Stephen Booth - The Corpse Bridge

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Cooper recalled that Mr Redfearn’s body had already started to look badly bloated when it was found. Even after twenty-four hours, when the remains had cooled to the temperature of the environment, the skin of the head and neck turned greenish-red and discolouration began to spread across the rest of the torso. The facial features could become quite unrecognisable.

Fortunately, the weather had been cold and this body was exposed to the air. But once bacteria started to dissolve the tissues, gases formed blisters on the skin, and the body swelled grossly and began to leak. In another day or two it would no longer have looked human.

Fry turned towards Cooper. ‘So what connection are we making between these individuals, if there is one?’ she said.

‘I don’t know, Diane. We haven’t found one yet.’

‘I presume you’re looking?’

‘Of course we’re looking. What do you think we’re doing — sitting around on our backsides with our thumbs in our mouths waiting for someone to come all the way from Nottingham and tell us how to do our jobs?’

She raised an eyebrow and Cooper’s anger subsided.

‘But you haven’t found anything,’ said Fry calmly.

He sighed deeply. ‘Not yet, no. It’s difficult to point to any significant similarities. Whether deliberately or accidentally, both victims seem to have fallen far enough for the impact to be fatal.’

‘It hardly constitutes a pattern.’

‘Not on its own, no,’ agreed Cooper. ‘Apart from that … well, the victims aren’t even the same age or gender. True, they’re both white and ethnically British, but-’

‘But the ethnic minority population in this area is — what? Two per cent?’ said Fry.

‘About that.’

‘It’s hardly a multicultural melting pot, is it? So your killer would have to try really, really hard if he wanted to find a black or Asian victim. As far as the evidence goes, these individuals could just have been chosen at random.’

‘Random,’ said Cooper. ‘I hate random.’

‘I know. Me too.’

Those were always the burning questions. Not how the murderer committed the crime, but what motivated him or her to take those specific, drastic measures.

‘But you still think the two incidents are linked?’ said Fry.

‘Yes, I do.’

When Cooper told her the story of the Bowden burial ground, Fry couldn’t help herself. Her reaction was accompanied by a cynical laugh.

‘Your friend Meredith Burns didn’t mention the graveyard, did she? Just general envy , she said.’

‘That was wrong of her,’ agreed Cooper.

‘Trying to avoid bad publicity for the earl, I imagine.’

‘But they reported the incidents — including the graffiti. They must have known questions would be asked.’

‘Wait a minute, though. Burns said the graffiti was discovered by one of the staff before the first visitors arrived on Friday.’

‘Yes, she did.’

‘Well, what if that wasn’t the case? What if members of the public saw that graffiti before it was covered up? It would be too late to keep it quiet then. They would have been talking about it all over the area by the end of the day. Some of the visitors would have been taking photographs of it on their phones.’

Cooper nodded. Fry was probably right. He could hear the discussion that might have gone on in the estate office.

‘So they decided to make a pre-emptive call,’ he said. ‘Damage limitation.’

‘And I bet they thought it had worked. A visit from the Neighbourhood Policing Team, probably a PCSO making a few notes for her report and tutting sympathetically. Burns said they didn’t expect anything to come of the visit. She meant they were hoping nothing would come of it. She really didn’t want to see us turning up at the abbey. Though she put a good show on, I’ll give her credit for that. Ms Burns had you more interested in looking at the nursery than enquiring into any reason for the incidents.’

‘That’s not true,’ protested Cooper, aware that he was starting to flush, feeling the familiar discomfort that Diane Fry was so easily able to provoke in him.

‘And now the murder of Mr Redfearn,’ she said. ‘If there’s no evident connection between the two individuals, why do you insist on believing these two incidents are linked?’

‘Oh, that’s easy,’ said Cooper. ‘Because of the Corpse Bridge.’

On his desk Cooper found the leaflets that Meredith Burns had given him on Saturday. He put aside the one advertising the Halloween Night and opened the leaflet about the attractions of Knowle Abbey.

For a few minutes he read about its claim to historic associations and the generations of Manbys who’d lived there. He skipped through the stuff about antique furniture and fascinating collections of curiosities, turned the page on details of the restaurant and the craft centre, and the walled nursery. Then he reached a few paragraphs about the extensive parkland on the Knowle estate.

Finally, he dropped the leaflet back on his desk with an exasperated groan.

‘How could I have been so stupid?’ he said.

‘What is it, Ben?’ asked Irvine in surprise.

‘Grandfather,’ said Cooper.

‘What?’

Meet Grandfather, 1am. It’s not a person. It’s a place.’

27

‘The family tend to refer to him as the Old Man of Knowle,’ said Meredith Burns as she led the way from the estate office at the abbey. ‘It’s a traditional Manby joke, I think. A reference to the previous earl. The “old man”, you know?’

Cooper nodded. ‘Yes, I see,’ he said.

As he and Diane Fry followed Burns along the signposted trail into the parkland, Cooper reflected that the old Derbyshire lead miners had often talked about ‘t’owd man’ too. But they’d meant something quite different. They’d usually been referring to the Devil.

But who knew what went on in a family like the Manbys? In any family, in fact. Perhaps there was more than a coincidence in the similarity between the miners’ superstition and the way the Manbys referred to the old earl. That portrait of the seventh Lord Manby in the Great Hall made him look a real tyrant. And when had Knowle Abbey begun to deteriorate so much? Had a previous owner neglected its maintenance, while spending his fortune on something else entirely? That would be enough to cause some degree of resentment among his descendants when they inherited a crumbling estate up to its chimneys in debt.

They’d entered the edge of the trees, and as the trail took a sharp bend they lost sight of the buildings they’d just come from.

‘I don’t like forests,’ said Fry. ‘You ought to know that by now.’

‘This is hardly a forest,’ said Cooper. ‘It’s landscaped parkland. Some previous earl obviously planted a few trees to create a view from the east wing.’

‘But you said there are wild animals.’

‘Roe deer. They’re far more frightened of you than you are of them, Diane.’

Fry didn’t look convinced. But he knew no animals would come near her, if they could help it. She was hardly Snow White, attracting wild creatures to feed trustingly from her hand. She was more the kind of person who would introduce a badger cull, then willingly extend it to include anything that moved in the dark.

‘One of the great things about these big trees is that they make such wonderful landmarks,’ Burns was saying. ‘You might not be able to find your way through a wood where all the trees are the same age and look identical. But anyone can find this grand old chap.’

‘And lots of people do, I suppose?’ said Cooper.

‘Oh, he’s a tourist attraction in his own right. We have signs on all the trails to point the way to him. Visitors love to come and stand underneath his branches and have their photos taken, or see how many of them it takes to reach all the way round his trunk. British people have a very affectionate relationship with this particular species.’

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