âYou mean deeds to flats, and places like that?'
âNo, not like that at all. Flats aren't anywhere near private enough. We're looking for deeds to places like lock-up garages and country cottages.'
âPlaces where he could have hidden the girl,' Beresford said.
âExactly,' Paniatowski agreed.
A team of twenty uniformed officers had been out on the moors all afternoon. The sergeant in charge had been given a list of all the villages within a fifteen- or twenty-minute drive of Whitebridge centre, and told that his team should visit every one of them.
By the time they'd reached the fourth village, they were working like a well-oiled machine. Most of the constables were deployed to search outlying buildings â the disused barns and near-derelict cottages that seemed to ring every village. The rest of the team, the ones the sergeant considered his brightest lads, were assigned to knock on the door of every house and put a standard set of questions to whoever answered.
The first question was accompanied by a photograph of Angela Jackson. Did she look familiar? the officers asked. Had someone like her been seen in the village recently? There were no positive responses, and the sergeant had never expected there would be â but it was at least worth a shot.
The third question was whether they'd noticed any strangers in the village the previous day, but this, too, had received nothing but negative replies.
The fourth question was divided into several parts, and was the big one. Had someone bought a house in the village in the last year or so â say a man in his late thirties? If such a person had bought a house, did he visit it regularly or only put in the occasional appearance? And when he was there, did he make an effort to be sociable with new neighbours, or did he seem to want to keep himself pretty much to himself?
This question advanced the search no more than the first three had. Yes, someone had bought the cottage up the road, but they were an elderly couple. Yes, the house on the end of the row had been sold, but the new owners were very friendly, as were their four kids. Yes, someone had taken over the old bakery and converted it into a home, but the man's name was Hardcastle, and he had a number of relatives already living in and around the village.
Yes, yes, yes. No, no, no.
It had been a complete waste of a day, the sergeant thought, as he ticked another village off his list. Wherever Angela Jackson was, she certainly wasn't in one of the places that he and his men had visited.
Perhaps, he thought, they should have checked on the villages further afield â the ones that were half an hour or forty minutes away from Whitebridge centre. He'd even suggested it when he was being briefed. But Chief Inspector Woodend had been adamant that wouldn't be necessary.
âFor obvious reasons, I can't give you all the details behind my thinkin', Archie,' he'd said to the sergeant.
âOf course not, sir. I understand that.'
âBut you can take it from me that if she is in a village, it'll be one that's close to the town. It's all a question of logistics, you see. He simply wouldn't have had the time to take her very far.'
So they'd done it Mr Woodend's way, the sergeant thought. Because that was what he'd wanted, and because he was the boss.
But what if, on this occasion, Mr Woodend was wrong?
âW
hat's happened to Inspector Rutter?' Edgar Brunton asked, when Woodend re-entered the interview room alone.
âHe's off investigatin' another aspect of the case,' the chief inspector said, sitting down opposite him.
Brunton raised a quizzical eyebrow. âOh?'
âDon't you want to know
what
aspect?'
âOnly if it amuses you to tell me.'
âWe've got a search warrant for your house. We're goin' through all your private papers.'
âHow very unpleasant of you,' Brunton said. âI shall certainly sue you for that, once I'm released.'
âInspector Rutter's very good at rootin' out grubby little secrets,' Woodend commented.
âUnfortunately for you, I don't have any
to be
rooted out,' Brunton said calmly.
âWe'll find the girl soon, you know,' Woodend said. âWe'll find her, she'll identify you, an' then you'll be buggered. So why don't you save us the trouble? Tell us where she is, an' it'll go much easier for you at your trial.'
Brunton smiled. âIf I were guilty â which I'm not â nothing I could say now would make it easier for me later. The press would call me a monster, and the judge would bow to political pressure and impose on me the maximum sentence permissible under the law.'
âDon't you think the papers would be right to call you a monster?' Woodend asked, curious.
Brunton hesitated for the briefest moment, then said, âIt's not me that we're talking about here.'
âAll right, I'll accept, for the moment, that we're not talkin' about you,' Woodend agreed. âSo let me put it in a way that might make it easier for you to give an answer. Don't you think the papers would be right to call
whoever
we're talking about a monster?'
Another hesitation. âI'm a trained lawyer,' Brunton said finally. âI'd have to know all the facts before I could express an opinion.'
âThe girl's been kidnapped, an' â according to your shrink, Dr Stevenson â will have been tortured horribly by now,' Woodend said. âWhat more facts do you need than that?'
âWho told you that Martin Stevenson was my therapist?' Brunton demanded with a sudden show of anger.
âDoesn't matter,' Woodend countered. âHe is, isn't he?'
âI may have consulted him on occasion,' Brunton admitted. âBut what passed between us is my business and no one else's.'
âDid you tell him how you had fantasies about inflictin' pain on children?' Woodend asked.
âWould
you
tell
your
psychiatrist if you harboured such fantasies?' Brunton countered.
âWhich means that you do have the fantasies, but you didn't describe them to him?'
âWhich means nothing of the kind.' Brunton smiled again. âYou really are getting much better at this, Mr Woodend,' he said. âThere's a subtlety to your questions which was notably absent earlier.'
âIt's not my main aim in life to have a man like you give me a mark out of ten for my performance,' Woodend told him.
âI don't believe you,' Brunton said. âWe all want to influence other people. We all want to impress them.'
âAn' we all want to have
power
over them?' Woodend suggested.
âThat too,' Brunton conceded. âIt's going to be much harder to find the girl than you seem to think it will be,' he continued.
âBecause you've done such a good job of hiding her?'
âBecause there are literally thousands of places â perhaps hundreds of thousands â where her abductor could have decided to hide her. You simply haven't got the manpower to search them all. And even if you had, the courts would never issue the blanket warrant that would be necessary to carry out all the searches, because while an Englishman's home is not actually his castle, he does, at least, have a reasonable expectation of refuge in it.'
âDo you know what really convinces me that you're our man?' Woodend asked.
âNo, but I could take a guess,' Brunton said. âPerhaps it's your jealousy that's making you reach such a far-fetched conclusion.'
âMy
jealousy
?'
âExactly! A jealousy fuelled by the fact that my standing in the community is so much higher than yours, and that while I am paid large
fees
for my services, you are forced to scrape by on a
wage
.'
Woodend shook his head. âIt's not that at all. It's the fact that you seem to feel absolutely no compassion at all for this poor kid that's gone missin'.'
âCome, come, Chief Inspector, aren't you being a little hypocritical now?' Brunton asked. âMost people are not really very concerned about anything that doesn't affect them directly. They'll pretend they are, of course, especially if others are watching them. But that's all it is! A pretence!'
âIs that right?'
âYou know it is. Hundreds of thousands of children are starving in Africa, even as we sit here chatting. Now, I don't wish those children any harm â if I was offered the opportunity to machine-gun a line of them to death, for example, I would quite properly refuse â but neither do I care enough about their predicament to do anything to improve it. And, if you're honest, neither do you.'
âI don't believe that,' Woodend said.
âYou don't believe that you don't care?'
âI don't believe that if you were offered the choice of lettin' them kids live or killin' them off, you'd be able to resist the temptation of killin' them off â because that would
really
show your power, wouldn't it?'
âYou don't understand me at all,' Brunton said.
âWrong!' Woodend told him. âIt's you that doesn't understand
yourself
. But maybe you will, eventually.'
âIs that right?' Brunton asked, clearly â and consciously â imitating his interrogator.
âYes,' Woodend said. âI think there's a very strong chance of it. After all, the prison shrink will have at least thirty years to help you find the real you.'
âBrunton really
doesn't
make that much money, you know,' Monika Paniatowski said, looking up from the pile of statements, receipts, and bills resting on the desk in the study.
âWhat was that again, Sarge?' asked Beresford, who had spent the previous two and a half hours going through Brunton's extensive book collection in search of hidden documents, and was now so punch-drunk that though he heard Paniatowski's words, they made no sense to him.
âBrunton. He doesn't make that much money. His social calendar is full to bursting â lunch with a town councillor, a game of golf with an important local businessman â¦'
âWell, there you are then, Sarge â he's rubbing shoulders with all the right people.'
âYes, but when you compare that social calendar with his list of clients, there are not many names that appear on both. Most of his
friends
, like Jeremy Smythe, take their business elsewhere, and most of
clients
are nowhere near prosperous enough to eat where he eats, and probably wouldn't be allowed in the golf club â except through the tradesmen's entrance.'
And then there was Brunton's office, she thought â overflowing with folders from the cases he was supposedly dealing with. But
why
was it overflowing? He had plenty of clerical staff on hand, who could have filed them away. There could only be one reason for the mess. The folders were there for display. They were there because he wanted to create the impression that he was busier than he actually was!
âMaybe he's already made all the money he ever needs to make,' Beresford suggested, closing one book, placing it back on the shelf, and reaching for the one next to it. âMaybe his work's more like a hobby to him now.'
âMaybe,' Paniatowski replied, unconvinced. She checked her watch. âI'm getting stale,' she said. âLet's take a five-minute break, shall we, Colin?'
âGood idea,' Beresford said, quickly slamming the book back onto the shelf and walking away from it before the sergeant had time to change her mind.
He looked around for somewhere to sit down. He wanted to be close enough to talk comfortably to the sergeant, but also in such a position that he didn't constantly catch himself staring down at her legs. The chair on the opposite side of the desk seemed perfect.
Paniatowski pulled a packet of cigarettes out of her pocket, and offered them to Beresford. âSmoke?'
âWill that be all right?' Beresford asked dubiously.
âYou mean, will the grand Mrs Brunton object to the air in this room â which should carry with it only the aroma of the finest Havana cigars â being polluted by the stench of cheap cigarettes smoked by common police officers?'
âMore or less,' Beresford agreed.
Paniatowski grinned. âI'm sure she'll object. She may even lodge a complaint. But we didn't ask to be here â the only reason we
are
here is because her husband's a pervert â and I'm dying for a smoke.'
âMe, too,' Beresford said.
They lit up, and took that first comforting drag which should in theory assuage the need, but in practice only leads to a craving for more of the same.
âAre you all right, Sarge?' Beresford asked cautiously.
âAt this moment, or in general?' Paniatowski replied.
âWell, you know, in general.'
âDo you want to know how I'm coping with the idea that while I'm a childless woman living alone, my ex-lover has his daughter living with him now?'
âWell, no. Not exactly.'
âOr are you more interested in finding out how I feel about the fact that we both suspect that same ex-lover is sleeping with a slag of a journalist called Elizabeth Driver?'
âI was only making casual conversation,' Beresford said awkwardly.
âNo, you weren't,' Paniatowski told him.
âNo, I wasn't,' Beresford admitted. âBut listen, Sarge â¦'
âYes?'
âI know that I'm so inexperienced that I'm still practically wet behind the ears, butâ'
âInexperienced in what?' Paniatowski interrupted. âIn police work? Or in life?'
âIn both. And I know there are probably a hundred people you'd rather talk to than me â¦'
âGet on with it,' Paniatowski said.
â⦠but if you ever do need a shoulder to cry on, I just want you to know that mine's always available.'