He sniffed, finished his tea in one gulp, wiped his nose on the cuff of his overall, decorating it with another hydrocarbon smear, and said, âThat your Astra? VXR, innit? What is it, two litre? What's it drive like?'
Thus the two chaps were able to wade safely back before the incoming tide of psychoanalysis and â
aargh
! â ârelationships' to the safe, dry shore of car ownership, and parted in good humour with each other. Atherton even shook his hand, and nobly waited until he was out of sight before getting out a handkerchief to wipe it.
Bob Bailey, the SOC manager, tracked Slider down in the canteen where he was having a very late lunch â so late he had had to have a leftover portion of macaroni cheese heated up for him in the microwave, and he only got that because the canteen staff liked him, and it was a crusty bit from the corner of the dish that no one else fancied. He had quarantined himself in a far corner with a heap of reports to reread. On the other side of the room, nearer the windows and a watery bit of sunshine that was attempting to creep in through the soot of ages on the panes, various uniforms were having their afternoon tea break, with a buzz of chatter and the occasional burst of laughter.
Bailey eyed the congealing remains on the plate â Slider wasn't getting on with it very well â and thought the bad news he was delivering might usefully serve as a counter-irritant.
âI was passing,' he said, âso I thought I'd come and report to you in person.'
Slider pushed his plate away with every appearance of relief, and said, âJudging by your face, it isn't good news.'
âDepends on your point of view. I should think Scott Hibbert's dear old white-haired mother would be very pleased.' He sat down. âWe've gone over every inch of the flat, the stairs and the common parts, and there's nothing to suggest Melanie Hunter was killed there. We've also looked at her car, and though she was obviously in there alive, there's no reason to think she was restrained there or transported dead. In fact, the back seats are so pristine I wouldn't think anyone's ever ridden in them. I think you can take it as read that she left her own premises alive.'
âI don't know that I'm surprised,' Slider said. âIt was always a possibility that she was killed elsewhere, and there were always problems about her being killed in the flat â the dog being the main one.'
âYes, most dogs would go nuts in a scenario like that.'
âBut if she left the flat alive, why would she leave her handbag and take the door keys? Leaving the handbag looks like coercion, but taking the keys looks like a voluntary action.' None of the evidence made a lot of sense. âNever mind.' He pulled himself together, and managed a polite smile. âNot your problem.'
âThank God for that,' said Bailey.
NINE
Lynch, Anyone?
â
S
o,' Atherton said to his assembled colleagues, âwherever Hibbert was on Friday night and Saturday morning, it wasn't where he said he was. And I checked the hotel he was supposed to have been staying in, and guess what, folks?'
âWhy wasn't he staying with his parents?' Connolly asked.
âSo as not to disturb them when arriving home drunk in the small hours from the stag do,' Atherton said.
âIt doesn't follow that he didn't change his mind,' Norma said.
âI know,' said Atherton, âand we'll have to check that.'
âOr he could have gone to a different hotel,' said Hollis.
âRather than check them all,' Atherton said with irony, âwhy don't we ask him? But it's my bet that, if he wasn't at the stag, and hardly at the wedding, he probably wasn't in the area at all. He was off doing something nefarious, and the wedding was just his alibi.'
âNot much of an alibi,' Connolly said derisively, âwhen ya could bust it that easy.'
âHe probably thought no one would check,' Atherton said. âSwaggering overconfidence doesn't usually go with painstaking analysis.'
âBut he'd told her well before the date that he was going to this wedding. Told Andy Bolton, too,' said Mackay.
âThe wedding was fact, not fiction,' Atherton said. âWhat's your point?'
âWell, are you saying he planned to kill her as soon as he got the invitation?' Mackay asked. âOr was it just lucky chance, he killed her spurathemoment and happened to have this alibi set up?'
âLucky?' Connolly protested.
âFor him, not for her.'
âThere must have been a degree of planning,' Atherton said, âbecause we know she was killed that evening, so he must have come back from wherever he was to do it. I can't see him plotting far ahead, but maybe it gradually grew on him he could make use of the occasion, if he was getting fed up with her for some reason.'
âYeah, but what reason?' Mackay said.
âNever mind that for the moment. From our point of view, he's good because he's got all the time in the world to take the body out to Ruislip, do any cleaning up that's needed in the flat, and get back to Salisbury for an eleven o'clock wedding. He wouldn't be likely to interfere with her sexually. And he knows the dog, and it knows him. Did you notice how he didn't seem to want anything to do with it afterwards?' he added, looking round them.
âWhat does that prove?' Swilley asked.
âWell, I'm just thinking, if he had a bit of trouble with it at the time â and why wouldn't he? â he might have been very glad someone had taken it away when he got back. He might well be scared of seeing it again, in case it attacked him.'
Connolly said, âBut if it was him â and fair play to ya, he's a big enough thick to think no one would check the stagger alibi â why would he leave the wedding early? Why not stay on for the rest of the day?'
âMaybe he didn't want to be around his mates answering questions about why he'd missed the stag,' Atherton said. âMaybe he was too shaken up by the murder to be around people at all. It takes a cool head to behave as if nothing's happened when you've just killed someone.'
Connolly nodded. âAnd didn't we think it was queer he didn't know she was missing â that he hadn't rung her all Saturday? Well, why would he, if he knew she was dead?'
But why,' said Norma, âif it was Hibbert who killed her, would he take her door keys? He had keys of his own.'
Atherton declined to be dampened. âTo make it look as if she'd gone out on her own two feet.'
âBut then wouldn't he have taken her whole handbag?' Norma said.
âThat would just make more things to get rid of. Keys are easy to drop down a drain, but a handbag the size of Belgium, like you women all carry these days . . .'
It was at this point that Slider came in, just in time to save Atherton from being lynched for the âyou women'. Atherton told him about the busted alibi; Slider told them about the clean flat. âSo whoever killed her, it wasn't at home.'
Atherton was not downcast. âNever mind, it still makes it Hibbert for my money. Who else could so easily lure her into his car and drive off without her putting up a fight? He only has to pretend it's something romantic â let's look at the lido by moonlight, something like that.'
âAt that time of night?' Swilley objected.
âBest time for romance. Get Tony to explain it to you. Anyway, we know for a fact that he's lied about his alibi, and there must be a reason for that.'
âI agree that Hibbert's got some explaining to do about where he spent the night,' Slider began.
âIf he was killing her and dumping the body,' Hollis said, âhe'd have been too late to drive to Salisbury and check into an hotel. More likely he just got changed at the flat and went to the wedding from there.'
âHe'd have had to leave early, anyway, not to be seen,' Mackay said. âMaybe slept in his car in a lay-by or something.'
âAt least it gives us something to check,' Slider said. âWhatever he was doing, there must have been some car movements. Fathom, put his reg number into the ANPR and see if you can find out where he was at any point between Friday morning and Sunday morning. I'd sooner have something concrete to face him with than just asking him blind where he was and having a whole lot of new lies to disprove.'
âYou'll get them anyway,' Atherton said.
âAt least we can narrow the field if we know whether he was in Maidstone, Maidenhead or Middlesborough.'
âI've got something else, boss,' Swilley said. âThis Hibbert talk's all very well.' She gave Atherton a look so cool you could have kept a side of beef on it for a week. âBut everybody agrees he's a prime plonker and about as subtle as a hand grenade. Plotting cunning murders and carrying them outâ'
âNot that cunning,' Atherton protested.
âNot that obvious, either, or we'd know all about it.'
âA person can pretend to be more gormless than they are.'
âOh, is that your excuse?'
âWhat's your point, Norma?' Slider intervened hastily.
She turned to him. âI've been going through Melanie's papers, and I started off with her bank statements and so on. Well, she was doing all right, just about breaking even, like most of us with a mortgage. She and Scott bought the flat between them and they were paying half each, and I suppose the same went for the bills â I haven't got that far yet, but it's fair to assume. But the thing is, a couple of years ago she had a decent amount in savings, but it's been going down steadily. She's been drawing out sums of money in cash â five hundred, a thousand, two hundred â at irregular intervals for the last two years. Ever since she moved into that house. And Simone Ridware said that for about the same length of time she's felt Melanie had something on her mind, was worried and anxious about something. She thought it was to do with Scott, because she reckoned Melanie knew subconsciously that he wasn't good enough for her.'
âMakes sense to me,' said Atherton. âThe man's a tool.'
Swilley shook her head. âThat's crap. She'd only just met him â they'd only been going out for three months when they got the flat together, so they must have decided to live together almost from day one. Which means she was head over heels in love with him. That doesn't wear off in an instant. Two years ago she'd have been happy as Larry setting up home with her new bloke. But from the time she moves into
that house
, she's anxious, and lumps of cash start disappearing from her savings.' She looked at Slider. âWhat does that add up to, boss?'
âI don't know that it adds up to anything more than her salary not quite being enough, but you're thinking blackmail?' he obliged.
âRight. And who in the house made mysterious hints about her having secrets no one knew? And went out to the pub with her but never saw fit to tell us? And has a criminal record?'
âNot for blackmail,' Atherton objected.
âNo, for murder,' Norma said triumphantly.
âWhy would he blackmail her?' Hollis asked, after a short silence paid tribute to the idea.
âFor money, of course,' Swilley said, witheringly. âHe can't get a job, he's living on benefits â why not?'
âHe owns that flat,' Connolly added, with a shade of reluctance. âHe doesn't rent it. How'd he afford it, on the broo?'
âNo, I mean, what'd he blackmail her
with
,' Hollis said.
âI dunno. Maybe that abortion thing â maybe she didn't want Scott to know about it. Or maybe she'd done something else. We don't know â her mum said she got into bad company at one time, so she may have been hiding some other secret.'
âBut then why would he kill her?' Hollis persisted. âYou don't kill the person you're blackmailing â that cuts off the supply. It's the other way round. The victim kills the blackmailer out o' desperation.'
âWell,' Swilley said, thinking, âmaybe she did get desperate â she was near the end of her savings. Maybe she finally stood up to him and threatened to go to the police. Fitton couldn't allow that. He'd be finished â he's out on licence, he'd have gone straight back inside so fast his head would swim. No, in the end he had more to lose than she did, and maybe she finally realized it. So then he realized she'd have a hold on him for the rest of his life, and decided to get rid of her.'
â
If
she knew about his past,' Atherton said. âNo one else seems to have.'
âWell, we don't know, do we?' she snapped. âWe can't ask her.' She appealed to Slider. âIt's just that it looks like a coincidence, boss, the timing. As soon as she comes into contact with Fitton, she starts shelling out cash, and goes round being anxious.'
Slider nodded reluctantly. âThere may be something in it. And I know Mr Porson would like to get Fitton in and sweat him a bit. There are unanswered questions.'
âAnd he has the mark o' Cain on his brow,' Connolly concluded disgustedly. âSure, give a dog a bad name . . .'
Slider looked at her kindly. âWe're just going to ask him some questions. He might even find it a relief â it can't be nice for him cooped up in that flat with the media howling for his blood. He might like a nice, quiet cell for a change. Get a good night's sleep.' Connolly looked at him reproachfully, but he wasn't joking. âAnd a square meal,' he added. âHe probably hasn't eaten in days â can't get out to the shops, can he?'
âBut guv,' Atherton said, âwhat about Hibbert? Alibi blown, lies all round, absent without leave for the very time we're interested in?'
âFathom can look for his car on the ANPR, and then we'll see. Don't look at me like that. We can always do him later. He's not going anywhere.'
As Slider predicted, Porson was thrilled with the new evidence, if that's what it was, against Fitton. â
That's
more like it. A nice juicy blackmail to get our teeth into.'