Authors: Reginald Hill
'I just wondered if it were still there,' said Charley. 'No one had said anything about it and I just wondered.'
They were sitting downstairs drinking the tea which Mrs Spillings had brought round on discovering Pascoe's departure. Her volubility did not mean she was insensitive to atmosphere and she had withdrawn without demur when Pascoe had thanked her firmly and promised he would collect the stuff for The Towers before he left.
'No one would say anything about it, unless they
knew,'
Pascoe pointed out reasonably. 'Who did know, Charley?'
'What's it matter?' asked the young man. 'It didn't get nicked.'
'Which probably clears anyone who knew,' offered Pascoe.
Charley considered this.
'Oh yeah. I get you,' he said. 'Well, no one knew, as far as I'm concerned. I never told anyone.'
'And how did you know? Did your grandfather tell you?'
It would have been easy for the young man to lie, and for a moment perhaps he considered it. But to his great credit in Pascoe's eyes, he decided against it and said, 'No. It was when he lent me the money for the ring. He told me to wait a bit, then he went upstairs and I heard a noise, it must've been the panel coming off, you've got to spring it and it sort of flies out, so I went half way up the stairs, just far enough to see he was all right.'
'And you saw him replacing the panel, and then he came down with your money?'
'That's right,' said Charley. 'It'll be me mam's money now, won't it?'
'I expect so,' said Pascoe. 'You should have told me about the possibility of its being there before, Charley. You realize that?'
'Yeah, all right. But I wasn't going to nick it, if that's what you're thinking.'
Pascoe believed him. The tears on the boy's face had been provoked by the presence in the box of several envelopes containing the cash and money orders with which Charley had conscientiously paid off his debt. Such a fond relationship as this had clearly been could not have led to theft.
'We'll say you showed me where it might be hidden, all right?' he said. 'There's about two hundred quid in notes, plus the money orders. Want to check?'
Charley shook his head.
'It'll be kept safe down at the police station for the time being, but your mam will get it all, never fear. Now, is there anything else you want to tell me or show me?'
Charley shook his head.
'OK,' said Pascoe. 'Let's be getting you back. Your mam can have the keys now, I think. You've got the front door one, haven't you? Oh and while I think on, here's the back door key. The one from the wash-house.'
He dug into his pocket and produced the key he'd found in the old boiler in the wash-house.
Charley took it and looked at it, puzzled.
'This isn't it,' he said.
'Isn't what? The back door key? Why do you say that?' asked Pascoe.
'I'm not saying it's not the back door key,' said Charley. 'But it's not the one granda kept hid in the wash-house.'
'No?' said Pascoe.
He went into the kitchen, the youth following.
'What about this one?' he said, holding up the key which had been in the lock beneath the broken window.
'Aye, that's it. That's the one out of the wash-house,' said Charley.
'Are you sure?'
'Of course I'm sure. That's the way I always came and went, see. Look, it's older and muckier, isn't it? And it's got a number on and this one hasn't.'
It was true. The two keys were readily distinguishable. But did it matter? Charley had been away from home for a few weeks after all. Perhaps the old man himself had swapped the keys round.
Yet if he hadn't, what might it signify?
Much, perhaps, if only he had time to sit and ponder it. Much.
Chapter 22
'If this is dying, I don't think much of it.'
Pascoe's hopes of finding a small square of pondering time vanished when he was greeted at the station with news of the raid on the unlicensed betting shop.
'So he did have money? A lot of money? Great!' he declared, much to the delight of Seymour, who hoped that he was in for a large helping of undeserved credit to compensate for the great dollops of undeserved criticism which were ladled on to a detective-constable's plate with monotonous regularity.
But this was not to be. As Pascoe recounted his interview with Mrs Escott it became clear that he did not hold Seymour innocent of blame.
'So she just lost a day,' said Wield.
'That's right. A possibility you would expect a young detective to admit, who had just been warned that the old lady was having memory problems.'
It had been a mistake to let on that Tempest, the warden, had made any comment on Mrs Escott's mental decline, realized Seymour miserably.
'They're not what they used to be, young detectives,' observed Wield.
'You'll need proper statements now, you realize that?' Pascoe said. 'The waitress who served him, the man in the off-licence.'
Seymour brightened up. His attempts to blarney a date out of Bernadette had failed the previous lunch-time, but he had high hopes that a second assault might weaken resistance. ‘Something still puzzles me,' said Pascoe. 'Here's an old lad come into a bit of money, and he's got the spirit and the gumption to lash out on a good meal and a bottle of booze to take home. Now why, on a night like that, does he set off to walk home? Money in his pocket, he could afford a taxi! Or, if that seemed too extravagant, you'd think at the very least he'd catch a bus. A No. 17 would take him from the town centre right to those shops behind Castleton Court, wouldn't it? And how often do they run? Every quarter of an hour, isn't it?'
He looked questioningly at Wield and Seymour. Wield had the face to abide such questions; Seymour felt challenged. He had no answer, but his mind was stimulated to a suggestion offered in hope of a consolation prize.
'Sir, shall I go back and see Mrs Escott again?' he asked.
'For a statement, you mean?' said Pascoe in surprise. 'A statement of what, for God's sake? She can't remember!'
'No, sir,' contradicted Seymour. 'She remembered the wrong day but she remembered it very well. Now, she might still have seen Parrinder on the Friday, mightn't she? Perhaps now she's had time to puzzle it over, something might have come back to her.'
Pascoe doubted it. His own gentle probings had produced a puzzled appreciation that the old lady might have got something wrong, but he had not felt it worthwhile to risk distressing her by going too hard. And now that 'Tap' Parrinder was definitely placed in the betting shop from 1.45 to 4.30
P.M
., he couldn't see what positive contribution any further memories of Mrs Escott could make. On the other hand, he appreciated Seymour's eagerness to regain what he felt as lost credit.
'Worth a try perhaps,' he said. 'But go easy, very easy. She's old and confused. And make damn sure you've got all those statements first!'
After Seymour had gone, Wield looked at Pascoe with something which might have been a smile fissuring his lips.
'He's a good lad,' he said.
'Yes, I know,' said Pascoe. 'He did well to get Charlesworth to cooperate, though I expect he's as keen as anyone to see these illicit shops closed.'
'So it clears the way for his own fiddles, you mean?' said Wield.
'Perhaps, though he was looked at recently and he came out clean.'
'So I believe. Did you know he was such an old chum of the Super's?'
Again that immediate and suggestive association! It was going to be very difficult to prevent Dalziel's friendship and Charlesworth's fortune from going together like fish and chips.
'No, but it does give Mr Dalziel a good reason for dining with him, doesn't it?' he pointed out.
'Aye, but then you'd think he'd have put Mr Dalziel on to this illegal betting shop racket, wouldn't you?' said Wield, who seemed determined to play devil's advocate.
'It was Mr Dalziel who put us on to Charlesworth, remember? I suppose a bookie has got to be careful about fingering others in the same line, even when they're bent. Could be that friend Don will turn out to be financed by some legit firm who might not take kindly to Charlesworth shopping them. Seymour will keep his mouth shut there, I hope.'
'Oh yes. He didn't really want to tell me! I think he rather liked Charlesworth, and
he's
certainly taken a shine to Seymour from the sound of it.'
'Yes,' said Pascoe thoughtfully. 'There was a son, I recall. It was in the local rag a few years back. He seemed bent on raising a bit of hell with his dad's hard-earned cash and ended up getting himself killed in a car smash. He'd be almost Seymour's age.'
'And build too if he took after his dad. And mebbe colouring if he took after his mam.'
Pascoe looked at Wield in surprise.
'You know her?'
'I saw her once in court. Speeding offence. Not long after the lad died. And not long before she and Charlesworth separated. Big red-haired woman. I got the impression she was chasing her lad the best way she knew how. I often wondered if she ran out of steam before she caught up with him.'
Pascoe shook his head glumly. This dying was enough to get a man down. He could just about cope, as everyone had to, with the idea that the car or perhaps the blood clot which was to knock him over was already speeding on its way. But the thought of what his death might mean to Ellie and to Rose was unbearable. Though is that real altruism or just disguised egotism? he asked himself. After all, the pension's not bad, and there's a bit of insurance, and that supercilious, bow-tied historian at the college has always fancied Ellie, and Rose would have lost all memory of me by the time she was two . . .
This morbid train of thought was interrupted by the arrival of Inspector Cruikshank.
'Seems you were right, then,' he congratulated Pascoe, with the smile of a candidate who has just lost his deposit.
'Yes, well, it's got to happen sometimes. Law of averages,' joked Pascoe, careful not to crow in the face of this attempt at magnanimity.
'That's right,' said Cruikshank. 'Oh, by the way, in the caravan that came back from Welfare Lane, there was this bag of stones. Hector told me they were the ones you got him to collect from the recreation ground. I thought, that's Inspector Pascoe! So much on his plate, he's bound to overlook a thing or two. So I've sent them down to Forensic for testing. On CID authority. That all right then?'
Pascoe looked at him with horror, imagining the reaction of the irascible little Scot in charge of the laboratory to the arrival of several dozen stones, unlabelled, all piled together in one bag, with a request for careful and almost certainly non-productive examination.
You rotten sod, Cruikshank! he thought. You wouldn't have dared pull such a stunt if Dalziel had been around!
'Thanks a lot,' he said to Cruikshank. 'Mr Dalziel will be so pleased to find uniformed and CID working so well together. I'll make sure he knows exactly how much you've cooperated, Inspector!'
Which in the circumstances was the best he could do.
Dennis Seymour was also doing his best, but Bernadette McCrystal was more than a match for him. To the vast disapproval of the dragon supervisor, he had insisted that taking her statement was a matter of such urgency that it brooked no delay. Now, in the supervisor's own office, with the statement signed and sealed, he had turned to more personal matters.
'Why won't I go out with you, is it?' she asked. 'Time was when a girl didn't have to offer reasons, but times change and here's three to be going on with. One, you're a policeman and I've got me reputation to be thinking of. Two, you're a Protestant, and I've got me religion to be thinking of.'
'And three?' prompted Seymour.
'Three, I like dancing,
real
dancing I mean, and you look a clumsy, awkward sort of a fellow and I've got me feet to be thinking of.'
'Hold on!' he protested. 'I'm a black belt at the old ballroom.'
'Black belt? That's judo, isn't it?'
'Yeah,' he grinned. 'I'm not so hot on the entrechats, but you won't half fly around the floor.'
She laughed and said, 'All right. I'll give you a two-dance trial. Where are we going?'
'I'll leave that to you,' said Seymour, delighted. 'I'll just choose where we're starting from. The lounge bar at The Portland, eight o'clock tonight.'
'That's a posh kind of place,' she said thoughtfully.
'I reckon you're a posh kind of girl,' said Seymour gallantly.
'Then you're on. Now I'd better get back to cleaning them tables, else she'll be grinding her false teeth to pumice.'
Outside the department store, Seymour stopped to take in a deep breath of wintry air. He felt well satisfied with life. Just as (oh, how these untimely thoughts came sneaking in!) 'Tap' Parrinder must have felt, close to this very spot last Friday. Money in his pocket, food in his belly, nothing to bother him except to decide which off- licence to buy his rum in.
In fact, it occurred to Seymour for the first time, he had a choice of two close at hand. Turning left about a hundred yards along on the opposite side of the road was the off-licence he'd actually used.
But if he'd turned right instead, the very next Shop to Starbuck's was a wine and spirit store.
And if his plan had been to walk back to Castleton Court, taking the short cut across the Recreation Ground, then that was the way he should have gone.
It was probably simply explained. Perhaps this wine shop had been closed on Friday evening. It was easy to check. Seymour strolled along and looked at the listed opening hours, then went in to double-check.
No, it had been open.
Perhaps it was a question of choice, or of price? But a glance at the shelves showed the same brand of rum that he'd purchased at the other place, and five pence cheaper at that.
As Seymour made his way to the other off-licence, he recalled Pascoe's puzzlement that a man with money in his pocket should choose to walk home in that weather. Fifty yards further in this direction there was a taxi-rank. Perhaps Parrinder had determined to get a taxi, but after buying his rum changed his mind. Perhaps there was no taxi free and, impatient of waiting, he had set out on foot.
The man who'd served Parrinder couldn't help. He signed his statement but was unable to say which direction the old man had turned as he left the shop.
Seymour thanked him and walked on to the taxi-rank. His reception swung between opposite poles in the first minute, from being greeted as a customer to being recognized as a cop, but it soon settled at cautious cooperation when the cabbies realized he was not inquiring into their peccadilloes.
It was a quiet time of day and there were seven of them there, all of whom had been on on Friday afternoon, but none of them recalled Parrinder.
'We hardly ever got back here,' explained one of them. 'It was a filthy afternoon; folk who'd never dream of taking a cab normally were flagging us down. You'd no sooner dropped one lot than there was someone else pushing in.'
So probably the rank had been empty and old 'Tap' had made the fatal decision to set off walking.
But Seymour was bent on thoroughness today. No more questions left unasked! He was not going to have Wield's Gothic eyebrows arch up in disbelief or, worse still, Pascoe's leanly handsome features stretch in faint puzzlement as one or the other asked, 'But you didn't actually talk to
all
the cabbies?'
A comprehensive list of those who might have been around on Friday was provided by the now very friendly seven who took him into their shelter and gave him cups of tea, the whiles vying with each other to provide the most remarkable reminiscence of cab-life. An hour later Seymour was awarding the palm to the perhaps valedictory coupling of groom and best man on their way to church, with as a close second the story of the couple who kept the taxi with its meter running outside a bank which, unbeknown to the driver, they were robbing, only later to be caught by the police having a fierce argument about the size of the fare, when a little man called Grundy appeared with a terrible cold which his colleagues told him in plain unadorned terms to keep to himself.
But Grundy when questioned about 'Tap' Parrinder replied instantly, if throatily, 'Yeah, I remember him. Old boy, full of the joys of spring, he were. Told me to drive him to Castleton Court.'
'That's the one,' said Seymour, now very puzzled. 'You didn't see what he did when he got to Castleton Court, did you?'
'No, I didn't,' snuffled Grundy. 'Mainly because I wasn't there.'
'You weren't there?'
'We never got to Castleton Court, see?' proclaimed the catarrhal cabbie. 'I was driving steadily along through the rain when suddenly he yells out, "All right! Stop here! This'll do!" so I stops, and out he gets, there was eighty-five p. on the clock and he gives me a quid and that's the last I see of him.'
'You don't know why he changed his mind?'
'I don't know. I thought maybe he just realized how much it was costing him. Could be it was his last quid, poor old sod. If he'd said something, like, I'd have run him home all the same. It wasn't a night for putting a cat out.'
He sneezed violently. Seymour averted his face in a hopeless attempt at evasion.
'And where was this?' he asked.
'Where he got out, you mean? Right outside the Alderman Woodhouse Recreation Ground.'
Seymour knew he was putting his health at grave risk by getting into a cab driven by a man with a cold like Grundy's, but when a bout of sneezing almost had them on to the pavement, he realized that germs might be the least of his worries.
It was with great relief that he got out at the spot which Grundy assured him was as near the point of Parrinder's departure as made no difference.
As an exercise in reconstruction in the event it didn't seem to have very much point. Grundy repeated his story without alteration. He also pointed out that, as stated, there was eighty-five pence on the clock, and looked significantly at his passenger.