He phoned the hospital and was given Sealy’s mobile number. Rightly or not, he pictured the little pipsqueak taking the call at home, reclining on a sun-lounger in the garden.
‘How much later?’ he asked. ‘Was she strangled in the park and then strung up?’
‘Unlikely.’
‘We agree on that, then. Did you find any medical evidence to back this up?’
Sealy sounded as if he was speaking through clenched teeth. ‘That’s what an autopsy is for. If you’d bothered to read my findings, you wouldn’t ask.’
‘Tell me, then.’
‘The trouble with you policemen is that you only bother with the conclusion, and then you want it all in one-syllable words. In my description of the external findings on page two, which you seem to have ignored, I mention indications of hypostasis on the right side of the back and buttocks.’
‘Hypo…?’
‘… stasis. It wasn’t pronounced, but it was there. You have to allow for secondary gravitation, and that diminishes the effect.’
‘We’re talking about pressure marks?’
‘Essentially, yes. They show up as pale areas after a couple of hours or so in one position. If the body was suspended directly after being killed I wouldn’t expect to find hypostasis where I did.’
‘The right side, you said. As if she was lying on her side for some time?’
‘I would say so.’
‘Curled up in a car boot, perhaps?’
‘Speculation.’
‘She’d have to be transported to the park. A car is the obvious way to do it.’
‘You tell me,’ Sealy said.
‘No, I’m asking.’
‘Not my job, squire. She could have been brought there on the back of an elephant for all I know.’
‘What about the time of death?’ Diamond asked with little expectation of an answer. Even the friendliest of pathologists can be guaranteed to baulk at that one.
‘How long have you been in the job, Mr Diamond?’
‘The approximate time, then?’
‘More than three hours before I examined her at the scene. Probably less than fifteen. And now you’re going to ask me about secondary injuries, and you could have found them listed in the report if you’d bothered to read it instead of turning straight to the conclusion. There were not many. A couple of broken fingernails, but that could have happened post-mortem. She didn’t put up much of a fight. However, she was not sexually assaulted. The usual forensic tests are being carried out. If any of the killer’s DNA was recovered we’ll let you know, but I wouldn’t hold your breath.’
‘I’d like to bring her partner out to Bristol to make the identification.’
‘Bring who you like. I’ll be on the golf course.’
‘These days,’ Diamond said to Ashley Corcoran on the drive back from Bristol after viewing the body, ‘we have a family liaison officer to help you through a tragedy like this.’
‘I’m all right.’
‘It’s the children I’m thinking of. They’ll have to be told now we’re certain it was their mother.’
‘Sure.’
The casual attitude was not unusual. In the first few hours and days, Diamond knew from experience, the practicalities take over and you believe you can get through without anyone’s support. That stage passes.
‘If I were you, I’d ask their grandmother to be present.’
‘Sorted. They’re staying with her now.’
So the man had done something right. Those two small girls were much on Peter Diamond’s mind. Steph’s hysterectomy had meant his own marriage had been childless, but that had never stopped him empathising with other people’s kids. ‘We’ll do our best to keep our distance. But the story is going to break this afternoon. I’ll have to call a press conference.’
Corcoran turned to look at Diamond, the overconfidence replaced by creases of concern. ‘You don’t want me there?’
‘No. What I’m saying is make sure the girls are told before they see it on TV — or their friends do.’
‘I’ll do that.’
‘The press will be a pain in the arse in the first days. Take a firm line, refuse any offers to tell your story and they’ll get the idea.’
‘I’ve got sod all to say to anyone.’
‘Good. Hold fast to that.’ He let a second or two pass before adding, ‘But if you have anything helpful to tell me, I’d like it now.’
‘I’ve told you all I can.’
That old cliche wasn’t stopping Diamond. ‘We do a reconstruction of her last twenty-four hours. You’re certain, are you, that she didn’t make contact?’
‘Not with me,’ he said, ‘and not with Marietta, the child-minder.’
‘I have to ask this, Ashley. Do you have any suspicion that Delia was seeing anyone else?’
He looked away, out of the car window. ‘Oh, come on.’ But there was something in the tone that undermined the words.
‘Was she like that, one for the men?’
Corcoran scraped his fingers through his hair and gripped the ponytail. The answer was a long time coming. ‘Guys liked her. She was something. She really was. She laughed a lot. But we trusted each other, right?’
Diamond gave a nod to that ‘right’, but he wasn’t sure if Ashley Corcoran’s trust had been well founded.
‘And you’re quite certain, are you, that there wasn’t any dispute with the girls’ father about custody?’
‘Danny? He’s a jerk. He’s never shown any interest. If he surfaces now and wants them back, he can go to hell.’
‘I’d take a more cautious line if I were you. As the father, he has more rights than you.’
Back at Manvers Street police station, the investigation machine powered into motion. Extra civilian staff were brought in to deal with statements. A press conference was scheduled. Halliwell was sent to Tosi’s, the Italian restaurant where Delia had worked, to see how much they knew of her missing days. Ingeborg continued to try and trace Danny Geaves.
Georgina, the ACC, liked to think of herself as a hands-on executive. Diamond liked the high-ups to keep their hands off. ‘Leave it to me, ma’am,’ he said when she looked in for the second time that day. ‘Have I ever let you down?’
‘We’ve had our moments, Peter. I put you on to this one, remember? Amanda sings with me. What’s the motive here? Have you thought about that?’
‘I will when I get a moment,’ he said.
‘The woman was strangled first and then suspended from the swing to make it look like a hanging,’ Georgina said. ‘That’s not the behaviour of a professional crook. Any villain worthy of the name would know forensics can tell the difference. I think we’re dealing with a first-time murderer who panicked when faced with a dead body. He didn’t think it through.’
‘I’ll bear that in mind, ma’am. And now if I can get on…’
‘An amateur, in other words. But the motive is the problem. I don’t understand the motive.’
‘Neither do I, yet.’
‘It doesn’t seem like panic,’ she said without realising she’d just contradicted herself. ‘It wasn’t manual strangulation. He used a ligature. And it’s pretty cool to transport the body to the park and string it up, however naive it was.’
‘It beats leaving it in his car.’
‘What do you mean?’
He shrugged. ‘Neutral ground. Nothing to connect him.’
‘Good point.’ She weighed it before speaking again. ‘Perhaps he is a professional. This is shaping up as a beast of a case.’
‘Thanks, ma’am.’
She gave a sideways smile. ‘But I have every confidence.’ And that was her exit line.
He crossed the room to where Ingeborg was using a computer. ‘Any progress?’
She shook her head. ‘This Danny seems to have gone to ground, guv. We’ve asked at all his usual haunts. No one knows him well enough to have heard of his plans. He isn’t a loner exactly, but he gives nothing away.’
‘There’s no talk of a girlfriend?’
‘Not in Freshford anyway. He does a lot of walking, serious walking, with a backpack.’
‘I’ve seen you with a backpack and I wouldn’t call you a serious walker.’
She rolled her eyes. ‘Mine is a fashion accessory.’
‘Does he work for a living?’
‘No one seems to know.’
‘See if he’s on the social.’
Keith Halliwell, when he returned from Tosi’s, had more to report. ‘Delia did her waitressing as usual on Tuesday, the night she went missing, guv.’
‘Did she now? But according to Dr Sealy she was killed Wednesday night or early Thursday morning, so where was she?’
‘That’s a mystery. I spoke to the owner, Signor Tosi himself. He said she was the best waitress he’d ever had, dependable, a lively personality and popular with the customers. He’s very emotional about the murder. Even wept a little while we were talking about it.’
‘What time did she leave after work?’
‘He thinks about eleven.’
‘Thinks?’
‘He’d already gone. His wife wasn’t well, so he left the restaurant early and his head waiter Luigi closed the place.’
‘Did you speak to this Luigi?’
‘I’m going back later. He’s on at five.’
‘I’ll come with you.’
Before that, he spoke to the entire murder squad, seated around the incident room. ‘The press are waiting downstairs and I’m going straight to them after this. What I won’t be telling them at this stage is that the victim was fun-loving, as they say, and not getting much fun from her partner. Ashley is so wrapped up in his work he doesn’t even notice when she isn’t home. She has a child-minder for her two kids, and they don’t fret when she’s away. Why? Because she’s done it before. She’s that kind of mother. She needs space, according to Ashley. We have no clue where this space was, and if it involved another man. We’re damn sure it involved someone else on the night she was strangled.’ He spread his hands. ‘Of course it won’t take the press boys long to work this out for themselves, but I want to start with the shock of the young working mum strangled at night and left hanging in the park. We’ll issue her photo and hope to get some feedback from the public. She was a waitress, so we’re sure to hear from people who remember her, who could have spotted her with a man in the hours leading up to her death. We may even get lucky and hear from someone who saw her with her killer. The phone lines are ready. It’s a crucial time and we’re up for it, right?’
The phone on his desk was beeping when he returned to his office. He gave his surname, as always.
A woman said, ‘Hi, Peter.’
He couldn’t place the voice, but she seemed to know him and she wasn’t going to help by saying her name.
‘Er, hi.’
‘So how was the cake?’
‘What?’
‘They did give it to you?’
‘Ah.’ The response was verging on ‘arrgh’ now he realised who was on the line. After the rousing speech to his squad he was in no mood for trivial chat with his secret admirer.
‘It was meant for you.’ She paused, and her tone changed. ‘The blighters. If they had it themselves, I’m going to raise hell.’ She was ready to go to war with the desk team downstairs.
He had to deal with this. ‘Oh — the cake?’ All experience told him to say the minimum, but he’d been trained in good manners since he was a kid. After clearing your plate you say thanks. He’d eaten the damned cake and forgotten it. Where was his gratitude? ‘Am I speaking to the lady who made it? Very tasty. The cake, I mean.’
She laughed.
He didn’t. He wasn’t trying to be amusing.
‘It’s all right,’ she said. ‘I’m not fishing for compliments. I know I’m not the greatest cook.’
The good manners took over again. ‘Everyone said it was the best. I shared it round.’
‘You should have taken it home.’
‘I did — what was left of it.’
‘Let’s not talk about the wretched cake,’ she said. ‘You’re not daft. You know who I am.’
‘Do I?’
‘The woman you didn’t meet at the Saracen’s last night. Did my letter put you off?’
‘It’s nothing to do with your letter, nothing personal,’ he said. ‘That’s the point. It can’t be personal because I don’t know you. And you certainly don’t know me, or you wouldn’t bother.’
She wasn’t giving up yet. ‘I told you quite a bit about myself in the letter.’
‘Yes, ma’am, and now I know you make a fine chocolate cake, but it doesn’t mean we’d enjoy a drink together.’
‘Why not? We haven’t tried.’
He was getting annoyed. ‘Because I don’t do that stuff.’
‘What stuff?’
‘Going out with women I haven’t met.’
‘But how do I get to meet you? I’d really like to.’
‘Sorry, ma’am, but it’s not going to happen. Goodbye.’ He hung up.
Confused emotions churned inside. He felt mean, heavy-handed, unchivalrous. She’d gone out of her way to be friendly and he’d slapped her down. But she had no right to demand a meeting. He was entitled to say no, wasn’t he?
He went straight out. There was serious work to be done. The little voice inside him said Diamond you’re a coward, walking away from the phone in case she tries again.
Peter Lovesey
Peter Diamond — 09 — The Secret Hangman
4
T osi’s was in George Street, up the hill from the police station. Halliwell suggested they walked there, but Diamond was panting like a bulldog before they reached the top of Milsom Street and he asked Halliwell to slow down. ‘You’ve made your point, Keith.’
‘What point is that?’
‘You don’t normally go as fast as this, do you? Man in my condition can’t keep up.’
‘Hadn’t crossed my mind, guv.’
‘I was fit once.’ He had to stop altogether on the corner. ‘There was a time when I played rugby for the Met every Saturday and trained two nights a week. Soon as I gave it up I put on the weight.’
‘I wouldn’t say that,’ Halliwell said, trying to be charitable.
‘Look at me.’
There was no way of telling whether Diamond wanted to prolong the self-criticism, or was just too puffed to move on.
Halliwell tried again. ‘You’re a man of substance, guv. People don’t mess with anyone your size. Look at the way the press swallowed everything you gave them this afternoon.’
He eyed Halliwell, uncertain how serious he was. ‘Let’s see what they print tomorrow. Then we’ll know how much they took in.’ He started walking again.
It was a tiny basement restaurant under a travel agent’s. They were met at the foot of the stairs by Signor Tosi himself, a man whose immense bulk restored some of Diamond’s self-esteem. ‘I catch Luigi,’ Tosi said, as if his head waiter were a contagious disease. He waddled inside and shouted Luigi’s name and something in Italian about the carabinieri.
A man in a white shirt and bow tie came from the back.
‘I translate, eh?’ Signor Tosi offered.
‘I figure we’ll get by,’ Luigi said in a smooth mid-Atlantic accent. He was tall and slim, with brown eyes that gave you undivided attention. ‘This is about poor Delia, I guess.’
‘Torto, torto,’ his boss said. ‘Delia Williamson.’
‘Can you get rid of this clown?’ Diamond said to Halliwell.
Halliwell grasped Tosi’s arm and led him to the kitchen at the back of the restaurant.
‘What was he on about?’ Diamond asked the waiter.
Luigi gave a wide smile. ‘He’s the boss. Thinks he has a divine right to know what I tell you.’
‘You don’t have any problem with the language, that’s for sure.’
‘Too much time watching movies.’
‘OK. W
hile we’ve got the boss out of the way let’s talk about the set-up here. How many staff does he employ?’
‘Three only. Carlo, Delia and me. Carlo is the cook.’
‘You’re the head waiter?’
He laughed. ‘I could live with that if it meant extra pay.’
‘Were all three of you on duty the night Delia went missing?’
‘Yes.’
‘How did she get along with you?’
‘No problem. She was great, a good worker, always willing to help if I was under pressure.’
‘You get busy in here, then?’
He shrugged. ‘People like Italian.’
‘When are you open. Evenings only?’
‘Six to midnight, depending how busy we are.’
‘On the evening we’re talking about, the Tuesday, I gather Signor Tosi went home early and left you in charge.’
Luigi frowned, troubled that some of the blame might be coming his way. ‘He told you that?’
‘It’s true, isn’t it? You locked up?’
‘Sure.’
‘So who was here at the end of the evening?’
Luigi curled his lip, not liking this line of questioning one bit. ‘She was, and so was I.’
‘The cook had left?’
‘Twenty minutes before she did.’
‘What sort of evening had it been?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Customers.’
‘I get you.’ The shift away from him personally came as obvious relief. ‘A quiet night. Party of four. Two couples. One man dining alone.’
‘Regulars?’
‘Yes, the four have a regular booking. Retired people. And one of the couples comes often. The others were new to me.’
‘Do you happen to remember who Delia was serving?’
‘That couple I just told you about. And the single man.’
‘Who you hadn’t seen before? What was he like?’
‘I didn’t speak to him. A businessman maybe, visiting the city. Suit and tie. Twenty-five, twenty-six.’
‘Why do you say he was visiting?’
‘Guy on his own. You get to recognise them. They’re stuck overnight in some hotel, so they look for a place to eat out. Most guys don’t eat alone if they live just up the street.’
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