Now there’s broken glass to get fixed, the domestic part of Slider’s mind worried. ‘Booby trap?’ he said.
‘A bucket resting on the top of the door,’ said Willets. ‘A metal one.’ He gestured, and Slider turned his head, wincing, to see a large, heavy, old-fashioned galvanised bucket lying on the carpet. ‘Someone doesn’t like you, sir,’ Willets concluded, with questions sticking out all over his face.
Fortunately, Slider thought, he had not gone barging straight in, so the bucket had not hit him directly, but struck his head glancingly and the tip of his shoulder on its way down. The old schoolboy trick. Bates was making a fool of him. Had he meant to kill him? Well, probably not, but he wouldn’t have minded if he had.
‘Need to get forensics in. You didn’t touch anything?’
‘Only the door, and then you,’ said Willets. ‘I think you ought to go to the hospital, sir. There’s quite a bit of blood.’
Slider became aware, now, of a stickiness around his neck and collar.
‘Can’t leave the place,’ he said.
‘We’ll take care of it, sir,’ said Willets. ‘I’ve already phoned it in. Wright will take you to the hospital and I’ll wait here and preserve the scene. You really ought to get that looked at.’
A veterinary-sized painkiller and three stitches later, Slider was functioning again, needing a clean shirt more than anything. Mackay, who’d been doing night duty, was beside him in the cubicle, reporting that nothing else in the flat seemed to have been disturbed, that there were no fingermarks on the bucket, only glove smears, that the forensic team had finished and gone, and that a carpenter was even then boarding up the broken panel in the front door.
‘Do you want a bug sweep done, guv?’ he asked. Slider had mentioned his initial thought that Bates may have put in a listening device.
‘No, don’t bother. I think the booby trap was the reason for the break-in. I suppose my door locks were child’s play to him.’ He only thanked God that Joanna had not been there.
‘Well, I don’t think you ought to go back there,’ Mackay said anxiously. ‘Not tonight, anyway.’
‘I need clean clothes,’ Slider said, ‘and some shut-eye. And he’s not going to do anything else tonight, is he?’
‘Well, at least have a uniform on the door,’ Mackay urged. ‘Renker was there when I left. Let him stay on guard while you sleep.’
Slider agreed to that, rather than argue, which was becoming increasingly difficult as his brain kept trying to check out into the land of nod. He knew that his old friend O’Flaherty was the night relief sergeant at the station, and he wouldn’t mind leaving PC Renker on nursery duty. And it would be a brave villain who tried to get past big Eric Renker in a confined space.
Eleven
Fainting in Coils
‘Why didn’t you call me?’ Atherton demanded, the next morning.
‘I thought about it, but I didn’t want to disturb Emily with more tales of violence,’ Slider said. He felt as if he hadn’t slept for a week.
‘She’s going to find out anyway,’ Atherton pointed out.
‘Better to hear about it in daylight than in the middle of the night,’ Slider said from experience.
‘Well, you can’t stay there now, anyway. Who knows what he’ll do next? You’d better come and stay at my place tonight.’
‘And interrupt love’s young dream?’
‘Facetiousness is my thing. It doesn’t work for you,’ Atherton informed him. ‘If you’re worried about the proprieties you can have my room and I’ll sleep on the sofa.’ And, of course, creep up to Emily in the spare room once the lights were out.
Slider couldn’t bear to argue any more. His head hurt too much. ‘Thanks,’ he said. ‘I’ll come, just for tonight.’ When Joanna got back he’d have to think of something else. But at least he’d get one evening of Atherton’s cooking. Those fish and chips had given him heartburn, though that probably wasn’t their fault, but a result of the subsequent dramas. As a long-serving policeman, he didn’t usually have any difficulty digesting grease. ‘It’s Porson I feel sorry for,’ he said, to turn the attention away from himself. ‘The old boy really feels it.’
He had reported in to Porson as soon as he arrived, and found the super pale and shaken.
‘I’m just about sick of this,’ he said once he had ascertained that Slider was not seriously hurt. ‘They’ve tied me up hand and foot. Bates is SOCA business now, and you know what these SO units are like. Jealous as fishwives, and if you tread on their toes, you’re in all sorts of grief. I’ve been told categorically not to pursue him, and my pension’s on the line, laddie, as you well know. But I’m not having my officers put in jeopardy and do nothing. What are SOCA doing? Sitting round scratching their targets. So you can go after him with my blessing, and anything you want, just ask. If it costs me my pension, well, that’s not an absorbent price in the scheme of things. Only,’ he had added, rather spoiling the magnificent defiance, ‘don’t let the Stonax case slip, will you?’
‘No, sir.’ Slider hesitated, wondering whether to voice any of Emily’s and Atherton’s conspiracy theories. He was beginning to have a suspicion of his own, though against his will. Why had the Stonax murder been left with him? Usually high-profile cases were whisked away to the specialist units for the greater glory of some desk jockey with a degree in looking good. He had been led by the nose to conclude that Borthwick had done it, but what if it was not the villains who were doing the leading, but the ‘them’ of Atherton’s paranoia?
But if the idea that such things could be would make him sick, they’d make Porson sicker. He had become, since his wife died, something of a shabby tiger, but he was not yet tamed. Slider decided to say nothing, at least yet, and to ask instead for something deliverable.
‘Could you get the traffic unit to find that Focus as a matter of urgency? I’ve got another reg number for it, so the likelihood is that they’re going to change it again, but there aren’t that many black Focuses with the same dint in the same place. I’m pretty sure it’s one of Bates’s close cronies driving it around, and if we get him, we might get a lead on Bates.’
‘Consider it done,’ Porson said. ‘I’ll sit on them and put a rocket under their arses, don’t you worry. Anything else?’
‘I can’t think of anything at the moment,’ Slider said.
‘Come to me if you do. Now, what are we going to do about Borthwick?’
‘The report on the oil marks was waiting on my desk when I got in,’ Slider said. That was another surprise, that it should have come through so quickly. Conspiracy was like oranges – once you got the smell in your nose, you couldn’t get it out.
Porson evidently agreed. ‘They must have priorised it,’ he said. ‘You don’t normally get presidents for non-human fluids. So what was the result?’
‘It’s a match for the sample taken from Borthwick’s bike,’ Slider said. ‘He says he’s never been in the flat at all, so that, plus the victim’s watch, make a pretty firm basis for a charge.’
‘Yes,’ Porson said, starting his lope up and down in the space between his desk and the window. ‘And then you’d have to try to trace the movements of that motorbike the old dear saw, which means watching endless CCTV tapes, and God knows what else besides trying to prove he did it when we know he didn’t. Which all adds up to a lot of running around with our heads up our blue-arsed flies.’
‘Displacement activity,’ Slider said, as Porson continued to pace.
‘We’ve got to do it, and we’ve got to make it look good,’ Porson decided. ‘It’s a pity that oil report came so quickly. But we can hold him pending more evidence. I’ll think of something to tell the muppets. He’s still co-operating?’
‘Yes, sir. I think he’s quite enjoying it. Bit of a holiday for him. He likes the food.’
‘The man’s sick! He hasn’t asked for a solicitor? He’ll have to have one, otherwise the press’ll cotton on and start moaning about human rights. But it’s got to
be one we can trust.’
‘I’ll find one, sir.’
‘And get him what he likes to eat, and whatever he likes to read. Keep him happy. Meanwhile find out who did do it. What lines have you got to follow?’
‘We’re trying to trace and interview people who were in the pub the night Borthwick says he met the man, Patrick Steel.’
‘No luck on the name, I suppose?’
‘No, sir, but I don’t want to waste too much time on it because it’s almost certainly a false name.’
‘I’ll get one of Carver’s firm to chase it up, take it off your books. Go on.’
‘We’re looking into Stonax’s past life, and talking to friends and colleagues to try to find what he was busy with recently. It seems likely his death was connected with one or the other.’
‘Or both. Could be two halves of the same coin. Well, get on with it, then. And let me know if you get anything on Bates.’
Joanna rang him from the hotel room at half past nine. ‘I’ve just had an enormous breakfast,’ she said. ‘Egg, bacon, black pudding, the lot. I shall have to play standing up. There’s not room in there for breakfast and the baby if I sit down.’
‘How is baby Derek?’
‘Oh don’t! If we start calling him that it’ll stick.’
‘Only if the wind changes.’
‘Don’t talk to me about wind! You were right about the curry yesterday. Derek-stroke-Gladys is fine. Listen, about tonight – I can’t see the point in staying in a hotel. I’d much sooner come home after the concert.’
‘No, I don’t want you to do that,’ Slider said, wishing he didn’t have to tell her, and wondering how shocked she would be.
‘I know you think I’m made of tissue paper,’ she said, ‘but Huddersfield isn’t that far, and the traffic will be light that time of night, and I’m used to driving back after concerts. I’d just sooner sleep in my own bed.’
‘Well, I’m afraid that’s not possible anyway,’ he began, trying to assemble the right words.
She jumped right in. ‘Oh God, something’s happened! What is it? Tell me. Are you all right?’
‘I’m all right,’ he said. ‘Don’t worry. Remember the baby and try to take this calmly.’
‘You’re making me more nervous telling me to be calm. What happened?’
‘Someone broke into the house yesterday and set up a booby trap, which I sprang when I went home. It was the old schoolboy trick, a bucket balanced on the top of a door.’
‘For God’s sake,’ she said, sounding more bewildered than anything.
‘I don’t think it was meant to hurt me seriously. I got a cut on my head and a bruise on my shoulder but I’m all right, apart from a headache.’
‘Oh, Bill!’
‘Please don’t cry. I’m all right.’
‘I have to cry, it’s my hormones. Was it Bates?’
‘I suppose so. It’s his sort of speed. He likes making a fool of me and wants to scare me.’
‘Well, he’s scaring me, so tell him he’s succeeded and he can stop.’
‘Anyway, you can see why I don’t want you to come home tonight. I’m going to stay the night at Atherton’s, so you’ll be better off at a nice, comfortable hotel. Then tomorrow come here when you get back and we’ll decide what to do. We might have caught him by then, you never know,’ he added in the vain hope of cheering her up.
But she was a sensible woman, he thanked heaven, and did not waste more time on useless remonstrance. ‘All right, if it will take a weight off your mind, I’ll stay. Oh, Bill, I do miss you! Please be careful.’
‘I am being. Truly. That’s why I’m not sleeping at home tonight.’
‘I have to go. Rehearsal starts at ten thirty.’
‘Drive carefully,’ he said.
‘That’s the least of my worries,’ she said.
The preliminary report came in from the electronics expert, Phil Lavery, on the security door at Valancy House. He had found a device, and it was, he said, a straightforward timer which caused a short-circuit at the desired time, disengaging the locks as would happen normally during a power cut. The interesting thing about it was the timer itself, which was a tiny transistorised thing not much bigger than a watch battery.
I have not come across one like it before, he wrote, and suspect it may be of Far Eastern origin. I do not recognise the handwork signature, but I will research further on both that and the timer, and report as soon as I have more information.
It was not much help, Slider thought. Most new electronic stuff did come from the Far East these days. The hope was that someone in the trade would recognise the handwork, because people who put together devices like that all had their own way of doing it, and it was generally as personal as a signature. Unless the ‘bloke in the van’ was clever enough to disguise his work. It sounded as though ‘Patrick Steel’ was clever enough, but he’d had to hire someone to do the actual work and it was possible that man was not. Get him, get to Patrick Steel. Was he the brains behind the thing or was he fronting for someone else? What they didn’t know was legion. No, they needed to find the reason for all this. Find the why and you find the who.
Hart came in with papers under her arm and a cup of tea in her hand. ‘Brought you this, guv,’ she said, setting the cup and saucer down. She reached into her pocket, and placed a bottle of aspirin beside it. ‘And Norma sent you these. She reckoned you might need ’em by now.’
‘You’re very kind,’ Slider said. His head was aching again. ‘And thank Norma for me.’
‘We don’t reckon you shoulda come in today,’ Hart said, eyeing him in a motherly way. ‘You look pale. You musta been concussed, and concussion’s not something to mess around with.’
‘It’s all right,’ Slider reassured her. ‘I’m not messing around with it, I’m having it properly.’ There had been a time when, according to Joanna, Hart had fancied him and hoped to get off with him. He’d never seen it himself, but he didn’t want to encourage anything. ‘What have you got there?’ he asked briskly.
‘Stonax’s diary,’ she said, drawing it out from under her arm. ‘I was working backwards, and then it occurred to me to go forwards a bit, and I found he had an appointment today with a “DM”. Look, here, DM at half twelve.’
‘So why hasn’t DM come forward to tell us that?’ Slider said. ‘He must have seen on the news or in the papers that Stonax is dead.’
‘That’s what I thought,’ said Hart. ‘Unless he was some kind of crim, but it didn’t seem likely, with Stonax being such a Boy Scout. So I looked back and found a meeting with a Daniel Masseter a couple of months back, beginning of July. I done a bit of a trawl through the files and everything, but I couldn’t find any reference to Daniel Masseter anywhere, not so much as an address or phone number. If Stonax kept any info on him, it was either in that file we think’s gone missing—’
‘Or it’s in the encrypted part of the computer,’ Slider said.
‘Or both. Anyway, I thought it was worth a bit of a goosey, so I put him in the computer and started searching. Luck would have it, I started with police records and found he’d been in trouble a couple of times doing environmental protests – Hartlepool, the Able UK ship recycling thing?’
‘Yes, I remember. The company that got the contract to break up US naval derelicts.’
‘Yeah. Well, he chained himself to some gates, apparently, and when they cut him loose he threw a brick and smashed someone’s windscreen, so they nicked him. And he was nicked for obstruction in that Essex oil refinery protest. And quite a bit in between.’
‘But those were both years ago,’ Slider said. ‘The Hartlepool thing must be – what – four years ago? And Jaywick two years ago.’
‘Yeah, so what’s he been up to since then? That’s what I wondered.’
‘Maybe it would explain, if he’d had trouble with the police in the past, why he didn’t come forward to say he had an appointment with Stonax.’
‘Maybe. But a more compel
ling reason, I reckon, is that he’s dead.’
‘What?’
‘Yeah. I wanted to see if he’d been visible recently, so I put him in a news filter, and up he come straight away. Reading Observer, local lad killed in an RTA. He was apparently knocked off his motorbike on a country road near Pangbourne – it’s a sort of cut-through to the A4. Locals say people use it as a rat run and drive too fast – it’s only really a country lane and some of it’s single track with passing places. Anyway, he was found by a woman going to work early morning two weeks ago. Him and the bike was in a ditch, there was skid marks across the road, and his neck was broken. Local police reckon from the damage to the bike he must have been sideswiped by a car. They put it down as a hit-and-run driver.’
‘And it could have been,’ said Slider.
‘That’s the beauty of it. Reading Evening Post did quite a bit on it, tragedy of young life cut short, blah de blah – I printed it out in case you want it – and made out he was some kind of planet-saving hero because of his “well known environmental activities”. Then the next day the Observer come up with his police record and they dropped him pretty sharpish.’
‘I think,’ Slider said, ‘we need to have a word with his nearest and dearest. Have you found out who they are?’
‘Yeah, his nearest, anyway. He lived with his mum on a housing estate in Reading. Don’t know if she’s his dearest – news reports don’t mention if he had a girlfriend.’
‘Well, you’d better go and find out, then,’ he said, and was rewarded with a wide grin.
‘Thanks, guv. I won’t let you down.’
Slider drank his tea, swallowed two of the aspirin, thought for a bit, and then rang his best snout, Tidy Barnett. Tidy’s sepulchral tones answered at the second ring. ‘’Ang on a minute, Mr S. Someone ’ere. We ain’t secure.’ There were various indeterminate sounds as Tidy removed himself to a more secluded spot, and then he was back on. ‘What can I do you for? I ’ope it’s not about this big business in ’Ammersmith, cause I’m not up to all that. I’ve ’ad me ear out for you, naturally, but nobody don’t know nothing about it.’
Game Over Page 15