Woman with a Secret (17 page)

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Authors: Sophie Hannah

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“Sir, I think it’s worth repeating. I can’t remember Simon’s exact words, but—”

“And you’re willing to risk paraphrasing? Won’t all the magic be lost in translation?”

“Most murder scenes reveal either cold, preplanned detachment or spontaneous chaotic passion,” Sam persisted. “This one’s a mixture
of the two—lots of planning involved, enough detachment to think about logistics and . . . image management, for want of a better term, but also, without a doubt, strong feelings. Whoever killed Blundy was passionate about him.”

“According to Waterhouse,” Proust added the qualifier Sam had omitted.

“And to me,” Sam said with uncharacteristic firmness. “It makes sense. Simon thinks whoever did it has difficulty openly expressing his or her emotions. So, feels things deeply, but is also a control freak with years of experience of preventing unmanageable feelings from spilling out. A bottler-up. Someone who wouldn’t let passion emerge unchecked, but would craft it into something safe, structured and anonymous. He both wants us to know how he feels and doesn’t, so he conveys his message cryptically, half hoping we’ll guess, half hoping we won’t.”

“That sounds consistent with the Damon Blundy murder scene to me,” Gibbs said.

“It sounds consistent with DC Waterhouse,” said Proust impatiently. “Am I the only one who notices that all his quack profiles are thinly veiled descriptions of himself? Is it his secret ambition to get himself arrested for every murder we investigate?”

“Simon thinks that room, that . . . display, with the knife taped to his face and everything—it’s an invitation to misunderstand,” Sam said. “The killer’s saying, ‘Go on, prove to me that you can work me out—no one else has ever managed to.’ When we fail, he wins, because he’s outwitted us, and loses because all his worst fears are confirmed: no one gets him; no one cares enough to make the effort. That murder scene is likely to be the first public expression of his feelings for some time—maybe his whole life.”

“‘
When
we fail,’ Sergeant? Could you brainstorm titles for your autobiography some other time? I’d like you to pretend your motto is ‘When we succeed,’ at least until you retire.”

“Sir, I meant from the killer’s point of—”

“Shall we stop playing Simon Reckons and return to work?” the
Snowman cut Sam off. “Who else hated Damon Blundy, apart from Bryn Gilligan, Rabbi Jacob Fedder, other Jews, some Muslims and a neighbor keen to protect her daughter’s earlobe?”

“Paula Riddiough, ex-Labour MP for Culver Valley East,” said Sam.

For whom Sellers had voted for reasons that had nothing to do with politics and everything to do with his pornographic fantasies about her, Gibbs remembered with a grin.

“Blundy laid into her in one of his columns for sending her son to a state school and the two of them quickly became well-known enemies,” Sam said.

Gibbs waited for Sellers to make a joke about laying Paula Riddiough, who was indisputably hot, and not only for an MP.

Nothing. Sellers hadn’t been himself for a while and seemed not to want to talk about it. “Just
insist
that he tells you,” Liv had said on the phone last night.

“You mean private school?” Proust asked Sam. “Blundy laid into Riddiough for sending her son to a
private
school?”

“No, she sent him to a state school,” said Sam.

“Isn’t that what good Labour MPs who believe in state education are supposed to do?”

“You can read the column if you want, sir—we’ve got the collected works of Damon Blundy next door. Riddiough comes from pots of money and went to Cheltenham Ladies’ College. Blundy accused her of culpable negligence with regard to her child’s future prospects, said she was one of the worst mothers in the UK. He called for social services to take her son into care.”

“On what grounds?” Proust sounded curious rather than shocked.

“On the grounds that all good parents, even flawed ones, want better for their children than whatever they had themselves,” said Sam. “Blundy said Riddiough could have afforded the very best for her son, but she’d actively sought to ensure that he had an education that was vastly inferior to her own, in an uglier building with fewer
resources, dragged down by the stress and hopelessness common to all teachers in what Blundy called ‘perkless institutions,’ and surrounded by gangsters-in-the-making rather than the intellectually curious children of scientific innovators and visiting diplomats—or something like that. He accused Riddiough of doing it purely to annoy her rich Tory parents while hypocritically pretending it was some sort of left-wing principle.”

“They’re proper aristos, the Riddiough family,” Gibbs chipped in. “Seat in the House of Lords until recently.”

“Until all the hereditaries were replaced by inarticulate cockneys from reality-TV programs, you mean?” Proust got angry suddenly. “Paula Riddiough didn’t kill Damon Blundy! I mean, if we’re going by Waterhouse’s nonsense theory about the inability of our killer to express himself openly in public—Paula Riddiough expresses herself in every perishing newspaper supplement I ever see, even now that she’s no longer an MP. Wasn’t it her oversharing that prompted the calls for her resignation?”

“Yes, sir,” said Sam. “And it seems that the more Blundy attacked her, the more she overshared.”

“She and Blundy are two of a kind,” said Gibbs. “Shock jocks. I agree, it’s unlikely she killed him, but I wonder—”

“All right, talk to her,” Proust cut him off. “You have to, don’t you? I wish Blundy had considered the inconvenience to us in the event of his murder. It’s going to take us until next year to interview everyone who might have wanted him dead, by the sound of it. Who else?”

“Two ex-wives, Verity Hewson and Abigail Meredith,” said Sam. “Referred to by Blundy in his columns as Princess Doormat and Dr. Despot.”

“Going back to Paula Riddiough . . .” Gibbs decided to risk airing his thoughts. “What about Blundy’s computer password, Riddy111111? ‘Riddy’ could be short for ‘Riddiough.’ It was the first thing I thought when I heard her name.”

“When you speak to her, ask her if anyone calls her Riddy,” said Proust. “Continue with the list of enemies, Sergeant.”

“A writer of horror novels, Reuben Tasker, and the journalist Keiran Holland. Both hated Blundy.”

“Keiran Holland?” Proust looked surprised. “The Britain-must-join-the-euro guy?”

“I don’t think he does so much economic journalism these days, but—”

“Talk to them both,” the Snowman cut Sam off. “What about Hannah, the grieving widow? What do we think about her claim that Blundy can’t really have loved her?”

“Simon and I both thought she believed what she was saying, but . . . I think that’s probably paranoia on her part. Low self-esteem.”

“Not as ugly as she thinks she is?” Sellers asked.

“She’s not most people’s idea of attractive, and as she pointed out herself, Blundy was forever harping on about how he loved gorgeous women and hated plain ones, but . . . I don’t know.” Sam shook his head. “To be honest, she sounded . . . well, a bit mad. She had no evidence—no sign that he’d ever had an affair, nothing she’d seen or overheard to back up her belief. And Blundy was a loving, devoted husband to her for the whole of their marriage. Could he really have faked it for so long? Why would he?”

“Don’t ask me,” said Proust. “Most married men have the opposite problem: they love their wives but find it hard not to behave as if they can’t stand them. Sergeant, please don’t look at me with the eyes of a rabbit dying of myxomatosis while Mr. Garfunkel sings ‘Bright Eyes’ in the background! It’s not sexism, it’s the truth! Gibbs and Sellers know what I mean.”

“Since he was so keen on shocking people, Blundy could easily have written a column saying he could never love an ugly woman just to be provocative,” Sam said, red in the face from the rabbit comparison.

“Or he could have been using his love life as yet another rebellion opportunity, in addition to his column in the
Herald
,” said Gibbs.
“He was famous, well-off—he could have had anyone. Well, not anyone, but—”

“Anyone who didn’t mind cruelty,” muttered Sam.

“Maybe he thought it’d shock people if he had an unattractive wife,” Gibbs said. “If you want to shock and keep shocking, you can’t be predictable. So if you’ve written about your fondness for fit women—”

“So then Hannah’s right,” said Sellers. “He didn’t love her. He married her for her freak-show value.”

“Hannah’s not a freak,” Sam said emphatically. “I could be wrong, but I don’t find it plausible that anyone, however much they enjoyed shocking or rebelling, would deliberately choose a partner they weren’t attracted to just to create a certain reaction. Being plain, like Hannah, or even downright ugly, doesn’t mean no one would fall in love with you at first sight.”

“Are you sure about that, Sergeant? I’m not. I think Hannah Blundy might have a point.”

“Sir, it’s not as if people always agree about these things. Maybe Damon Blundy thought Hannah was beautiful.”

“You’ve seen her and I haven’t,” said Proust. “Could any man think she was beautiful? Is it within the bounds of possibility?”

Sam looked confused. “It
has
to be,” he said eventually. “These things are so subjective. Anyone could look beautiful to at least one person. Couldn’t they?”

“No, Sergeant. Think of Superintendent Barrow. His head looks like a goiter, disfiguring a neck from an unusually elevated position.”

“You should send your CV in to the
Daily Herald
, sir,” Gibbs suggested. “Now that Blundy’s dead, they’ll be looking to fill their offensive-columnist gap.”

Proust looked irritated. Then he grinned. “That’s not a bad idea,” he said. “I wonder if I could notch up as many enemies as Blundy.”

“More, I reckon,” said Gibbs.

The Snowman’s smile remained in place. He turned to Sam. “I
assume you’ll be looking at the comments beneath Blundy’s columns, the digital versions?”

“We’ve already started, sir. Any names that come up regularly are being noted, anyone who seems suspiciously keen or regular, anyone veering toward obsessive—whether they’re pro- or anti-Blundy. There’s stacks about him. And we’ll be doing more house-to-house as soon as—”

“Put the Silsford team on that,” Proust barked. “Waste of time! No one saw anything, end of story. No one looks at the world outside anymore. We’re all glued to our tiny screens. Did you speak to Karen Sanderson?”

An audible shudder filled the Snowman’s small glass-sided room. Every police officer in Spilling knew the name. A thirty-five-year-old chartered surveyor with a day-trader husband and no children, Sanderson was a good citizen of the obsessive kind who, for no reason that anyone could fathom, had taken it upon herself several years ago to crack down, personally, on drivers who parked unethically in disabled and mother-and-baby spaces. She’d been cracking down ever since and regularly turned up at the station to harangue the police about their apparent willingness to leave it all to her.

“Sanderson corroborates Nicki Clements’s story,” said Gibbs, who’d had the misfortune of interviewing her that morning. “At eight minutes past eleven, when the email containing the killer’s photo was sent, Sanderson was yelling at Nicki in the library parking lot for parking in the wrong place. She’s sure about the times—she noted it down in her little black book of sinful parking. For the duration of her row with Sanderson, Nicki didn’t touch her phone—Sanderson’s certain.”

“So whoever emailed Damon Blundy a photograph of his killer encased in a protective suit, brandishing a knife as if to stab him imminently . . . it wasn’t Nicki Clements,” said Proust.

“No,” Gibbs agreed.

“Yet Clements describes the woman she fought with in the library
parking lot as an old-granny type. Did you ask Sanderson if she was in her granny costume at the time?”

“She told me she looked the same as she always does,” said Gibbs. “Trendy haircut, tarty crocodile boots. Nor was she helped to fight the good fight by any passing grannies. It was just her and Nicki Clements.”

“I think that’s what they call ‘a telling error,’ Detective. Nicki Clements was right about every detail of her parking-lot row apart from the description of her adversary. Why?”

“She’s lying,” said Gibbs.

“Our best guess is that she started to tell the truth, told a bit of it, then panicked,” Sam said. “She was afraid we might try and track down this strange woman who shouted at her in a parking lot. She wouldn’t have known we’d recognize Karen Sanderson instantly from her description of their exchange. There was a risk that Sanderson would tell us Nicki’s car had both its side mirrors when she saw it, and Nicki had just lied to us about having lost one more than a week ago. I think she gave us the granny description of Sanderson to make it less likely that we’d find her.”

“The lie about the missing mirror wasn’t thought through at all,” said Gibbs. “In the CCTV footage, which Nicki
knew
was what led us to her because Simon and Sam told her, there’s clearly something sticking out of the passenger side of her car where the side mirror ought to be. Of all the stories she could have told, she picked one that was ridiculously easy to prove untrue.”

“She was in a complete state,” said Sam. “I’m surprised she was able to produce any kind of story, though she did calm down once she started to talk about the mirror, funnily enough. It was almost as if the process of creating her lie . . . I don’t know, kind of soothed her.” He turned to Gibbs. “Though I suppose it’s just about possible the mirror thing wasn’t a lie? What if the car accident she described knocked the mirror out of its casing, or container, or whatever—the sticky-out bit that’s there in the CCTV footage?
No.” Sam disagreed with himself before anyone else could. “When Simon and I arrived at her house on Tuesday afternoon, the whole of the passenger-side mirror attachment was gone. She’d left the garage door wide open so that we could see it. Obviously she’d done something to break it off between getting picked up on CCTV and us seeing her car. I also think . . . when we got to the house, we bumped into her husband, Adam, who was on his way to pick up the kids. He said Nicki had gone to London—she’d rented a car to get there. Adam was in a tearing rush to get off to school because he’d had to drive her to the car-rental office once she’d found out the trains were messed up . . .” Sam broke off. “Lots of alarm bells were ringing at that point. I’d like to know what was so important to Nicki, immediately after we’d questioned her, that required a rented car and a trip to London, and dragging her husband home early from work.”

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