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Missing: Presumed Dead ib-1

Page 13

by James Hawkins


  “Oh it’s you, Chief Inspector — I thought I heard voices,” said Daphne blundering in with a bucketful of cleaning materials. “I didn’t expect you in yet.”

  He jerked upright and flung his eyes open. Voices? Was I talking out loud? “You’re in early, Daphne,” he said cheerily, hoping he wasn’t blushing.

  “I like to get started at six — always have.”

  “I should have thought someone of your age would enjoy a lie in.”

  The bucket dropped with a clang and she struck back crustily. “Most old fogeys die in bed, Chief Inspector — I minimise the risk by spending as little time there as possible.”

  “Oh I didn’t mean …” he began apologetically, but she was already laughing.

  Smiling, he went back to his assessment of the Dauntsey case and picked up a sheaf of papers to give the impression of busyness.

  “I’ve got my eye on a nice leg of lamb for tonight,” she said, dusting around the boxes of his still unpacked office.

  “Sorry?” he said, looking up, realising he’d missed something important.

  “I said I was thinking of doing lamb tonight — have you forgotten you’re coming …”

  His mind was focused on the paper in front of him — a page from a message pad. “No, I hadn’t forgotten …” he began, then drifted to silence, pre-occupied by what he was reading.

  “Seven-thirty or eight?” she asked.

  His mind was miles away — Scotland — a purple heather estate on the banks of a loch somewhere in the Highlands — the distant skirl of pipes, the abattoir smell of boiled haggis. “According to this, the Major didn’t live there,” he said waving the paper at her before scrunching it and aiming at a litter bin.

  “Didn’t live where?”

  His brow creased inquisitively. “Didn’t you say he lived in Scotland?”

  “No — I don’t believe I did. I suppose he may have done, but all I said was that I hadn’t seen him …”

  “ … Since Suez,” he interjected, suddenly remembering that it had been the matron of the nursing home who’d mentioned Scotland. “Actually, I wanted to ask you about that. It struck me as strange afterwards. Why Suez, what made you think of that?”

  A look of consternation clouded Daphne’s face and he worried he had offended her in some way. Putting down her can of spray polish, she scooted across to the door and checked the corridor with exaggerated care. As she returned to his desk her thoughtful expression suggested she was considering the wisdom of revealing some great secret, but she shelved the idea at the last moment, saying, “I’d rather tell you tonight — if that’s alright — at dinner.”

  “In that case why not let me take you somewhere posh as promised — I could do with something to cheer me up.”

  The implication that her leg of lamb would not have cheered him smarted, but she rationalised quickly. “Thank you, that would be nice — at least I won’t have to wash up.”

  Bliss was still trying to piece together the newly acquired information from Scotland as Daphne dragged her vacuum cleaner into the next office, and he wandered thoughtfully around the room abstractly picking at files and boxes.

  “Whoomph,” the low boom of an explosion shook him out of his thoughts and left him trying to identify the sound. The backfire of a car, was his first thought, but the frequency was too low — so low it was tangible rather than audible — more like a pressure wave pulsing through the atmosphere. The following silence was almost as tangible as the boom of the blast, leaving him wondering if he’d heard anything at all, even dismissing it and fleetingly returning to his inner debate over the Dauntsey murder.

  Twenty seconds later he’d reached the part in his hypothesis where Jonathon was grave-side, unrolling the duvet from the body, when a second explosion hit. An explosion of instantly identifiable sounds — the pandemonium of disaster: shrieking alarms, sirens and bells; shouting men; thundering feet; slamming doors; screaming engines and squealing tyres.

  Swept up in the excitement, Bliss rushed to the control room where half a dozen shirt-sleeved operators were electrified by the madly pulsating warning lights and flashing computer screens. At lightening speed the control officers were tapping buttons and flicking switches as they struggled to deal with a flood of incoming calls and alarms. And, above the electronic hum, the enlivened buzz of their voices — asking, ordering, directing, informing.

  “What’s happening? Where are you? Do this, do that, go there, stop the traffic, secure the area — fire services are en-route, hospitals are being alerted.”

  “What’s happening?” whispered Bliss, leaning over one of the women, trying not to interrupt her.

  “Shush,” she waved him off with an irritated flick of the wrist and continued calling into her microphone. “Alpha five-niner — location, over?”

  “What is it?” he tried again, a note of insistence adding authority to his tone.

  She ignored him. “Alpha five-niner,” she continued to call, “State your location — over? I’m getting nothing from fifty-nine, Serg,” she shouted at the man on an opposing console.

  “What’s happening, Serg?” called Bliss, but was blanked out as the sergeant stared straight past him, treating him like an inconvenient post.

  “Try fifty-four …” he shouted to the controller. “No, belay that, I’ll do it myself.” He picked up the microphone. “Alpha five-four, alpha five-four. What’s five-niner’s ten-twenty?”

  “Am I invisible?” Bliss questioned flippantly. Have I died? Did he get me? Then his thoughts darkened and left him pondering — Is this what death is like? What was that explosion? Maybe I am dead — maybe he did get me. “Sergeant!” he bellowed in something of a panic.

  “I’m busy — what do ye want — who are you?”

  The loudspeaker cackled overhead. “Alpha five-four to Delta Alpha — I’ve no idea where five-niner is. We’re just arriving at the scene — looks a mess-over.”

  Unable to wait any longer Bliss harshly grabbed the sergeant’s shoulder, “I’m D.I. Bliss. Will somebody tell me what’s happening?”

  “Sorry, Guv — There’s been an explosion. One of our uniformed …”

  “Where?” insisted Bliss, cutting him off.

  “Mitre Hotel in the High Street.”

  Bliss felt his knees giving — his hotel, the hotel he’d left only thirty minutes earlier. The hotel where he would have been shaving or showering had he waited for the receptionist’s early call. “Oh God!”

  “Are you alright, Guv?”

  Now what? Admit I know who did it? Admit it was my fault — again?

  “Yes … yes … I’m alright. I suppose I’d better get down there. Have you called the Super?”

  “Everything’s under control, Guv.”

  Not in Bliss’s mind it wasn’t. His brain was exploding with questions. How did he find me so quickly? How did he know I was at the Mitre? Why can’t he leave me alone?

  Snatching the keys to one of the C.I.D. cars off a pegboard he paused deep in thought. What if it’s a trap — what if he’s waiting to pick me off? But he quickly shook off the notion of an ambush and ran for the car park, telling himself that the killer wouldn’t risk it with the area swamped by uniformed officers. He will have been long gone, he told himself. Why hang around when the bomb’s achieved it objective?

  The car was already on automatic pilot as he shot out of the car park, piecing together the likely scenario in his mind: timed device almost certainly — cheap chain-store alarm clock — made in Hong Kong or Taiwan. That’s prophetic, he thought — identical ones would be waking a million people around the world and this one, attached to a battery, detonator and a lump of Semtex high explosive, had woken an entire city.

  He took the roundabout at high speed, slackening off the throttle as the tyres protested. It must have been planted last evening, he mused, under the bed while I was in London — careless, I should have checked. But how did he get in? Slamming the car into fourth, he pictured it in his
mind as he tore along the quiet street: a fairly ordinary looking workman in blue overalls carrying an official looking toolbox. “Come to check the plumbing in 203 — you got a leak apparently,” he says to the pretty Swedish receptionist who had charmed Bliss with her brilliant smile and oddball English.

  “Oh. I have no understanding — I think maybe I should call to the manager?” she replies, reaching for the phone.

  “Well I ain’t hanging around, girl,” he says, turning on his heals. “Maybe I should come back tomorrow when the place is flooded out — I can make more money that way.”

  “No, please — it is alright, I am sure,” she pleads, handing over the keys — even placating him with the offer of a cup of tea or a miniature from the courtesy bar.

  The High Street was blocked, jammed by the haphazardly abandoned emergency vehicles and the detritus of catastrophe. Bricks, tiles and baulks of timber carpeted the roadway. Broken glass had spewed everywhere, turning summer to winter as Bliss’s footsteps crunched through the glistening ice-like crystals. But he couldn’t hear — every burglar and fire alarm in the street was blaring; police, fire and ambulance. Sirens were still screaming in the distance, clearing a path through thin air as they raced through the deserted streets.

  He ducked under the hastily strung fluorescent tape and stopped, perplexed. The Mitre Hotel seemed intact, normal even, apart from the snake of shell-shocked patrons streaming out of the door, clutching themselves in blankets and dressing gowns, and being hurried away by ambulance and fire officers. Still confused, he made straight for a fireman, his helmet and shoulders weighed down with gold stripes.

  “D.I. Bliss,” he shouted, hoping the other man wouldn’t ask for his warrant card. “I thought it was the Mitre,” he added, struggling to be heard above the cacophony of sirens.

  “So did half the people in the Mitre,” replied the chief, cupping his hand to Bliss’s ear. “The blast shook the shit out of the place.”

  “So what happened?”

  “Classic gas explosion I would say. I bet someone left the gas stove on and forgot to light it.”

  “Where?”

  “Tea shop — three doors down from the hotel.”

  “Anyone hurt?”

  The loudest of the sirens stopped abruptly, leaving the fireman shouting unnecessarily. “Yeah — one of your people, walking past at the time — caught a packet.”

  The flush of exhilaration drained from Bliss’s face as the silent radio was explained. No wonder Alpha five-niner hadn’t responded. No wonder the control room staff had been so concerned. Five-niner was already at the scene — lying under the debris. “Is he alright?”

  “It’s a she,” replied the officer, having to shout again as the alarm burst back to life. “Yeah … she’s just shook up. A couple of your lads have taken her to emerg.”

  Thank Christ, he thought, asking, “What sparked it off?”

  “Time switch possibly,” he shrugged. “Won’t know ’til we’ve made the place safe and had a good look. It was probably carelessness, either that or a phoney insurance claim.”

  “I’ll get a detective working on it straight away,” Bliss said moving off for a closer inspection of the wrecked building.

  The siren paused again, and he stopped cold as the fire chief shouted after him. “Of course, it could have been a bomb.”

  He needed coffee, high roasted Arabica preferably — hot and very strong, but the only cafe open had Cash amp; Carry instant — take it or leave it. He took it, but it didn’t stop his hands shaking and it didn’t offer comfort and warmth. Sitting on a ripped vinyl stool in a corner, he listened to the excited babble of early morning workers, each having their own take on the explosion.

  Bliss shut out the voices and gripped the counter tightly to stop the shaking. It wasn’t fear, he tried telling himself, not fear for his own safety anyway. It was fear for others, like the policewoman, who might get caught in the shrapnel. I wonder, was she young or old, he started thinking, then stopped himself. Does it matter? She could have been killed.

  But it was fear for his family, especially his daughter Samantha, that hurt most, turning him, in his own mind, into a social leper. “Keep away,” he wanted to warn. “Don’t come to my house; don’t stand close to me; don’t talk to me in public; don’t phone me; don’t even admit to knowing me.” And it wasn’t only his family and friends: Every unexpected visitor turning up on his doorstep had been given a verbal rub down by one or other of the protective team cruising the neighbourhood. Complete strangers, innocent people going about their daily lives, had become tainted. People like the sorters at the post office, using plastic tongs at arms length to pick up every item addressed to him like pieces of shitty toilet paper, then dropping them into a blast proof container for x-ray examination. Even electricity, gas and phone bills got the “contaminated” treatment.

  “We can’t be too careful when it comes to the safety of our staff,” the postal inspector had said, making him feel even dirtier.

  It was the elaborate routine with the garbage that had exasperated him more than anything — three evenings a week segregating paper, metal, glass and food; labelling each bag with as much detail as a laboratory specimen; smuggling it out of the house at night to be shredded or incinerated away from prying eyes. Initially, he had complained to the commander that it seemed unnecessarily circumspect but, inwardly, he knew very well it was not — recognising that a single bag snatched from the kerb under the nose of the refuse collector could yield a Pandorian assemblage of personal information.

  Shaking with frustration and anger — wanting to scream, “Come on out you coward — fight me like a man,” he left the cafe, and the coffee, and walked back to the High Street. The sirens had stopped, firemen with hoses and brushes were sweeping the debris to one side and washing the glass into the gutters. Blue uniforms patrolled the tape barriers, keeping back a curious mob, allowing only shopkeepers and their staff through, to reset alarms, turn off the gas and assess the damage.

  Bliss slipped under the tape and stepped gingerly through the debris toward the tea shop. The fire chief spotted him. “It was the gas,” he called.

  “Are you sure?”

  “Yeah — the owner’s over there if you want to talk to her,” he pointed. “The woman in the blue pinny who looks as though she’s had an accident in her drawers. She says she put some meringues in a slow oven overnight — then forgot to light it. She even worried about it when she got home but her husband said she was worrying for nothing — little did he know.”

  One look at the mortified woman’s ashen face was enough to confirm the truth in the story and Bliss wanted to relax, saying to himself, “This wasn’t the work of the killer — this was just an accident.” But, he was so wound up it wasn’t that simple. Since the threatening calls and letters, and especially since the bomb, he had become paranoiacally self-centred, finding it difficult to imagine that, in some way, this wasn’t directed at him.

  He tried stepping away from himself. “Just look at yourself. Look what he’s done to you,” he said. “The moment they mentioned an explosion you assumed yourself to be the target. Every time a phone rings you think it’s for you, or about you. Every knock on the door and every beep of a horn or shout is to get your attention.”

  “Good morning, Inspector.”

  Bliss jumped and his head whipped around so fast his neck “cracked” audibly.

  “You were miles away,” continued Superintendent Donaldson chattily. “I wasn’t sure you’d be back from London. How did it go — everything alright?”

  “Tell him about the Volvo,” whispered the voice in his mind but he brushed it aside. “Fine,” he said, and immediately changed the subject. “The fire chief tells me this was gas … owner left the stove unlit overnight apparently.”

  Donaldson looked around as if he’d just arrived. “It’s a bloody shame. That tea shop used to do a really good cream tea … I don’t suppose you’ve had a chance to try their scones ye
t, and the strawberry … ”

  “The re-enactment fizzled out, I understand,” cut in Bliss impatiently.

  “Patterson called me at home,” Donaldson grumbled. “Interrupted my backgammon night … just a few of us, once a week — you wouldn’t be interested by any chance would you? My wife always leaves us a nice tray of sandwiches, smoked salmon …”

  “No thanks, Guv … How come Dauntsey got bail?”

  “Don’t ask me. He gave the silly old bitch on the bench his ‘little boy lost’ act; played up to her with that poofy accent of his; she got a damp patch in her knickers and let him out.”

  “Stupid cow. Now he’s got plenty of opportunity to cover his tracks.”

  “That’s what I thought at first, then it occurred to me that it might be a good thing. Think about it, Dave … We couldn’t find the body when he was inside, now he’s out he might lead us to it.”

  Bliss considered strategy for a moment. “You might be right, Sir. Twenty-four hour surveillance?”

  Donaldson nodded. “Already in place — though I’ve had to pull men off the search details.”

  “No problem. I was going to do that anyway. All I’d planned for today was a thorough search of his house.”

  “Again?”

  Bliss nodded. “Really thorough this time … walls, floors, attics — the works.”

  “How about some breakfast?” asked Donaldson chummily. “I know this little place where the sausages are just …”

  “I think I’ll get back to the nick,” interrupted Bliss. “I’ve got a lot to arrange.”

  Donaldson seemed put out and turned cold. “Oh, alright. If that’s what you want, Inspector. Was there anything else to report?”

  “Tell him about the Volvo,” screeched his inner voice.

  What is there to tell?

  “You were being followed.”

  Possibly.

 

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