by John Harvey
Rachel bent carefully down and rearranged the clothing over the little girl. Close, she allowed herself for a moment to touch the child’s cheek, the back of her hand against the smooth warmth of her skin. Sarah stirred, the rhythm of her breathing changed but she did not wake.
When she went out of the room, Rachel left the door unclosed by some inches. In the bathroom, Vera Barnett was on her feet, forcing one foot in front of the other as she leaned sideways against the wall.
“You needn’t bother,” she said, when Rachel went to take her arm, but she did nothing to resist her.
She was seated in the living room with the television on and Rachel was mashing tea when the doorbell rang.
“Whoever can that be?” called Vera Barnett. “Don’t let anybody in. I don’t want to talk to anyone. I won’t.”
“I think it might be the police,” Rachel said.
“How’s it going?” Resnick asked, shuffling off his damp coat.
Rachel raised an eyebrow. “Could be worse.”
“Kids?”
“Sleeping now.”
“You told them?”
Rachel nodded towards the open living-room door. “She beat me to it.”
“How’s she standing up?”
Rachel smiled. “Sitting down.”
They were keeping their voices low, whispering really, close in someone else’s house, strange sort of intimacy.
“How are you?” Resnick asked. He was having to stop himself from reaching out a hand, touching her.
“We’d better go through,” Rachel said.
“Is she up to a few questions?” he asked to Rachel’s back.
“I think so. If you must.”
Vera had propped herself more upright in the chair; her hands were loosely linked over the straightened rug on her lap.
“This is Detective Inspector Resnick,” Rachel said, biting back a sudden, irrational desire to call him Charlie.
Charlie, Rachel was thinking. His name is Charlie.
She left them and went to the kitchen.
They were drinking tea. A half-dozen plain biscuits had been fanned out on a plate and ignored. They had listened to Vera Barnett on the subject of her son-in-law, her ironic surprise that he had found the time to visit the registrar, contact the undertakers; they had tiptoed around the subject of the funeral itself, the necessity of a “proper” service.
“You told the woman officer that your daughter had been seeing a man,” Resnick said.
Cup rattled against saucer. “I did no such thing.”
Resnick glanced down at his notebook. “She was with a man,” he quoted.
“Of course she was. Who else did that to her?”
“But you knew…”
“No.”
“You said…”
“Where else would she be?”
Resnick took another mouthful of tea. He knew that Rachel was trying hard not to look at him while he questioned Vera Barnett; somehow he’d felt good about the fact that she’d be watching him at work, but that had been before it began.
“Obviously, Mrs. Barnett, the sooner we can trace whoever Mary saw yesterday evening the better. So if you have any idea, any idea at all, who she might have been with…”
“My daughter and I didn’t discuss such matters.”
“Never?”
“She didn’t say and I didn’t ask.” The line of her mouth tightened until the lips had altogether disappeared. “She was free to do as she pleased. Whatever I might have said would have made precious little difference.”
“You haven’t any idea who she might have been seeing earlier, in the last six months or so? No name she might have mentioned, even in passing?”
“No.”
“And you don’t know if she had been seeing somebody regularly?”
A small, tight shake of the head.
“If there had been anyone, serious, I mean…”
“We were never close, not…not after the divorce. She seemed to think I blamed her for it in some way. Blamed her instead of him, running off after the first woman who gave him a second look, no better than an animal in heat. He ought to be ashamed of himself, leaving her and those two beautiful children, and now I hope he is. If he’d been there, this would never…”
She was crying again and Rachel went over and took the cup and saucer from her hands. Her eyes told Resnick what he already knew-go easy, don’t push too hard.
He waited until she had dabbed at her face with a tissue and Rachel had rearranged the rug about her knees. “We found some letters…”
“What letters?”
“From men. It looks as though Mary might have, um, put an ad in the local paper.”
“I don’t understand.”
“To meet somebody.”
“To meet…?”
“The personal columns, Lonely Hearts they call it, if there’s no other way of meeting someone to go out with…” Resnick felt himself faltering under the woman’s barely comprehending stare. “Somebody else who’s looking for a relationship.”
“In the newspaper? The daily…you’re talking about the newspaper?”
Resnick nodded. “Yes. It’s quite normal. A lot of people…”
“Mary did this?”
“Yes. At least, we think so.”
“Mary…?”
The rain had diminished to a slow drizzle that fell like a blur across the street lights. Search in vain for a star in the sky.
“I could do with a drink after that,” Resnick said.
“I’m sorry. I must get back.”
“I can’t even give you a lift?”
Rachel shook her head. “I’ve got my car.” Nevertheless, she continued to stand there; they both did. When Resnick unlocked his car she slid into the passenger seat alongside him.
“I suppose you had to tell her that.”
“I think so.”
“She won’t understand. She won’t begin to.”
“The names, once we’ve checked the letters out, we’ll have to see if any of them mean anything to her.”
“But she’s told you…”
“I know, but we’ll have to check just the same.”
“It hardly seems fair.”
“Think what would happen if we failed to do it and it turned out to have mattered. What she can’t remember today might be clearer tomorrow.”
Resnick switched on the engine and turned up the heater.
“I don’t think I understand either,” Rachel said. “Not really.”
“You’re lucky,” Resnick said.
“I don’t feel it.” The words were out without thinking and with emphasis.
“You mean more than this,” Resnick said, gesturing back at the house.
Rachel nodded. “Uh-huh.”
“Chris?”
“It’ll sort itself out.” She wasn’t looking at him any more. He could see her reflected in the car window, three-quarter profile. For Christ’s sake, thought Resnick, do something-say something.
“I’ve got to go,” Rachel said, opening the door.
She had one foot on the pavement when Resnick put his hand on her arm. As her head swung round, he made himself keep the hand where it was. “Take care.”
She smiled ironically. “Leave it to the professionals.”
Resnick’s fingers were back round the steering wheel. The door was firmly shut. As Resnick signaled and drew away from the curb, he was wondering how soon after getting home Jack Skelton or the DCI would be on the phone, checking progress, feeling for the next move.
Patel had been pulled on to nights to relieve Lynn Kellogg and let her return to normal shift. In a way, it suited him well. Peel wasn’t the pushy sort, kept himself to his copy of the Daily Mail and allowed Patel to get on with the studying necessary for his sergeant’s board.
“Running before you can bloody walk, pal!” Divine had said, glancing down over Patel’s shoulder in the canteen. “Look at this,” he’d called to Naylor. “Not content w
ith taking over every tobacconists and newsagents in the sodding country, they’ve got eyes on the Force as well!”
Naylor, who was busily beating the books on his own account (well, Debbie’s, if the truth were to be told), had shaken his head and said nothing.
“You know why our Asian friends didn’t prosper in the Roman Empire, don’t you?” Divine had asked in a loud voice.
Naylor and Patel knew they were going to be told anyway.
“All them straight roads, where’d they put the corner shops?”
The beauty of nights, Patel thought now, no Mark Divine.
After another two paragraphs, Patel realized that Peel was staring at him. Oh, no, not you too. Then he understood that there was somebody else in the office; someone else who was receiving a great deal of Peel’s attention. Patel got up from where he had tucked himself out of the way, round at the foot of the L-shaped room. Grace Kelley was standing outside the inspector’s room, looking in. She was wearing a bright red laminated cape and a matching hood; there were a couple of inches of bare skin between her black leather trousers and red high-heeled shoes. Her sweater had a deep roll at the neck and a turquoise brooch like a misshapen heart pinned to the appropriate place; the sweater was white wool and at least one size too small.
She smiled at Patel encouragingly.
“Inspector Resnick is off duty,” Patel said.
“All tucked up?”
Behind Patel, DC Peel sniggered and crossed his legs.
“He will be in first thing,” Patel assured her. “If you could call back.”
“By then I shall be back to civilization,” Grace said. “Cases are in the car and I’ve just filled the tank. I’ve run out of things a girl can do here.”
She winked at Patel and made a sinuous movement which caused her cape to slide further back from her shoulders. Patel was doing his best not to stare at the turquoise heart, but it drew his dark eyes like a magnet.
“Touch it if you want,” she grinned, moving closer. “Real smooth. Like a baby’s bum.”
She supposed; she didn’t think she had ever got near enough to know and she’d be pleased to keep it that way. This one, though, this little rabbit with his great startled eyes, ready to bolt at her first false move-well, somehow she’d never got around to bonking any Asians.
“No?”
Through the clipped dark hair of his mustache, she could see the drops of sweat beginning to gather. Rather him, she thought, than the chinless wonder, leering away at the back.
“No, well. I’d best leave the message with you, then. If that’s okay.”
“Of course.”
“Might not be nothing special, only, Shirley, you see, my friend that got…” She shrugged, not wanting to say the word. “She told me once about this bloke she met, all right he was, good-looking and everything. That’s not the point, though, is it? Point is, she met him through one of them ads. You know the kind-glamorous blond, simple tastes, anxious to meet well-hung yacht owner.” Her brittle laughter broke loud across the almost empty room. “Poor bloody Shirley! Little Miss bleedin’ Lonely Hearts!”
Eighteen
Was it something about his generation, the fact of living alone? He chose two potatoes from the rack and washed off the surplus dirt before beginning to peel. Most people he knew, worked with, they operated in couples: that was the way it still was. For the rest, though, finding someone or making it work, which was the most difficult? He thought of Rachel, of the two of them in the enclosed space of his car, a tiredness he had not noticed before in her eyes. Dizzy was winding in and out between his feet and he picked the animal up and set her down again across the room. All the things he might have said; the warmth of her arm through her sleeve. It’ll sort itself out. Usually, he supposed, things did.
When he reached up on to the shelf to take down the grater, he noticed that Pepper had fitted the curve of her body inside the largest aluminum pan, only the last inches of her tail curling over the rim.
No matter what, his mother had made latkes on Monday evenings, grating the potato as finely as if she had been turning a precision tool. The smaller pile of onion would stand ready in its dish, the egg beaten, oven warming. In a saucepan, thickened with flour, gravy from the weekend’s meat bubbled slowly.
Happy or miserable-mostly, Resnick realized, thinking back, resigned-his mother, once married, would have known no other option. Like her potato pancakes, regularly she made her bed and once that was done there was nothing else but to lie down in it.
Resnick gave the mixture a final stir and began to grease the bottom of the heavy frying pan. There were still a few slices of smoked Polish ham in the fridge, a spoonful of sour cream.
“Dizzy! If you end up getting trodden on, don’t blame me.”
He was sliding the spatula under the nearest latke to turn it when the phone began to ring. The outside was crisp yet not too thick and didn’t crumble when he lifted it up, set it back down.
“Dizzy!”
The cat retreated beneath the table and regarded him balefully.
“Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
Surprised that Jack Skelton had not called already, Resnick was anticipating the superintendent’s voice until his hand touched the receiver and he knew it would be Rachel. Distressed, needing to talk.
“Hello?”
It was Patel. Resnick recognized that careful voice instantly. He listened for several moments and then, “How long ago?” he asked, and, “Is she still there?”, finally, “She was certain?”
Resnick kept the phone in hand and depressed a finger to break the connection. It was he who would have to call Skelton.
“Different game now, Charlie. Different rules.”
It was still shy of seven-thirty and they were on the steps outside the station. Skelton was wearing his dark executive blue and with good reason. There was an extra shine to his shoes and a messianic glint in his eyes that made Resnick wonder if he moonlighted as a lay preacher on his days off.
“This is where we see the technology swing into action.”
“Yes, sir,” Resnick said glumly.
“Buck up, Charlie. Think where you’ll get with all this glorious back-up.”
Confused, Resnick thought.
“Come on,” said Skelton, gesturing around the corner to the car park, “I’ll give you a lift.”
In the normal run of things it would be down to the detective superintendent of CID to head the inquiry, but he had been fanned out to Cumbria to investigate an alleged conspiracy involving the sale of radioactive sheep. So Len Lawrence was going to bluff and bluster his way through running the station, while Skelton moved his family photos and running gear into the major incident room at Radford Road sub-station. No surprise that he was looking more than usually chipper.
“Who’s on, sir?” Resnick asked, as two buses, one trailing the other, brought them down to second gear.
“Tom Parker is heading up the outside team, that’s the good news as far as you’re concerned. Howard Colwin’s coming in to coordinate the inside.”
“Is that the bad?”
“Depends on your point of view. Colwin’ll run a tight ship, we can be sure of that. I’ll trust him to get an efficient routine established, see that it’s adhered to.”
Resnick allowed himself a smile. He considered Skelton to be pretty well organized, but Colwin-everything that came across his desk was dated and filed, each phone call logged, he probably had the paper clips sorted according to color and weight. Howard Colwin was the man for whom the term anal retention had been invented: he even walked into a room with his buttocks held clenched.
Tom Parker was different. Resnick spoke to the DCI by phone most mornings, keeping him up to date with what was happening. He just might be able to work some kind of deal with Parker.
“Hate all this, don’t you, Charlie?”
They were driving along by the Forest, past three-storey Victorian houses, which one of the local housing associat
ions was busy restoring and converting into flats. To the right, down through the trees, the Goose Fair site stood empty save for a succession of small men exercising smaller dogs.
“Sometimes,” said Resnick, picking over his words, “I think it can get in the way.”
“Of real police work, you mean?” said Skelton, underlining the word ironically as he said it.
“Of the answer.”
Skelton checked his mirror, indicated, slowed, rechecked the mirror, turned into a parking space. Textbook stuff.
“I’m not satisfied we’ve got the right question yet,” Skelton said, getting out.
Resnick looked at him over the roof of the car.
“One murderer or two?”
Skelton locked the door and Resnick followed him past the young constable on duty by the entrance.
“If you do sort something out with Parker,” Skelton said, his voice lowered, “I shan’t go against it.” He favored Resnick with a rare smile. “Still room for initiative in the computer age. Not all modules and floppy discs, eh?”
He moved briskly off and left Resnick thinking.
The briefing room was set up with a blackboard, twin flip charts on twin easels, two linked video monitors, a computer screen and printer, their controls mutually accessing via the adjacent office with the Home Office computer. Maps of the city gave the location of the murders. Photographs, black and white and colour, had been tacked to one wall. Resnick’s eyes glided over them, remembering, refusing to settle.
Jack Skelton stood behind a desk, lists and rosters spread before him. To his right, one arm crooked back on his chair, was DCI Parker: fifties, thinning hair, and gently spreading paunch. He was wearing a dark sports jacket and light trousers, one leg crossed over the other. Waiting for the superintendent to begin, he lit a cigarette and, seeing Resnick, winked.