2

Wednesday

Ben Cooper arrived under the Devil’s Edge as the morning was already getting warm. He followed the directions of a uniformed officer and parked his Toyota on a narrow verge behind a line of vehicles that had reached the scene before him. He unbuckled his seat belt, pressed redial on his mobile phone, and stepped out of the car into the smells of newmown grass and horse manure.

‘Gavin, it’s Ben. Did you get the message earlier? See if you can round up Luke and Becky and get them out to Riddings asap. Drop everything else, mate. This is a priority.’

As he put his phone back into his pocket, Cooper was wishing he’d got a call-out earlier. He couldn’t deny that the adrenalin was flowing. This was his first big challenge as a recently promoted detective sergeant. He had to do a good job, make sure he got his team focused and producing results. Results were what everyone demanded. But you had to be on scene early, and get in at the start, if you were going to play a leading role. Otherwise you started to look like an extra.

He began to walk towards the blue and white tape marking out the crime scene. According to a street sign, he was on Curbar Lane.

Cooper wasn’t too familiar with Riddings. In normal times, these villages weren’t usually the focus of crime. Expensive houses and affluent middle-class residents, by and large. A few months ago, this road had appeared on a list of the most expensive places to buy property in the East Midlands, along with a similar location in Curbar. Decent houses were pricey everywhere in the Peak District. But Riddings and its neighbouring villages seemed to have an appeal all of their own. A highly desirable location. He could almost write the estate agent’s details himself.

The villages of Froggatt, Curbar and Riddings lay on the banks of the River Derwent, between the bigger communities of Grindleford and Baslow. From all of these Derwentside villages, the view to the east was blocked by a series of high gritstone edges – Gardom, Baslow, Curbar, Froggatt. Created through glacial action twenty thousand years ago, they formed a great curve of rock faces swinging away to the north and south, a formidable barrier protecting the clusters of grey-roofed houses in the valley and the wooded dales to the west. An almost continuous twelve-mile-long wall of rock.

Cooper paused for a moment when he reached the outer cordon and looked up. Riddings Edge was considered a mecca for climbers, with routes up to seventy feet high. He knew a few rock climbers, and they told him it presented some of the most testing challenges, comparable to the popular sections of Stanage Edge. Sheer perpendicular faces were split vertically like shattered teeth, angles shifted suddenly to steep slabs or overhangs. Some stretches of rock were said to be notorious for crumbling unexpectedly under the fingers, so that a hold that seemed perfect one second disappeared into thin air the next. Climbers looking for something easier tended to head a bit further north, to Froggatt.

With one hand Cooper shaded his eyes against the sun to study the edge itself. Grotesque, twisted outlines of weather-worn gritstone. Jutting outcrops, misshapen boulders, broken shards of stone, so dark that they seemed to absorb the light. Against the sun, some of the rocks were impossible to distinguish from watching human figures.

He pictured what was beyond the edges. Desolate expanses of scrub known as flats, and vast tracts of moorland beyond them. Above Riddings Edge was the biggest area of moorland, known simply as Big Moor. If you took the trouble to walk to the highest point of the moor, you would see what lay beyond – the suburbs of Totley, Dore, Beauchief, the first tentacles of the city of Sheffield, reaching out towards the Peak.

Cooper gave his name to an officer at the inner cordon, just inside an impressive entrance with electric wrought-iron gates and a long driveway leading up to the front of the property. A Land Rover Discovery stood on a paved parking area, next to a brick-red Beetle Cabriolet. Beyond the house, he saw landscaped gardens, a water feature with a fountain, shrub borders, a lawn containing a children’s trampoline.

He headed towards a group of figures and made out his DI, Paul Hitchens, who nodded to him briefly.

‘Ben.’

‘Sir.’

Hitchens was looking well fed these days, or maybe losing a battle against middle-aged spread. He was always dressed smartly, though – in a suit and tie, like a middle manager in a large insurance company. Cooper brushed automatically at his own leather jacket, wondering whether he should think about changing his image.

The DI’s expression was serious and preoccupied. Cooper decided he ought to make an effort not to let his excitement show too much.

‘House invasion?’ he said.

‘And a bad one.’

August had been a hell of a month under the Devil’s Edge. Warm weather and long evenings tempted people to leave their windows open at night, a back door ajar, their house unattended. It was an opportunist thief’s dream.

But these weren’t opportunist thieves. Their attacks were planned. They had everything so well worked out that they seemed to disappear after the event. Disappeared without a trace, the newspaper reports said. Well, almost.

‘Ben, suppose we were looking at this scene without any preconceptions,’ said Hitchens.

‘Yes?’

‘Well, if the children had been harmed, we might be thinking murder-suicide. Father kills the wife, the kids and then himself. It happens.’

Cooper nodded. ‘Too often.’

They were both silent for a moment, watching the crime-scene examiners go about their work. The circus had arrived early this morning, the SOCOs and medical examiner, the photographers and CID, and the task force officers in their overalls conducting a fingertip search. They were all here promptly, arriving like magic. It was as if everyone had already known where to go, as though they were expecting something like this to happen. Well, it was that kind of summer. One where death had been inevitable.

‘Or it can be the mother. That happens too,’ said Hitchens, as if as an afterthought.

‘No. The mother does it differently. A woman sets fire to the house, so she doesn’t have to see them die.’

‘Yes. And these children are unharmed anyway.’

‘We know, though, don’t we?’ said Cooper at last.

‘Yes, I suppose so. The Savages.’

‘If you like that name, sir.’

‘Well, this was definitely savage. They’ve upped the stakes, Ben. This is a deliberate escalation.’

As he listened to Hitchens, Cooper was trying to absorb the atmosphere of the house. There was always a lingering atmosphere after a violent crime – a sense of the shock and fear, the impact of death echoing from the walls.

‘Maybe it was deliberate,’ he said. ‘But perhaps it all just went wrong for them this time.’

SOCOs were busy everywhere, dusting for fingerprints, hoovering up trace evidence, examining the garden for shoe marks. Cooper realised that he’d arrived only just in time to see the body in situ. A black van was already waiting on the drive to take it away.

‘Besides,’ said Hitchens, ‘the husband isn’t dead. Not yet. Want to take a look?’

Cooper could see the body from the back door. It lay on the kitchen floor, the face turned slightly towards him. A woman, wearing jeans and a white T-shirt stained red at the shoulders. A woman lying in a pool of darkening blood. The stain had spread right across the floor and soaked into the tiles.

There were always a lot of people around at a murder scene. Many of these officers would never have attended a violent death before. Some of them were trying to avoid looking at the body, in case they couldn’t forget it afterwards. It was different if you had an immediate job to do. If you walked into a crime scene with a professional attitude, thinking about carrying out your work, it really focused the mind. Then you were able to concentrate on looking at the evidence, assessing the circumstances of death, planning what should be done next. Sometimes it was only later, when you saw the photographs of the scene, that reality hit you.

‘The victim’s name is Barron,’ said Hitchens. ‘Zoe Barron, aged thirty-six.’

‘The husband?’

‘Jake.’

‘Okay.’

When she was attacked, Zoe Barron had been clutching a bottle of wine. Chateau d’Arche Sauternes, according to the label. It had smashed on the tiles as she fell. The golden liquid had formed thin streams through her blood, and now the smell of wine was turning sour on the morning air. The back door stood open, and flies were starting to converge on the kitchen.

It was the sight and smell of the wine that made Cooper feel suddenly nauseous, the way that blood and the presence of a corpse no longer did. He felt guilty at the excitement he’d experienced on the way here, the adrenalin that had been surging through his body and heightening his sensations as he stepped out of the car. Zoe Barron’s dead eyes stared like a reproach.

‘You know we’re already taking a lot of flak over these incidents,’ said Hitchens quietly.

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Well, take it from me, Ben – that was nothing. The shit is really going to hit the fan now.’

Because the Barron family were far from the first. There had already been four attacks in the space of a few weeks. All the incidents had taken place in villages along the eastern edges, with high-value properties targeted in Hathersage, Padley and Baslow. Aggravated burglaries, with at least two cases of GBH if they ever came to court. Two people had suffered injuries at the hands of ruthless offenders who showed no hesitation in using violence to get in and out quickly. No sneaking through windows while the occupants were asleep for these men.

Yet from the way the Barrons were found, it seemed as though they had expected nothing. For them, it had probably been a normal day. A spell of warm weather meant a chance to tidy up in the garden, a spot of maintenance on the back fence before the autumn began. There were probably no signs of danger as twilight fell in Riddings – only the late-afternoon sun catching the edge, picking out those grotesque, twisted gritstone shapes.

And inside the house? The kitchen was the most dangerous place in any home, the room where more people were killed or injured than any other. But most of those cases were accidents. A fire, a fall, or a faulty electrical connection.

Zoe Barron’s death looked at first glance as though it might have been an accident. The dropped wine bottle, the slippery floor, the hard tiles. And that head injury, oozing blood. But the circumstances were different. The husband, for example. Jake Barron had been found in the sitting room, sprawled in front of a fifty-inch plasma TV.

‘He was lucky,’ said Hitchens.

‘So he’s alive, you say?’

‘Just about. He has serious head injuries. If he survives, there’s a high probability of brain damage.’

‘What about the children? There are children, aren’t there? In a house this size…’

‘Yes, three. Social Services have taken custody of them while some relatives are tracked down. There are grandparents living in Sheffield, and a sister somewhere in Nottinghamshire, I think. None of the kids seems to be injured, but they’re in shock, of course.’

‘Did they see anything? Or is it too early to interview them?’

Hitchens shrugged. ‘It doesn’t seem likely that they did. They were all upstairs in their bedrooms. The youngest was already asleep, and the older two were watching TV, listening to their iPods, chatting to their friends on their mobile phones. All at the same time, as far as we can tell. I suppose it’s one of the advantages of giving kids all those electronic gadgets to use. Personally, I’ve always thought it cuts them off from the real world too much. But sometimes…’

‘Sometimes that can be a good thing,’ said Cooper.

‘Exactly.’

There was a stir behind them in the doorway, and Cooper turned. Detective Superintendent Branagh had arrived. There was no doubt who would be Senior Investigating Officer on this one, then. The inquiry was getting the superintendent’s personal touch. Of course it was. A major, high-profile case like this. A sergeant would be a long way down the pecking order.

Branagh brought an air of authority on to the scene. She had a physical presence that made other officers step back. Cooper sometimes thought it was the shoulders that did it. She was built like a professional swimmer, broad and flat across the shoulders, an effect emphasised by the cut of the jackets she wore. She moved like a rugby player ploughing through the opposition, her face set in a determined glower. Cooper knew he would hate to get on the wrong side of her. But so far he seemed be in her good books. It was to Superintendent Branagh he owed his promotion.

After Hitchens had briefed her, Branagh cast a sharp eye around the immediate scene, then walked to the sitting room window.

‘Neighbours?’ she said.

‘Not so as you’d notice, ma’am,’ said Hitchens.

‘What? This isn’t an isolated farmhouse. We’re in a village. There were plenty of houses visible as we came up the road.’

‘Well, take a look for yourself.’

Each property in the area was screened by high hedges or thick banks of conifers, with long drives and gates to separate them from the road. A desire for privacy was a double-edged sword. In other villages, where smaller cottages clustered together, no strangers could have got too close without the neighbours seeing them. Here, some of these homes were as isolated from prying eyes as if they stood alone on the remotest plateau of Kinder Scout. More so, actually, when you considered the number of walkers scattered across open-access land.

‘You’re right,’ said Branagh. ‘There must be houses nearby, but we can’t see them from here.’

‘Yes, they chose their target well.’

‘And that’s good news, in a way. It suggests they must have checked out the location in advance. Someone will have seen them.’

‘Maybe.’

Branagh was trying to strike a note of confidence, but Hitchens sounded unconvinced. No one was mentioning the word ‘Savages’ now. Everyone knew the superintendent wouldn’t like it. She loathed the media. More than one officer had felt the strength of her disapproval after quoting something from the press. Besides, it hardly seemed necessary. Standing in this house, and with all the incidents that had happened in the last few weeks, the conclusion seemed obvious.

‘We keep an open mind,’ said Branagh. ‘Until the evidence points one way or the other.’

Everyone nodded. But everyone had their own ideas.

Hitchens nudged Cooper.

‘Take a look round outside, Ben. See if you can get any ideas about their approach.’

‘Okay.’

‘Then we need to start talking to the neighbours. Can you get your team organised on that as soon as?’

‘We’re a bit thin on the ground, sir.’

‘You’ll get more help. I’ve got at least one more pair of hands on the way for you.’

Cooper went back out and walked around the house. Roof trusses and window frames were stacked against a wall, presumably ready to go in the extension he could see was being built at the back. He nudged one of the timbers. They were heavy, too heavy for one person to move on their own.

The parking area provided access to a garage block big enough for four cars at least. To the rear, a terrace led via a decked walkway to a large balcony with wrought-iron railings. Doorways led out of the house on to the balcony from the kitchen and a games room.

It was a breathtaking position, with spectacular south-facing views across to Stoke Woods and down the Derwent Valley as far as Chatsworth.

Across a lower deck he found himself looking into a pool room and gym. The garden sloped away to a weeping willow on the boundary. Near a dense coppice of beech trees he could see a greenhouse, a polytunnel, a pergola. Among the beeches he thought he could make out a large tree house.

He was about to start making more phone calls when he saw with relief that his team were starting to arrive. Divisional CID would have an important part to play here. He aimed to make sure of that.

Detective Constable Gavin Murfin was the first to plod his way up the drive, chewing ruminatively on a soft mint and wiping sweat from his forehead.

‘Nice gaff,’ he said. ‘They tell me it costs a fortune to buy a place like this. I might move here when I retire.’

‘Really?’

‘Yeah, and I’ll start breeding flying pigs.’

Of course, there were bigger and better houses than these in Derbyshire. Properties with more bedrooms, higher-specification kitchens, larger grounds and longer swimming pools. But here, location was the factor that raised the price so high. Location, location, location. The estate agent’s mantra was accurate. People were willing to pay big money for a view like this. It was why those who’d grown up here found it so difficult to afford properties in the Peak District.

Murfin peered through the French windows into the lounge.

‘Look at this furniture. I bet they didn’t buy this on eBay.’

Cooper wondered what had been stolen in the break-in. It was too early to know, even if there was anyone here who could tell them. There were no obvious signs. He’d noticed a retro-style DAB radio standing on a kitchen work surface, and an iPad lying on the table. Easy pickings for a burglar. Who could have failed to snatch up the iPad? Unless they were panicked by the violent confrontation with the householder and fled empty-handed. Or maybe they were looking for something specific. A safe, perhaps, where the Barrons kept their most valuable possessions.

The house itself was nothing special, as far as Cooper could see. Not architecturally, anyway. It had been added to many times over the years, and had lost any character it might have possessed when it was built. Most of it was stone, but it failed even to blend in with its surroundings. The size was impressive, though. It seemed to go forever, stepping down on to a lower level and constantly revealing another extension. Guest bedrooms, a gym, a sauna. It seemed to have everything.

‘I wonder what the mortgage is like,’ he said. ‘It makes me shudder just to think about it.’

Murfin grunted. ‘Don’t talk to me about mortgages. I’ve got one as big as a planet. As big as Alpha Centauri. We went for a fixed rate just at the wrong time, like. Typical.’

‘Alpha Centauri?’

‘My lad’s getting keen on astronomy.’

‘Your son is doing wonders for your education, Gavin.’

‘I have to help with his homework. Just one of my many jobs.’

‘Speaking of which…’

‘Yeah, I know. Start knocking on doors. Just call me the tally man.’

‘I’m not sure how many adjoining properties we’ll have.’

‘I can tell you,’ said Murfin.

‘Really?’

‘Did you think I’d been wasting my time until I got here? Oh ye of little faith.’

‘So you didn’t have time to call at that baker’s in Hollowgate?’

‘I was a model of restraint. No, I’ve rounded up information on the immediate neighbours. Modern technology is wonderful. Saves me a bit of leg work, anyway.’

Who did they have to start with? The Barrons’ house was called Valley View for good reason. This whole section of Curbar Lane enjoyed views down into the valley of the Derwent. Along the lane Cooper had noticed a sign for Fourways, and he could just see the roof of another property beyond the trees.

‘Yes, Fourways is the nearest,’ said Murfin, consulting his notebook. ‘The people there are called Holland. On the other side we need to talk to a Mr Kaye at Moorside House, and Mr Edson at Riddings Lodge. Across the way are Mr and Mrs Chadwick. Their house is called The Cottage. Irony, I suppose. There are also two properties backing on to this one from The Hill. A Mrs Slattery at South Croft, and a family name of Nowak at Lane End.’

‘Nowak?’

‘That’s what it says here.’

‘Well, when Luke and Becky arrive, we can divide them between us.’

‘Looks like the lass is here now,’ said Murfin.

DC Becky Hurst was just passing through the cordon, ducking to get under the tape. She was sensibly dressed in jeans and sweater, as if she’d known when she got up this morning that she was scheduled for a day in the country. Her hair was very short and a colour that Cooper would probably call coppery red. He was fairly sure it wasn’t the same colour she’d had last week.

Hurst walked briskly up the drive with that businesslike air with which she approached every job, clutching her notebook and phone in her hand, her expression alert and eager. When she and Gavin Murfin were working together, they often looked like a young Border Collie shepherding an aged ram. Sometimes Cooper felt like calling ‘Come bye’ to get her to steer him into the right pen.

‘Morning, boss,’ she said brightly. ‘Has Gavin given you the information I pulled out on the neighbours?’

Murfin coughed quietly, as if a piece of mint had gone down the wrong way.

‘Oh, you did that, Becky?’ said Cooper.

‘Of course. Gavin had to call in somewhere on the way.’

‘And is there anything else you’ve done for Gavin?’

‘Yes, I checked with the hospital on the condition of the householder, Mr Barron. They say he’s on the critical list.’

‘In hospital-speak, that means they don’t think he’ll make it,’ said Murfin.

‘Thanks, Gavin.’

Hurst looked at the Barrons’ house for the first time, running a keen eye over the facade as if she was counting the windows and doors.

‘So it could be a double murder we’re dealing with,’ she said.

‘Very likely.’

A flash of colour caught Cooper’s eye. On the edge above Riddings, two climbers were clinging to the rock face. From here, their grip on the rock looked impossibly precarious. But inch by inch, foot by foot, they were making their way up towards the edge itself. The clang of karabiners reached him clear on the air.

The rock climbers who’d told him about Riddings Edge had mentioned that many of the routes up those gritstone faces had been given names that reflected a climber’s view of the challenges they presented. There was Torment, Hell’s Reach, Satan’s Gully, Demon Buttress. The message was pretty clear.

Those names alone would be enough to explain why this particular escarpment had become known as the Devil’s Edge. But this summer, they weren’t the only reason.

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