Stephen Booth - Dead And Buried
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- Название:Dead And Buried
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To help her think, Fry turned on the CD player. Annie Lennox was still there, waiting for her, the one person she could trust in an unreliable world. Lennox’s voice came in over the first chords to an acoustic version of ‘Dark Road’. She was singing about emotions she wasn’t feeling, a meaning she wasn’t listening to. Fry nodded her head to the song. She knew that particular dark road.
Between the two distractions, she managed not to notice much of Edendale until she was turning off Greaves Road into West Street. She reported to DCI Mackenzie, then called in to the CID room and collected Becky Hurst to sit in with her when she reopened the interview with Nancy Wharton.
‘Poor Maurice,’ said Nancy, her arms still wrapped tightly round her body. ‘It was horrible. But he was out of control. He wasn’t responsible for his actions. That’s what I’ll say, you know. That’s what we’ll all say.’
‘But it isn’t as simple as that,’ said Fry. ‘There was only one person who was capable of organising the clean-up. It needed a level head, clear thinking. Only one person was in any condition. And you don’t drink, do you, Nancy?’
‘I did that night,’ she said. ‘But not until much later.’
Nancy continued to tell the story. She no longer needed much prompting. Now that she was halfway there, she wasn’t going to stop.
‘Afterwards … well, some of the lads rallied round, and we all agreed on a story.’
‘The lads?’
Her jaw was set in a hard line. ‘I wouldn’t tell you their names. Not for anything.’
Fry recognised a dead end when she saw one. But there were ways round it. More routes than one to the truth.
‘Go on, then,’ she said.
‘At one time, Maurice only really felt at home in one place. Where the heart of the Light House was — in the cellar. So that’s where we chose. We knew we’d have to move them, but it was the best place for the time being. The mine shafts were searched at the time, but the pub wasn’t.’
Nancy nodded slowly. ‘Well, it was strange, but it was only when we saw the fires on the moor and started to worry about the pub getting damaged that it suddenly occurred to us that there would be new owners going in. They would be sorting everything out, looking through the records. We’d put the old filing cabinets down in the cellar and forgotten all about them. It was the place we always put things we didn’t want.’
‘And when the inquiry ground to a halt …?’
‘We thought it was all dead and buried.’
‘Dead and buried? Not really. It must always have been in your mind.’
She shrugged hopelessly. ‘Well, you’re right. It was always in my mind. I was always wondering when something might happen, whether someone would talk. I knew it would only take a slip of the tongue, a careless remark.’
Fry couldn’t imagine what it must be like to live with that sort of fear, the terror of a secret slipping out. No matter what Nancy Wharton said, it must fill every minute of your day, until you suffered from an unremitting paranoia about every little thing.
‘Later on, we moved everything,’ said Nancy. ‘They buried the anoraks and stuff, but the bodies … well, have you ever tried shifting a body? It took a couple of quad bikes to get them well away from the pub on to the moor. Then a few fires were started to draw attention away. That nearly went wrong. The wind changed direction, and the fires moved towards the pub instead of away. My God, watching that smoke coming nearer and nearer, we panicked. We had to get the freezers out of the cellar. We knew there’d be evidence — blood, and so on. We’d already cleaned up in the bedroom, scrubbed the floor with bleach, replaced the carpet and the bedding, even stripped off all the wallpaper and redecorated. It never came to an end, the clearing up and covering over. The blood always seemed to be there.’
‘Talking to yourself again, Ben?’
Cooper turned and found Villiers watching him. He had been so absorbed that he hadn’t heard her coming down the steps into the cellar.
‘No one else will listen to me,’ he said.
She laughed. ‘Liz Petty is working in the Bakewell Room, where the Pearsons stayed. She says there’s blood residue everywhere.’
‘I’m not surprised.’
‘It’s going to keep her busy for a while. She ought to have some help, Ben.’
‘I know. I’ll call in and chase someone up. Well, I will when I can get a signal on my phone.’
‘I’m off network too,’ said Villiers.
‘It’s these cellars.’
‘Don’t you start to feel a bit uneasy when you’re out of touch? Or is it just me?’
‘It used to be like this all the time when I was in uniform. We didn’t have mobile phones, and the old analogue radios were almost useless in parts of this division.’
Villiers stepped into the office area. ‘What are you doing anyway?’
Cooper showed her the guest record. ‘What do you think of that?’
‘It’s a turn-up. But it doesn’t mean Mad Maurice wasn’t responsible for the deaths.’
‘It shows that Nancy wasn’t telling the truth, about that part of the story at least. And what was it she said in the interview? You can’t blame us for trying to protect our family. Anyone would have done it. That word “family” suggests more than just Maurice to me. It sounds like a mother talking about her children.’
As he spoke, Cooper moved back into the main part of the cellar and stood under the delivery hatchway that led outside. Stepping up on to the stone ledge, he heaved at the hatch. He managed to raise the edge of one door an inch or two before the weight of the furniture stacked on top prevented it moving any further. If he tilted his head at an angle, he found he could just see through the inch of space he’d created. He saw a rusty table leg in the foreground, a patch of burnt earth, and a length of concrete stretching away from the building.
Then he blinked in surprise. A white pickup stood by the garages, next to his own car. A Mitsubishi L200, if he wasn’t mistaken. But before he could see any more, the weight of the door proved too much for his bruised shoulder, and he had to let it down.
‘Whose is the pickup?’ he said.
Villiers stared at him. ‘Pickup? I’ve no idea.’
‘Has Josh Lane left?’
‘I think so. I saw him out of the building.’
‘Well did someone else arrive, then?’
‘I don’t know, Ben. You can’t hear anything from down here.’
‘Yes, that’s true.’
Worried now, Cooper checked his phone for a signal and saw that it still read Network lost. Blasted cellar walls.
But he saw from the display that he’d received a text message before the network dropped. He tapped the messages icon and found a text from Diane Fry. You need to know this. DNA match confirmed from blood. Call asap.
‘Mmm. But who is it a match to?’
‘Sorry, Ben?’
‘It’s okay. I’m talking to myself again.’
‘Liz will have to cure you of that. We don’t want you getting a reputation as an eccentric.’
Cooper turned slowly and took in the cellar — the empty kegs, the abandoned equipment, the beer lines snaking upwards. He gazed at the ceiling, where the lines disappeared into the bar to connect to the pumps.
‘We’ve missed something, haven’t we?’ he said.
‘Have we?’ said Villiers. ‘We’ve been through every room — the kitchens, the bedrooms, all the stores and outbuildings. And now the cellars.’
But there was something lodged in the back of Cooper’s mind — the part of the brain that most resembled a landfill site, full of unwanted debris. If you poked around in the detritus long enough, you sometimes unearthed a valuable item you’d thought was lost.
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