound.
His heart whammed and his mouth was dry as he turned the handle and opened the door. The room had suffered only superficial smoke damage, leaving its fixtures and fitting more or less in one piece.
His torch beam picked up the source of the noise, two eyes glinting in the darkness.
âPC Christie to DI Bayley,' Henry said into his radio. âYou need to return to the house as soon as possible.'
It was an eight-inch carving knife and had been driven deep into the table top by a huge force, the point of the blade probably a whole inch into the wood.
The only problem was that the knife had also been driven through the back of Jack Bowman's right hand which, palm down, fingers splayed, had effectively pinned him like a butterfly, and sliced through the spread of delicate bones that radiated out from his wrist to his knuckles.
Bowman was kneeling by the table and looked as though he had been caught reaching for something on the table and suffered a terrible consequence for it.
He was still conscious as Henry entered the dining room and looked at him pleadingly through pain-ravaged eyes.
An expression of relief crossed his face.
âHelp me,' he whispered hoarsely. âHelp me ⦠I can't ⦠can't ⦠move,' he tried to say.
Henry crossed quickly to him and inspected the situation and gave a little whistle of appreciation. It looked as though a shaved, five-legged tarantula had been skewered by the knife. Bowman's palm rested in a pool of bright red blood. His fingers and thumb twitched involuntarily.
âI can't ⦠I daren't â¦' Bowman gasped.
Henry reached for the knife, his initial instinct being to release a fellow human being from suffering. But just as his fingers were about to wrap around the handle, he stopped and shone his torch into Bowman's face, then took his hand away and slowly squatted down on his haunches so his face was level with Bowman's.
âLooks like it's stuck.'
âI tried to ⦠I couldn't â¦' Bowman cringed. âOh God, please get it out. I ⦠every time I move ⦠Christ, it hurts.'
âWho did this to you?' Henry asked, making no effort to release him, staying exactly where he was.
âGet it out, get it out,' he begged. âPlease, please.'
âYou need to tell me who did this,' Henry said reasonably.
âPlease, man â¦'
âYou won't be running away this time, will you?'
The implication of Henry's words and lack of action sunk in and Bowman's grey face turned to horror.
âDoes it really hurt?' Henry asked cruelly.
âYeah, yeah, oh God, please.'
âHow much does it hurt?' Henry said â cruelly again â but the tone of his voice sounded soft and caring, as though he was concerned.
âA lot. I daren't move. Each time I move it cuts me even more.'
âYeah, a lot of nerve endings in the hand,' Henry said knowledgeably.
âPlease help me.'
âI will, course I will.' Somehow Henry knew that if he hadn't had a drink, he would have instantly released Bowman and called for an ambulance. But those few drinks had made him reckless and cruel, made him realize he could get something out of this situation. âBut first you need to talk to me, Jack, boy.'
Henry's head tilted slightly. Outside he heard a car pull up, a door slam, footsteps approaching. Then FB appeared at the dining-room door, a big torch in his hand, flashing it onto the tableau in front of him. An evil smile of opportunity creased his face. He had realized instantly what had taken a minute or two to dawn on Henry.
âWell, well, well, what have we here?' He strode across, Henry and Bowman watching him.
He peered at the knife and the hand and the blood-covered table. He inhaled a sharp whistle of breath. âNow that must hurt.'
âApparently it does,' Henry confirmed.
âYou bastards, you utter bastards,' Bowman hissed, gripping his right wrist with his left hand and starting to tremble. His skin was drawn tight across his features.
âHe was just going to tell me something,' Henry said.
âWas he now?' FB reached out and touched the top of the knife handle with the tip of his forefinger. âLooks like it's in deep. I'm not certain we could actually remove this without destroying evidence. Fingerprints, y'know?'
âI was thinking the same thing.'
âBut we could, I suppose, wiggle it a bit to see if we could get it free. But I reckon that would hurt a hell of a lot.'
FB tugged up his trousers by the front crease and squatted down on the other side of Bowman to Henry. âNow then,' he cooed softly, âwe are normally decent, sympathetic people, Jack, but at this moment in time, we're not.' He shone his torch beam directly into Bowman's face.
Sweat dribbled from Bowman's hairline. His nostrils dilated constantly as he tried to deal with the pain and the situation.
âY'see, I'm investigating your stepsister's brutal murder and the equally brutal murder of a young policewoman and several armed robberies.' FB's bushy, untrimmed eyebrows arched, and then dropped back into position. âAnd your part in them,' he added.
âI had no part.'
âListen to me, Jack ⦠you did play a part in Sally's murder, didn't you?'
If Bowman's skin could have tightened any more, he would have looked like a skull. He shook his head.
âI'm going to stand up now and see if I can loosen this knife, Jack,' FB said. He put his left fist in front of Bowman's face and made a waggling gesture. âI would guess that me riving it backwards and forwards and side to side in an effort to free you would certainly make the wound more serious than it already is and would cause you a great deal more pain. And it still might not come out. In fact, the point might accidentally go even deeper into the table.'
âYou wouldn't. That's torture.'
âMerely me trying to release a man whose hand is pinned to a table by a carving knife and who was begging me to do just that.' FB stood up, his knees cracking.
Henry was still at Bowman's eye level. âSpeak,' he urged quietly.
FB's right hand, fingers outstretched, reached for the hilt.
Bowman watched in disbelief as FB curled his hand around it. âWhat about the evidence?' he gasped.
FB pulled his face. âTo be honest, I don't think we'll get prints off the surface of the knife handle.'
âSpeak,' Henry urged again, his lips not far from Bowman's ear.
âOK, OK, I broke into the women's refuge place,' Bowman gabbled quickly before FB could start to move the knife.
âWhy?'
âFor Vlad. He said he wanted to speak to Sal, said he wanted to chat things out with her.'
âMm, interesting,' FB said. His hand hovered close to the knife. âThat makes you a murderer.'
Bowman blinked, the words penetrating through the haze of pain. âI didn't kill her.'
âNo, but you're part of the murder plot. An accessory. A co-conspirator. A co-accused ⦠all those things ⦠Looks like a life sentence for you, my lad ⦠No more running away from cops. Screws, maybe. Other inmates, definitely, sex offenders and the like ⦠Lad like you would be catnip in prison.'
âHe said he wanted to talk to her, needed me to let him in, that's all,' Bowman blabbered quickly.
FB frowned. âA court would convict you like that!' He clicked his fingers with a snap. âWhich means you need to talk â now.'
âI let him in. I swear I didn't know he was going to kill her. I wouldn't have let him in if I'd known what was going to happen, would I?'
âI don't know, would you?' FB asked.
âNo, no, no.'
âSo you broke in, then let him in â is that correct?'
âYes, YES! Now call an ambulance, please.'
âIn a minute,' FB said tantalizingly.
âShit.'
FB stepped back thoughtfully. âI'm not convinced.'
Henry looked at FB sharply, frowning. He thought this had gone on long enough now. He thought they had enough.
âConvinced by what?'
âBy you, Jack ⦠How come Vladimir grassed on you.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âAbout all the burglaries you committed.'
âWhat? He grassed on me?'
âHow the hell do you think I knew about you? He told me everything you'd done.'
âI didn't know.'
âHe's shagging your sister and, basically, butt-fucking you, too,' FB said. âSo what's this about â the knife through the hand?'
âLike I said,' he breathed dully. âI didn't let him in with the intention of killing Sally, I didn't know he'd do it â honest! I sneaked back in here to get my head down after you lot'd gone, but he must have followed me, OK? He knew I wasn't remotely happy with him. I'd argued with him, said I'd go to the cops ⦠yeah, like I meant it. Not. You don't cross a crazy psycho like him. You don't even threaten to cross him, even if you don't mean it. But I did and he stuck me to the fuckin' table. Now, please will you call an ambulance? It really, really, really hurts and every time I move just a bit, it creases me and I'm bleeding and I want to faint, but I daren't just in case I fall over and my hand gets sliced in two. And pull it out â quick.'
FB didn't move. âWhere is he?'
âI don't know, Christ I don't.'
âI said, where is he?'
âI don't know ⦠but I do know one thing â¦'
âAnd that would be?' FB said.
âThere's a big job being pulled tomorrow and Vlad's in on it and when it's done he's outta the country, going back to Poland with his equally freakin' psycho brother.'
FB gripped the knife.
Bowman froze, watched terrified.
Henry's breath stopped.
FB counted: âOne ⦠two ⦠THREE!'
B
y the time the two compassionate cops had accompanied their wounded prisoner to Bury General Hospital â the nearest casualty department to Rossendale â and stayed close to him during treatment (Henry hovering even during the stitching process because there was no way he was going to let him run a third time) and then taken him back to Rawtenstall nick under arrest in the section van, it was almost 4am.
FB took the honour of claiming the arrest â suspicion of murder â ensuring that his name was emblazoned on the back of the charge sheet in big, bold capitals, whilst Henry watched on with mild amusement. It wasn't said in so many words, but FB was clearly going to shove all this firmly up the force's backside for the sin of dislodging him from the helm of the murder investigation, which had so infuriated him.
He did, however, allow Henry to put the heavily bandaged and drugged-up Bowman into a cell. Some compensation, perhaps, for something he should have done a couple of days earlier.
When Henry walked back into the charge office, FB crooked a finger at him and led him upstairs to his office where the heavy detective slumped into his office chair and Henry took a seat opposite.
Both men exhaled heavily.
âWhere do we take this?' Henry asked.
FB spun on his chair, thinking. Then he said, âWe don't have much to go on, really. Bowman needs to be wrung dry of everything he knows in the morning, which will implicate Vladimir to the hilt, if you'll pardon the expression.' He chuckled at his own humour.
âBut we still have to find him,' Henry said. âIf he's gone to ground in Manchester, it won't be easy.'
FB pinched the bridge of his nose.
Henry felt a throbbing headache coming on from a combination of tiredness, a bit of excitement and the alcohol wearing off. âAnd on top of that, if Bowman is to be believed, then there's a big job coming off,' he checked his watch, âsometime today.'
âThe questions being, what, where, when and how?' FB said. âAnd if we don't know these things, or can't find them out, should we just try to disrupt it?' He paused, counting off on his fingers as he spoke. âFlood the place with uniforms, lots of them. High-visibility patrols, checkpoints, pulling everything coming into the valley from
that
direction' â FB jerked his thumb towards Manchester â âand just put the buggers off.' His eyes narrowed conspiratorially. âOr do we let it run, keep our resources hidden and hope we catch 'em?'
âWe could compromise,' Henry suggested.
âHow?'
âY'know â meet in the middle.'
âI know what compromise means, you jack-ass.'
Henry grinned. âHow about we get all the unmarked divisional crime cars in and get them patrolling and stop-checking with a bit of subtlety, maybe with some help from the traffic department.' He saw FB's face scrunch up tight at the mention of traffic, referred to by the CID as âgutter rats'. Like most detectives he had an unhealthy dislike of the traffic section, but for no real reason. âIt's just, if we let it run,' Henry said thoughtfully, âand someone gets hurt and it's discovered we knew about it but didn't do anything, then you could be in big bother.'
FB's face reacted to the change from the royal âwe' to a finger-pointing âyou'.
âYou are the senior officer, after all,' Henry said. âYou might have Teflon shoulders, but maybe not in this case.'