by Frank Smith
Table of Contents
Also by Frank Smith
Title Page
Copyright
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Epilogue
Also by Frank Smith
The Chief Inspector Paget Mysteries
ACTS OF VENGEANCE
THREAD OF EVIDENCE
CANDLES FOR THE DEAD
STONE DEAD
FATAL FLAW
BREAKING POINT
THE COLD HAND OF MALICE
A KILLING RESURRECTED
IN THE SHADOW OF EVIL
NIGHT FALL
Other Novels
DRAGON’S BREATH
THE TRAITOR MASK
DEFECTORS ARE DEAD MEN
CORPSE IN HANDCUFFS
SOUND THE SILENT TRUMPETS
NIGHT FALL
A DCI Neil Paget Mystery
Frank Smith
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2013 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9 – 15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
eBook edition first published in 2013 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited.
Copyright © 2013 by Frank Smith.
The right of Frank Smith to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Smith, Frank, 1927-
Night fall.
1. Paget, Neil (Fictitious character)--Fiction.
2. Murder--Investigation--Fiction. 3. Police--Great
Britain--Fiction. 4. Detective and mystery stories.
I. Title
813.5'4-dc23
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8271-4 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-407-2 (epub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
PROLOGUE
Monday, 29 August
Rain spattered the tinted windows. It was late, but there was still a lot of traffic on the road. They’d been ready to leave Chester by eight o’clock, but the driver of the bus hadn’t returned to pick them up until after ten, so now it would be midnight or later before they got home. Ben, his name was, the driver. Funny little chap, but he had a way with the girls. He said he’d met an old mate and the time had just slipped by, but it was probably a girl.
They’d spent the time in the pub while they waited. Celebrating. And why not? After all, they’d come third, hadn’t they? Third out of twenty-six entries was pretty damned good – far better than they’d expected when they set out this morning – so most of the adults were feeling no pain by the time they got on the bus, and some had continued to drink as they left Chester behind.
There’d been some boisterous celebratory singing on the bus as well, but drink and the strains of the day had finally taken their toll, and it had been quiet for the last half hour or so. Except for the pair in the front seat. Voices had been rising and falling, but now there was a sharp crack like the snapping of a dry twig, and suddenly Meg Bainbridge was on her feet, hands busily brushing down her rumpled skirt.
Her companion half rose in his seat beside her, one hand holding the side of his face. ‘For Christ’s sake, sit down, Meg!’ he ordered hoarsely. ‘It’s just a bit of fun.’ He made a grab for her arm and tried to pull her down.
‘Well, it’s not my kind of fun!’ Meg snapped as she snatched her arm away, ‘so you can keep your hands to yourself, Mike Fulbright.’ She set off unsteadily down the aisle towards the back of the bus to look for an empty seat.
‘Then you shouldn’t have put it on offer,’ he called after her.
Furious, Meg turned to reply, but a small man in the third seat from the front grabbed her hand. ‘Good for you, Meg,’ he said loudly for Fulbright’s benefit. ‘He’s a very dangerous man, is our Mike. It’s a good thing you’re on a bus and not—’
‘Shut it, you!’ Fulbright snapped, glaring at the man.
‘Or what, Mike?’ the little man demanded cockily, emboldened by the drink. ‘Do you know what day this is, Mike? Well, do you?’
Meg, clearly puzzled, frowned down at the man, then pulled her hand free and moved on.
‘I know you’ve got a big mouth,’ Mike sneered, ‘and I’m telling you to shut it.’
‘Or what, Mike?’
Conscious that others were listening, Fulbright lowered his voice. ‘I’m just telling you to think about it,’ he grated. ‘In fact, I’d think long and hard about it if I were you.’ He slid down into his seat.
The little man stared at the open can of beer in his hand, then tilted his head back and drained it. ‘Think about it?’ he muttered. ‘I’ve never stopped bloody thinking about it!’ Tears glistened in his eyes and spilled over.
The man beside him stirred. ‘Perhaps not the wisest thing to do,’ he suggested mildly. ‘Antagonizing Mike Fulbright, especially when he’s had too much to drink.’
The little man brushed ineffectually at the tears but remained silent.
‘If you’d like to talk about it . . .?’ his seatmate prodded gently. He put a hand to his mouth to smother a yawn. ‘Bottling things up is rarely a good idea.’
The little man’s fingers curled tightly around the empty can, eyes fixed intently on it as it crumpled and collapsed beneath the pressure. ‘Why not?’ he muttered in a voice barely above a whisper. Then, more boldly, ‘Why bloody well not!’
He turned his head to squint at the man, then tapped the side of his nose. ‘But you have to promise not to tell anyone,’ he warned. ‘I mean it. Not ever. All right . . .?’
Farther back, Meg Bainbridge found an empty seat next to a slim, fair-haired young man by the name of Colin Findlay. Good looking lad . . . well, not a lad, exactly. Married, two kids. Meg rather fancied him, but he was as straight as they come. Straighter. Didn’t drink; didn’t smoke; probably only had sex once a week if that, and he was the only man on the bus who was wearing a suit and tie. Bernice, that was his wife’s name. Pretty little thing but a bit of a prude in Meg’s estimation. Thin lips and disapproving eyes, and very possessive. Meg had wondered how Colin had come to marry her. Pro
bably got her pregnant, then ‘did the right thing’.
‘Don’t mind if I join you, do you, Colin?’ she asked, continuing without giving him a chance to answer. ‘Mike can be a lot of fun when he’s sober, but he can be a proper bastard when he’s had too much to drink.’ She leaned closer and giggled beneath her breath when she felt Findlay flinch and try to pull away from the pressure of her breast pressed hard against his arm. ‘And he’s not too pleased with you either, Colin, love,’ she confided. ‘Not after today’s performance, he isn’t, so you’d better watch your back in future.’ She squeezed his arm. ‘And me sitting here with you isn’t going to improve his temper,’ she added brightly, ‘so like I said, you’d better watch it, love.’
He tried to ease away, but the seat was narrow and there was nowhere to go. The heady fragrance of Meg’s perfume was overpowering. He turned his head away and tried to breathe more shallowly, but there was no escaping it.
‘I didn’t expect to win,’ he said plaintively. ‘I mean I didn’t set out to upset Mike. It’s just that—’
He stopped abruptly as Meg reached out and pressed her fingers against his lips. ‘I know, Colin, love,’ she said, ‘but I’m tired and I don’t want to talk any more.’ She yawned, then snuggled down and laid her head on his shoulder and closed her eyes. ‘You don’t mind, do you, love?’ she murmured sleepily. Her long black hair felt soft and warm against his cheek.
Findlay breathed in deeply. ‘Not at all, Meg,’ he croaked huskily. ‘Really, I don’t mind at all.’
ONE
Friday, 30 September
The town hall clock was striking eleven when the front door of a house on Thurston Street opened and a small group of men stepped out into the night. They paused in the act of pulling hoods over their heads, surprised to find it had stopped raining. Then, with mutterings of ‘G’night,’ they made their way to their cars and drove off.
Billy Travis, alone on the pavement, thrust his hands in his pockets and turned towards home. It was dark; street lights were few and far between in this older part of town, but home was only a few streets away.
It had been a good session. The highlight of the night had been a demonstration by Ted Grayson of special effects that could be achieved without using a computer. Not everyone had found it as fascinating as he had, though. They were all computer mad these days, quick to use every new-fangled piece of software that would – what was the word? Enhance! That was the word they were so fond of using. Enhance their pictures. Well, that might be all right for some, but to him it was no different than cheating, and he had found Grayson’s presentation refreshing. This obsession with manipulating pictures using Photoshop and other devices . . . Billy shook his head. Not that he was dead set against them; he’d made use of them himself at one time or another, but he’d been brought up the old way, helping his dad in the darkroom, watching images appear on a piece of blank paper, lifting them out of the tray with tweezers when his dad said, ‘Now, Billy. Now!’
He liked Ted Grayson, liked going to meetings in his house with all the black and white pictures on the walls and the collection of old cameras in the back room. Grayson himself was something of a character. Gaunt-faced and pale, he was tall and thin, and with his straggling pony-tail and his addiction to weed, he looked – and sometimes acted – like a hippie from the sixties. But what Grayson didn’t know about cameras wasn’t worth knowing, in Billy’s opinion.
The smell of weed was still with him. It was the same every time; it clung to his clothing, and he’d never been able to convince his father that he hadn’t been smoking the stuff himself.
He’d be in bed now, his father. The fitful weather of the past few days was playing havoc with his arthritic knees, and he’d been going to bed early and taking a sleeping tablet to get some relief from the pain. Fifty-seven years old and he was hobbling around like a man of ninety. He was—
‘Aahhgg!’ Billy gasped as he collided with the figure of a man stepping out of a dark doorway. He stumbled and would have fallen if the man hadn’t reached out and grabbed his arm.
‘Sorry,’ the man said. ‘My fault. I should have looked where— Billy? Billy Travis? Is that you? Good God, man, fancy bumping into you like this. Are you all right?’
‘Just scared the shit out of me, that’s all,’ Billy said shakily. Heart racing, he drew a deep breath as he peered at the man. ‘What brings you over to this side of town anyway?’
‘Stopped in to see a friend and didn’t look where I was going when I came out,’ the man said apologetically. ‘You sure you’re all right? On your way home, are you?’
‘That’s right.’ For some reason, Billy felt he should offer an explanation. ‘I’ve just been to a meeting of the photographic society. We meet every other Friday.’
‘Keeping up with your work, then,’ the man said approvingly. ‘Always something new, I suppose; something else to learn. Good for you, Billy.’ He looked up and down the deserted street. ‘Look, my car’s right here. The least I can do is drive you home after almost knocking you down.’
‘Thanks, but there’s no need,’ Billy said. ‘It’s no more than five minutes from here.’
‘Nonsense!’ the man said as he took Billy’s arm. ‘Come on, get in.’
‘No, really . . .’ Billy began again, but the man had opened the door of the car, and it seemed pointless to resist the offer of a ride.
‘Best buckle up,’ he said as Billy got in. ‘Can’t be too careful, can we? Watch your arm now.’ He closed the door, then paused to survey the silent street once more before opening the back door. ‘Just bear with me for a minute,’ he said, as he climbed inside. ‘Something’s been rattling around back here and I want to sort it out before it drives me mad.’ He picked something up off the floor, then, settling himself in the seat directly behind his passenger, he chuckled. ‘I think I should lower the headrest for you while I’m here,’ he said. ‘Just sit up straight, Billy, and put your head back while I do that.’
Billy chuckled himself as he pushed himself up in his seat. ‘At least there’s not much chance of getting whiplash when you’re my size,’ he said. He sat up straight and put his head back. ‘See, I’m still too short.’
‘Very true,’ the man said quietly as he slipped the noose over Billy’s head and the headrest and pulled hard on the slip-knot. Billy opened his mouth to cry out, fingers clawing at the rope that bit deep into the flesh. His eyes bulged; his feet hammered against the floor, and blood streaked his neck where his nails were digging into the flesh.
The pressure eased. His throat rattled as he gulped air, and it flashed across his mind that this must be what they were talking about when they spoke of the death rattle. The rope tightened again. He could feel himself slipping away. He was only thirty-three years old, for Christ’s sake, and he was about to die! Tears streamed down his face; he tried to scream, but there was no sound except the roaring in his ears.
The pressure on his throat eased slightly. ‘Talk to me, Billy,’ the man said softly. He could feel the man’s breath against his ear. ‘I want to know every last detail. A full confession. Think of it as cleansing your soul before you meet your Maker.’
TWO
Saturday, 1 October
Grace Lovett was putting on her wellingtons at the back door when the phone rang. She groaned. Not today, please not today, she thought as she pulled the boots off again. They’d had it all planned. Today was to be devoted to sorting out the garden, and Neil was already down at the shed bringing out the tools. The weather forecast was for showers in the afternoon, hence the early start. With any luck at all they could have the whole thing done by lunchtime.
Depending, of course, on who was on the other end of the phone, she thought grimly as she went back into the house.
Three minutes later Grace stepped outside again. ‘Put ’em all back, Neil,’ she called. ‘We’ve both been called in to work. Suspicious death on the tracks under the bridge at the Lessington Cut.’
They tra
velled to the site separately in their own cars. As a member of SOCO, the crime scenes investigation team, Grace would probably be spending her time at the site itself, whereas there was no telling where DCI Neil Paget would be by the end of the day.
The Lessington Cut, as it was called locally, lay some four miles north of Broadminster. The cutting was about a mile long, slicing through a fold in the land, and the bridge carrying a little-used country road was roughly halfway along the ridge.
It was an unusually subdued DS John Tregalles who greeted Paget when he arrived at the scene. The sergeant’s eyes were grave, and his normally expressive features were set in rigid, sombre lines. ‘It’s a bad one, boss,’ he said quietly as they walked from the car to the bridge overlooking the tracks. ‘Never seen anything quite like it.’
‘No chance it was an accident or suicide, then?’
Tregalles grimaced and shook his head. ‘You’ll see,’ he said grimly.
They clambered down the steep bank to where white-suited members of the crime scene squad were setting up their equipment. A photographer was already at work, crouching down to get shots of the body from different angles, while two men stood waiting for him to finish before setting a plastic screen in place around the body.
‘Be finished in a minute,’ the photographer called over his shoulder as he took another shot.
‘Who found the body?’ Paget asked.
‘The engine driver of the seven forty-five out of Broadminster spotted him and radioed in,’ Tregalles told him. ‘PC Whitelaw and his partner were first on the scene, and Whitelaw recognized the victim. His name is William Travis, and that’s been confirmed by his driving licence and other things in his wallet. He’s a photographer, or he was. He and his dad have a shop at the top end of Bucknell Street. Pokey little place. You’ve probably seen it; they do wedding photographs and passports and such. His dad did our wedding photos.’
Paget nodded. He’d never been in the shop, but he knew where it was.
‘SOCO reckons he came over about there,’ Tregalles said, pointing to the stone parapet of the bridge, ‘and if that is the case, then he would have fallen on the tracks, so he either managed to drag himself off the tracks to where you see him now, or someone pulled him off. But with the head injuries he has, I don’t see how he could have survived the fall.’