‘Maybe he sketched it from a photograph.’
‘So who took the photograph? His wife, Shaun Pryce or him? I think Brian Goodway is very familiar with the reservoir. He was probably spying on his wife. Not that it proves anything, naturally.’
Knox shrugged. ‘So we keep looking.’
They went from room to room opening drawers, scrutinising cupboards, searching under furniture, but found nothing.
‘Maybe he does all his art work at school,’ said Knox.
‘There must be something. He told me this afternoon that he paints in his spare time. Where does he do it?’ Goodway’s mother was hovering in the doorway.
‘Does your son have a studio or a workshop where he does his art work?’
‘Yes, it’s up in the loft. You have to open the hatch and pull down the ladder—’ Mariner and Knox were already vaulting the stairs. ‘He doesn’t really like anyone going up there!’ she called after them uncertainly.
‘I’ll bet he doesn’t,’ Mariner muttered to himself.
Though basic, the loft had indeed been converted into a fully equipped artist’s studio. Two skylights provided the required natural light. The down side was the lack of evidence that any sculpting went on here, there were only easels and drawing and painting materials — everything strictly two dimensional. They were not going to find what was used to strangle Yasmin here.
An assortment of larger drawings stood stacked in one corner. Absently Mariner began to sort through them unsure of what he was looking for. Until he found it. ‘Look at this.’
Knox came and looked over his shoulder. ‘Jesus H.’
‘Actually, Shaun P,’ Mariner corrected him. ‘This looks like some pretty close-range spying.’ The pictures of Pryce were full-length pencil sketches, this time revealing his face, and beautifully drawn. He was also completely naked and in a considerable state of arousal. ‘So that’s why women throw themselves at him,’ remarked Knox.
‘And not just women,’ added Mariner, as the final piece fell into place. ‘We’ve been barking up the wrong tree altogether.’
A strident female voice rang out from below. ‘Who is it, Gran? What’s going on?’ Chloe Goodway was home.
‘It’s the police,’ they heard Mrs Goodway say.
‘What are they doing here?’
‘I’d better go and explain,’ said Mariner starting down the ladder.
But Chloe wasn’t in the mood to await explanations. ‘You shouldn’t have let them in, Gran. They can’t just come barging—’
‘But they’re policemen, darling. I expect they’re going to help us find out what happened to mummy.’
‘They know what happened to mum,’ Mariner heard as he descended the last flight of stairs. ‘I’m going to call dad.’
‘Miss Goodway, if you could just wait!’ Mariner took the last stairs two at a time, but he wasn’t fast enough.
‘Dad? It’s Chloe. The police are here. They’re up in your studio. What’s going on?’
Too late, Mariner snatched the phone from her. ‘I really wish you hadn’t done that.’
The girl was unrepentant. ‘What are you doing here? We haven’t seen a search warrant. You have no right—’ But Knox was hard on Mariner’s heels and, leaving the girl ranting behind them, they ran out to the car and jumped in. As Knox drove at breakneck speed, Mariner called for an area car to come and keep an eye on Goodway’s house. Next he called ahead for Watson and Ellis to detain Brian Goodway in the exhibition tent at the festival. They arrived breathless to find Ellis waiting helplessly.
‘We missed him. He’d already gone. One of the stewards saw him leave about ten minutes ago.’
‘Let’s get out a description of him and his car.’
The car was easy. As it turned out it was still sitting less than five hundred yards from where they stood, left where Brian Goodway had parked it that morning in front of the shops on Bournville Green. A lady who worked in the toy shop had a girl at the school and had seen Goodway come back to his car and retrieve something from the boot.
‘He knew we’d be able to trace the car,’ said Mariner. ‘But if he’s gone on public transport we don’t stand a chance.’ He looked across at the steady stream of traffic on the ring road. The festival grounds were at the centre of a public transport network, served by the railway station at the back of the factory works and major bus routes to the front and sides.
Knox was more optimistic. ‘He won’t get far. It may take a while, but somebody somewhere will recognise him.’ All they could do was wait, but waiting wasn’t Mariner’s forte.
‘We never found that wire,’ said Knox, suddenly. ‘Is it worth checking his classroom?’
* * *
The school seemed a desolate place without the noisy bustle of hundreds of students. Today even the caretaker’s family had abandoned their house on the site in favour of the festival. Parking outside the locked reception area they walked round to the side of the building and found the door to Brian Goodway’s classroom swinging open.
‘He must have his own key,’ said Knox, but any hope they might have felt was short-lived. The classroom and those around it were completely devoid of life. If he had been here, Goodway had long since made his exit. The classroom was as much of a mess as it had been last time Mariner was here, the forms of half-finished sculptures dotted about.
‘He’s left us plenty of modelling clay and wire,’ said Knox, bagging up samples. ‘So why was he here?’
‘There’s Lily’s tan-coloured suit,’ said Mariner, seeing the pristine brown overalls hanging on the back of the door, ‘—or at least the next generation of clean replacements.’ It was then that the smell drifted in on the air; the faint, slightly acrid smell of burning. ‘That’s what he’s here for.’
Following the smell they ran round to the rear of the building where they found Goodway standing beside the outsized refuse bins, black smoke billowing from the nearest.
‘What are you doing, Brian?’ Mariner called. Goodway reeled round, shocked to see them. ‘It’s all right, you don’t need to tell me.’ Mariner continued calmly. ‘I know what you’re burning and I know why. Burning won’t get rid of all the evidence though. Even if the fabric is charred we can still get DNA. We’ll still find Ricky Skeet’s blood on those overalls, won’t we?’
‘And you’ve given us plenty of circumstantial evidence,’ added Knox, ‘the pictures of Shaun Pryce and the reservoir; the wire you used to strangle Yasmin.’ Goodway’s eyes widened.
‘There might be a way out of this mess, Brian,’ Mariner soothed. ‘Why don’t you tell us what happened?’
Goodway turned away, wringing his hands. ‘I’ve nothing to say to you.’
‘Why don’t we start with St Martin’s?’ Mariner said, ignoring him.
Goodway couldn’t help himself. ‘St Martin’s was nothing,’ he said.
‘So why did you resign in such a hurry? There were rumours. No smoke without fire, eh, Brian? What was the boy’s name?’
‘Boy?’ Knox was totally lost now.
Mariner turned to him. ‘We were only partly on the right track. When Stewey Blake said Brian here had approached a sixth former, we both assumed it was girl, because Brian here is a red-blooded, heterosexual family man. But that’s not true, is it Brian? It wasn’t your wife who was having an affair with Shaun Pryce, it was you.’
CHAPTER 30
Brian Goodway sank to the ground, burying his head in his hands. For several moments he said nothing then just as Mariner started to walk towards him, he spoke, his voice hoarse and trembling. ‘I realised I was gay long ago,’ he said. ‘My whole marriage was a sham. I concealed it for years, satisfying myself with the occasional one-night stand. But it got more and more difficult, always feeling that I was living a lie and never being able to just be myself. I knew that eventually I’d have to give in to temptation.’
‘Is that why you went to work at the girls’ school, so that there couldn’t be a repeat of St Martin�
�s?’
‘I told you, nothing happened at St Martin’s.’
‘—only because the kid ratted on you.’
‘I’d done nothing improper,’ Goodway insisted. ‘It was a conversation, a careless gesture, that’s all. But I did think working at Kingsmead would be easier. And for a while it was; everything was fine, under control. Then when I met Shaun that evening at our house, I knew what was meant by love at first sight. I couldn’t get him out of my mind. Inviting him to model at school was really just a way of seeing him again. I never thought anything would come of it, especially when I saw him flirting so outrageously with the girls.’
‘Afterwards I took him for a drink as a kind of thank you and that’s when I discovered that he wasn’t averse to male company either. I couldn’t believe my good fortune. We began an affair. But this time it was a proper relationship and I knew I’d have to tell Barbara. She’d been suffering from depression for a long time, partly because of the state of our marriage. I thought we’d be able to work out something civilised between us. But when I told her she was devastated. She’d never guessed. She became very distressed and started talking about ending it all. Then suddenly she announced that she was going to tell the children. I couldn’t let her do that. Not yet. I wasn’t ready. So one night when she went out I followed her. She went down to the reservoir. It was somewhere we used to go together years ago. I would sketch and she would enjoy the peace and quiet.’
‘Not that night though.’
‘I caught up with her on the wooden bridge. I tried to reason with her, but she wouldn’t listen. She said that I’d humiliated her and ruined her life and that now she would ruin me. In some strange way I even think she was jealous.’
‘She’d made a pass at Pryce. Did you know that?’
Goodway snorted. ‘No.’
‘So you tipped her into the river.’
‘It was an accident, I swear!’ He glanced up. ‘I had Barbara by the shoulders, trying to make her see sense. I was begging her not to tell the children. She just laughed at me. In my frustration I pushed her, the railings gave way and she fell. I went down to help her but knew straight away that she was dead. I was desperate, I didn’t know what to do. I was going to pull her out, back onto the bank and get help, but then I thought about how it would look. It occurred to me then that the easiest thing was the drainage tunnel. We’d had a lot of rain, so the water was flowing fast, and it just carried her down. It was as if it was meant to be.’
Fate. Mariner was sickened by the self-justification. ‘And Yasmin?’
‘She was a lovely girl, truly talented.’ A brief smile crossed Goodway’s lips. ‘I saw her flirting with Shaun but I knew it was harmless.’
‘So what then?’
‘She saw us together. Shaun and me. While the weather has been so warm Shaun persuaded me to meet him at the reservoir. I’d introduced him to it when he’d said he needed somewhere private to sunbathe. He talked me into going with him after school. It was thrilling.’
‘So you were there on that Monday when Yasmin walked past,’ said Mariner.
‘She’d been to see that boy Everett and was taking a shortcut through the reservoir back to the station. The next morning she came to tell me. She was tougher than you think. She said “You’re a queer, aren’t you? I saw you with Shaun. It’s disgusting.” Actually I think she was quite shocked and upset herself, but she’d come to find out what I’d do to stop her telling anyone. But by then I guessed that she was meeting Everett and we came to an arrangement: I’d say nothing about Lewis if she would forget Shaun.’
‘Cosy,’ said Knox.
‘I knew it wouldn’t last,’ Goodway went on. ‘Everett was bound to let her down and then I’d never be able to trust the little bitch to keep her mouth shut. If she let it out I’d be ruined.’
This was the part Mariner didn’t understand. ‘What you and Pryce were doing is hardly illegal. You’re both consenting adults.’
‘There was my reputation though, the reputation of the school. I’d been lucky at St Martin’s. It was the word of a young, impressionable boy against that of, as you put it, a heterosexual family man; the interpretation of a conversation. The head believed me and I was able to resign with dignity and take up another post, my record unblemished. If my sexuality became public knowledge now, all that could be dragged up again. Questions would have been asked about Barbara’s disappearance. Besides, I have my children and my mother to think of. What would it do to them? I couldn’t bear it.’
‘So what did you do?’
‘I started checking Yasmin’s phone during lessons. I don’t know what I hoped to find, I suppose knowing she was seeing Everett against her parents’ wishes I thought there might be something more incriminating that I could use to buy her silence. When I saw the message from Everett cancelling their meeting at the reservoir I knew that was my chance.’
‘Chance to do what?’
‘Talk to her. During the lesson I took her travel pass, and before I left I dropped it on the classroom floor, knowing that she’d have to come back for it, which would give me time to get there ahead of her.’
‘And what happened?’
‘When she got to the reservoir I was waiting on the bridge. She told me there was nothing to say. Before I knew it she was lying at my feet, dead.’
‘Do you always carry sculpting wire around with you?’
‘I had it . . . just in case.’
‘In case of what?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘And the brown overalls?’
He had no answer.
‘So what about Ricky Skeet?’
‘I dragged Yasmin down to the drainage tunnel. The water hadn’t released but I knew it would within a matter of an hour or so—’
‘You took Yasmin down to where your wife was.’
‘But when I climbed back onto the bridge this boy just rushed at me from nowhere, shouting and screaming that he’d seen what I’d done. He started hitting me with this chunk of brick, but it slipped out of his hand, so I grabbed it and hit him over the head. He fell but I had to be sure so I hit him again and then I found that I couldn’t stop. I kept hitting him over and over.’
‘Why didn’t you dispose of Ricky’s body in the same way as the others?’
‘I was going to, but there was so much blood. Part of the stream flows down into the park, I thought someone might see it. And also there were already two bodies in the tunnel. A third could have caused some kind of blockage and drawn unwanted attention. I knew I needed time to think.’
‘So you just dragged him into the long grass and left him?’ said Mariner.
‘Something made me look up. I thought I saw someone in the window of the nursing home. I needed to get away. I was going to come back later, after dark, to move the body, but when I came back he had gone. I looked around a bit but there was no sign of him, so then I thought perhaps I hadn’t killed him after all.’
‘Weren’t you worried that he might turn up somewhere and report what he’d seen?’
‘Of course I was. I even phoned round the hospitals to ask if an injured boy had been brought in. He hadn’t been, so there was nothing else I could do.’
Mariner remembered how strung out Goodway had seemed on that first meeting. He must have been beside himself. ‘And you didn’t know that Yasmin had dropped her phone.’
‘No.’
‘It must have been a shock when that turned up. If it hadn’t been for that our search would never have switched to the reservoir.’
* * *
While they’d been talking, the light had begun to fade. In the gloom Mariner moved towards Goodway. ‘Come on,’ he said. ‘Let’s get all this down on paper.’ But as he moved forward he saw the glint of something in Goodway’s hand, the razor-thin blade of a craft knife. ‘Don’t do anything—’ he began, but before he or Knox could intervene, Goodway drew back the knife and slashed violently at his wrist. Blood sprayed out in a wide, crimson ar
c as over their heads the first dazzling scatter burst of fireworks lit up the sky.
‘Call an ambulance.’ Mariner sprang forward and seized the knife, just as Goodway collapsed to the ground groaning in pain.
EPILOGUE
DCI Jack Coleman stood surveying the building work going on two hundred feet below him when there was a knock on the door. ‘Come.’ It was DI Mariner. ‘Tom.’ Coleman moved forward and the men shook hands.
‘Good to see you again, sir,’ said Mariner.
‘Seems you’ve done rather well without me these last few weeks; a high-profile killer and a potential sex attacker arrested within twenty-four hours of each other.’
‘We nearly lost Goodway.’
‘But you didn’t.’
‘No. A dozen stitches and some pretty comprehensive dressings did the job, although I understand they’ve got him on twenty-four-hour suicide watch at Winson Green while he’s on remand.’
‘And Andy Pritchard?’
‘We found dozens of photographs at his place that he must have taken over years, students and young girls around parks in south Birmingham, and we can place him on or near the university campus at the times of each indecent exposure, along with a couple more in other parts of the city.’
‘DCI Fiske seems to have left me with a lot to live up to,’ said Coleman.
‘With all due respect, sir, I’m not sure that Mr Fiske had much to do with either of the arrests.’
‘You got him off the hook with Complaints though, didn’t you?’
‘I’m sure he’s enjoying his refresher course on Risk Assessment,’ Mariner smiled. ‘It’ll give him lots of opportunity to practise his vocabulary.’
‘And Colleen Skeet’s happy with that?’
‘She’s satisfied that we caught Ricky’s killer, but I doubt Colleen will ever be happy again.’
‘No. And I’m sorry about your mother, too Tom.’
‘Thank you, sir. Welcome back.’
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