âI'd say he's been dead fifteen hours at least.'
âLast night, then. Some time during the evening rather than in the small hours of today.'
The thin face winced at such speculation. âTry to find when he ate his last meal. If you can give me that, I'll give you a more accurate time of death when I analyse the stomach contents. We'll give the autopsy priority. No problem with a suspicious death.'
Lambert thanked him and walked into the hall of the house. The scene of crime team had collected various items, principally from the room where the body had fallen and the study upstairs where Preston had spent most of his time. âWe've got prints from the back door handle,' said the man in charge. âProbably they're just from the occupants of the house, but we'll need to match up in due course.'
Lambert drove thoughtfully back into Oldford. He was already fairly certain that Preston had been killed at some time on the previous evening or in the early hours of the night. When he entered the CID section, he had his first piece of positive encouragement from DI Rushton. It had come from a man who was about to be charged with breaking and entering. It was the first useful by-product of petty crime that Rushton could recall. A black or dark-coloured car had driven into The Avenue and possibly to the house of the murder at a crucial late evening time.
It should have been exciting, but Ros Barker found herself unable to concentrate upon the work in hand.
She and Kate were deciding which pictures to select for the exhibition in Cheltenham. Ros had already settled on the major ones, which would be in the most eye-catching positions as people entered the gallery. Harry Barnard had been an invaluable guide to commercial considerations in that. But there were still another twenty smaller paintings to be selected for display. The choosing of them should have been a pleasurable task.
But Kate Merrick had done their shopping in Oldford and come back with the news that the high street there was buzzing with rumours. A major crime, apparently, with extra police being mustered to make up the team of investigators. A local sensation in prospect; such dramatic outrages were to be expected in Gloucester and Hereford and Cheltenham, and all kinds of things went on in the major city of Bristol to the south, but they were almost unheard of in sleepy Oldford. It was merely a historical convenience that a major police centre had been established in Oldford, a happy accident that the now nationally famous Detective Chief Superintendent John Lambert should be a local.
To have a gory crime on even the outskirts of the town would be a splendid bonus for most residents of this normally peaceful, even sleepy, rural area. And if the victim at the centre of all this excitement should turn out to be a local celebrity, that would be bliss indeed. There was a good chance of that, for the centre of the investigation was rumoured to be The Avenue.
Kate Merrick was a local, and a very human one. She brought a little of the excitement that was building in Oldford back to the studio with her. Ros Barker, as the older and senior of the partners, tried to pour the appropriate cold water upon such gossip. But she was thirty, not seventy, and the sight of an animated Kate, with her fair skin flushed and her kittenish features so animated beneath her dishevelled fair hair, brought feelings of pleasure rather than irritation to her.
And both of them knew very well who lived in The Avenue, though for some curious reason neither of them chose at this moment to mention it.
Ros listened to the news of the gossip as it poured from her excited partner, made her ritual protest, then settled for running her fingers down the back of the tremulous Kate, feeling the vertebrae and the active muscles around them as Kate said, âA strangling, that boy in the butcher's said. Someone else came in and said they'd heard it was a whole family. I do hope there aren't any children mixed up in it.'
âMmmm!'
âAnd you can stop that maternal stuff immediately.' But she didn't move.
âMmmm! It isn't maternal.'
âBut you can stop it nonetheless. Work first, play later.'
âMmmm! Promise?'
Kate scrambled hastily away from her partner and on to her feet. âWhy does the young one always have to provide the work ethic round here?'
âI suppose because I've always responded to discipline. When it comes in your shape, it's positively irresistible. The more you accuse me of being an idle old trollop, the more I like it. I suppose I'm just a helpless decadent in my private life, the way all good artists are.'
âGood artists who are idle never became successful ones. And I want you to be successful, Ros. Don't ever have the illusion that I'm with you for your art. You need big money to keep me around and don't you forget it.'
She dodged a half-hearted attempt by Ros to recapture her kitten and they set about selecting which pictures should be among the privileged twenty to be displayed in the Barnard gallery at Cheltenham. Half an hour later it was Kate who said, âI think this one should go in, Ros. It's different from the others.'
It was a nude of Kate lying on the sofa on which they sat every day, but with a light blue drape beneath her. There was a window frame beside her, with a cat, which was not at all kittenish, looking in with bared fangs. A representative of the dangerous world outside, which always threatens the innocence that blooms in privacy, the blurb for the exhibition would explain.
âYou sure?' It was one of Ros's own favourites, but too personal for her to be able to say objectively whether or not it was one of her best. âPeople will recognize you, you know.'
âYou always said that wasn't a consideration, that art comes first and overrides such petit bourgeois considerations.'
âDid I?' But of course she knew she had; she could almost hear her own voice saying it, in her most sententious vein. âWell, it seems different when it's personal. It's an invasion of intimacy. At least you should be consulted before being displayed in all your naked glory.'
âHow very petit bourgeois! When I was looking forward to all my teachers and the poor sods who used to try to be my boyfriends seeing me tits and all!'
âDon't be coarse, young Kate! Well, we'll put it in if you really think we should. If you aren't just being big and grown up when you don't really feel it.'
âWe're putting it in and that's that! Preferably in a spot where it will get maximum attention from your admiring public.'
âI'm not sure I've got a public, admiring or otherwise. And the prime spots have already been agreed with Harry Barnard. But I'm very happy to put it in. I suppose I had reservations partly because I like it myself. I always have reservations about putting what I think is the best of myself on display. It's probably a fear of people being critical of it.'
âOr even worse, of someone buying the painting. I remember you telling me about when you sold your first painting. You felt as though someone was carrying away a part of you and locking it away for ever.'
âYou remember far too much, young Kate.'
âI remember that if you're going to make a living you have to sell everything you possibly can, until you're well established.'
âNow you're beginning to sound like Harry Barnard. I shall defer to your sordid money-grabbing instincts in all my selections. Anyway, I seem to remember the experts in these antiques programmes saying that nothing sells as well as an attractive nude lady.'
âThank you for declaring me an antique. I wonder which pervert's pad I might end up in.'
They selected the rest of the exhibits without argument and with ease, including a couple of extra ones so that Harry Barnard could make the final choice. By four o'clock they were ready for a cup of tea and Ros switched the television on.
They were munching biscuits when the national news finished and the local news began. It did so with a picture of The Avenue and a reporter standing, microphone in hand and with a police car behind him, at the entrance to The Willows. âIn this house last night a man died and foul play is suspected. Police have not yet released the name of the dead man or further details, but the victim is believed to be the well-known radio and television director, Peter Preston.'
Ros Barker had always known it would be so. She looked at Kate Merrick and found her eyes filled with a wild surmise.
Edwina Preston was younger than her husband. Around ten years younger, the experienced eyes of the two senior CID men told them. There was no hint of grey in her light brown hair, but neither of them knew how much of that was due to the hairdresser who had styled it. She looked calm, but so did many people who were riven with grief. Her complexion was good and her only cosmetic seemed to be a rose-pink lipstick. There was no hint of the puffiness that came with weeping around her watchful blue eyes.
The Willows was still a crime scene, and in any case she could not face returning to the big house yet. It was Sue Charles who had convinced her that she needed to inform the police of her whereabouts and her immediate plans; they always spoke to the spouse of the victim as soon as they possibly could, the crime novelist told her confidently. She had rung the station at Oldford from Sue's house. The calm voice of the policewoman had confirmed that they needed to interview her and had then said that the CID officers would meet her wherever she chose. Eventually, to their surprise and perhaps to her own, she had decided that she would come in to the station at Oldford and do it there.
It was half past four on a bright May afternoon, with a gentle breeze and a few high white clouds moving softly across a blue sky that looked so clear that it might have been rinsed by the early morning rain. Lambert opened the window of his office wide, for the first time in the year, and had tea and biscuits brought in for his visitor. Someone must have divined his wish to treat the new widow sensitively, for on the tray there were china cups and saucers he had not known the station possessed. It was surprising what treasures lurked in the deepest recesses of the police canteen.
He asked Edwina to sit in the single easy chair the room possessed. She glanced at his preparations as she took her seat and said, âThank you. I don't know what I was expecting. I suppose one of your tight little interview rooms and a grilling.'
A woman already aware of her surroundings and in control of her emotions. That didn't necessarily mean she wasn't feeling grief. Death, especially sudden death, hit the bereaved in all sorts of ways. A collapse into helpless weeping might be delayed, or it might not occur at all. The mind and the body found all sorts of ways of coping, and in the end most of them worked. It was part of the CID task to study all reactions with ruthless objectivity.
Lambert took in her inspection of the room and the preparations made for her, then watched her listening with her head a little on one side to the unexpected song of a blackbird from the tree below the open window. He said, âI don't spend much time in here myself. I'm afraid I'm not a modern superintendent, supervising an investigation from my desk. I like to be out and about and meeting people.'
âI don't see why you should apologize for that. It sounds good to me.'
He smiled. âI should begin by telling you how sorry we are about your loss, and assuring you of our very best efforts to bring to justice the person who killed Mr Preston.'
âThank you. Perhaps I should respond with an assurance that I was not that person.' He must have looked disconcerted at such directness, because she was driven to add, âThat's why I'm here, isn't it? To clear myself of suspicion.'
Lambert smiled. âIt's part of the reason. You are also here to give us all the information you can about a man who has died. We know very little as yet about Mr Preston, about the way he thought and the way he lived and the sorts of enemies he might have had. Murder victims cannot speak for themselves, as the victims of other crimes usually can.'
She thought about that for a moment, then said with a rueful smile, âIt seems strange, Peter not being able to speak for himself. He always had plenty to say.' She looked up for a reaction, but Lambert was too professional to show how heartily he agreed with that. âHe had rather a lot of enemies, you know.'
She looked at them again. It was Hook who said, âWe didn't know. That's not going to make our job easier, but it's an example of the way we need the thoughts of those closest to him to build up the sort of picture my colleague referred to. If it's not too painful for you at this moment, could you tell us about your own relationship with Mr Preston?'
âWe'd been married for twenty-four years. I suppose I knew Peter better than anyone.' She spoke as if the thought came as a surprise to her. âHe was a complex man. I'm sorry â that tells you nothing, does it.'
Hook smiled. âIt tells us how the person closest to him saw him. It would be useful if you could give us some examples of his complexity.'
âYes.' She paused for so long that it seemed she might say nothing further. But these men were used to silences; they had taught themselves to be unembarrassed by them, to wait as long as it took for people to translate flying thoughts into words. âHe had a self-image which was very important to him. He'd produced programmes for the BBC and the odd one for ITV in the past. One or two important ones. Documentaries on poets and dramatists, things like that. Sometimes, especially with the later ones, they only used snippets of them amid someone else's filming or recording. He didn't like that, but he had to take it. He was quite well paid for his work, in those days.'
âWhich would be when, Mrs Preston?'
âWhen?' She looked for a moment as if Hook had dragged her back from a private reverie. âOh, up to about ten years ago, I suppose. I couldn't be precise, but it was about then that the work began to dry up.'