9

Thursday

On Thursday morning, a Derbyshire County Council gully-emptying crew had stopped on the roadside near the patch of woodland. They could see the stream of water running on to the road and forming deep puddles stretching right across the carriageway. They walked along the verge looking for blocked gullies, sucked out some mud and dead leaves, but found it didn’t make any difference.

‘Where is it all coming from?’ one of the crew asked the other.

He shrugged. ‘It must be a blocked watercourse somewhere in the woods.’

‘I suppose so.’

‘Not our problem anyway. Watercourses are the landowner’s responsibility. Them, or the Environment Agency.’

The driver was getting back into the cab, but his mate hesitated.

‘It’s making quite a mess of the road,’ he said.

‘So?’

‘Well, maybe we ought to check what it is. So we can report it properly.’

‘Are you serious?’

‘You know what it’s like these days — if a motorist has an accident on this stretch of road because of all the surface water, everybody will be looking for someone to blame. We have to make sure that’s not us. So we cover our backs. Check it out, and report it to the appropriate people.’

‘You’re a real stickler, aren’t you?’

‘Just being realistic, that’s all.’

The driver sighed and got back down from the cab. ‘Come on, then. Which way do you reckon it’s coming from?’

His mate pointed into the trees. ‘Up above. Something’s not quite right up there in the woods.’

In the CID room in Edendale, Gavin Murfin took a call. He looked at Diane Fry as he put the phone down. ‘We’ve got a body,’ he said.

Fry couldn’t resist that old surge of excitement. It was what she’d gone to the Major Crimes Unit for. It was what made her life worth living most of the time.

‘A body?’ she said. ‘What are we waiting for?’

‘Well, it might only be-’

But Fry had already stacked her paperwork back in her in-tray and was putting on her jacket.

‘Where is it, Gavin?’

‘A place called Sparrow Wood. It’s just off the B5056, west of Brassington.’

Fry hesitated and looked round the office. ‘Okay, that’s er…?’

‘South,’ said Irvine. ‘It’ll take about half an hour.’

‘We’d better get going, then.’

‘Me?’ said Irvine.

‘Of course. Are you coming?’

‘You bet.’

Grabbing his jacket, Irvine almost ran after Fry as she headed for the door. Hurst watched him go with a sour expression. Fry noticed it only for a second as she turned in the doorway.

‘It’s going to rain again, you know,’ called Murfin.

‘It’s always bloody raining.’

The water running through the edge of this wood had been no more than a trickle three days ago, according to the local farmer who owned the fields above. It was only a narrow drainage channel, taking a bit of water off the hillside, not even worth the name of a stream or brook.

There was a bigger watercourse to the west where a torrent crashed over rocks and scoured away the roots of trees growing too close to its banks. But some of the flood water had diverted this way and found a route into the channel where the body lay. The past forty-eight hours had filled the channel and overflowed its side, so that the ground for yards around was a swamp, boots squelching six inches deep into sodden peat. The water had dredged soil and debris from both sides. Much of the detritus carried down from the woods up the hill had come to a stop here, clogged up by a blockage in the channel.

The blockage was a man, naked and sprawled out in two feet of muddy water. He was lying on stones with his head tilted slightly backwards, his eyes staring up into the trees, the white protrusion of a toe or a shoulder bizarrely incongruous. From Fry’s vantage point on a rocky outcrop, the crime scene looked like a thick soup floating with pale, unidentified vegetables.

‘This will be a long job,’ said Wayne Abbott, the crime scene manager. ‘We’re trying to dam the water upstream and divert the flow. At the moment, the water is washing away our forensic evidence even as we watch.’

‘What about the water he’s lying in?’ asked Fry.

‘It’ll have to be pumped into a temporary reservoir and then sifted through carefully. We can’t see what might be in it otherwise. We’re working on the practical details. But, like I say…’

‘… it’ll be a long job, yes. Did he drown?’

‘The medical examiner thinks not.’

‘You can drown in a couple of inches of water.’

‘True. But only if you’re lying face down, I think,’ said Abbott. ‘Our victim is on his back, and well jammed in between the banks. The water would need to be at least nine inches deep to cover his face, wouldn’t it? Besides, the doctor says he’s been dead too long. Between thirty and forty hours. The water has only built up since then. We’ll know more when they can get him on the slab for a post-mortem.’

Fry nodded. ‘Of course.’

Luke Irvine was beside her, looking down at the victim, jotting down details and first impressions in his notebook like an assiduous student.

‘Wondering who he was?’ asked Fry.

‘Obviously. And I’m wondering who he met in these woods for this to happen to him.’

‘Do you think it would have been a stranger?’

Irvine seemed to take her question as a test. Would he remember what he’d been taught in detective training?

‘Well, an investigation begins with the assumption that there’s no such as thing as a stranger murder,’ he said. ‘In almost all murders, the assailant is known to the victim.’

Fry hadn’t really meant it as a test at all. But she could see that Irvine regarded her as some kind of strict schoolteacher who might put him in detention if he forgot his lines. There was no point in trying to explain what she’d really meant — it would take too much time and effort. So she might as well play up to his expectations.

‘Well done, Luke. That’s almost word perfect.’

Irvine looked at her. ‘Yes, the “who” is sometimes easy, isn’t it? But the “why” can be a lot more complicated.’

Fry blinked, taken by surprise. That was something that Ben Cooper would have said. She could almost hear him saying it now. Cooper was one who always wanted to look for the complications, to explore the tangled subtleties of people’s relationships. He would certainly have wanted to know the ‘why’. It was often the place he started from in an investigation, rather than the obvious ‘who’.

In the past, she’d never worried too much about the differences in Cooper’s approach. Sometimes he got there, but often he didn’t. Sticking to the book, following the laid-down procedures — that always worked, eventually. So why was she thinking about what Cooper would say? If he’d been here in the woods alongside her she would have ignored what he said, treated his opinion with contempt, even. But it was another thing when he wasn’t here. His absence was more powerful than his presence.

Fry turned to look at the landscape of the White Peak beyond the woods. An isolated farm, a derelict field barn, a couple of old cottages nestling in a narrow valley, trapped in a network of stone walls between wet hills scattered with sheep. It was Ben Cooper country. He should definitely be here.

‘Do you think we have a murder, then?’ she said.

‘It’s hard to tell,’ admitted Irvine. ‘So far, there’s no evidence of a struggle, or even of a second person being present. And we’d need to know the cause of death.’

‘Right.’

Fry shoved her hands in her pockets. Was it wrong for her to be standing in this damp wood hoping that an unidentified man had been the victim of a criminal act? Probably. This might well have been a suicide or an accidental death. There were certainly more of those around than murders. But her instincts were telling her something different. This man had ended up dead in the stream as a result of someone else’s actions.

‘Luke, call Becky Hurst and get her down here,’ she said. ‘We’re going to need another pair of hands before long.’

Although it was daytime, the overcast sky made the woods gloomy, and arc lights had been set up under the trees. Fry had found a remnant of stone wall that was just the right height to sit on while she waited.

When Becky Hurst arrived at the scene, she ducked through the cordon and looked down at the body.

‘Look at the way his eyes are staring,’ she said. ‘Like a blind person.’

‘That’s probably right,’ said Irvine. ‘Imagine it was night-time, with a heavily overcast sky. And no source of light nearby. It would have been pitch black out here. I mean, really black.’

‘Of course,’ said Fry. ‘So he wouldn’t have been able to see a thing.’

‘Yes, it’s just like being blind,’ said Irvine. ‘I was visiting one of those show caves in Castleton once with Michelle, and the guide turned off the lights…’

‘I know all about that,’ she said. ‘I know about darkness.’

Irvine glanced at her. ‘I dare say you do.’

Fry shuddered. There was one thing for sure. Without the benefit of these arc lights, she wouldn’t be out here in the woods at night, overcast sky or not. There were too many insects and tiny, crawling creatures waiting to drop on to her face from the trees when she couldn’t see them coming. It wouldn’t be her choice for a suitable place to commit suicide, or to have an accident. It wasn’t her idea of a place to die at all.

She realised that Irvine had kept looking at her, as if he was expecting something. Fry sensed one of those moments when her people skills were about to fail her. She supposed someone other than her would know instinctively how to behave, and what to say. But it was impossible to figure out logically what was required of you: people had to tell you. While Irvine waited, she went back over what he’d been saying.

‘Oh,’ she said. ‘Who’s Michelle?’

‘My new girlfriend.’

‘Great.’

The face of the dead man continued to stare up at the trees, his eyes so close to the surface of the water that they reflected the glare of the arc lights. Strands of fair hair were matted with something dark. Blood? Perhaps.

Fry had felt quite comfortable on the wall until now, but suddenly the stones had started to feel harder, their edges sharper. She shifted uneasily, stood up and paced outside the cordon, until Abbott called her over.

‘One of the search teams has found the victim’s clothes. All neatly piled up on a rock. It looks for all the world like he just decided to go for a shallow swim.’

By the time Diane Fry slithered a few yards through the woods, the clothes found by the search team had already been bagged, and markers were placed on the rock. Two SOCOs were struggling to erect a scene tent over the location.

Even in the best of circumstances, the loss of trace evidence from exposure to the weather was a major problem with an open scene like this. Any DNA in the vicinity would be degrading as they watched. And if the rain turned torrential again, the place would become a swamp.

‘Do we know what the weather forecast is?’ asked Fry.

Irvine pulled out his iPhone and tapped the weather app. ‘An eighty per cent chance of rain by four o’clock,’ he said.

‘Is that thing accurate?’

‘Spot on, usually,’ said Irvine.

A SOCO handed her an evidence bag. ‘There’s your victim’s ID, Sergeant.’

Fry turned it over to see a mobile phone and the contents of a leather wallet. Driving licence, credit cards, an AA membership card, a small stack of ten and twenty pound notes.

‘Glen Turner.’

Hurst immediately made a call to check on the name. ‘Yes, he’s a misper,’ she said. ‘He was reported missing yesterday by his mother, Mrs Ingrid Turner. The description she gave fits, too. An address in Wirksworth.’

Fry still found her grasp of local geography was lacking, even after the years she’d spent in this area. ‘Wirksworth? How near is that?’

‘Pretty close,’ said Irvine. ‘Five or six miles to the east, I’d say, on the other side of Brassington. It’s the nearest small town.’

‘How long has Mr Turner been missing, do we know?’

‘The mother says he didn’t come home on Tuesday night. She waited a while before she reported it because she wasn’t sure if it was an emergency or not.’

Fry nodded. It was a common belief that you had to wait twenty-four hours before reporting a missing person, but it wasn’t true. You could make a report to the police as soon as you were convinced someone was missing. It sounded as though Mrs Turner had done that.

‘We’d better get to the address straight away,’ she said.

She called Luke Irvine over and instructed him to find out what car Glen Turner drove and get a search started for it.

‘It must be somewhere,’ she said. ‘He didn’t walk out here from Wirksworth. We need to find out as much as we can.’

‘About the victim?’ said Irvine.

‘Of course, Luke. You know that’s the starting point in victimology — working out what could have put two people in a particular location at that time. When we can answer that, we’ll have a clue about what happened.’

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