âIt's not too late, you know,' she heard Beresford say in a gentle voice.
âToo late for what?' she asked.
âToo late to ask for this case to be assigned to another DCI.'
But it
was
too late, Paniatowski told herself. It had already been too late to shrug off the responsibility for Jill Harris when she'd sneaked out of the wedding reception.
âI told you at lunchtime, in the pub, that however this turned out I could handle it,' she said.
âYes, you did,' Beresford agreed. âBut now that you've seen the girl for yourself . . .'
âThere's not much more that we can accomplish in the dark,' Paniatowski interrupted him. âHere's what I'd like you to do, Colin. First of all, make sure that all non-essential officers are moved back well away from the crime scene . . .'
âI still think that . . .'
â. . . and then I want the park locked, and uniformed officers posted all around the perimeter. Make sure there's at least a dozen of them on duty throughout the night, and if anybody from upstairs starts bitching about how much that's going to cost in overtime, just refer them to me.'
âI'll see to it, boss,' Beresford said, giving up on his attempt to change her mind. âShould I also arrange for somebody to inform the mother?'
âNo,' Paniatowski said. âI'll do that myself.'
âI'd make sure that whoever was sent was well trained and sympathetic,' Beresford said.
âI know you would, Colin â but it has to be me.'
âAll right,' Beresford said dubiously. âIn that case, I'll see you in the Drum in, say, an hour.'
Paniatowski forced herself to take another look at the dead girl, and then thought about the other girl â the one who would be waiting for her back home.
âNo, after I've told Mrs Harris the bad news, I think I'll make an early night of it,' she said.
I
t was still dark when Paniatowski left home, but by the time she reached police headquarters, the sun was shining weakly down on the sheen of frost that covered the pavements.
By six thirty-two she was at her desk â a cigarette in her left hand, a cup of strong black coffee conveniently close to her right â and had started to make phone calls to people who were still snugly wrapped up in a cocoon of sleep.
Roger Hardcastle, the producer of Northern Television News was her first victim.
âI'd like to book a spot for a police spokesman on the nine a.m. news bulletin, Roger,' she said.
âIs it a murder?'
âYes, you can get the details from the police press office.'
âWill it be you who's putting in an appearance?'
âI doubt it. I'll probably send DI Beresford.'
âPity,' Hardcastle mused. âColin Beresford's a nice enough lad, but you look much better on television.'
âIt's not entertainment were talking about here, Roger â it's
murder
,' Paniatowski said.
âSorry,' Hardcastle replied, sounding slightly shamefaced, âbut when you've been in the news business for as long as I have, it's sometimes hard to tell the difference.'
Her next call was to the editor of a local evening paper.
âI want the story on the front page,' she told him, âand I want it emphasized that while we always appreciate help from the general public, we
really
need it this time.'
âUnderstood.'
âWhat time does your first edition come out?'
âUsually around two o'clock in the afternoon.'
âIf you make it midday, I'll owe you one.'
âWe can't possibly have it ready by midday,' the editor protested.
âThe girl was
thirteen
,' Paniatowski pointed out. âThirteen!'
âAll right, all right, I'll do my best,' the editor promised.
It was as she hung up the phone that she noticed the slight tremble in her hand.
âYou're just tired,' she told herself.
Of course it was just tiredness. It couldn't be anything else, for while it was true that the murder victim this time was a girl of around the same age as Louisa â and a girl, moreover, who she might have talked to at the wedding reception but hadn't â this was still a case just like any other.
Ideally, the subject of an interrogation should be tired and hungry, and the two prison officers who had just come off the night shift, and were now sitting across from George Baxter, fitted the bill perfectly.
Their names were Higgins and Fellows, and they were in their mid-thirties. They both wore their hair short, though Higgins' hair was blond and Fellows' was brown. Fellows looked the more intelligent of the two, but also the more cautious.
âYou were on duty the morning Templar was beaten up in the shower, weren't you?' Baxter asked.
âThat's right,' Fellows agreed.
Several seconds' silence followed the admission, then Baxter said, âI'd appreciate it if you'd tell me exactly what happened.'
âThe shower block has ten showers, and the procedure is to take the prisoners there in batches of twenty,' Higgins said. âWhat's supposed to happen is that ten of them stand in the corridor, while the other ten take their showers. Then the ten that have showered take their turn at waiting in the corridor, while the other ten get
their
showers.'
âThe thing is, that assumes all ten showers are working properly,' Fellows added.
âAnd sometimes they're not?' Baxter asked.
âAt best, there's never more than five or six of them in working order,' Fellows said. âThat means there has to be five prisoners in the showers, and fifteen waiting outside.'
âAnd there are only two officers supervising them?'
âThat's right.'
âIsn't that rather a high ratio of prisoners to officers?' Baxter wondered. âWhat if they decided to attack you?'
âThey wouldn't dare,' Higgins said.
âWhy not? What would stop them?'
âThe thought of having their fingers broken,' Higgins smirked.
âShut up, Tony!' Fellows warned him.
âSo if any prisoner attacked any officer, the governor would have his fingers broken?' Baxter asked.
âYeah, right â like this governor of ours would have the balls to do that!' Higgins said contemptuously.
âI told you to shut up,' Fellows said.
âSo if you're not talking about the governor, you must be talking about the chief officer,' Baxter said.
âMr Jeffries wouldn't even think of doing that,' Fellows said, obviously furious at his colleague for putting him in this position.
âThen who would?' Baxter pressed.
Fellows sighed. âThere are a few hotheads in this place, but most of the prisoners just want a quiet life,' he said. âAnd that means that the last thing they need is for an officer to be assaulted while going about his duties.'
âSo the prisoners who want a quiet life break the fingers of anyone who steps out of line?' Baxter asked.
âNo,' Fellows replied. âAs long as everybody knows they'd do it if they had to, there's no need for any violence.'
âBut there
is
violence,' Baxter pointed out. âViolence was done to Jeremy Templar.'
âThey didn't hurt him because he stepped out of line,' Higgins said. âThey hurt him because he was a sick bastard.'
âWhich brings us neatly back to that morning in the showers,' Baxter said. âWhat happened?'
âI was in the shower block, and Officer Higgins was supervising the prisoners in the corridor,' Fellows said. âThen Officer Higgins came into the showers, and asked me to help him deal with a situation that had developed.'
âWhat kind of situation?'
âTwo of the men waiting in line had got into a fight, and he needed help separating them. I stepped out into the corridor and dealt with the matter. When I returned to the showers, Templar was lying on the floor of the stall. He'd been beaten up.'
âAnd there were only four or five men who could have been responsible for the attack, weren't there?'
âYes.'
âDid you question them?'
âYes.'
âAnd?'
âAnd they all denied having anything to do with it.'
âWhat did Templar have to say about it?'
âTemplar knew better than to say
anything
,' Higgins said, with another sneer.
âOur hands were tied,' Fellows added. âYou can't charge five men with an attack when only one of them might be responsible, and since Templar refused to help us . . .'
âI'd like to see the report you wrote on the attack,' Baxter said.
âYou'll have to ask Mr Jeffries for it â but it won't tell you anything we haven't already said,' Fellows said.
âI'd also like to see the other report.'
âWhat other report?'
âThe one on the incident that occurred outside the shower block â the one that Officer Higgins called you out of the showers to deal with.'
âAh, well, you see, I'm not sure there is one,' Fellows said uneasily.
âWhat do you mean â you're not sure?'
âIn comparison to what happened to Templar, that was no more than a scuffle, and we may have forgotten to write it up.'
âBut it did happen, did it?'
âYes, of course it happened.'
There were only two possible explanations of the incident, Baxter thought. The first was that there had been no fight in the corridor, and the two officers had invented it to excuse the fact that they'd failed to protect Templar.
The second was that there
had
been a fight, and that it had been carefully orchestrated to distract Higgins' and Fellows' attentions while someone in the showers laid into the pervert.
Both explanations had their merits, and it was impossible â for the moment â to decide which one of them was the truth.
âThank you, gentlemen,' he said. âYou've been very helpful.'
And he couldn't miss the look of relief on Fellows' face that the interrogation was over.
Fairfield High School for Girls was about as posh as schools got in Whitebridge. It was situated on the edge of the town, in an old neo-Gothic mansion, and such had been the demand in the previous few years for the kind of âsuperior education' it claimed to offer, that several modern annexes had been grafted onto the original building.
Looking at the gothic part of Fairfield from the road, Kate Meadows thought back to her own school days.
She recalled vividly the countless occasions on which she had been hauled into her headmistress' study, a stuffy overbearing room which smelled of leather and spinsterhood. She had only to close her eyes to see the headmistress, Miss Harvey, a woman in late middle age, who had worn heavy tweed costumes, kept her grey hair rigidly in place with a complex network of pins and grips, and looked at the world through heavy-framed glasses.
âSo you're here again, Katherine.'
âYes, Miss Harvey.'
And then one of the obligatory lectures would begin. They were long, rambling lectures, full of disapproving adjectives and adverbs that were framed within rhetorical questions.
The only relief from the stream of condemnations came when Miss Harvey broke off to point to one of the numerous photographs of âold girls' that adorned her wall.
âThat's Lucinda Hubbard. She's only a few years older than you, but she's already a junior partner in a most prestigious firm of accountants.'
Good for her â the smug-looking cow!
âAnd that's Miranda Bonneville. She's a junior lecturer in St Hilda's College, Oxford now, and I wouldn't be the least surprised if she is offered a chair by the time she is forty.'
And she was more than welcome to plop her big fat academic arse on it, because Kate didn't want it!
âI really would have thought, Katherine, that these girls would serve as an inspiration to you.'
âThey do, Miss Harvey.'
âWell, I must say, that's certainly not apparent from either your work or your attitude.'
But they had inspired her â though not in a way the headmistress would have hoped.
âLook at me now, Miss Harvey,' she said to the empty air. âA common-or-garden police sergeant, rubbing shoulders with all sorts of riff-raff. Ain't that just grand?'
It seemed somehow wrong to be entering the morgue without Dr Shastri standing there at the door to greet her, Paniatowski thought, and she found herself hoping that the beautiful and delicate doctor would soon get bored of exploring her exotic roots and return to dank, chilly Whitebridge.
It was the new doctor â wasn't her name Liz Duffy? â who was conducting the post-mortem, and as the attendant showed Paniatowski and Crane into the dissecting room, she looked up from her work and said, âGood God, Jack Crane! What are you doing here?'
âYou know each other, do you?' Paniatowski asked.
âKnow each other?' Dr Duffy repeated. âI should say we do! Jack and I were atâ'
âAt school together,' Crane interrupted hastily and â it seemed to Paniatowski â rather shakily. âAs a matter of fact, our families lived on the same street, didn't they, Liz?'
âEr . . . yes . . . er . . . they did,' Duffy said, and though she was wearing a surgical mask, Paniatowski could still read the puzzlement in her eyes. âBut I still don't know what you'reâ'
âI'm a detective constable now,' Crane said, interrupting her again. âI bet that shocks you, doesn't it? You probably always imagined I'd end up as a bricklayer or a window cleaner.'
âWell, I certainly never thought you'd end up as a policeman,' Liz Duffy said, in evident confusion.
âAnyway, we're not here to chat about old times,' Crane said. âWe've come to find out what you can tell us about the body, haven't we, boss?'