So, finally, he'd agreed to do what his mother's social worker had been urging him to do for years â had accepted that he could no longer look after her himself, and that she needed full-time residential care.
It hadn't been an easy decision to make â because although he continually told himself that she was so unaware of her surroundings it wouldn't matter where she was, he still felt as if he was betraying her. But he had gone ahead and made the arrangements anyway.
âMr Beresford?' asked a new voice on the line â a firm authoritative voice that he recognized as belonging to the warden.
âYes, I'm here.'
âIt's almost ten o'clock. We were expecting you to have brought your mother in by now.'
âI know, but . . .'
âIf you leave it much later, it will make it
very
difficult for us to get her properly settled down by lunch time.'
âI'm afraid I won't be able to bring her in at all this morning,' Beresford told the warden.
âI beg your pardon?'
âI said I'm afraid . . .'
âI
heard
what you said â I just found it rather difficult to
believe
that you'd said it. You do appreciate, don't you, that it is most unusual â not to say highly irregular and extremely inconvenient â to have the arrangements cancelled at the last moment?'
âI know,' Beresford said miserably. âBut something has come up at work, and I'm afraid that I can't get out of it.'
âAnd do you
also
realize that you're not the only one who has a job?' the warden demanded crossly.
âYes, I . . .'
âAnd that the children of our other residents
also
have careers, but
still
find time to do what's right by their beloved parents?'
âCouldn't I . . . couldn't I bring her in tomorrow morning, instead?' Beresford asked.
âNo, I'm not sure that you can,' the warden said.
Which means, âNo, you sodding well can't,' Beresford thought.
âWhen you choose to cancel established arrangements to suit your own convenience, you must accept that any new arrangements will be made to suit ours,' the warden told him.
âBut you can admit her
some time
this week?'
âThat's possible, I suppose.'
âThank you.'
âBut it's equally possible â in fact,
more than
possible â that you'll have to wait until
next
week.'
âCould you ring me when . . .?'
âNo, I most certainly will
not
ring you, Mr Beresford. I shall expect
you
to ring
me
.'
âFair enough,' Beresford agreed. âI'm sorry for all the trouble.'
âAnd so you should be,' the warden said.
What a bloody mess, Beresford thought, as he hung up. He'd made an enemy of the warden who would be entrusted with caring for his mother before that caring had even begun.
But what choice had he had? He couldn't simply desert his old friend Monika.
Not on her first day.
Not with a case like
this
one.
When Jenny Brunskill entered the office which she shared with her brother-in-law, she found Stan bent over his desk, looking down at the same pile of documents that he'd been looking down at when she left it.
And âlooking down' at them was exactly the right way to describe what he was doing, she thought. Not
reading
them â the pile was as thick as it had ever been â but just gazing at them
blankly
.
âYou don't happen to have seen Tom Whittington this morning, do you?' she asked.
âWhat?' Stan replied.
And from the
way
he said it â rather confused and perhaps a little nervous â it was clear that it was the mere sound of Jenny's voice, rather than the question she'd asked, which had brought him back to life.
âTom Whittington,' Jenny repeated. âI've been round the entire bakery twice, and I couldn't find a single person who'd admit to having so much as caught sight of him this morning.'
Stan shrugged. âSo what?'
âSo what? So he's our head baker â that's what.'
âI was aware of that.'
âAnd it's his job to see that things are running smoothly.'
A slight, thin smile played on Stan's lips. âI thought you considered that
your
job,' he said.
âIt's
my
job to see the paperwork keeps moving along,' Jenny said seriously. âIt's
my
job to make sure the figures add up â although they haven't been recently, and that's something I want to talk to Linda about â but I don't know anything about the technical side of things.'
âLinda knows about it,' Stan said, perhaps a little sourly. âLinda knows about everything. She's a superwoman.'
âBut Linda isn't here, either,' Jenny pointed out. âSo the only two people who can be relied on to make sure our products get on the right shelves at the right time have gone missing.'
âSo what?' Stan said, for a second time.
âI thought I'd just explained . . .'
âYou worry about the little things too much,' Szymborska told his sister-in-law. âRelax, Jenny. Enjoy yourself, for a change.'
âThe little things?' Jenny said hotly. âThe
little
things! Our father started out with nothing. He built up this bakery from
nothing.
And it's our responsibility to see that his legacy is maintained.'
âYour father . . .' Stan began, and then tailed off.
âWhat about him?'
âNothing.'
Your father was a narrow-minded little man who never liked me, he thought. Your father never
really
built this business up at all. It was dying when you and Linda took over. Why can't you see that for yourself?
âSay what's on your mind!' Jenny demanded.
âI was wondering why you don't find yourself a boyfriend,' Stan said, in an attempt to change the subject. âYou're a good-looking woman â a
very
good-looking woman. There'd be no shortage of candidates.'
âOh, you're impossible, Stan!' Jenny said exasperatedly. âHere I am, trying to discuss important matters with you, and you treat the whole thing as if it was no more than a joke.'
âYour
life
isn't a joke,' Stan told her, seriously. âYou could have a beautiful life, if you'd only put your mind to it.'
âI'm going to look for Tom again,' Jenny said. âMaybe he'll have turned up by now.'
She swept out of the office, and Szymborska returned his attention â or rather, his
lack
of attention â to the papers on his desk.
He'd been lying to Jenny when he'd said that what he'd been thinking about was
her
life.
The truth was, he'd been thinking about his
own
life: about the horrific things he'd seen when he'd returned to Poland after the war â the hunger, the devastation and the imprint that the communist jackboot was already leaving on the people; about his heartbreaking decision to leave his beloved homeland for ever and settle in England; about his decision to marry Linda . . .
But most of all, he was thinking about the last few terrible hours of the previous day, and the first few terrible hours of the present one.
When Chief Constable George Baxter held briefing sessions with any of his senior officers, he did not do it from behind the protective cover of a large imposing desk, as his predecessor had done. That was simply not his style. Instead, he led them across to the corner of his office, where two easy chairs â but not
that
easy â faced each other over a plain coffee table.
It was in one of these chairs that Paniatowski was sitting at that moment, looking across the table at the solid man with red hair and a bushy red moustache, who was unquestionably a very
masculine
man, but who, nevertheless, had always reminded her of a big ginger teddy bear.
âThis isn't exactly the ideal case for you to kick off your new career with, is it, Monika?' Baxter asked.
âNo, sir,' Paniatowski agreed awkwardly.
She
always
felt awkward in Baxter's presence.
When she'd first heard that the Yorkshireman had been appointed chief constable of mid-Lancashire her stomach had turned over, because though coming in from the outside, he was a stranger to everyone else in the division, he was certainly no stranger to her.
Those feelings of awkwardness had never gone away, even though Baxter had now been his post for five years. If anything, they'd got worse recently, because at least when Charlie Woodend had been there, she'd been able to avoid seeing much of the chief constable. But now Charlie was
not
there â and meetings such as this one would inevitably become a regular occurrence.
âJust what exactly is the killer's game, do you think?' Baxter asked.
âI really don't know, sir,' Paniatowski admitted. âIt's too early in the investigation to even make a guess at it. But whatever it is, he wants what he's doing to be noticed.'
Baxter nodded. âBut you think you can handle it?'
âYes, sir, I believe I can,' Paniatowski said with more conviction than she actually felt. âBut I'd like to make a few changes in my team.'
Baxter raised a sandy eyebrow. âIsn't it rather early to be thinking of making changes?'
âPerhaps it is,' Paniatowski agreed. âBut given the nature of the case, I need a team I can rely on absolutely.'
âAnd who
can't
you rely on?'
âSergeant Walker.'
âI'm surprised to hear you say that,' Baxter told her. âHe has a reputation for being a very competent officer.'
Yes, and the reputation is probably well founded, Paniatowski thought. He'd certainly been able to work out for himself why the killer had to have used the telephone box at the top of the slope, and no other. And while she didn't quite buy into the theory that the killer must have had some military training, she couldn't entirely dismiss it, either.
And yet . . .
And yet, she still didn't trust him. For all that he'd expressed his enthusiasm for working as part of her team, she was far from convinced that enthusiasm was genuine. In fact, she was inclined to believe that he had no respect for women in general â and for her in particular.
She hadn't liked him calling Dr Shastri a Paki, either. Nor had she appreciated him lumping together all the inhabitants of the Pinchbeck Estate â the estate on which she'd grown up â as the scum of the earth.
âI'm sure that Detective Sergeant Walker would make a really excellent bagman for some other DCI, but I'm not convinced that it will work out with me,' she said.
âMake it work,' Baxter said firmly.
âBut, sir . . .'
âI can't afford to be seen to be doing you any favours, Monika. Not with our history.'
âOur history!' Paniatowski repeated silently â and bitterly.
They had met when she'd been investigating a case which had links to his patch in Yorkshire, and they had â unthinkingly and almost carelessly â become lovers. But though she had liked him â and even admired him â she had never managed to transfer the passion he raised in her in bed to a passion for him as a man out of it.
It was he who had broken off the relationship, and she hadn't blamed him. The blame was entirely hers. She was convinced of that. She should have tried harder to love him â should have brushed aside thoughts of Bob Rutter, her first and only true love, and accepted George for what he was.
âWhen all's said and done, sir, our history's just that, sir â history,' she told Baxter.
âI take it from what you've just said that you are unaware that there are a number of people in this building â perhaps even a
large
number â who know all about our previous relationship.'
âYes, sir, you're right, I
am
unaware of that. In fact, I'm not sure there's any truth in it. How
could
they know? Our courtshipâ'
âIs that what it was, Monika?' Baxter asked, with a small, ironic smile playing on his lips. âOur
courtship
?'
âOur affair, then,' Paniatowski said, feeling an anger beginning to build up inside her. âOr our bit of mindless casual sex on the side, if that's how you'd prefer to think of it.'
âI think, on the whole, that I'd prefer to think of it as our affair,' Baxter said quietly.
âFine. Our
affair
was carried out entirely in Yorkshire. By the time you came to Whitebridge, we'd broken up. So how
can
anybody know?'
âThey know. Word gets around. Don't ask me
how
it gets around, because I couldn't tell you. But it does! Of course, what we once were to each other didn't matter as long as you were Charlie Woodend's protégé, but the moment there was a possibility you might be promoted to DCI, the rumours started to fly. There are plenty of people who believe that I only pushed your promotion through because of what happened between us.'
âAnd did you?'
âOf course not. I honestly thought you were the best qualified person for the job. But we have to be careful, Monika. If somebody is seen to cross you, and the next day he's out on his ear, tongues will start wagging.'
âIn other words, sir, if this request had been made by any other DCI, you'd have granted it without a second's thought?'