Two
No Folk Without Mire
Outside, Slider put his head down and scuttled for his car, blocking out the shouted questions, ignoring the eyes and open mouths massed around the barrier tape, keeping his head turned away from the rattlesnake clicking of cameras. As he reached his car and opened the door, something he saw across its roof caught his attention, but in such a subliminal way that when he looked properly, he could not see what it was. But it reminded him of the black Ford Focus again, and he made a mental note to get one of the firm to run the number plate he had taken down.
He drove off, was let out of the roadblock, and turned on to King Street. A few minutes later his mobile rang.
He flipped it open. ‘Slider,’ he said.
‘Don’t you know it’s illegal to answer the phone while you’re driving?’ said a voice. A male voice, vaguely familiar, precise, accentless. The words were spoken not as a pleasantry but with – as far as one sentence could reveal this – a kind of menace.
‘Who is that?’ Slider said.
‘Oh, you know who it is. You haven’t forgotten me, surely, Inspector Plod? The last time we met I told you you’d regret meddling in my business.’
He knew it now. ‘Bates,’ he said.
‘Mr Bates to you. Don’t forget you’re a public servant and I pay your wages.’
Trevor Bates, alias The Needle. Wealthy businessman, property dealer, electronics expert, murderer of a prostitute called Susie Mabbot. He had stuck her full of acupuncture needles (his fetish), broken her neck and thrown her in the Thames. Slider suspected him of commissioning, if not actually committing with his own hands, other murders, and who knew what else besides? Slider had been in on the capture of The Needle, helping to trap him in his hotel room at a conference, for which Bates had vowed revenge. Slider had heeded it as little as the idle wind at the time; but Bates had not remained long in custody. He had never even gone to trial. While he was being moved to the maximum security remand facility at Woodhill, the security van was held up and he was sprung. He had been missing for over a month now, not seen or heard of by anyone in authority. Until now.
‘How did you get this number?’ Slider asked.
Bates laughed. ‘Oh, come, Mr Plod. A man of my stature? I can find out anything I want to know. I know all about you. I know where you live.’
‘What do you want?’ Slider asked, striving to sound untroubled, though he was thinking of Joanna. He had been threatened before, many times, and he knew most threats were simply made to aggrandise the threatener. They were never carried out. But Bates was not quite in that class. He was intellectual, cold-blooded, and pathologically vain. He might just mean it.
‘You know what I want,’ Bates said. ‘To make you regret messing with me. And you will, I promise you.’
‘You’re talking like a bad movie,’ Slider said, taking furtive looks around him in his rear-view and wing mirrors. If the man knew he was answering while driving, he might be somewhere near, following him. There seemed to be a lot of background noise to the call but he couldn’t identify it as anything in particular. It could have been a call made from a car. Slider thought at once of the black Focus. He couldn’t see one anywhere, but it might have dropped back too far to spot. Or Bates might have changed to another car. He had been fabulously rich in more than one country, so it was possible that not all his assets had been seized, and he certainly had the know-how to mount secret-service type surveillance. ‘Every policeman in the country is looking for you,’ Slider said. ‘You’ll be back inside any time now.’
‘Don’t you know I have friends in high places? Very high places, Mr Plod. You’ll be wanting to try to trace this call, so I shall ring off now, but we’ll talk again soon. Or I may pop in and visit you. How would you like that?’
He was gone before Slider could say anything more. He knows, of course, Slider thought, how long it takes to do a trace. All that kind of thing was nursery stuff to Bates – electronics was his field; he had provided listening services to the CIA in London. But wait a minute, if Bates knew he was talking to Slider’s mobile, he must know that calls to and from a mobile are all logged automatically, so why had he said that?
Just to sow confusion and fear, he answered himself. Blast the man, popping up at a time like this, when he was going to have his hands full with Stonax. An unwelcome distraction, to say the least. And there was Joanna . . . He was glad she was not at home today – though of course she’d be coming back. Was the threat serious? He thought of Susie Mabbot and shuddered. No, The Needle wasn’t as mad as that, surely? It was out of all proportion to Slider’s puny role in capturing him. There had been a dozen people there, and the operation had been run by Chief Superintendent Ormerod of the Serious Organised Crime Liaison Group. Ormerod was Bates’s nemesis, surely? He was the one who ought to be being threatened. Unless it was simply Slider’s lowliness that offended him: all right to be pursued by top-ranking brass, but not to be toppled by a dog-eared inspector.
He’d report it to Porson, of course, when he got in, and Porson would hand it further up the line. Probably Bates was the responsibility of the Serious Organised Crime mob now – SOCA – and Ormerod, who had moved on and up to be head of another group of initials under the same umbrella, would no doubt be itching to nail the sod who’d slipped his grasp.
Anyway, it was not his problem. And he had his own work to do. He shoved the whole mess firmly to the back of his mind, with the final thought that his old instincts had – probably – been right. He had – probably – been being followed.
Back at the factory, he met Atherton on the stairs. ‘Where’s the daughter?’ he asked briskly.
‘In the soft room,’ Atherton said. That was what he called the ‘interview suite’, refusing to use the official title because, he said, a suite had to have more than one room to it. The others frequently mocked Atherton’s pickiness, but often, as in this case, his verbal amendments stuck. Everyone now called it the soft room. It was, in fact, simply an interview room, but unlike the ones downstairs it was meant to be reassuring for witnesses in a delicate mental state. It had carpet, sofa and chairs, and pictures on the walls so bland they could have been used to dilute water. Also it didn’t smell of feet and imperfectly expunged vomit, which was a great plus all round.
‘Good. Has anyone had a go at her?’
‘Asher brought her in, and Swilley’s been holding her hand, but they only took the basic statement of how she found him.’
‘Right. We’ll go and do her now, then,’ Slider said. Atherton followed him after a tiny but noticeable pause. ‘What’s the matter with you?’
‘Nothing,’ Atherton said. There was an odd blankness in his expression, which he shook away instantly. As they turned on to the corridor he said in his normal, conversational tone, ‘Have you heard of a coup de foudre?’
‘New car?’ Slider said, not really listening. ‘Is that the next thing you’re after?’
‘Oh, no, I’ve already got it,’ Atherton said, opening the door to the soft room.
Slider beckoned Swilley out, and they had a brief chat, sotto voce, in the corridor as she brought him up to date. Kathleen ‘Norma’ Swilley was tall, blonde and gorgeous in a curiously unmemorable way, like a Miss World contestant. She was also one of Slider’s best officers, and highly trained in unarmed combat. It was said she could kick the nuts off a fly at five paces, so sexist comments about her were not generally aired in her presence – though what was said behind her back would curl the hair of anyone but a policeman. Canteen culture was more than just a mould found on the sandwiches.
Slider passed over to her the registration number of the Focus and asked her to get someone to check it.
‘And I was called on my mobile ten minutes ago. Can you find out who it was that called me and where they were?’
‘Yes, boss.’ She jotted down the number.
‘When Hart comes in, you and she can start sorting the statements. Get Fathom on it too, so he can learn from you. Oh, and let me know when Mr Porson gets back.’
‘Right, boss.’
In the soft room, Emily Stonax was sitting on the sofa with WPC ‘For God’s Sake Stop Calling Me Jane’ Asher beside her. Asher stood and Miss Stonax looked up as Slider and Atherton came in. So far, Slider noted with relief, there seemed to be no tears. Emily Stonax was dry-eyed, though white with shock, but evidently doing her best to hold it together. She was twenty-eight, according to Swilley, though she looked younger – but then, he thought, most people did these days, probably because they dressed younger. Slider noted the suitcase, carry-on bag and duty-free carrier in the corner, with a donkey jacket dumped over them, and took in the dry, weary look of the recently flight-arrived.
‘I’m Detective Inspector Slider,’ he said. ‘I’m very sorry for your loss, Miss Stonax. I know it must be hard for you, but would you mind if I asked you a few questions?’
She was sitting a little hunched, with her hands clasped between her knees, screwing a paper handkerchief about between her fingers: a slim but nicely made young woman in cargo pants and soft ankle boots, a white shirt – understandably a little crumpled – and a brown suede jerkin. Her only jewellery was a large, oval gold locket on a chain round her neck, which hung like a slightly flattened pullet’s egg in the V of her shirt neck. Her hair, as abundant, black and coarse as her father’s, was cut short and spiky, and stood out round her head, but pointing backwards like the quills of a hedgehog. It was, he saw, meant to look cute rather than challenging. No Goth, this: she had no make-up on and no piercings, her nails were short and unpolished, and there was about her face a look of intelligence, and of sense – not always the same thing. Her full mouth, brown eyes and thick eyelashes gave warmth to a face otherwise notable for character, with its straight nose, strongly marked brows and firm chin. She met Slider’s eyes directly, and he felt the attractiveness of her, even as he was admiring her determination not to give in to wailing and gnashing while there was something that had to be done.
‘Ask me anything,’ she said. ‘I want to help.’
Slider took the chair opposite her, on the other side of the lamentable coffee table. It reminded him to ask, ‘Has someone offered you coffee?’
‘Yes, thanks,’ she said, nodding towards Asher. ‘I didn’t want any, but I’d love a glass of water.’
Atherton beat Asher off the mark and brought it. The soft room had a water-cooler, but was also provided with proper glasses so he was spared the shame of bringing her a plastic cup. She took it from him with a smile that did things to his spine, and he took himself off to one side, out of her line of sight to Slider, so that he would not distract her, but also so that he could study her face without her looking at him. There was something about her that he could not take his eyes from. Slider, a normal but almost-married man, had merely felt her attractiveness, but it had pierced Atherton like a skewer to the vitals. She took his breath away.
‘Would you begin by telling me what happened this morning?’ Slider opened. He knew it, of course, from Swilley, but he found it helped to get people talking, to repeat something they’d already said. Safe ground, easy to get across. ‘You’ve just flown in from America, I believe?’
‘Yes. I live in New York now. I’m a journalist – freelance, but I do a lot of work for the New York Herald.’ Her lips gave a quirk that would have been a smile in other circumstances. ‘It’s not quite challenging the New York Times yet, but it’s getting there. There’s a good team, dedicated to serious news, and it already had a lot more international coverage than most other American papers. Dad’s such a help there – was such a help,’ she corrected herself faintly, her eyes lowering for a moment. Slider saw her swallow hard and then brace her shoulders, sitting up straighter.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said again. She made a little ‘carry on’ gesture with her hand, and went back to tormenting the tissue. ‘So why did you make the trip to London today?’
‘I come home three or four times a year to visit Dad. I was due a break, and he said he wanted to see me, so I packed a bag and hopped on a plane. I rang Dad on my mobile from Heathrow but he didn’t answer. I thought it was a bit odd because he knew what time I was getting in, but then I thought he must have had to go out suddenly.’ She frowned. ‘Though if he’d gone out he’d have put the answer-machine on. I ought to have thought of that.’
‘People can forget,’ Slider said, helping her out.
‘Not Dad,’ she said. ‘He was a journalist. Communication is everything. Anyway, I took a taxi home and let myself in. And I saw—’ She couldn’t quite, for all her determination, say it aloud. She took a breath and said, ‘You know what I saw. So I rang the police.’
‘You didn’t touch anything or move anything?’
‘I know that much. I went across to Dad just in case—’ She shook her head. ‘I could see it was no good.’ She met Slider’s eyes. ‘I’ve never seen anyone dead before. Of course, Dad’s seen dozens, maybe hundreds of bodies. I suppose if I want to call myself a proper journalist I ought to be able to face up to things like that. But it’s hard when it’s your own father. It must be harder, surely, than with a stranger?’
He saw that she wanted him to answer. She was deferring to his knowledge, given his job, of looking at dead bodies. He was touched, and impressed that her intellect was still functioning independently. She was not one who would enjoy the histrionics of grief, and he had seen plenty of those over a long career and admired her for it. ‘I think it’s always hard, whether it’s a stranger or not,’ he said. ‘If you care about people. Something has been taken away that can’t be replaced.’
He felt Atherton stir at that, and supposed it a rebuke for getting too personal. But this woman was going to have to help them a lot, and he wanted to treat her as an equal by taking her questions seriously.
‘You don’t get used to it?’ she followed up his answer.
‘Not really,’ he said. ‘You cope.’ She nodded thoughtfully, and he got back on line. ‘You say you let yourself in?’
‘I have my own key,’ she said.
‘You have your own room there?’
‘Not that, exactly. I don’t keep any stuff with him any more – that’s all in New York. But somehow, wherever Dad lives is still “home” to me.’
‘Does anyone else have a key that you know of?’
She shook her head, but a faint colour touched her pale face. ‘I don’t know for sure, but he might have given one to Candida.’
‘Candida?’
‘You don’t know about her? She’s his . . . girlfriend? Mistress? I don’t know what the proper term is. I’m not being censorious,’ she added with a frank look. ‘I don’t mind about her, honestly. Why should I? Mummy’s dead, and anyway she left him long before that. He’s entitled to a life of his own. I just don’t know how you would classify her. Candida Scott-Chatton. I expect you know who she is?’
Atherton anticipated Slider’s ignorance. ‘She’s the head of the Countryside Protection Trust and a spokesman on ecological matters.’
Emily Stonax looked at him. ‘And a journalist.’
‘Yes, I’ve heard of her,’ Slider said, who actually had – and had seen her on television, round about the time of the Countryside March. Tall, blonde, aristocratic, gorgeous. And hard as nails – as he supposed she’d have to be with such a thankless brief. ‘Do you have an address for her?’
‘Ten, Hyde Park Terrace,’ she said promptly. ‘It’s just off Queen’s Gate, near the Albert Hall. I think she and Dad were quite close. I mean, she stuck by him after that business last year?’ The sentence ended on an upward note as she looked to see if Slider understood the reference. He nodded. ‘I suppose someone will have to tell her,’ she added, faltering.
‘We’ll do that. Unless you’d rather . . .?’
‘No. God no. I don’t want to have to tell anyone – is that normal?’
‘It’s normal not to want to put it into words.’
‘That’s what it is,’ she said eagerly. ‘If I say it, it will make it real. Luckily there’s no family to speak of. Since Mummy died, it’s just the two of us.’
‘So, no other keys that you know of?’
‘No. He wouldn’t have handed them out. I don’t even know that Candida had one, really. Dad was quite safety-conscious. I mean, there were locks on all the windows and a deadlock on the door.’ She looked at him thoughtfully. ‘The door was closed when I got there and there was no damage to it. I mean, someone didn’t jemmy their way in. Is that why you’re asking about keys? That policewoman I spoke to said it was a burglary. Is that what you think it was?’
‘His wallet and watch seem to be missing. His pockets were empty, and they haven’t been found anywhere else in the house.’
‘Someone killed him and went through his pockets?’ Tears jumped into her eyes for the first time. ‘They killed him for that?’
‘We don’t know if anything else is missing. The flat is very tidy and there’s no sign of any disturbance.’
‘Yes, Dad was always very tidy.’ She wiped the wetness from below her eyes. ‘He gave me a hard time in my teenage rebel years. But it was a good lesson to learn.’
‘Do you know if he kept anything valuable about the house?’
‘Well, the paintings and bronzes were quite valuable, and those little Etruscan figures on the mantelpiece.’
‘They’re still there.’
‘I don’t think he ever had much cash about him – he preferred cards, like I do. He wasn’t the sort to have envelopes full of tenners in a shoe box in the wardrobe, if that’s what you mean.’
‘Did he have a safe on the premises?’
‘I don’t think so. He’s never had one to my knowledge. But I suppose he might have had one put in recently and not told me about it. It wasn’t something that would ever come up in conversation.’
‘Later, when the forensic teams have finished, I’d like you to come back to the flat, if you will, and look around, see if you can tell if anything’s missing.’
‘Yes, of course,’ she said. She studied his face. ‘You don’t think it was a burglar, do you? You don’t think he was killed for what was in his pockets?’
‘I’m not at the stage of thinking anything yet. I have to consider all possibilities.’
She was thinking. ‘If it wasn’t burglary, I know the next question: did he have any enemies?’
‘Something like that,’ Slider said with a small smile, admiring her spirit. She reminded him a little of Joanna, in the way her mind worked doggedly through the logic. (Joanna! He must phone her before she left Eastbourne.)
Emily Stonax blew her nose, reached into the massive handbag by her feet to exchange the soggy tissue for a fresh one, and said, shaking her head, ‘He was a well-known figure. Thousands of people knew him from television, millions probably recognised him, and there are so many nutcases about these days who will attack anyone famous. Look at Jill Dando. But if that’s what it was, it’s no use looking for reasons, is it? As to specific enemies, it’s hard to think anyone could hate him enough to kill him. He was such a good man. He was honest, and he was an idealist. He believed in goodness.’
Atherton spoke. ‘He was a career journalist, and then he worked for the government, but we haven’t heard anything of him since that trouble last year. Do you know what he’s been doing since he left the DTI?’
A spot of colour appeared in her cheeks. ‘He didn’t leave. It was character assassination. He hasn’t had another job since. How could he, after that? No-one would touch him. As far as I know he’s been living on his capital.’
Atherton said, ‘But a man like him wouldn’t do nothing.’
‘No, I’m sure he kept up his interests – his charity work and so on – but he was terribly shocked and low for a while after the photograph thing. Although just lately I’ve suspected there was something he was working on.’
‘Only suspected?’ Slider said.
‘Well, he usually talked to me about his work, but if it was something investigative and serious he would keep it to himself until it was all worked out. Not that he didn’t trust me, he just wouldn’t tell anyone. That way no-one could be put in a difficult position. And just lately when I’ve phoned it’s been quite hard to talk to him, as if his mind was elsewhere. He gets like that when he’s writing sometimes. You talk to him but nothing much comes back. It’s like blowing out of a window.’
She obviously thought of something, and Slider said encouragingly, ‘Yes?’
‘Well, I had been meaning to come over for a visit next month, but when I rang Dad to thank him for my birthday present, he asked me if I could make it sooner. As it happened I didn’t have anything urgent on, so I said I’d see if I could get a last-minute ticket, and I did.’
‘Did he say why he wanted you to come?’
‘I asked, of course, and he said he had something he wanted to talk to me about, but he wouldn’t tell me what. I said couldn’t it wait until next month, and he said it was rather urgent, but that it was nothing to worry about, and not to be anxious.’
‘So what did you think it might be about?’ Atherton asked, intrigued.
‘Well, my first thought was that he’d got some bad news about his health. Then I thought – well, I thought maybe he and Candida were getting married or something. Although there was no reason not to tell me that on the phone. So I assumed it must be something work-related, that maybe he had a really hot story lead for me.’
‘Couldn’t he have told you about that on the phone?’ said Atherton.
‘Phones aren’t secure, you know. Suppose it was something to do with the government? The US government, I mean. You never know who might be listening. And there’d be documentary evidence to show me. Papers, photos. But that was just a guess. He was being tight-lipped, and when he’s like that you can’t shift him.’
There was a knock at the door and Swilley looked in to say that Porson was back. Slider decided to take a break. Miss Stonax was looking drained.
‘I still have some more questions I’d like to ask you,’ he said, ‘and I’d like you to look at the flat later, but I can see you’re tired and you must be hungry by now.’
She considered a moment. ‘I’m starving,’ she discovered.
‘Then may I suggest that Constable Asher here takes you up to the canteen, and you can get some lunch, and we’ll talk again afterwards. How would that be?’
She shrugged. ‘I’ve nowhere else to go,’ she said bleakly.
That was so true, it gave Slider a pang of pity. ‘Is there anything else we can do for you?’ he asked gently.
‘I’d love a shower and a change of clothes. I’ve been in these things since yesterday.’
Slider nodded. ‘Asher will show you where. You’ve got things in your bag to change into, I imagine?’
‘Obviously,’ she said, and then remembered her manners. ‘I mean, thank you. You’re very kind.’
Outside, in the corridor, Atherton said, ‘Poor kid.’
‘Kid? That’s a bit rich, coming from you.’
‘Manner of speaking,’ Atherton said. ‘So, what do you think?’
‘It could be that he was investigating something after all—’
‘And it turned round and bit him?’ Atherton finished.
‘Yes, but what could it be that was worth his death? Let’s not get carried away by conspiracy theories. It could still have been simple robbery.’
Atherton rolled his eyes. ‘Must you always see both sides of everything?’
‘And it could have been accidental,’ Slider went on reasonably. ‘Maybe the intruder only wanted to knock him out, and just hit him too hard. And then panicked and ran away.’