âShe â I never taught her. She wasn't my student,' Wiseman said feebly.
âI don't think that is going to make any difference, do you? So here's the thing â this brave girl is willing to risk her reputation and face angry parents and the ruination of her hopes and future to give you an alibi. Unless, of course, you want to confess to murdering Melanie, and tell us where you really were and exactly what you did that night.'
âBut I didn't! I didn't kill her! I
was
with Stephanie. Now you know I'm innocent, you'll
have
to let me go.'
âYou're going to rely on Stephanie, are you? Let her sacrifice herself for you? Hasn't she sacrificed enough already?'
âWhat do you want me to say? I
was
with her. She's telling the truth. I was with her all evening. I can't tell a lie, can I?'
âIt hasn't bothered you before,' Slider said.
Drobcek objected, but his heart was no longer in it. There was going to be no brilliant defence of a murder charge to make his name after all. He was back to juvenile shoplifters on Monday.
âBut I couldn't contradict Stephanie and call her a liar when she's telling the truth,' Wiseman said. âYou have to let me go now, don't you? Doesn't he?' he appealed to Drobcek.
âDo you have any other evidence against my client?' Drobcek asked.
âHold your horses,' Slider said, though it was mere endgame flourishing. âWe have to check the alibi first.'
âIt sounds as though he's covered, then,' Porson said with disappointment. He had wanted Wiseman ever since he heard about him hitting Melanie. He didn't like hitters. And the nature of this new evidence made him unhappy. He doodled a series of ducks on his phone pad. He liked ducks. They always sounded as if they were laughing. They took your mind off things. When he retired, he was going to find a house with enough room for a pond and get some. âWhat about this girl? Is she pukka?'
âConnolly believes so. We can check the early parts of the alibi, but the important part, covering the murder time, is down to her alone.'
âWhat do you think?' Porson asked sharply, looking up.
âMy gut instinct is that she's telling the truth, and therefore that it wasn't him.'
âHmm,' said Porson.
âAnd we don't have any other evidence against him. If we let him go, and it was him, it might put him off his guard. Then if anything turned up, we could catch him unawares with it.'
âSuppose he scarpers?'
âI don't see him as the type, sir. He sets a lot of store by respectability. Once he's free, he'll want to re-establish his reputation.'
âAnd what about the girl? She'll be in a shedload of trouble.'
âUnless we charge him, her evidence need never become public. If she keeps her mouth shut, and Wiseman does, it may all blow over for her.'
It was the best they could hope for. Porson nodded. A big pond. With a little island in the middle, so they can sleep safe from foxes. âHe's ruined anyway. He wasn't wrong about that. The school won't want him back.'
âBut he's been vindicated. They'll have to take him, or disparage the rule of law. And that will be good reason for him to keep his mouth shut about the girl, because he'd certainly lose his job over
that
.'
âWhy should he get away with it?'
âHe shouldn't. But if he doesn't, she doesn't.'
Maybe a duck house â just a plain one. A little wooden cabin. He sketched straight walls and a sloping roof. âI suppose you're right,' he said. He thought of the girl infatuated, and Wiseman debauching her, and Melanie still dead, and sometimes he felt the whole weight of human nature on his neck, crushing him down. He
needed
ducks. The simplicity of them. And the quacking.
âLet him go,' he said. âWarn him to keep his mouth shut about the girl. And get after Hibbert. Half a confession's better than no bread.'
âYes, sir.'
Slider was at the door when Porson said, âWhat's that poem? Learnt it in school. About bees, or beans, or something, and living on an island, and a cabin, or some such?'
Slider, who had long ago given up being surprised by anything Porson said, dug through his brain. âDo you mean “The Lake Isle of Innisfree”, sir?' He quoted, â“Nine bean rows will I have there, and a hive for the honey bee.”'
âSounds like it. Mention a cabin?'
âYes, sir. “And a small cabin build there” â that's the second line.' He waited for enlightenment.
Porson grunted. âAny ducks?'
âDucks? I don't think so. But to be honest, I only know the first verse. I suppose there might be ducks later.'
âHave to be later,' Porson said. âRetirement plan.' Slider was looking at him, just faintly puzzled. âWell, what are you standing there for? Get on with it!' he barked.
Slider got.
As he reached the office on his way to his room, Norma was on the phone saying, âHe's in with Mr â oh, no, here he is, just walked in.' She held out the receiver to Slider. âAtherton, boss.'
âI'll take it in my room,' he said.
Swilley looked at him with motherly affection as he trudged past thinking vaguely, though she knew it not, of ducks and beans and sex in cars. âYou look cream crackered, boss. Shall I get you a cuppa?'
âWould you? I need one before I go and tackle Hibbert again. He's all we've got now.'
âBad news on Wiseman?'
âI'll tell you when I've taken this call. Maybe it'll cheer me up.'
But Atherton, always cheery, said, âIt's bad news. It looks as though Hibbert's a washout.'
Slider whimpered. âBut he's confessed.'
âReally?'
âSort of.' Of course when a man was in the emotional state Hibbert was â and particularly if he's a self-obsessed, grandstanding sort of bloke with a taste for fantasizing â there was always the danger of false confessions. But hey, when you got nuthin you got nuthin to lose. A man can dream, can't he? âAnd Wiseman's no good. We found his alibi.'
âYou had to go looking! So â what? He was doing private coaching?'
âOf the carnal sort. Nice young sixth-former says he was with her all evening, and at the crucial time they were testing his car's suspension in a deserted car-park, somewhere, we guess, in the Chilterns.'
âNo wonder he lied about it. And didn't tell his wife,' said Atherton. âInstant dismissal for that. But it lets him out?'
âUnless she's lying, but we don't think she is. And now you're telling me Hibbert's no good?'
âI've been running the marathon with Valerie Proctor,' Atherton said wearily. âIt seemsâ'
âI've heard all about the scams and the doinking from Hibbert,' Slider forestalled him. âHe was only servicing her to keep her on side, according to him.'
âShe didn't know about Melanie, according to her. What a prize pair!'
âWe can compare notes later. But what's this about an alibi?'
âOn Friday evening, when he wasn't at the stag, Valerie says they took a developer out to dinner at a posh restaurant in Christchurch, to discuss Hibbert's idea for a big scoop. There were delicate negotiations to be made, feelers to put out to see if the developer was crooked enough to go along with it, so oiling the wheels was considered a good idea.'
âYou keep saying “the developer”. Doesn't he have a name?'
âShe didn't want to tell me that, and I didn't press, because she says they'll certainly remember them in the restaurant. Apparently merry was made and the festive board groaned. The bill came to over six hundred quid, and restaurant staff tend to remember that, especially in Bournemouth â on the subject of whichâ'
âWhich?'
âBournemouth â can I come home now? I promise to be good.'
âDon't you like it? Jewel of the south coast, I've always heard.'
âValerie's interior decor's given me a migraine. And it's not good for me to mix with people who think dishonesty is just fine, as long as they're the ones doing it.'
âYou're too delicate to be a policeman. Remind me again how you got into the Job.' It was a famous mystery, long disputed in the canteen, but Atherton had always liked to be enigmatic and had never told, not even Slider.
âNice try, guv,' came the reply, âbut no banana.'
âSo what time did the party leave the restaurant?' Slider asked, going back to work. Not that there was any urgency about it, if Hibbert was blown and his confession just self-indulgent hysteria.
âClose to midnight, she says. A fine cognac was going round â and round â and round. Then Valerie and Hibbert went home for a celebratory two-step â I don't even want to think about that â after which he passed into a heavy sleep. She slept too, but she said when she woke at eight on Saturday morning, he hadn't even changed position, and he didn't surface until after ten.'
Slider sighed. He'd sighed so much lately he was going to have to replace his battery. âI suppose she could be lying to cover him.'
âTwo chances â fat, and slim. Now she knows about Melanie and thinks he killed her, she's desperate to be rid of him. She turned him in, remember.'
âShe could just be trying to save her own skin.'
âBut she doesn't know how the murder was done, or when, so she didn't even know she was giving him an alibi until I showed an interest in the detail. She seems to think 'e done 'er in on Saturday, when he left her ostensibly to go to the wedding. Now she knows Saturday night was important I think she'd like to take it back, but she can't.'
âAlways the problem,' Slider said. âYou can't ask people questions without warning them about what you want to know.'
âFine, fine, but can I come home now?' Atherton asked impatiently.
âYou have to visit the restaurant first,' said Slider sternly. âWe've had enough of people giving us alibis they think we won't check up on. Go and be diligent. And quick, because if he didn't do it, I want to get rid of him. I don't like the bugger, not one little bit.'
âValerie's a hero, really,' Atherton remarked.
âAll women are heroes. There's not one man I know that I'd want to put up with on a domestic basis.'
âExcept your dad.'
âWell, of course. Now stop stalling, and go.'
âSo why did you run, you dipstick?' Slider asked Hibbert, who looked so unappealingly crusty a public health inspector would have closed him down.
The restaurant had amply confirmed the alibi â one of the waiters even knew the developer and was eager to tell them his name, address in a glamour-pad in Poole, mobile phone number and the identity of his mistress, a former beauty queen who had been Miss South Coast Resort two years earlier and was installed in a glass-and-chrome âluxury' flat overlooking the sea on Overcliff Drive. And the ANPR had not found any movements of Valerie's car between Bournemouth and London, so even if everyone was mistaken about the time, he'd have had to go and murder Melanie by train. He was as clear as it was possible to be in this naughty world.
Hibbert was massively deflated. Out from under his latest trank, he had got a severe lungful of cold reality. He was not Cap'n Jack Sparrow, swooping up doubloons from under the noses of his fat corporate bosses. He was not Heathcliff, driven to noble madness and murder by overmastering love. He was a bloke with a job at an estate agent's (which he might well lose, if his scams came to light) and nothing to show for his life but a few flashy suits and a motor he still owed payments on. And no girlfriend. When he went home, Melanie was not going to be there. The house would be cold and smell funny and the washing wouldn't have been done. And he really had loved Mel. She had been part of his grand design, the top wife enhancing his status as he climbed to higher things. And she had adored him. Now she was dead. He stared at Slider in abject misery.
âI knew you lot were after me,' he said. His voice was hoarse from all his recent troubles. âI thought you were going to frame me for Mel's murder.' His lower lip trembled. âI didn't want to go to prison. I was scared. Terrible things happen in there. Ronnie told me once. About these big boss cons who run everything, all muscles and tattoos, and when someone like me comes in theyâ' He gulped and squeezed his eyes shut. âI don't even want to think about it.'
Slider could imagine Fitton, who didn't like Hibbert and thought him a big soft ponce, indulging in a little light blood-curdling as they passed in the dustbin area of a Monday night.
âThen why did you say you killed her?'
Hibbert's frightened eyes were those of a small boy who had been egged on to something too serious for him by bigger boys. âI â I s'pose I sort of got carried away,' he confessed abjectly.
Slider almost felt sorry for him. âIt happens a lot,' he said.
âAnd then there were none,' Porson said disgustedly. âA week on, and we've got nothing. Unless Ronnie Fitton still comes up trumps.' He brightened slightly. â
He's
got no alibi, anyway, good or bad.'
âBut we've no evidence against him.'
â
I
know that!' Porson snapped. âBlimey, I wouldn't have thought you'd want to boast about your incomptitude at a time like this! Your job is to
get
the evidence. The press is going to be all over this by Monday.' He stamped about a bit, and Slider understood that his anger was not against him, but the perversity of fate and, most importantly, the pressure put on them all by their bosses' fealty to the press. He turned to Slider, steam now vented, and said quite kindly, âYou look all in. Go home. There's nothing more you can do today. They're going on with the fingertip search tomorrow, and maybe something'll come up. Take tomorrow off, do some thinking, come back fresh on Monday.'