Alex Gray - A small weeping
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- Название:A small weeping
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Solomon was going to see the people at the Grange today, he’d told her. She’d likely see him in the staff club just around teatime. Sometimes she’d have a quick orange juice as she scanned the room for her dark, bearded friend. Other times he’d be there ahead of her reading the papers in what had become their favourite corner. Funny how he was a creature of habit in some ways when he was so unpredictable most of the time. They’d discussed the two murders, Rosie offering her professional opinion but sparing him the grislier pathological details when she remembered. Solly had a delicate stomach for such things. The pathologist usually delighted in tormenting lay people with the finer points of her post-mortems but she’d made an exception with Solly.
Lorimer had teased her about their relationship. She was fairly sure Solly found her attractive. He had invited her down to London for his sister’s wedding, hadn’t he? They’d had a great time. He’d been so attentive, showing her all the traditions surrounding a Jewish wedding to make her feel at ease. And afterwards they’d danced and laughed all night. Lorimer was no fool. She fancied Solly like crazy. It had taken all her powers of concentration to keep her hands on the steering wheel as they’d driven back up north. But Solly? Just how did he really feel about her?
Rosie looked in the mirror above the basin. She pushed her fingers through her blonde hair. There were a few wee laughter lines around the eyes but it wasn’t a bad face, she told herself. No need for the Botox just yet. Maggie Lorimer always joked that Rosie was the other woman in her husband’s life. That was just Maggie’s way, though. The older woman was given to flattery. Rosie stuck out her tongue at the face in the mirror and turned away. Poor Maggie. She didn’t have much fun with Lorimer working all the hours that his job demanded. Maybe she could suggest a night out. A foursome. Cheered by the idea, Rosie whistled to herself as she came out into the corridor of the mortuary. A shelf full of white skulls grinned down from above as if sharing in her good humour.
Alice paused from cleaning the bathroom windows as she looked down on the figure below. From her vantage point high above the grounds of the clinic she could see him wandering slowly towards the back of the building as if he was looking for something. She gave the window a push outwards so that her cloth could reach the fixed pane in the middle. But she couldn’t take her eyes off the stranger.
‘Hey, Nellie,’ she called back into the room. ‘C’mere an’ see this. This one doesnae look like polis, does he?’ she asked as a thickset woman in green overalls pushed her way towards the open bathroom window. Together they stared at the figure below them. As if sensing he was being watched, the man turned and looked up at the two cleaners.
‘Naw, he isnae polis,’ Nellie decided. ‘Looks mair like a foreigner tae me, hen.’
‘Whit’s he doin’ moochin aroon’ here, well?’
Nellie shrugged. It was none of her business. She hadn’t liked being questioned by that wee slip of a polis wumman. But still an’ all, there wis a murderer on the loose.
‘Ach, I suppose we’d better tell Mrs Baillie,’ she decided.
Alice screwed her face up. ‘Gonnae you go, eh, Nellie? Ah don’t like.’
Nellie grinned. ‘Feart of her are ye?’ Seeing Alice’s weak grin, the older cleaner stuffed her cloth into the pocket of her overalls and turned to leave. ‘Ach, a’right. But
keep an eye on whatshisface, OK?’
‘Aye. Thanks, Nellie. Yer a pal.’
Down below, aware of the slight interest he had created, Solomon turned back towards the front door. He would have to request permission now to walk about the grounds. A pity. He’d liked to have wandered around the back of the building free from any prying eyes. He looked up at the name carved out of the key stone above the main door. The Grange were the only visible words, there was no brass plate to intimidate the patients with the idea of a clinic for neural disorders. In fact, it was more like coming to a private residence. That was probably the whole idea, he told himself.
Solomon stood on a tiled porch beyond the open storm doors trying to peer through the frosted glass. The security panel to the right of the door showed five buttons. Five numbers to be memorised. Solomon wondered how often they were altered, how they were chosen and by whom. He heard the sound of feet approaching, then a blurred shadow opened the door to him.
‘Dr Brightman? We were expecting you. I’m Mrs Baillie. Won’t you come in.’ As the director of the clinic held open the door, Solomon’s first impression was of a woman who’d had too little sleep for too long. She looked as if she were holding herself together by sheer strength of will.
‘Actually I’d like to look around the grounds. Especially at the back of the building,’ Solly explained in his gentlest voice. ‘Would that be all right, Mrs Baillie?’ He could see the relief in the woman’s body as she nodded.
‘Will you need me after that, Dr Brightman?’ she asked, then seemed to hesitate before adding, ‘I have an appointment in town.’
‘If I might just have your permission to stroll around? It helps to form an impression of what may have happened that night.’
‘Of course. Ellie Pearson will be here to show you the layout of the Grange. She’s our most senior member of staff.’
The woman’s voice had become more brisk, as if she resented Solly’s deference. As the door closed behind her Solly wondered what sort of a strain it must be to run a clinic of this sort where one of your staff had been murdered.
At the back of the building a high wall ran the length of the grounds. Thick rhododendrons divided the Grange’s gardens from those properties on either side. Solomon imagined the closed-in aspect of the grounds had been simply to maintain privacy whenever the house had been a private dwelling. Now it took on another aspect. As he gazed around he could see that there was little chance of escape for anyone who wanted to make a secret getaway. And that included the residential patients themselves. They had to have a certain amount of security, Solly told himself, remembering the panel on the front door. There was a responsibility to care for fragile people here, some of whom were being protected from themselves. How, then, had the killer made his way in and out of the house when there were such watchful eyes among the staff? The only conclusion he could come to was that the killer had been inside the clinic from the start. That’s what Lorimer had suggested. One of the patients might be the selfsame killer that had strangled Deirdre McCann. They were trying to obtain permission to take forensic samples right now. Adhering to Human Rights legislation held up the process considerably, he knew, making officers like DCI Lorimer champ at the bit.
So far medical staff, auxiliaries, cleaners and odd-job men had all been questioned along with the more lucid patients. Even their friends and families were coming under Lorimer’s scrutiny. There was nothing to indicate an escape route for a killer coming out of this area unless he had been a pole-vaulter. The wall behind him was easily twelve feet high and the bushes seemed quite impenetrable. No, the killer must have taken the route across the road, possibly through the dentists’ car park and out into that back lane. Or, a little voice reasoned, he’d simply stayed inside the clinic, going about his normal night-time activities. His or hers.
Nothing was even clear about that, although Rosie had voiced her opinion that it probably had been a man who’d taken the lives of the two women. Strangulation had been exacted with considerable force. But, Solly had argued, many of the nursing staff were females used to hard manual work. Nursing was a pretty physical occupation after all, even in a private clinic like this one.
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