Quintin Jardine - Hour Of Darkness
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- Название:Hour Of Darkness
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‘Yes, but just the once. She made an impression, though. She was on radio, but from what he said she should have been on telly. Mind you, he was impressionable then,’ she added.
Pye chuckled. ‘I’ll let you into a secret; I am not so old that I don’t remember Mia Sparkles myself. I must have been about sixteen when she was on the radio, on that Airburst station.’
‘She passed me by,’ she commented, ‘but then I was a Radio Forth girl.’
‘Andy’s right about her looks,’ the DI said, softly. ‘I remember her face was on billboard posters for a couple of weeks, and it was a traffic hazard. She had a big audience among teenage kids in and around Edinburgh. She used to talk about things that they were actually experiencing, voice-breaking, periods, wet dreams, that sort of stuff.’
‘From what you’re saying,’ Karen laughed, ‘there must have been a few wet dreams about her.’
‘I’m sure there were. And then she just disappeared. I actually remember tuning into Airburst that day, after school. They trailed her programme as usual, but when the time came she wasn’t there. The previous presenter just carried on, saying that Mia Sparkles had been unavoidably detained, but she never did turn up.’
‘So I gather. Did it make the papers? I can’t recall.’
‘Yes. It was a one-week wonder. The rival radio stations rubbed it in big time, as you’d expect. It was the beginning of a very short end for Airburst. It folded not long after that.’
‘I wonder if she was ever listed as a missing person,’ the DS mused.
‘I’ve been wondering the same,’ Pye told her. ‘To tell you the truth, in my early days in CID, I actually looked her up and she wasn’t. But of course, I never knew her real name was Watson. In fact that makes me think; it might be worth checking again, under that surname. If she was reported missing, and she’s never been found, she should still be on a list, even going that far back. Could you do that for me, now?’
‘Yes, I will,’ Neville said, ‘but what will it tell us?’
‘It’ll tell us who reported her. That might be interesting.’
‘True,’ she admitted. ‘I’ll get on it and let you know.’
‘No!’ he protested, laughing. ‘I’m off duty, remember.’
She left him to the rest of his weekend, and called the missing person records office. It was on skeleton staffing, and as she expected, her request for a trace on a report going back three decades was greeted unenthusiastically.
‘I’ll get back to you,’ the civilian clerk sighed, after he had noted the details.
‘Within half an hour,’ she added.
‘Oh, I don’t know if I can do that,’ the man warned.
‘I do. This is a live inquiry. So pull your finger out, please.’
She left him to it and made herself a coffee from the CID room supply, being careful to drop a pound coin into the kitty tin. She would have made two, but Wright was deep in conversation.
She took it back to her temporary desk, and was wondering whether there was a doughnut shop within walking distance of Queen Charlotte Street, when she was interrupted by another call.
That guy must have taken me seriously , she thought, smiling, as she took it, but the voice on the line, although male, was much older.
‘Is that the officer in charge of the Watson investigation?’
‘For today only, yes. Detective Sergeant Karen Neville.’
‘No DI there?’
‘Afraid not,’ she replied, mildly annoyed. ‘I’m as good as it gets over the weekend.’
‘Of course, sorry, Sergeant.’ The man was contrite. ‘Don’t mind me. My name is Tom Partridge, detective superintendent, retired for more than a few years. There’s something I think I should report to you. I had a visit yesterday from a young man, a very young man indeed. He turned up on my doorstep, wanting to ask me about a book that I wrote after I handed in my a warrant card. It was about the life and times of a villain called Perry Holmes. Have you heard of him?’
‘Yes I have, and I’ve heard of you too, Mr Partridge.’
The old man laughed, softly. ‘The old crank with the bee in his bonnet, eh?’
‘No,’ she contradicted him, ‘a well-respected officer, who left a lot of good things behind him in this force.’
‘You can flatter me any time, Sarge; I love it. Anyway, this kid introduced himself as Marlon Hicks, and it became obvious he was quite upset. He said he’d tried to get a copy of my book from the Central Library. . it’s either that or the charity shops these days. . but the librarian there told him the only copy was out. As it happened, I go there quite a lot and the lady knows where I live, so she sent him along to see me.’
‘Was it wise for her to do that?’
‘Aye, it was fine,’ he replied. ‘I’ve got no problem with it. I know who to let over my door and who to keep on the step. This boy I let in and I talked to him. He told me a very strange story, and a sad one too. He’d just found out the day before, he said, that he was the son of a man called Marlon Watson.’
‘I know,’ Neville said. ‘It was me who told him. We had to interview him in connection with the Bella Watson murder inquiry. . I’m assuming you know about that. . and there was no way I couldn’t tell him why.’
‘Of course not,’ Partridge agreed, ‘but how much did you actually tell him?’
‘Only what was necessary for the investigation.’
‘You didn’t tell him who the police think killed his father?’
‘Absolutely not.’
‘No, I thought not, because that’s what he wanted to know from me. Can I ask you, do you know who did it, Sergeant, Karen if I may, and I’m Tommy, by the way?’
‘I think so, Tommy. If I recollect correctly the evidence suggested that Perry Holmes had him killed.’
‘That’s right. Bob Skinner. . he led the investigation. . proved that beyond a doubt. But the case never came to court, see, because Perry’s son, Hastie McGrew, made sure there was nobody left alive who could tie his father to the crime. I never flat out accused him in my book either, but only because the lawyers wouldn’t let me.’
‘Did you tell young Marlon any of this?’ Neville asked.
‘No, I didn’t. I just felt it wouldn’t be prudent, because the boy was very wound up. He said that he’d misjudged his father all his life, and that now he realised that he was a victim and not a bad man at all. He was angry, Karen, disturbed. . unquiet, to use an old word, a characteristic that I observed for many years in the genes of the Watson family.’
‘Are you saying that we should have another word with him?’
‘At the very least,’ the old detective replied. ‘All the more so because I’ve just had a call from my daughter. She’s the editor of the Saltire newspaper. She told me that this morning the boy came into their front office looking for old issues. He told the laddie there that he’d been to see me and that I’d advised him to check all the old cuttings about the Marlon Watson murder.’
‘And did he?’
‘Aye, he did. The lad in the office just happened to mention it later to my June, by chance, after he’d gone. I remember those cuttings, Karen; my June wrote some of the stories and they must have had better lawyers than me because they didn’t leave much room for doubt that Perry Holmes was behind the killing and that his son was involved too.’
‘I’m with you,’ Neville murmured.
‘Good, ’cos I still keep tabs on that crew, and I know that Hastie’s out of jail and back in Edinburgh.’
‘We’re on it, Tommy,’ she said. ‘Thanks a lot.’
‘Don’t mention it. It takes me back to the old days. I wish you luck; he seemed like a nice boy, and I’d hate him to do something daft. There’s been enough of that in his family.’
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