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A Narrow Return

Page 10

by Faith Martin


  Hillary didn’t even blink at the sexism. ‘So she never said that there was someone bothering her, or that she was worried her husband had found out about you or anything of that sort?’

  ‘Nah. She said her hubby wouldn’t notice a mink in the sugar bowl unless it bit him.’

  ‘And while you were together, you never saw or noticed anything odd? She didn’t get phone calls that upset her, or anything like that?’

  ‘No, nothing like that. She was fine – honest. She wasn’t the jumpy or temperamental sort. And if some asshole had been stalking her, she’d get her hubby to sort him out, wouldn’t she?’

  Because that’s what they were for, Hillary could have finished the thought for him.

  Yes, she knew Mark Burgess’s kind all right.

  ‘How long were you together?’ she asked curiously.

  ‘A couple of months.’

  ‘You were still having an affair when she died?’

  ‘Well, it was petering out a bit,’ he said, a shade reluctantly.

  ‘Perhaps she was finding Mr Gregg more amenable,’ Hillary asked, just to see what sort of a temper he had.

  But Burgess merely grunted. Obviously, being dumped for his lover’s own brother-in-law hadn’t worried him that much, and Hillary could guess why. With an ego as fragile as his, it should have rubbed him on the raw, and there could only be one reason why it didn’t.

  ‘Well, that’s all for now, sir,’ Hillary said turning away. Then she quickly swung back, ‘I would appreciate it if you didn’t discuss this conversation with anyone else, sir. We don’t want people alerted or made curious unduly.’

  ‘Don’t you worry none about that,’ Burgess muttered with feeling. ‘I’m not about to go blabbing about something like this, am I?’

  ‘No, I don’t suppose you are, sir,’ Hillary conceded.

  ‘’Sides, who am I gonna tell? The missus?’ Burgess asked rhetorically, needing to get in the last word. Then, for good measure, he guffawed falsely.

  As they walked back to the car, they heard the van doors slam, and a moment later, the van roared away past them and back up the hill.

  Hillary sighed. She’d forgotten to get the steak. She could have done with a nice sirloin.

  ‘What do you think, guv?’ Jimmy asked.

  ‘Well, I think he can remember exactly where he was when Anne McRae died for a start,’ she surprised him by saying flatly. ‘He was lying about that.’

  ‘You do?’ Jimmy blurted.

  ‘Yes. And if you think about it for just a bit, Jimmy, I expect you’ll get it too.’

  Jimmy climbed in behind the wheel and unlocked the door for her. By the time Hillary was settled in the passenger seat, he was grinning widely.

  ‘He was in bed with some other bored and lonely housewife, wasn’t he?’

  ‘In Wendlebury, I expect,’ Hillary agreed. ‘That’s why he wasn’t more disgruntled that Anne McRae had got bored with him. He was getting his ego stroked elsewhere. Well, that and other things that I don’t even want to think about.’

  She shuddered theatrically.

  Jimmy sighed. ‘So he’s scratched from the suspect list?’

  Hillary smiled widely. ‘Oh, I never scratch anyone from the list, Sergeant,’ she said, using his old title without realizing it. ‘Let’s just say he’s demoted to somewhere near the bottom. For now.’

  Jimmy nodded and turned over the engine. ‘So where to now, guv?’

  Hillary glanced at her watch. ‘Now we go and see the cuckolded husband.’

  Melvin McRae opened the door to find a good-looking redhead and an older man on his doorstep. Neither of them being what he expected, he stared at them silently for a moment.

  ‘Mr McRae? I’m Hillary Greene – we spoke on the phone yesterday?’ Hillary prompted. ‘This is my colleague James Jessop.’

  Both of them held up their IDs, but Melvin barely glanced at them.

  ‘Oh yes. Come on in. My wife’s at work,’ he said, confusing Hilllary momentarily, until she realized that he meant his current wife. For a moment there, she’d wondered if he was mentally ill, and then had a brief but disturbing image of Anne McRae’s ghost beavering away in some office somewhere.

  He showed them into a small but pleasant room, with a view of a large church.

  ‘So, what can I do to help?’ Melvin asked, indicating a couple of armchairs, but sitting down himself in a small, hard-backed chair beside a table. Once there, he leaned forward, letting his arms dangle along his thighs, with his large-knuckled hands hanging above his knees. He looked tired, as if he hadn’t slept well, but he was neatly groomed and his clothes were clean and freshly laundered.

  ‘This is really just a courtesy call, Mr McRae,’ Hillary said, making Jimmy’s mental eyebrows go up. So she was going to go with the soft-soap routine here, was she? Interesting.

  ‘As you know, I’ve been assigned to re-investigate your wife’s case, and I just wondered if you had any questions for me?’

  Melvin shot her a quick glance. Whatever he’d been expecting from them, it hadn’t been that.

  ‘Questions? No. About what?’ he asked, clearly confused.

  ‘I just thought that you’d like to be given the opportunity to speak to me, sir, that’s all,’ Hillary said smoothly. ‘Have you had any thoughts on who might be responsible for your wife’s death in the intervening years?’

  ‘No. I’d have been on to DI Squires if I had.’

  ‘Inspector Squires has retired now, sir,’ Hillary said softly. ‘Anything you want to say, you can say to me.’

  Melvin sighed. ‘I just don’t want you bothering the kids none, that’s all,’ he said finally. ‘It really cut them up, their mum going like that. Young Jenny – well, it really sent her off the rails, even now, she’s having a bad time of it.’

  ‘We haven’t even spoken to your daughters yet, sir,’ Hillary said gently. ‘And we will be careful. We don’t want to rake up bad memories, and we’ll be as brief as possible.’

  ‘I know it’s been a long time, and all that, and you probably think I’m fussing, but I know Anne would say the same.’ Melvin looked at Hillary from eyes that were watering with tears now. ‘Some people said a lot of bad things about Anne – you know, about how it turned out and all that business with Shane and what have you. But she was a good mum to her kids – they always came first. You can ask anybody – even her detractors have to admit that. She always put the kids first – like a tiger defending her cubs she was, a proper dedicated mum, and she wouldn’t want you worrying them now, not even on her own account.’

  ‘I believe you, sir,’ Hillary said softly. ‘Her sister says the same thing.’

  ‘Debbie? You’ve already spoken to her?’ Melvin asked sharply.

  ‘Of course, sir, she was first on our list,’ Hillary said simply, and putting no undue emphasis in her tone at all.

  But Melvin McRae quickly gave a sighing grunt. ‘Of course she was. Inspector Squires thought she did it, didn’t he?’

  ‘He said as much?’ Hillary asked, surprised.

  ‘No. He didn’t have to. Debs was beside herself at one point. She was sure she was going to go down for it.’

  Hillary couldn’t detect much bitterness in the man’s voice, and she looked at him curiously. ‘Do you think she did it, sir?’ she asked simply. And beside her she felt, rather than heard, Jimmy take a deep breath.

  Melvin McRae leaned back in his chair and rubbed a hand wearily across his face. ‘I don’t know. I just don’t. I don’t like to think it. Debbie’s family after all, isn’t she? Anne’s big sister and all that. You don’t like to think someone you’ve shared countless Christmas dinners with has murdered your wife, do you?’

  Hillary smiled noncommittally.

  ‘On the other hand, Inspector Squires seemed certain. She had no alibi at the time Anne died. And she had motive.’ Melvin shrugged. ‘I just don’t know. She swears up and down that she didn’t, though.’

  Hillary nodded, but s
he was not about to comment on that. The number of times she’d heard villains swear to their innocence didn’t bear thinking about.

  Still, it was interesting that Melvin McRae seemed to bear the chief suspect in his wife’s murder no obvious ill will.

  ‘Were you surprised to find out about the affair, sir?’ she asked carefully. It might be more than twenty years since he’d first learned of his wife’s infidelity, but it had been in such horrific circumstances it was bound to leave a massive scar.

  ‘Of course I was. I couldn’t believe it, not at first,’ Melvin confirmed grimly. ‘I was gutted.’

  ‘You had no inkling?’

  ‘No. I never thought Anne was like that.’

  Hillary believed him. So he probably had no inkling about Mark Burgess either.

  ‘Well, sir, if you can think of anything you want to tell us, you can call me any time.’ She handed him a card with the CRT’s number on it. Her name was scribbled on the back.

  ‘Thank you.’

  Once outside, they walked thoughtfully back to the car.

  ‘DI Squires never liked the husband for it, guv,’ Jimmy said, ‘and I can’t say I do either. Even without the airtight alibi, he just doesn’t strike me as the kind. I know you never can tell, right? But still….’

  Hillary knew what he meant. ‘You get a feeling for it.’

  ‘Yes, guv.’

  ‘Well, I can’t say as he’s my number one suspect either.’

  Jimmy grinned. ‘But he stays on the list right, guv?’

  ‘You’re learning Jimmy.’

  Back at HQ, Hillary and Jimmy found the communal office more or less deserted.

  ‘You can send Vivienne and Sam out to Wendlebury tomorrow, see if they can track down any candidates for Mark Burgess’s bored housewife,’ Hillary gave out the instructions without hesitation, but Jimmy knew she wasn’t trying to throw her weight around. She was, quite simply and inevitably, going to be the operational boss of this outfit, and he had no trouble with that. He didn’t think Sam would mind either – she was obviously going to be a great teacher for him. He wasn’t so sure about the young madam though.

  ‘It won’t hurt to get confirmation of Burgess’s alibi,’ Hillary continued, unaware of the ex-sergeant’s thoughts. ‘Don’t forget, his butcher’s van was regularly seen in Chesterton, so he could have parked it up somewhere and nobody would have thought much about it. Plus, he was known to the victim, so if he’d come calling, she’d probably have let him into the house, even if it wasn’t one of his regular days.’

  ‘Right, guv. That should please our Vivienne. It’s been twenty years, so it’s likely the woman in question has moved house long since, or even been dead for years. Talk about a wild-goose chase.’

  ‘It’ll be good practise at door-stepping for both of them,’ Hillary said, without sympathy.

  ‘Yes, guv,’ Jimmy grinned.

  ‘And you can set about getting a warrant to compare Mark Burgess’s DNA with that one stray, unaccounted-for hair they found on the victim,’ she added, lest he think he could get away with any of the scut work.

  ‘Guv.’

  ‘That should please the super at any rate,’ she added, and when she caught his questioning look, added, ‘I daresay having something solid, like DNA evidence to go on, will be right up his street. After all these years, we’re going to be hard pressed working up a case with just witness statements and circumstantial corroboration.’

  ‘Right. But he’ll still go to bat for you if he thinks you’ve cracked it, guv,’ Jimmy predicted.

  Hillary blinked. She hadn’t put Steven Crayle down as someone who’d be willing to go out on a limb for anyone or anything.

  ‘If you say so, Jimmy,’ she said blandly.

  Jimmy opened his mouth to say something, then obviously thought better of it, and closed his mouth again. It was obvious that she didn’t rate the super very much just yet.

  But Jimmy reckoned she’d learn. She was smart. It wouldn’t take her long to realize that, ambitious and careful though he undoubtedly was, Steven Crayle was also one of the good guys.

  With a sigh, he set about finding a judge who’d be sympathetic to the cause of comparing a single human hair to a very lightweight suspect indeed.

  But that evening, as the sun began to set, and the daytime staff at the Kidlington HQ began to make way for the night shift, Jimmy Jessop wasn’t the only one contemplating the merits or otherwise of human hair.

  Long silken strands of auburn hair, to be precise.

  The locker room in the CRT was situated at the end of a particularly torturous set of rooms in the rabbit warren that was the basement. It was also a unisex affair, and Hillary Greene’s locker stood beside that of Sergeant Handley, the computer-loving technophile and someone the newest member of CRT had not yet met, a Sergeant Sheila Young.

  But neither Crayle nor Young’s locker interested Tom Warrington much.

  With a set of lock-picks that he’d ‘confiscated’ from a collar a few months ago, he set about opening Hillary’s locker, and eventually succeeded only due to luck rather than to skill. He didn’t know it, being an amateur, but he left clear scratches and marks of his lock picking behind on the new brass padlock. Blissfully unaware of this, he eagerly opened the metal door in the deserted room and was bitterly disappointed at the meagre pickings inside.

  A spare coat hung from a solitary hanger, and a duffel bag proved to be largely empty. But a half-full perfume bottle had him spraying the air and sniffing appreciatively. The scent, like the woman herself, was classy, subtle and pleasing.

  He reached up to the top shelf and removed her comb – a plain and simple black affair, and his heart tripped a little faster at the sight of the long, red hairs stuck in the comb’s teeth.

  He had to have it.

  He pressed the comb into the top of his shirt pocket, where he could feel it resting against his heart. He was sure it was getting warm, setting his breath coming faster and faster.

  A sound coming from a little distance behind him made him hastily close and re-lock the door, but it was only someone passing by the outer door on the way to the loos.

  Tom was careful not to be seen as he left the locker room, and made his way back upstairs into the main area of the building, which was now largely deserted.

  The comb in his breast pocket now felt hot and secret against his ribs, making him smile and want to shout for joy.

  This was going to be so good. This time, he could feel it, things would finally go the way he needed them too. And she’d realize he was the man for her.

  She’d better.

  Tom Warrington didn’t take rejection well.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  Diane Burgess was a small woman, rounded and rosy-cheeked, with a fading modest beauty that reminded Hillary of everyone’s generic favourite aunt. She lived in what had probably been a council house at one point, but which was now almost certainly bought and paid for, in a pleasant but dull little cul-de-sac in Bicester’s King’s End.

  The garden was neat and well tended, and when Hillary and Sam Pickles introduced themselves at her doorstep, they were immediately invited in.

  Hillary could tell by the nervous, puzzled and just faintly excited look on her face that her husband had not told them about his interview with the CRT representatives yesterday. So a visit from the police was the last thing she’d expected.

  Hillary knew she was about to ruin the woman’s day.

  ‘Mrs Burgess, there’s nothing to worry about,’ she began warmly if not altogether truthfully, as the older woman settled them down in a small living room done out tastefully in shades of mint-green and amber. ‘We’re re-investigating the murder of Mrs Anne McRae. You may remember it?’ she began cautiously.

  Diane’s rosy cheeks paled suddenly, and she put a hand up nervously to her hair, which was mouse-brown, with streaks of grey, and swept back in a rather untidy bun at the back of her head.

  ‘Oh, er, yes?’


  ‘She was the mother of three who was bludgeoned to death in her kitchen in Chesterton, about twenty years ago now,’ Hillary prompted with a reassuring smile.

  Diane blinked, her round pale blue eyes becoming gradually more and more frightened. They shot to Sam, who unnerved her further by looking away with a guilty expression that made Hillary want to kick him.

  She hid an inner sigh carefully. Women like this always made her feel like a bully in a schoolyard, no matter how kind she tried to be. But she knew from past, and sometimes bitter, experience that pussy footing around wasn’t always a kindness when dealing with life’s innocents.

  ‘I remember,’ Diane said, her voice so low, it was almost a whisper now. She fixed those big blue eyes on Hillary like a dog expecting a kicking.

  Hillary smiled bracingly. ‘I don’t suppose you knew her?’

  ‘Oh no. But I read about it. We all did,’ Diane said quickly, as if anxious to be seen to be ultra-honest and truthful.

  ‘All?’ Hillary asked casually.

  ‘Oh, you know. My friends, the neighbours around here, my sisters and all. It was a local murder, you see, and not something that you expect to happen to us. I mean, someone like us. I mean, living here, and not in a big city. I mean, you expect drug pushers and, well, women who walk the streets to be in danger. But a housewife from Chesterton….’ Her voice trailed off helplessly.

  ‘Yes. I understand,’ Hillary said softly. And did. Something like the murder of Anne McRae would have been totally outside of Diane Burgess’s experience. When something that shocking and unexpected happened, rocking that little bit of your own personal world that you had always felt to be safe before, it tended to leave a scar.

  ‘But you knew her sister, I believe?’ she pressed on.

  Diane looked puzzled.

  ‘No, I don’t think so.’

  And she wasn’t lying either, Hillary thought instantly. She knew this type of witness. All her life, Diane Burgess had respected the law – she’d probably been taught it by her respectable working-class parents, and then had it reinforced by her school teachers, and would no doubt have dubbed the same mindset into any children she may have had. Added to that, she was a genuinely timid soul, and they tended to avoid confrontation out of habit. More than anything else, she would be uncomfortable lying, especially to someone in authority. It was far easier for someone like this to simply tell the truth. It required less effort.

 

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