Omens of Death

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Omens of Death Page 6

by Nicholas Rhea


  Upon arriving at the car, Montague Pluke removed his panama, opened his car door, placed the hat upon the rear seat and invited Winton to be seated in the front passenger seat. The young man consented, easing his bulk into the limited space and placing his camera upon his knee. Montague Pluke turned to face him, noting the young man was pale-faced and very nervous.

  ‘So.’ Pluke’s voice was now softer, quieter too, although some might say it contained a hint of menace as he addressed the man who was his number one suspect — his only suspect in fact. ‘You found her, Mr Winton? Tell me about it, again and in greater detail, please. Take your time, I need to know every step you took, every move you made, even what thoughts were going through your mind.’

  ‘There’s not a lot more I can tell you, Mr Pluke, I’ve said how I found her.’

  ‘You said you had come here to take photographs for a magazine and went into that cave where you discovered her. You ran back to your car, which you had left in the car-park, and called us on your mobile phone?’

  ‘Yes, that’s it, that’s all. I waited until you got here, like your office said I should do.’

  ‘Good,’ acknowledged Pluke. ‘You did what every good citizen should do and I compliment you on that. But I fear this is a murder-style investigation, Mr Winton, which means I need to know a lot more details about your actions and your purpose in being at this place. Little details, Mr Winton, petty stuff you might think, unimportant stuff you might even say, but most important to us, to me, to the whole investigation.’

  At this point Pluke took out his official notebook, found a ballpoint pen among the conglomeration of instruments in his breast pocket and scribbled on the clean page; he was noting the time, the place and the reason for the ensuing entries.

  ‘Your full name, Mr Winton? Age, date of birth, address and occupation please.’

  He was Stephen George Winton, twenty-eight years old with a flat on Cragston Moor on the outskirts of Fossford. He said he was a professional freelance photographer and provided his date of birth. He was single and lived alone. He had a girlfriend who lived with her parents in Fossford, but there was no engagement or long-term commitment. Not yet, he emphasised.

  ‘Tell me about the commission that brought you here,’ invited Montague.

  ‘It’s for a series, “Mystical Tours of Britain”, I told you that before.’ The man’s lower lip quivered as he responded to Pluke, ‘A new magazine highlighting places of mystery ...’

  ‘You know the Druids’ Circle is a folly, a fake?’ Montague put to him. ‘It is hardly a place of mystery, hardly the sort of spot to merit any great attention.’

  ‘Yes, I know, but it does attract people, and there is a theory it might occupy the site of an earlier temple and that it is on a ley line, so the editor wants to include it.’

  ‘And your editor, who is he?’

  ‘She, it’s a woman. Molly Swift, I have her address and telephone number.’

  ‘I may need those to check your story.’ There was a hardness in Pluke’s voice because he was in active pursuit of a killer. ‘We check everything that we are told, Mr Winton, time and time again until we are completely satisfied.’

  Detective Inspector Pluke waited as Winton found a business card in his jacket and handed it to Pluke. It bore Molly Swift’s work address, telephone and fax numbers.

  ‘You can keep it, I have her details in my Filofax,’ said Winton.

  ‘Tell me more about the commission, Mr Winton,’ invited Montague Pluke. ‘How you came to receive it, how you were about to execute it this morning.’

  ‘Molly rang me last week, she knows my work. I’ve undertaken commissions for her before, rural scenes generally. Abbeys, castles, country houses, river bridges, dramatic views, that sort of thing.’

  ‘Published work?’

  ‘Yes, of course. She asked me to produce a set of contact prints of the Druids’ Circle, that’s all. She wanted to select two good ones for publication. By the end of the month. So I came this morning, the light was ideal. A hint of thunder and dark clouds combined with bright sunshine would produce a marvellous atmosphere.’

  ‘You’ve been here before?’ asked Montague.

  ‘Yes, but not to take pictures. I once came with some friends, hiking, about eight or nine years ago. We had a picnic here, we didn’t stay, we were youth hostelling.’

  ‘So this is your first visit for professional reasons?’

  ‘My first visit for years, Mr Pluke.’

  ‘So today. What time did you arrive?’

  ‘It would be around eleven o’clock. I reckoned I could work for an hour or so and allow an hour or so for the drive to York for another appointment.’

  ‘That plan has been thwarted, eh?’ Montague’s face creased in a sad smile. ‘So you drove out here, parked in this car-park and walked into the Circle?’

  ‘Yes. I spent a few minutes calculating the light, to get the right setting, studying angles and views. I wanted to capture the atmosphere, the mystical feel of the place, something to provide the reader with an immediate appraisal of the attractions of the Circle.’

  ‘Did you take your car to the Eastern Gate? I was thinking of you having to carry your equipment.’

  ‘No, I just use a hand-held camera, no portable lighting, tripods or such. Besides,

  we’re not supposed to drive that far, are we?’

  ‘True. So what time did you leave Fossford?’

  ‘Tennish. Maybe a bit before. It’s about an hour’s drive; a bit less when there’s not much traffic about.’

  ‘Did you see anyone you knew as you were leaving? Did you talk to anyone?’

  ‘No, no one. I got into the car and came straight here.’

  ‘Where was your car in relation to your flat?’

  ‘Right outside, parked on the street. I don’t have a garage.’

  ‘So there are no witnesses to confirm your departure time? And when you arrived, did you see anyone? Tourists? Hikers? Gamekeepers, estate workers ... anyone?’

  ‘Nobody, Mr Pluke. I had the place to myself. It was eerie even then, I don’t mind admitting.’

  ‘I agree, it is a very odd place, Mr Winton. It’s redolent of past times. Now, take me through your discovery of the body once again.’

  As Pluke and Winton talked, the first of the support services arrived — it was Detective Sergeant Tabler of the Scenes of Crime Department and he was accompanied by three detective constables in their official Transit van. Wayne Wain would brief them well. Then an increasing number of specialist service vehicles began to arrive, along with two uniformed constables to secure the site. All knew their jobs. Wayne would cope and Pluke could continue his interrogation.

  He smiled at Winton.

  ‘Like I told you,’ Winton was saying, ‘I took my camera from the car, which I parked here, and went into the Circle. After selecting certain shots, I took them, all out-of-doors using natural light, but all within the circle of stones. The trees do make it fairly dark in places, but that can be used to advantage. I managed to get the altar in a lovely atmospheric light, then I thought the cave might make a nice pic so I took a few shots of the exterior, the entrance that is, avoiding the litter on the ground inside, and then I went in. I had no torch, so when I got into the dark bit, round the corner, I activated the flash on my camera — it was like walking in lightning during a thunderstorm in the dark: all quick flashes — that’s when I found her. God, what a shock, Mr Pluke ... I couldn’t believe it ... it was terrible ... at first I thought it was a joke, one of those tailor’s dummies, and then I touched her. I knew she was real, but she was so cold, so awfully cold ... and stiff. I knew she was dead. So I ran out and went straight to my car to call the police.’

  ‘You did not touch anything else? Remove anything? Turn her over?’

  ‘No, nothing.’

  ‘And have you seen her before? In life? Do you know her?’

  ‘No. I saw her face ... I’ll never forget her face now. No, Mr P
luke, sorry, I can’t help you there.’

  ‘How many films did you say you used before you found her, Mr Winton?’

  ‘Just the one. It has thirty-six exposures. I know you want it, that’s no problem. I have others I can use, I have a commission this afternoon, in York, the Minster. I might just get there on time if I can leave now ... you can have all those I took — if I can have my shots of the Circle please, before my deadline. I don’t suppose I could go back in there now, for a minute or two, to take another reel, now that you are here to supervise me?’

  ‘Sorry, no. It’ll be out of bounds to the public for today at least, perhaps longer. We’ll develop your film and will make copies of everything we consider useful. I will ensure your negatives are returned to you, probably tomorrow. Now, before you go, I would like you to put all this in writing, in the form of a written statement. If we do it now, I shouldn’t have to trouble you later. I might add that a statement from the finder of the body is vital to the investigation. I have the necessary forms in my briefcase.’

  And so, as the complement of support services began to gather around Wayne Wain for their first briefing, Montague Pluke wrote down everything said by Stephen Winton, quizzing him once or twice to iron out any queries, and afterwards Winton signed the form. This was merely a witness statement, not a statement from a suspect, and once it was complete, Pluke allowed Winton to leave — after confiscating his film.

  ‘Now, before you leave,’ said Pluke, ‘my officers will need to examine your car.’

  ‘My car?’

  ‘Yes, and the soles of your shoes. For elimination purposes. We need to be sure you did not convey the body to this place in your car, Mr Winton, and we need to isolate your footprints from those of any other person. We must eliminate you from our enquiries as soon as we can, and this is the ideal time.’

  ‘Am I a suspect or something?’ The paleness of Winton’s face was turning slightly more grey at this juncture.

  ‘In a murder enquiry, everyone is a suspect until we can officially eliminate them, Mr Winton,’ said Pluke. ‘Clearly, you are the only person we can talk to at this point. It will take a few minutes of your time, then you will be free to leave. I am sure you wish to be cleared of suspicion? Is it your own car?’

  ‘Yes, of course I do, and yes, it’s mine.’

  ‘And how long have you had it?’

  ‘A year. I bought it second-hand.’ Detective Inspector Pluke asked the Scenes of Crime officers to examine the tyres for comparison with any tracks they might discover, then they examined the interior of the car, and the boot, to determine whether a dead, naked female body had been carried. If she had been inside Winton’s car, she would have left some deposits. Whatever the officers found would be taken away for forensic analysis. While Winton stood and watched the meticulous examination of his vehicle, another detective came to examine his footwear and to take plaster casts of the soles of his trainers.

  As these investigations were under way, Detective Inspector Pluke went to check on progress in the cavern. The police doctor had pronounced the girl’s life extinct but was not prepared to certify the cause of her death; a local pathologist had conducted a preliminary examination of the body in situ but could not provide any suggestion as to the cause of death. He confirmed there were no marks of violence on the body — no stab wounds, bullet holes or other indications of the use of a weapon. He had turned her over for a look at her back, again finding no sign of a weapon having been used, but this examination would have to be followed by a post-mortem in laboratory conditions. He added that, in his opinion, she had been dead for at least twelve hours but the coolness of the chamber had preserved her remains longer than if she had lain outside in the normal heat of the day.

  Meanwhile, the Scenes of Crime officers had examined the interior of the cavern and had marked the position of every dot of debris before collecting it all in plastic sample bags. Everything, including the remains of the woman, would be closely examined, both visually and scientifically. Official photographs and a video tape of the body had been completed, and meanwhile the Task Force officers were noting and examining every item found within the Circle, or just beyond the perimeter of outer stones.

  Wayne Wain had done a good job as liaison officer and after about an hour Detective Sergeant Tabler located Pluke, took him aside and said, ‘We’ve finished with Winton’s car and footwear, sir. We’ve got all we need for the moment.’

  ‘And?’

  ‘We’ve got some bits and pieces from it, but on first inspection I don’t think he carried her in that car. Prints matching the soles of his shoes are on the track as one would expect; we found them in several places, heading in both directions, and at the entrance to the cavern, in the soft mud.

  They confirm his account of how he found the body.’

  ‘But they’re not inside the cavern, on the floor?’

  ‘No, sir, it’s solid rock. We found no footprints there, none at all.’

  ‘So we can let him go?’

  ‘Yes, sir, I think so. I reckon he’s clean.’

  ‘All right. Release him, but I think we need to know a little more about him, Sergeant,’ cautioned Pluke. ‘His eyebrows meet in the middle, you will have noticed. That’s never a good sign, Sergeant! It is said that people whose eyebrows meet in the middle are untruthful.’

  ‘Really, sir?’ puzzled Sergeant Tabler.

  ‘So that’s an action for a good team,’ stressed Pluke. ‘To examine Winton’s life and recent movements in detail.’

  After returning to thank Stephen Winton for his public-spiritedness, Detective Inspector Pluke allowed him to leave the scene in his car and returned to locate Wayne Wain.

  ‘If Winton says he didn’t kill her, then who did?’ he asked as he fell into step at the side of his sergeant.

  ‘We might know the answer to that if we could find out who she is,’ said Detective Sergeant Wain.

  ‘And in due course we must have more words with Mr Winton,’ said Montague Pluke with determination in his voice. ‘For the time being, let him think we have finished with him. I believe he may have more to tell us if we press him. But first, let us complete a tour of the site, Wayne.’

  *

  Millicent did enjoy her lunch with Mrs Councillor Farrell and six other ladies of position and eminence in the town. The goings-on at May’s bungalow, during the absence of May and her husband it was stressed, was a talking point of some interest to the assembled group. All wondered if May had given permission for her niece to hold parties on the premises. It seemed that lots of young people had arrived and although several had left by taxi, some had stayed overnight; there’d been lights too and music. Had that large van been a disco DJ and his equipment?

  The big question discussed by the ladies was whether May and Cyril should be told about this upon their return from holiday. No one referred to the incident at the cricket club, however; perhaps such things were not discussed in decent society, so Millicent decided not to mention it to her friends, although, if he would listen, she might tell Montague.

  Chapter 6

  With Wayne Wain at his side, and taking care to avoid places under close examination by his officers, Detective Inspector Pluke completed a pedestrian tour of the Druids’ Circle. It was during this perambulation that Pluke remarked on the presence of some rowan trees, saying, ‘Our pagan ancestors planted rowans to ward off evil spirits, Wayne. They were grown near burial grounds to aid the deceased along their path to the heaven of their time. Thus the presence of rowans hereabouts could — and I emphasise the word could — suggest the location was once a genuine religious site.’

  ‘So even after the passage of centuries, we might expect some rowans, descendants of the parent trees?’

  ‘Yes indeed, Wayne. Very true. Remarkable evidence of continuity down the years.’

  While the two detectives had been studying the environment of the giant stones, members of the various support services had been carrying out their
detailed and specialised inspections.

  ‘Everyone’s finished with the body, sir.’ Pluke was eventually approached by Detective Sergeant Tabler of SOCO. Wayne Wain was at Pluke’s side.

  ‘Good, then we can move her. Is the shell here?’

  ‘Yes, sir.’ Wayne pointed to a parked Transit van.

  Pluke strode across to the constable who was standing beside a blue Ford Transit van.

  Inside would be the plastic makeshift coffin known as the shell; this was used for the transportation of dead bodies to the mortuary.

  ‘She’s all yours now, PC Hughes,’ said Pluke, pleased that this part of the enquiry was complete. He did not like dead bodies lying about when there was work to be done, but as it was physically impossible for the large vehicle to enter the confines of the Druids’ Circle, its driver reversed it to the Eastern Gate where Hughes recruited the assistance of three detectives to help carry the loaded shell. Pluke walked beside them as they made for the entrance of the chamber where she lay.

  ‘Feet first, gentlemen,’ Pluke told the bearers. ‘You always carry a corpse out feet first.’

  ‘I’ve never come across that sort of thing before,’ muttered one of the officers. ‘It’s not in Standing Orders, is it? I can’t see that it matters which way a corpse is carried out, upside down, back to front, feet first, head first, sideways and standing on its head ...’

  ‘I insist that things are done properly, gentlemen.’ Pluke was not to be deflected from his ideals. ‘It is out of respect for the deceased if nothing else.’

  He spoke with unaccustomed authority as the team of bearers carried the lightweight coffin into the dark chamber, now illuminated by lights wired to a generator. They lifted the pale corpse into the coffin, working quietly but efficiently, and in a matter of seconds the young woman was lying in the shell, arms upon her body with her hands covering her most personal area as if she were in the bath surrounded by ogling onlookers.

  Before the lid was fitted, Pluke looked upon her in the brightness of the temporary lights, hoping he might have seen her in the town, but had to admit he did not recognise her. Pluke was sure she was not a local woman.

 

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