âColleagues,' said the woman next to him. âDon't you know what that means?'
âNo,' the man replied. âWhat
does
it mean?'
âWell,' the woman said, suddenly looking helpless, âit's . . . err . . . it's like colleges, only different.'
âWhat I meant was that another police officer will call round and see you,' Clarke explained.
âThen why didn't you say that in the first place?' the man in the cloth cap wondered.
Clarke took the pictures from the folder and passed them around. Several of the women tut-tutted in a sympathetic sort of way, most of the men seemed vaguely embarrassed to find themselves in a situation in which any emotion was being expressed, and the two schoolboys merely looked disappointed.
âPoor little mite,' said a woman in headscarf and curlers. âYou used to feel safe walking round this town, but you don't any more.'
âIt was different before the war,' the woman who was standing next to her contributed. âTimes were hard, but at least you didn't have to worry about being murdered in your bed.'
âThe girl was murdered in the
park
,' Clarke pointing out.
âAnd the buses ran on time back then,' said first woman, ignoring him, and looking hopefully down the road. âThere were always plenty of buses around before the war.'
It wasn't like this in films, Clarke thought. In the films, members of the general public showed the greatest respect for the police, and were always falling over themselves to help see that justice was done. But then, he supposed, that was because most of those films weren't set in Whitebridge, the dour and grumpy capital of the north.
âHas
anybody
seen the girl?' he asked, hoping for one of those breakthroughs that always come about a third of the way through the movie.
Nobody had.
By eight thirty, reports were beginning to land on Beresford's desk, some filed by constables who had canvassed public places (like PC Clarke), some from the units that had stopped drivers on their way to work and shown them Maggie's picture, and some from officers who had disturbed householders at their breakfasts in order to put the standard questions.
There were already a fair number of positive responses, and a younger, less-experienced Beresford would have been over the moon about them. This Beresford, however, had now acquired a great deal of experience of that kind of work â and was prepared for disappointment.
âI know I said I'd seen her, but I'd forgotten that I was in Accrington that day.'
âTurns out the girl I saw was the niece of Mrs Clegg from next door, who's come up for a visit.'
âYes, I saw the girl, but I won't tell you who killed her until you've told me how big the reward is.'
âOf course I recognized her. She's my sister â and she's been missing since 1943.'
Yes, they would get all that â and more.
All kinds of cranks â and lonely people who simply wanted some attention paid to them â would come crawling out of the woodwork, as they always did whenever there was a murder. Hundreds of police hours would be spent in chasing up the delusional or the merely confused. But it had to be done, because there was just a chance that one of those people wouldn't be delusional, and might give them the lead they now so desperately needed.
Beresford lit up a cigarette â he calculated it was his fourth one of the morning â did a couple of stretches to get his muscles working again, and then set off to brief his team.
Lennie Greene was already sitting at the table in the interview room when Baxter arrived. He was not a big man, but with his square body and bullet-shaped head, the chief constable had absolutely no doubt that he was a very
hard
one.
âIt was good of you to agree to meet me,' Baxter said, as he sat down. âThe prison authorities didn't think you would.'
âThe prison authorities don't know shit,' Greene replied.
âThe reason you're in here is because you blinded a policeman, isn't it?' Baxter asked. âThey gave you twenty years for it.'
âThat's right, they did â the justice system doesn't like it when a member of the criminal classes attacks a guardian of law and order. The only thing is, I didn't do it.'
âYou didn't blind him?'
âOh, I blinded him, all right. I hit him so hard that when he came to, he couldn't see. But I didn't attack him.'
âTell me more,' Baxter invited.
âHe was one of those coppers who not only thinks he's really hard, but always has to prove it. You know the type?'
âYes, I know the type â and it's a type not confined to police officers,' Baxter said.
âGranted,' Greene replied. âAnyway, we happened to be in the same club one night. He was drunk, and looking for trouble, and when he saw me â a man with something of a reputation â he couldn't resist the temptation to start pushing me around. I held off until he actually hit me, then I hit him back.'
âAnd blinded him?'
âNo, I only gave him a little tap â just to show him how out of his depth he was. But he wouldn't learn his lesson, and he came after me with a broken bottle. That's when I
really
hit him.'
âThe way you've described it, it sounds like self-defence,' Baxter said.
âAnd so it was â except that when it came to trial, nobody in the club seemed to be able to remember the broken bottle. I didn't blame them for that â the filth were determined to get me banged up, and they'd have crushed anybody who got in their way.'
âSo you're an innocent man?'
âOf course I'm not an innocent man. I've done enough in my time to have earned half a dozen life sentences â but I didn't do that!'
âYou were an important man on the outside, weren't you?'
âWithin my own small community, I had a certain amount of influence, yes,' Greene agreed.
âAnd being in prison hasn't really changed that, because, from what I hear, on this side of the bars, you're an absolute monarch.'
Greene grinned. âNow that's an interesting choice of words. Have you been dipping into my file?'
âI have.'
âI never had much interest in learning before I got banged up, but now I really do love history,' Greene said, in a surprisingly dreamy way.
âAnd you've got an O-level in it,' Baxter said.
âAnd I've got an O-level in it,' Greene agreed. âYou're completely wrong with that “absolute monarch” idea, you know.'
âAm I?'
âCouldn't be wronger. Take Louis XIV of France, for example â now there
was
an absolute monarch. He once said, “
L'etat, c'est moi
,” â I am the state â and he was right. He could do anything he wanted to.'
âAnd “you are the prison” â at least as far as the other inmates are concerned,' Baxter countered.
âIt's not the same,' Greene said. âLouis XIV never had to worry that if he overstepped the line, he'd be woken up in the middle of night by three or four screws armed with truncheons â but I do. And after the beating, I'd be on the next bus out of here, en route to another prison â which wouldn't be good, because I'm too old to start building up my reputation again from scratch.' He paused. âWhere exactly is all this chit-chat leading?'
âI want to make a deal with you,' Baxter said. âI need to know how things work in this prison â not in specific terms, but generally â and you're in a position to tell me.'
âAnd what do I get out of it?' Greene asked.
âYou get the chance to do a long-distance learning degree in history at the Open University,' Baxter said.
A hunger â a deep yearning â appeared in Greene's eyes.
âYou can fix that?' he asked, with a tremble in his voice.
Baxter nodded. âI think so. You know how things work â I don't know anybody at the Open University, but I do know a professor at Lancaster University who owes me a favour, and I've no doubt that he's got a mate in the OU who owes him a favour . . .'
âWheels within wheels,' Greene said.
âWheels within wheels,' Baxter agreed. âSo, yes, I think I can swing it â but only if you give me what I need.'
âI'll try,' Greene said earnestly. âWhat do you want to know?'
âYou say you're nothing like the absolute monarch in this prison, so just what are you?'
âI'm a facilitator. Dunston Prison is a cooking pot, sitting on a high heat and in constant danger of boiling over. I'm the one who keeps the lid on.'
âAnd how do you do that?'
âI don't really want to tell you â and you don't really want to know,' Greene replied. âLet's just say that since I've been here, not a single prison officer has been attacked.'
âAnd in return, the prison authorities turn a blind eye to whatever you get up to?'
Greene shrugged. âIf it wasn't me who was given a bit of leeway, it would be somebody else, because there are some jobs â like tobacco distribution â that always need to be done.'
âDo you ever have anybody beaten up?' Baxter asked.
âNext question,' Greene said.
âIf you want to get on a history course, you'll have to do better than that,' Baxter told him.
âPut it this way,' Greene said, âin any organization, there has to be some instrument for enforcing discipline. Does that answer your question?'
âI think so,' Baxter said. âSecond question â does anybody ever get beaten up
without
your permission?'
âWhat you mean is, did I authorize the attacks on Jeremy Templar.'
âAnd did you?'
âI didn't try to stop them.'
âAnd why was that â because he was a sex offender, and so he only got what he deserved?'
âNo, it was because, as we've already established, I'm not an absolute monarch.'
âSomething's not quite adding up here,' Baxter mused. âPower's not just about deciding who gets hurt â it's also about deciding who
doesn't
get hurt. And if you don't have
that
power, then you really have no power at all.'
âWhat happened to Templar was nothing to do with me,' Greene said, and in his tone there was the implication that he was not prepared to debate the matter any further.
âYou do know who attacked him though, don't you?'
âWould you believe me if I said I didn't?'
âNo.'
âSo there's no point in denying it.'
âI want to know about the attacks,' Baxter said. âI want to know if they were so carefully planned that there was nothing that the prison officers could have done to prevent them, or if the attackers merely took advantage of a lapse in prison security. In other words, were the guards outmanoeuvred or simply incompetent?'
âSo now you're asking me to snitch on my fellow lags?'
âNo, not at all. I don't need to know their names, just the circumstances in which the attacks took place.'
âI can't do it,' Greene said flatly. âIt'd be a step too far.'
âThen I can't recommend you to the Open University,' Baxter said, just as flatly.
âI know,' Greene said â and there were tears in his eyes.
The police surgeon's office at the morgue had been central to so many cases that Monika Paniatowski had almost come to regard it as an extension of her own office, and looking around it at that moment â at the prints of Indian gods that had been hung by Dr Shastri, and the bag of golf clubs belonging to Dr Taylor â she reminded herself of just how important a good police doctor was to any investigation.
The newest police doctor â Liz Duffy â was sitting behind the same desk that Shastri and Taylor had occupied, and she seemed very, very tired.
âYes, I know that I look like death warmed up,' Dr Duffy said, reading Paniatowski's expression, âbut then I do work in a morgue, so it's really quite appropriate, isn't it?' She smiled weakly. âThat's a little pathologist's humour for you, Monika.'
âDid the autopsy take all night?' Paniatowski asked.
âNo â just most of it.'
âSo you haven't been home at all?'
âThere didn't seem much point, and anyway, I didn't know exactly when you'd be coming, and I wanted to make sure that I was here when you did.'
âThat was very thoughtful of you.'
âI'm the assistant police surgeon â it's my job,' Liz Duffy said, with a tired grin. âWould you like to hear what I've got?'
âYes, please.'
âMaggie Hudson's death was due to strangulation, which should come as no surprise to anybody who's seen her. Last night in the park, I estimated that she'd died between two and three hours earlier, but having run some tests, I'd be inclined to say it was closer to two than to three. I hope that's of some help to you.'
âSo that would put her death at around seven o'clock?'
âYes.'
When it was already dark, Paniatowski thought â when, chances were, the park was all but deserted.
âI also found a contusion on the back of her head,' Liz Duffy said.
âWas it recent?'
âVery recent. I'd say the blow was delivered shortly before death, and my guess â and bear in mind that I'm no detective â is that since she was obviously much stronger than Jill Harris, the killer did that to ensure she didn't struggle too much.'
âLast night in the park, you told me that you couldn't say whether there was one killer or two,' Paniatowski said. âFrom the way you're talking now, it seems as if you'd decided there was only one.'
âThat's my gut feeling,' Liz Duffy said, âbut I'm afraid I don't have any conclusive medical evidence to back it up.'
âWas Maggie unconscious when she died?'