Read Lambs to the Slaughter Online
Authors: Sally Spencer
âHe wasn't a nice man at all,' Becky said stubbornly.
âYou killed a nice man, who everybody liked,' Paniatowski prodded. âYou robbed him of his life. You
murdered
him!'
It was those last words that connected â that hit the switch in Becky's brain. Her eyes widened, and her face was suddenly transformed into a mask of arrogance and pitilessness.
âIt's not murder to kill a man like Len Hopkins,' she said, in a harsh voice, quite unlike her own. âHe's a louse. He's scum. He's against everything your grandfather ever worked for or believed in. And he'll still be alive when your granddad's dead. He'll stand there, looking down at your granddad's grave, and laughing. And don't you think your granddad knows that? Don't you think it's eating away at him worse than the coal dust? If only Len Hopkins was gone, your granddad could die happy. And it wouldn't be any worse than squashing a bug, Becky â it wouldn't be any worse than swatting a fly.'
The mask melted away, revealing the frightened child beneath it.
âThat was what Gary told you, wasn't it?' Paniatowski asked gently.
âNo,' Becky said, in a dazed voice. âNo, he . . .'
âI'll tell you what I think happened on Sunday night,' Paniatowski said. âYou went up to your bedroom, and then you climbed down the drainpipe. You're very good at that, aren't you? Remember. you showed me how easy it was?'
âI remember.'
âGary was waiting for you in the alley . . .'
âNo!'
âHe was waiting for you in the alley,' Paniatowski repeated firmly. âHe told you that Mr Hopkins would have to go to the lavvy at some time in the night . . .'
âNo!'
â. . . and the reason he was sure of that was because he'd already spiked Mr Hopkins' cocoa with laxative. Not his
milk
, Becky â his
cocoa
!'
âI meant his cocoa when I said his milk,' Becky whimpered. âYou've been getting me all confused.'
âIt was Gary who told you to use the pickaxe, because that was the weapon a miner would have used. And when you'd killed Mr Hopkins â when you'd
murdered
Mr Hopkins, when you'd smashed the poor man's skull in â it was Gary who was waiting for you in the house. Isn't that true?'
âNo!'
âIt just as we thought,' Paniatowski said to Beresford. âShe's making the whole thing up. She was the one waiting in the house, and Gary was the one who killed Len Hopkins.'
âThat's not true,' Becky said. âIt was Gary who was in the house.'
âAnd what was he doing there?' Paniatowski asked.
âHe . . . he . . .'
âYou can't go back on it now â you've already admitted he was there.'
âHe . . . he was looking for a bit of paper,' Becky mumbled. âHe said it was very important that he took it away with him.'
That would be the letter which was supposed to have come from the Department of Education and Science, but, in fact, had come from a very different department, Paniatowski thought.
âHe found what he was looking for, didn't he?' she asked.
âYes,' Becky admitted. âAnd when he found it, he screwed it up, and put it in his pocket, as if it didn't matter at all.'
It didn't matter. All that was important was that the police didn't find it in the house after Hopkins' death, and start asking awkward questions.
âYou left through the front door, didn't you?' Paniatowski asked.
âYes.'
âAnd Gary locked it behind him, so he must have had a key.'
âNot a proper key. It was like a lot of metal rods.'
âSkeleton keys?'
âI think that's what he called them.'
And he'd locked the door behind him to muddy the issue, Paniatowski thought â he'd done it so they'd waste time wondering who had a key.
âWhen you persuaded your granddad to lie about you having been together Sunday night, he thought that was because you wanted to give him an alibi. But that wasn't it at all, was it? You wanted
him
to give
you
an alibi. And you didn't think that up yourself, did you? That was another one of Gary's ideas.'
âGary said he couldn't stand the thought of me going to gaol. He said that if I had an alibi, everything would be all right.'
âDo you ever feel sorry for killing Mr Hopkins?'
âSometimes. But Gary said I shouldn't. Gary said I'd done a wonderful thing â a
kind
thing.'
âI think that's all we need,' Beresford said to Paniatowski.
âYou do believe me now, don't you?' Becky asked pleadingly. âYou do believe that Gary was in the house at the time I killed Mr Hopkins, and that he had nothing at all to do with it.'
âI believe he was in the house,' Paniatowski said.
âI couldn't bear it if anything bad happened to him,' Becky told her. âI love him, you see. I'm having his baby.'
T
he cold wind had blown in from the moors â where it had been doing all it could to freeze the sheep to death â and now it was rushing along the streets of Whitebridge in search of human victims. What few pedestrians there were out on those streets walked with their hands in their pockets and their heads bent forward, but even then, the wind's icy fingers clawed at their faces and found a way under their tightly wrapped scarves to their vulnerable necks.
The two women standing in front of the Royal Victoria looked up at the suite on the top floor of the hotel.
âI don't want you going up there to talk to him, boss,' Kate Meadows said. âI really don't.'
âI don't much like the idea myself, but I've no choice in the matter,' Paniatowski replied. âA deal has got to be made â and I'm the only one who can make it.'
âThen let me come with you,' Meadows pleaded.
Paniatowski shook her head. âIf you're there, we'll get nothing. He likes it to be just me. He thinks we have a special relationship.'
âYou
do
have a special relationship,' Meadows told her.
âYes, I try to deny it, but deep down inside myself, I know that we do,' Paniatowski admitted. âAnd some nights, I wake up in a cold sweat, just thinking about it.' She braced herself, and took a step closer to the hotel's main entrance. âWish me luck.'
âGood luck, boss,' Meadows replied, and then, when Paniatowski was almost at the door, she added, âI'm half-hoping that he'll refuse to see you.'
Paniatowski stopped and turned around. âHe'll see me,' she said confidently. âHe needs to know if I've found out his secret.'
Paniatowski was met in the vestibule of the suite by a short, broad man with a shaved head.
âI'm going to have to search you,' he said.
âYou do know who I am?' Paniatowski asked.
âYes,' the man replied. âThat's why I need to search you.'
Paniatowski spread her arms. âThen let's get it over with.'
The process was slow, thorough â and as asexual as if the man had been searching a wardrobe. When he'd completed it, he said, âFollow me,' and led her into the lounge.
Forsyth was sitting behind the desk, and an upright chair had been positioned on the other side of it, facing him.
âAh, my dear Monika, what a pleasure to see you again,' he said. âI take it that Symons has introduced himself.'
âIn a manner of speaking,' Paniatowski said.
Forsyth gave the other man a disapproving look. âYou really don't have any concept of the social niceties, do you, Clive?' he asked. He turned back to Paniatowski. âSymons is my valet,' he said.
âSymons is your bodyguard,' Paniatowski countered.
Forsyth nodded. âHe's that, too. You're not going to cause him any trouble, are you, Monika?'
âNo,' Paniatowski replied. âIt's already been pointed out to me, by my sergeant, that there are some battles I simply can't win.'
âExcellent. My respect for Sergeant Meadows â who is not quite who you think she is â increases daily,' Forsyth said. He gestured to the chair. âDo take a seat, Monika. Can I offer you a glass of vodka?'
âNo,' Paniatowski said, sitting down.
Forsyth looked hurt. âBut it's Zubrowka â your favourite. I ordered it specially.'
âStill no,' Paniatowski said, sitting down.
Forsyth sighed. âI do wish you'd try to be more civilized during these meetings of ours, Monika,' he said.
âI want to know why you had to have my daughter abducted,' Paniatowski told him.
âWe'll come to that later,' Forsyth promised. âBefore that, I'd like to know how things are in Bellingsworth. What have you been doing since you made your arrest?'
She could argue â could say that she wouldn't answer any of his questions before he answered the one that was truly important to her â but she knew that there would be no point.
âI got our technical boys to check out a few of the buildings in the village,' Paniatowski said.
âOh yes?'
âThey found listening devices in the Miners' Institute and Tommy Sanders' house. There weren't any bugs in Len Hopkins' home, but that, I assume, is because they were removed on Sunday night.'
âYou surely don't expect me to either deny or confirm that, do you?' Forsyth asked.
âHow long have you had an interest in the village?' Paniatowski asked.
âFor months,' Forsyth replied. âWe moved in soon after the Yom Kippur War, which was long before most of the miners even realized there was the possibility of a strike.'
âAnd your aim was to influence the strike ballot when it was eventually called?'
âIt was.'
âYou won't win, you know.'
âOn the contrary, I expect the Bellingsworth miners to vote massively against the strike.'
âBut most of the other pits won't. There
will be
a strike.'
âI think you rather misunderstand our purpose in Bellingsworth,' Forsyth said. âWe regard it as a laboratory, in which we can try out various strategies and analyse their effectiveness.'
âAnd why would you want to do that?'
âThe miners must be crushed â and crushed decisively. If Britain is to survive as a world class nation, there is simply no choice in the matter. But they won't be crushed this time, because our current prime minister, Mr Heath, hasn't got the stomach for a long and bitter fight. However, we will eventually have a prime minister with more spirit, and when she takes on the minersâ'
âShe?' Paniatowski interrupted.
Forsyth smiled like a mischievous schoolboy.
âDid I say
she
?' he asked. âI meant, of course,
he
. I wouldn't want you to think, when the Conservatives get rid of Heath and elect a new leader, that I've had anything to do with it. Oh no, that would never do at all.'
âYou're full of shit,' Paniatowski said.
âAt any rate,' Forsyth continued, ignoring the comment, âwhen a prime minister comes along who
does
have the stomach for a fight, we will give
him
all our support, and it is then that the lessons we have learned in Bellingsworth will be invaluable.'
âYou fixed the brass band competition in Accrington, didn't you?' Paniatowski asked.
âWe had a quiet word with two or three of the judges, and pointed out there are certain things about their private lives they might not care to become public knowledge, if that's what you mean,' Forsyth said.
âThat is what I mean,' Paniatowski agreed. âWhat was the point in fixing the competition?'
âWe come back to our laboratory idea again,' Forsyth said. âHarold Wilson â who has twice been elected prime minister, and will be again â has a theory that when people feel happy, they tend to opt for the status quo. Thus, he has always tried to schedule elections at a time when the weather is pleasant, or when England is basking in the glow of a sporting triumph.'
âSo you thought that if the miners won the brass band competition, they'd be less inclined to vote for a strike?'
âExactly.'
âAnd has it worked?'
Forsyth looked slightly uncomfortable. âEvents have moved on since the competition, so we have no real way of assessing its impact,' he said.
âEvents have moved on,' Paniatowski repeated. âIs that another way of saying that Len Hopkins was killed?'
âIt is.'
âLen's letter never got as far as the Department of Education and Science, did it?' Paniatowski asked.
âIt did not. We intercepted it before it had even left the village.'
âAnd you wrote back to him on DES notepaper.'
âOr a reasonable facsimile thereof.'
âWhat was point of Gary's visiting him?'
âGary?'
âThat was the name by which your agent was known to Becky Sanders.'
âAh, indeed. The purpose of his visit was to give Len Hopkins quite a large amount of money.'
âBut the money was not intended to finance his research into his ancestry, was it?'
âNo, it was to be used as a cash incentive for miners who were still not sure which way to vote in the forthcoming ballot.'
âIt was to be used to bribe them, you mean.'
âIf you choose to look at it that way.'
âThat doesn't sound like one of
your
schemes, at all,' Paniatowski said. âIt seems far too crude.'
âIt is crude, when stated as baldly as that,' Forsyth agreed. âBut if it had been handled correctly, Len Hopkins would have been left with the impression that he'd been co-opted by the DES, as part of a general scheme to widen workers' educational opportunities.'
âBut it wasn't handled correctly?'
âUnfortunately, it was not. The boy . . . did you say Becky called him Gary . . .?'