You're lying, thought Peach. You know perfectly well it was Sunita, but you're trying to distance yourself from the girl. Why? I wonder. What else have you to hide? He leaned forward and said, âIt's my belief that you met Sunita Akhtar at number twenty-eight Sebastopol Terrace quite frequently.'
âI don't remember that. But it's too long ago for me to deny it. I've already said that I have only the haziest memories of the girl.'
âIt's rather important to us that you start to remember more. Important to you as well, if you've nothing to hide. This is a murder investigation. We'd like to eliminate you from the list of suspects, if that proves to be possible.' Peach managed to imply that he thought this was very unlikely.
âShe was one of a group. She didn't say a lot. She was quite attractive, I think. I can't remember much else about her.' He spoke tersely, picking his words like one anxious not to make any mistakes with them.
âWe'll have to try to help that memory of yours, then.' Peach stroked his moustache and gave his man a sardonic smile. âDescribe your relationship with this murdered girl, please.'
David wished this truculent, muscular man wouldn't keep mentioning murder. It didn't help, when you were fighting to save whatever you could of your reputation. âI've only the vaguest recollection of her. I didn't see her that often.'
âWhat was the purpose of these meetings in a deserted house?'
âWe smoked a little pot, that's all. I'm not proud of it. It seemed like fun at the time.'
âFunny place to have parties like that. An empty house, with no heating and light. And most of the doors removed for fuel by the people in the squat next door, if my experience of squats is any guide.'
âWe got by. I took an electric fire in with me to give us a bit of warmth, I remember. But I expect most of the meetings were in the spring and the summer. It's difficult all these years later toâ'
âNo electricity in the house at that stage of its life, was there? Made a mistake on that one, Mr Edmonds, didn't you?'
âYes. I remember now, I used to buy one of those small bags of coal from a garage, on the way there. Well, it wasn't always me, I expect. Others must have taken their turn to buy the fuel, butâ'
âDon't insult my intelligence, Mr Edmonds!' It was Peach who was terse now, dangerously so. âAt this rate, we're going to be here for a long time. So, let me shorten that time. I believe that it wasn't just cannabis involved at those meetings.'
âYou forget how much more relaxed things are now than then. It may be regarded as just a recreational drug now, but in those daysâ'
âAnd I don't buy all this rubbish about meeting for parties. There was no heat in that place, and you didn't bring coal or any other fuel into it. You were there to deal, not smoke. And you were dealing more than pot. Heroin, coke, probably LSD in those days. Probably other Class A and Class B drugs as well.'
David Edmonds had taught himself to look people straight in the face as he had climbed the hierarchy at Ormerod's. It was important when you were selling property to have eye contact with people: it gave the illusion at least of frankness and sincerity.
Now he discovered that he could not look this odious tormentor in the eye. He found himself staring hard at the small, scratched table between the two of them and trying hard to summon up the convincing defence which would not come to him. He wanted to shout, âProve it!' at the man, to fling defiance into his face. But something told him that it would be foolish to provoke this man, to challenge him to come up with evidence. Perhaps, indeed, he already had that evidence, was just allowing his quarry to wander ever deeper into the mire. He shook his head and said heavily, âIt wasn't like that.'
In the tension of his struggle with Peach he had almost forgotten the watchful girl beside him. It was she who now said unexpectedly, âThen tell us how it was, Mr Edmonds. We can only help you if you are prepared to help us.'
He looked up into clear eyes, which seemed green to him in the harsh fluorescent light of this square, claustrophobic room. âYou already know from that caution that I was dealing. But I was a small man in a big, dangerous world. I gave it up quickly after that caution. It scared me.'
She let that assertion hang unconvincingly in the air for a moment, as Peach had taught her to do when you got an improbable reply. âI should think other people scared you far more than the police, Mr Edmonds. Drugs are a big industry: a lucrative, evil industry. There are some very big criminal fish in it. Fish who would devour a small dealer like you for breakfast. It's my belief that you were warned off by them.'
He nodded. They seemed to know far more than he had even feared. He wondered what they were going to do about it. âI got out while I could. I've never been sorry about that. And you must admit thatâ'
âIt's your dealings at twenty-eight Sebastopol Terrace which interest us. The house where the body of a murdered girl was hidden.'
She was almost as bad as his first torturer, this girl in the green sweater, with her pretty face and her soft curves and her gentle, persuasive voice. He said hopelessly, âWhat is it you want to know?'
âTell us about your relationship with Sunita.'
âI hardly knew her. She was living next door and she came in with someone else. She was only there a few times.'
âMr Edmonds, we have already established that these weren't merely parties. Number twenty-eight was where you briefed people who were dealing for you, wasn't it?'
He shook his head, trying to find the words which would make a denial convincing. âSunita came in with someone else.'
It was at this point that Peach re-entered the exchange, like an official torturer giving the rack another and crucial turn. âNot good enough, Mr Edmonds. These meetings didn't last long. You were expanding your activities in drugs. Moving from dealing yourself to creating your own network of small-time dealers. It was a good place to brief them, you thought. Away from the police and away from other and larger figures in the drugs industry. Sunita Akhtar was one of the people you recruited to work for you.'
He spoke with such certainty that no one would have known that this was speculation rather than established fact.
David Edmonds certainly didn't. He said, âAll right, I admit it. She was dealing for me, that girl.'
âAlong with several others. Weren't you lucky to get away with a mere caution, in that year?' Peach dwelt a little on the last phrase, as though considering whether they might even now choose to prosecute, in view of his admission. âSo what went wrong with the empire you were building for yourself?'
âI told you. The police caution scared me off.'
âNot good enough, Mr Edmonds. That wasn't what stopped you.'
His eyes flashed desperately round the featureless green walls of the small room, came back to the relentlessly turning cassette in the tape recorder. âI've a lot to lose here. I'm an established figure in a perfectly legitimate business now. Do I have your assurance that this won't go any further?'
Peach gave him the smile of a tiger poised over its helpless prey. âYou have no such assurance. No one could give you one, in the middle of a murder inquiry. If all of this proves to have nothing to do with this killing, it won't be made public by us. But you may of course be called as a witness in a murder inquiry, and questioned in court about your activities at that time. It should be obvious to you by now that your best chance of keeping the lid on all of this is to give us the fullest possible co-operation. So far we've had to wring everything out of you.'
It didn't feel like that to David Edmonds. He felt that he had hardly mustered even a token resistance. But by now he was in no condition to argue. âAll right. I'm sorry. Please understand that I thought all this was far behind me, that I'd never even have to think about it again, let alone talk about it. What is it that you want to know?'
âFor a start, what it was which really stopped you dealing. It wasn't just a caution from the Brunton CID. That merely proved that they didn't know enough about what you were doing to charge you. If they'd had the evidence to show that you were setting up a ring of dealers, you'd have been behind bars. So who was it who warned you off?'
âJoe Johnson.' His voice was scarcely above a whisper, but the name was perfectly clear in the quiet, airless room.
âI thought so.' From a base in Brunton, twenty years ago, Johnson had created a drugs and betting empire which extended through the north-west of England. It had been Percy Peach's greatest achievement of recent years to put him behind bars a few months previously, for his part in the murder of a young prostitute. âThat's better. We're beginning to get answers which make sense at last. Now tell us about Sunita Akhtar, and what went wrong with your arrangements with her.'
âShe came to me, you know. I didn't go out looking for her.'
âAll right. Hardly matters, does it? What happened to her is the important thing. The reason why the three of us are buggering up our Sunday in an interview room at Brunton nick.'
âShe came and asked to deal. Wanted the money. Said she couldn't do legitimate work for fear of her family finding out about it.' He looked up at them, flashing his troubled gaze from one earnest face to the other. âWas that true?'
âIt may have been. So you took her on.'
âYes. She only wanted to do pot, and that was all I wanted to trust her with, for a start.' He shook his head and said with sudden bitter emphasis, âI wish I'd never seen the damned girl!'
âI expect that was mutual, in view of what happened to her,' said Peach grimly. âSo what went wrong with the arrangement?'
âThe attention she brought with her from next door. That's what went wrong! I should never have entertained using her. I didn't realize how little she knew about the dangers of the trade.'
âWally.' Peach nodded sagely, as if he knew everything about a man who was no more than a name to him.
âWally Swift. He knew far more than I knew about drugs. I was a novice.'
âI can believe that. I expect he warned you off.'
âHe did more than that. He questioned Sunita, frightened her to death.' As the apposite nature of that phrase struck him, he shivered suddenly in the warm room. âSwift pinned me in the corner of the pub car park and told me to get off his patch. I tried to say there was room for both of us, but he wasn't having that. He had me by the throat at the time and I wasn't going to argue. I thought that night that he was going to kill me, but he said there were other men to do that, that he didn't need to soil his hands with me.'
âHe was working for Johnson?'
âI'm sure he was. It wasn't mentioned â you don't throw names about in the drugs trade â but I already knew Johnson was the big player in the area.'
âSo you got out. Scared off not by a police caution but by Joe Johnson.'
David wanted to argue. Apart from anything else, it made him sound a wimp, and he wasn't used to that nowadays. He made an attempt to assert the worthiness of his present position. âAnyway, they did me a favour, those people. I found a different and better way to make a living, in estate agency.'
Peach nodded and gave him the smile all of Brunton CID would have recognized as dangerous. âYes. You took up a different kind of lying and distortion, some people would say. Not me, of course. Married the boss's daughter. Joined the Masons. Lived happily ever afterwards. Until someone discovered your murky past.' He studied the sweating man in front of him dispassionately for a moment, then rapped out, âSo what happened to Sunita Akhtar?'
âI told her I couldn't use her any more. I don't know what became of her after that.' David was fighting hard to convince them, to find words which would ring true, but he knew himself that he was far too shaken to be persuasive.
âAnd when would this be?'
âSome time in the spring of 1991. I can't be any more precise than that. It's a long time ago. And it's a part of my life I've put a long way behind me.'
Peach looked at him sourly. âLet me put another scenario to you, Mr Edmonds. Sunita Akhtar knew too much about your activities. She'd already let you down with Wally Swift. She was a walking time bomb as far as you were concerned. So you put her out of the way.'
David Edmonds tried to control the panic he felt welling within him. âNo. I'm not a man for physical violence. I could no more strangle a helpless girl than fly to the moon. You'll see that I have no record of physical violence, anywhere in my life.'
That was true enough. But there was no need to concede the point. Peach said, âYou're not planning to leave the area, are you, Mr Edmonds?'
âI'm going away for a family holiday, that's all. We're off to Madeira for a bit of early spring sunshine.'
âAnd when would this be, Mr Edmonds?'
âNext Friday.'
âRecently arranged was it, this trip to Madeira?'
David heard the scepticism in the man's voice, wanted to scream at him that this had been arranged for months. But they could check on it, if they wanted to, couldn't they? And this man seemed to him all-powerful now. Certainly he seemed to know far more about what had gone on in that squalid house thirteen years ago than David would have believed possible.
He was totally unconscious that he had added considerably to that sum of knowledge, that Peach had not even known Wally Swift's name until a few minutes ago, let alone his activities in the drug trade in 1991. He said, âNo, I only booked the holiday this morning, as a matter of fact. I find you get much better prices if you can leave it to the last minute. I'm lucky, I can do that, being the boss. Not that it's any business of yours.' He stuck this belated piece of defiance on the end of his defensive words, and immediately regretted it.