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the wreckage had been, not only by the rescue teams and the local police, but also later by the RAF recovery squad. And he recalled how many of the fragments of the aircraft
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had disappeared over the years, scavenged by souvenir collectors or tugged loose by curious walkers and left to be
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scattered by the ferocious gales that blasted those moors in winter.
Rowland brushed the wood shavings off his overalls with the backs of his hands.
‘No way,’ he said to the chair leg sitting on his workbench. ‘No way on this earth.’
He had lost interest in the chair. The smooth surface and delicate turns seemed irrelevant now, an old man’s preoccupation, no more than a means of keeping himself occupied and away from his memories. His hands weren’t as good as they used to be now, anyway. The arthritis had progressed too far, and the pain was so great that it was impossible to keep his grip on the wood. He knew he would suffer for the rest of the week now, as a result of the short time he had spent working on the chair. Some folk would tell him to stop, to give in and accept that he was wasting his effort. Aye, and the clay that he gave in would be the day that he died.
Rowland opened the back door of the workshop and coughed out a mouthful of sawdust on to the side of the path, staining a patch of snow. Then he lifted his head slowly and spoke to the night sk, as if the cold air might somehow carry his voice to the place on Irontongue Hill where the wreckage of Lancaster SU-V lay.
‘All of them that died in that crash, we got out,’ he said. ‘And the one that should have died that bastard walked away.’
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1 he tiny bones looked pathetic on the slab. Dark peat had dried and crumbled away from the skeleton, to be carefully swept into an evidence bag. Some of the bones were crushed or were freshlv
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broken where Flight Sergeant Josh Mason had dropped the wing of Sugar Uncle Victor on them.
‘If it weren’t for the skull, you could be forgiven for thinking you had found a dead lamb/ said the pathologist, Julian Van Doon. ‘At this age, they’re barely formed.’
‘What age?’ said Dianc Fry.
‘Mmm. Two weeks, perhaps. We’ll ask a forensic anthropologist to take a closer look. The only injuries I can see. are definitely postmortem.’
‘Blasted air cadets.’
‘It’s hardly their fault.’ The pathologist used a small steel instrument to remove a live insect that had been hibernating in the corner of the jaw. It went into another bag. ‘I sec from the newspapers you’ve been searching for a small child. “Have you seen Baby Chloc?”’
‘That’s right,’ said Fry.
‘Well, I don’t know the sex of this child. But there’s one thing for sure — it isn’t Baby Chloe. This baby has been dead (or years.’
Fry nodded. She looked at the evidence bags containing the pink bonnet and the knitted white jacket found with the bones.
‘On the other hand,’ she said, ‘the clothes it was wearing are brand new.’
By Friday morning, DC Gavin Murfin had still not come up with a match for the Snowman on the missing persons databases and was showing signs of giving up. There were the usual missing husbands and sons on the list. There were the middle-aged men who had succumbed to their midlife crises and walked
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out on the boring wife, and the teenagers who had suffered their midlife crisis early and walked out on the real world. And plenty more besides.
The trouble was that none of them sounded like the owner of the expensive suit and the brogues. Strangest of all, a house to house in Woodland Crescent had established that the man Grace Lukasz described had called at no other addresses except hers.
‘We’re going to get Mrs Lukasz in to make a formal statement/ said Diane Fry when she came back from talking to their senior officers. ‘There must be a clue there somewhere to who this man was, and what he wanted in Woodland Crescent.’
The Snowman enquiry and the hunt for Eddie Kemp’s associates in the double assault were taking up most of the resources that E Division had available. And they still had a missing baby to find, and nothing was more important than that. Meanwhile, undetected crimes and unresolved enquiries were piling up. The Crown Prosecution Service was kicking up a fuss about the delay in producing files for court cases, which they had to postpone.
Ben Cooper had more actions on the Snowmnan enquiry that morning. There were several more visits in Edendale, and a drive out to the Snake Inn to talk to the staff once more.
‘By the way, I think Eddie Kemp is going to find himself called in for questioning again,’ said Fry.
‘Did Forensics get something from his car?’ asked Cooper.
‘Nothing definite yet. But we badly need to be questioning somebody. Who’s going to make the decision, I’m not sure. It might be Mr Tailby, or it might be Mr Kessen. Talk about too manv chiefs and not enough Indians.’
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‘Are we going to get any help, or what?’
‘God, I hope so. But as for who’s going to organize that …’
‘I get the picture.’
Fry watched him sifting through the files on his desk. ‘Have you found anywhere to live yet, then, Ben?’
‘As a matter of fact, yes. I went to see a place last night. A flat on Welbcck Street, close to town. It belongs to Lawrence Dalcy’s aunt.’
‘Whose aunt?’
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‘Lawrence Dalev. He owns Eden Valley Books. You remember, where Marie Tennent bought her books?’
‘Oh, yes. So you did some private business while you were there, did you, Ben?’
‘Well, not really.’
‘And you bought some books as well, if I remember rightly.’
‘It didn’t take me two minutes.’
‘Better make up tor it with some interviews. There are plenty to be done.’
‘You know there’s still the Marie Tennent Hie outstanding?’ he said.
‘Mrs Van Doon won’t be getting round to her yet, so the inquest won’t open for a few days. It’s a matter of priorities. We have to move on with the Snowman. We have to get an identification. The woman can wait.’
‘That was a false alarm about the remains, then. Jt wasn’t Baby Chloc?’
‘No, this one was long dead.’
‘Poor beggar. What do you think? An unwanted child? Teenage mum?’
‘Never mind teenage they have them by the time they’re ten.’
The clothes, though …’
‘Forensics will tell us more,’ said Fry. ‘But they were new. It got out on the news bulletins last night, and we’ve been coping with phone calls about missing babies ever since.’
‘Nothing from the person who actually has Baby Chloe, I suppose?
‘No.’
‘If the clothes turn out to belong to Marie’s baby …’
‘OK, we’re still very concerned about Chloc. Officers visited all the neighbours last night, when they got home. No one knows anything about the baby. They’re going to take another look round the Tennent house today, just in case, and Marie’s mother is coming in this morning. She lives in Falkirk and says she hasn’t seen her daughter since not long after Chloc was born. Marie was due to go up to Scotland to visit her in the spring, but in the meantime they only communicated by
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phone, says Mum. We might get some more out of her when she arrives.’
‘Marie did have a baby then?’
‘Why, what did you think, Ben?’
‘She might have been looking after somebody else’s baby. She might have been babysitting for a friend. She might have been working as an unregistered childminder. She might have been one of those women who are so desperate for a baby they take somebody else’s. There are lots of possibilities.’
‘Not according to Grandma. Anyway, if you spent less time in bookshops and more time reading the files, Ben, you’d know that M
arie’s GP has removed any doubts on that score.’
But Gooper hadn’t really been in any doubt. The impression from Marie Tennent’s house had been quite clear. Marie had been a mother, and her baby was somewhere they hadn’t looked vet.
‘What about the garden?’ he said.
Fry sighed. Despite what she had said, Gooper knew she was thinking the same as he was.
‘The uniforms are being issued with spades,’ she said.
Mrs Lorna Tennent was brought back to West Street after identifying her daughter in the mortuary at the hospital. She was made tea and settled in an interview room. She cried tor a while until her eves were red and swollen, and then she talked about her daughter and about the baby, little Ghloe.
‘Of course, I came down to be with her when the baby was born,’ she said. ‘I stayed with her for a week, but 1 had my job to go back to in Falkirk.’
‘Did she seem all right?’ asked Fry. ‘Able to cope with the baby?’
‘She was taken up with Chloe completely. But Marie wasn’t very practical. 1 wanted her to come back with me to Scotland, so I could help her to look after the little thing. But she wouldn’t do it. She wanted to be on her own with her baby, and she didn’t
want Grannv being in the way. She hardlv even seemed to want
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the little jacket I knitted for her.’ ‘A jacket? What colour?’
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‘White.’
‘Would you be able to identify it?’ ‘Of course. Have you found it?’ ‘We might have.’
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Mrs Tennent nodded sadly. ‘Marie didn’t want Chloe wearing it. She thought I was interfering. You’re right, she wasn’t really up to coping properly, but she wouldn’t take any help. Of course, it’s always a bit difficult with a first baby.’
Fry paused. ‘But, Mrs Tennent, it wasn’t Marie’s first baby, was it?’
The woman stared at her, then her tears began again as she understood what Fry was saying. ‘I always wondered/ she said. ‘Marie told me nothing, but 1 could guess. She managed to make excuses for not seeing me for months, and when I did sec her, she looked ill.’
‘When was this?’
‘Over two years ago. She’d come to live down here because she fell in love with the area. We used to visit Edcndale every year when she was younger.’ Mrs Tennent paused. ‘I suppose she had an abortion, did she? She wouldn’t want to tell me, because we’re Catholics, you see. Marie was brought up a Catholic.’
‘No, we don’t think Marie had an abortion,’ said Fry. ‘She’d given birth before.’
‘But …’
Fry showed her a cutting from that morning’s newspaper. ‘We think this could have been Marie’s first baby. This was also where the jacket was found which I’ll ask you to identify.’
Mrs Tennent read the article twice. ‘Do you know how the baby died?’
‘Not yet. In fact, we may never know.’
‘Marie told me she had a new job in a clothes shop and was too busy to come to see me, or to let me come and see her.’ Mrs Tenncnt sighed unsteadily. ‘I should have followed my instincts, and I might have been able to do something. I suppose nobody knew she’d had that baby at all?’
‘It seems possible, I’m afraid.’
But, like Fry, Mrs Tennent was following a line of logic. ‘Poor little Chloe,’ she said. ‘It’s terrible to think of all the things that
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might have happened to her. Marie wouldn’t have done anything deliberately to hurt her, though. I’m sure of that.’
‘Her doctor says she was suffering from some anxiety about the baby, even before it was born.’
‘I know, 1 know. But that’s not the same as wanting to hurt her. is it? I thought she would pet on better once she’d got
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rid of the old boyfriend — if you could call him a boyfriend. He was married, of course. He went back to his wife after a few months, but not until after he’d knocked our Marie about a bit. She always had poor taste in men.’
Fry sat forward with more interest. ‘Who was this boyfriend?’
Mrs Tenncnt had looked ready to start crying again, but she scowled at the question.
‘I told and told her she could do a lot better for herself. Marie said he ran his owTi business. But after all, he was only a window cleaner.’
The number of potential interviewees had been mounting steadily, without a matching increase in the number of staff for the enquiry teams, although a trickle of officers had been seconded from other divisions. Ben Cooper had been knocking on doors fruitlessly with a file full of interview forms in his hand, when he had found himself within halt a mile of Underbank. It occurred to him to wonder whether Eddie Kemp’s car had been returned. Kemp would find it impossible to do his work without it.
Rather than attempt the steep, cobbled street from the Buttcrcross itselt, which hadn’t been cleared of snow, Cooper chose to approach the Underbank area from the opposite direction. He worked his way to Eddie Kemp’s street, and noted that the Isuzu wasn’t on its concrete apron.
Now he was nearly half an hour ahead of schedule. Next on his list of tasks was a visit to the Snake Inn, where he was supposed to take statements from the staff and try to jog their memories about vehicles that might have passed the inn after the Pass had been closed because of the heavy snow on Monday night. Half an hour in a cosy pub with a blazing fire and a pint
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of beer sounded attractive. Then his mobile phone rang. It was Diane Fry.
‘Ben I know you’re busy, but I need you to meet me at Eddie Kemp’s house in Bceley Street in half an hour.’
‘Half an hour?’
‘Can you make that?’
‘Of course, but
‘We’ve just had Marie Tennent’s mother in,’ said Fry. ‘Guess who used to be Marie’s boyfriend until he went back to his wife?’
‘Not Eddie?’
‘Yes. That sounds like a desperate woman to me.’
‘Maybe he’s got hidden qualities.’
‘Yeah, she probably liked him for the size of his squeegee.’
‘Do you think he might have the baby? I hope so.’
‘Do you? He wouldn’t be my idea of the perfect father.’
‘No,’ said Cooper. ‘But it’s better than some of the alternatives.’ He looked at the street where he had parked. Eddie Kemp’s house was just round the corner. ‘Half an hour you said, Diane?’
‘I’ve got to show my face at a meeting Arst, so I can’t make it any sooner. Is that OK?’
‘No problem at all.’
When Cooper finished the call, he checked an address in his notebook and turned the car round. The former RAF mountain rescue man, Walter Rowland, lived only a couple of streets down from Eddie Kcmp, in a terrace of houses that hung over the antique shops in the Ruttercross like a line of birds perched among the trees.
Rowland’s front door was one of two narrow entrances which shared a wooden portico carved with stylixcd flower designs. A
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stone mounting block found at one of the former coaching inns
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in town now stood outside the cottages among the remains of some frost-blackened petunias. On the end of the row stood a modern Gospel Hall, and further up, on the corner of Harrington Street, was another church that Cooper didn’t recognize.
He looked up at Rowland’s cottage. The first-floor windows had tiny glass panes, so grubby and dark that it was obvious
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neither Eddie Kcmp nor any of his window-cleaner colleagues had called this way recently with their ladders and chamois leathers. The putty was crumbling away from the window frames, and the lintels were badly worn where the weather had eaten deep chunks out of the soft golden sandstone. From outside, it looked as though only the ground floor was occupied. The lower windows were stuffed with cheaper versions of the brass in the nearby antique shops, along with pot plants and porcelain figurines in f
ront of the net curtains. These objects were the traditional barricades against the prying eyes of the tourists who passed by in the street during the summer, only inches from the private lives of those who lived here all year round.
Walter Rowland was in his mid-seventies and looked like a man who had been accustomed to doing things with his hands, but no longer could. He had deformed fingers, in which the tendons twitched occasionally, their movement clearly visible under the skin, like the strings of a puppet. Ben Cooper found the movement distracted his eye rrom Rowland’s face and the sound of his voice.
‘Yes, you can come in,’ said Rowland. “I don’t know what you want, but I don’t get much company.’
The cottage was a traditional two up and two down, clean and neat. On the ground floor there was a combined sitting-and dining-room looking on to the street, and a kitchen at the back. Rowland led Cooper through the front room, which was dominated by a pine table and black iron fireplace with an incongruous gas fire that pumped out enough heat to wipe out memories of the cold outside.
In the kitchen, Cooper saw an open back door, which didn’t lead directly to the outside but into a small workshop that had been built on to the house. He saw a wooden workbench, with a gleaming lathe and tools hanging neatly in racks. There were old wood shavings on the floor and several half-finished objects on a table.
Rowland closed the door to the workshop. He did it awkwardly, not using his hands, but leaning into it with his
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dhow and shoulder. Then, without even bothering to ask whether his visitor wanted a cup of tea, he switched on an electric kettle that stood next to the sink under the hack window. Cooper noticed that the skin of the old man’s face was translucent, like his hands. You could see the veins in his temples and the light from the window shining through his ears.
‘Of course I remember the crashed Lancaster,’ said Rowland. ‘I rememhcr all the crashes I went to, every body or injured airman I helped to carry off the mountains. That’s not the sort of thing you forget. And the Lancaster was the worst of them all/
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