Read Only a Game Online

Authors: J. M. Gregson

Tags: #Mystery

Only a Game (21 page)

BOOK: Only a Game
13.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Why did you ask that?'

Again there was the irksome little pause as she gathered her thoughts. ‘To be honest, I'm not quite sure. It wasn't going to make a lot of difference to me. In that I was sure Jim would be selling at a profit and making a shrewd business decision, this was probably in my best interests. But we'd had a heady afternoon and a famous Brunton Rovers victory and I felt close to the people in the room. To be quite honest, I think I wanted them to be aware that I had known nothing of Jim's decision until it was announced a few minutes earlier. It sounds stupid and immature, but I think that was why I asked my question. I was as shocked as everyone else, and I wanted everyone in the room to know that.'

‘So who do you think killed Mr Capstick?'

For the first time, she lost some of her coolness. ‘I've no bloody idea!' She transferred her glittering gaze from Peach to Lucy Blake and her ball-pen poised over her notebook. ‘And for your records, young lady, I loved Jim and I want you to arrest the person who did this as quickly as possible.'

Peach spoke more quietly. ‘Mrs Capstick, I spoke earlier of contract killers and the possibility that one of them might have been hired in this instance. I was reminding myself as well as you that we have to consider all possibilities. It is a highly unlikely possibility in this case. It is neither the usual method nor a typical setting for such a killing. Hit men prefer the bullet and the anonymity of city streets. Moreover, it would be a huge coincidence if such a man chose the very moment when his victim had made an unpopular announcement and given him a collection of alternative suspects. The probability is that the person who killed Mr Capstick was someone who was in the room with you when you heard about the sale of Brunton Rovers.'

Helen Capstick too was quieter as she replied to him. She suddenly looked as drawn and strained as they would have expected at the outset. ‘I had worked out as much for myself.'

‘You knew the victim better than anyone else in that room last night. Which of them do you think it was who killed him?'

A small, weary smile. ‘I've been asking myself that since I heard the news from Mr Pearson this morning. I knew all about my husband, as you say. But most of the people in that room I hardly knew. I've been through them: they're a varied bunch, but I can't imagine any of them committing murder.'

Peach stared steadily at her, looking for further fissures in the carapace of her composure. ‘We need an account of your movements last night. We shall be asking everyone else for a similar account.'

‘And one of them will tell you lies.'

‘Perhaps more than one. They will be most unwise to do so. Secrets rarely survive a murder investigation.'

She looked at him sharply. ‘Jim left the hospitality suite shortly after his announcement. He said he was going up to his office and he obviously did that. There was a lot of discussion of the takeover and what it would mean to the present employees of the club. I felt embarrassed because I didn't believe that I should be part of that. I tried to convince them that I'd had as little warning as they'd had of the news. But after that, I left as quickly as I decently could. I didn't look at the clock, but I'd guess that was about half an hour after Jim.'

Lucy Blake said gently, ‘We need the details of your movements during the rest of the evening, Mrs Capstick.'

She looked at the younger woman with distaste, then deliberately away from her and past her to summon concentration. ‘I went out to my car and drove home. I stayed there for the rest of the evening.'

Peach studied her carefully and without embarrassment. ‘You didn't come to the ground with your husband?'

‘No. I used my own car.' A small, mirthless smile. ‘We rarely travelled together. We usually seemed to have different agendas. This occasion was patently no exception to that.'

‘You didn't go out again during the evening?'

‘No. I've just told you I didn't.'

‘Can anyone confirm this for us?'

‘I don't think so. The domestic staff come in during the day rather than occupy the service flat. I prefer it that way.'

‘You mentioned a chauffeur. I think he was the man who let us in today.'

‘Yes. Wally Boyd. He's my husband's man. He has his own self-contained flat over the garage. I doubt whether he'll be able to vouch for me. I don't even know whether he was in or out last night. It was Jim who told him when he was required and when he could have time off.'

‘I need you to think again about the people you were with in the hospitality suite at Grafton Park. Do you recall any reaction, anything said, which now seems significant in view of what happened to your husband later?'

‘No. I'll go on thinking and let you know if I do.'

She saw them off the premises personally, remaining at the door of the big house until their car disappeared, as if it was important to her to confirm that they had really left.

FIFTEEN

‘
W
e can't stay long, Mum.'

‘That's a fine way to introduce yourselves!' said Agnes Blake with dignity.

Lucy led the two men of such contrasting appearance into the cottage behind her and gestured to Percy Peach to take over. ‘I'm afraid she's right, Mrs B,' said Percy regretfully. ‘We've a murder on our patch and it's all CID hands to the pumps at the moment. Well, apart from the hands of Tommy Bloody Tucker, anyway.'

‘I heard about it on the news. The owner of Brunton Rovers. This man Capstick who bought the club three years ago. They said three years on the news. It hardly seems that long ago to me.'

‘This is Clyde Northcott, Mum,' said Lucy Blake rather desperately.

The DC held himself very erect, so that he looked even taller than his six feet three in the low-ceilinged cottage. He was wearing a polo-necked white shirt, which set off his blackness and made it even more uncompromising. His hair was cut very short, seeming to emphasize the lack of flesh on his features and make his high cheek bones even more prominent. He bent a little from the waist and offered his hand to his hostess, so that Lucy was reminded ridiculously for a moment of Jane Austen and Regency bucks in the pump room at Bath.

Clyde said, in his deep voice, with its traces of the Lancashire where he had lived the whole of his life, ‘Delighted to meet you, Mrs Blake. Lucy has told me lots about you.'

‘And I'm delighted to see you at last, young man.' She held his big hand in her small ones and shook it vigorously.

‘Clyde Northcott is the man to have beside you if you get into a pub fight,' explained Percy Peach helpfully. ‘That's his function in our team, you see. He's what we call a hard bastard. Excuse my language, Mrs B, but that's a technical police term. Clyde will be very useful if we have any punch-ups at the reception after the wedding.'

‘Go on with you, Percy Peach!' Agnes giggled delightedly. ‘I expect he's a good boss to you, isn't he?' she asked Northcott.

It was the first time Lucy Blake had ever seen her junior colleague embarrassed. He looked at every face in the room in turn, then bent his head low towards the old lady's ear. ‘I might be on the other side of the law without him, Mrs Blake. I was keeping bad company when he first knew me.'

‘And we can't have hard bastards on the wrong side, you see, Mrs B,' said Percy breezily.

‘Better to have him in your tent pissing out than outside pissing in? I believe that's the expression. Pardon my language, but I believe it was some American President – they don't have our standards, you know.'

There were three seconds of shocked silence which delighted Agnes Blake. Then Clyde Northcott said with a dazzling smile, ‘I think you and me's going to get along just fine, Mrs Blake!'

‘Oh, I do hope so, Clyde. We'll need to keep these two lovebirds in order on their big day, you see. They'll be billing and cooing all over the place. It will be up to us to keep things moving along on schedule.'

The notion of Percy Peach billing and cooing was an appealing one to Clyde Northcott, but he took care not to catch his DCI's eye. Instead, he nodded seriously at his diminutive new friend. ‘I've already gathered one or two interesting stories about the bridegroom for my speech. I might like to run them past you in private some time in the next week or two.'

‘And I can give you one or two embarrassing episodes from the bride's childhood, if you need a few cheap laughs.' Agnes giggled again, this time in delighted anticipation.

‘Mother, you're not to—'

‘Time we were on our way, I'm afraid,' said Peach hastily. ‘We have a murder to attend to, as I said.'

‘What about next Thursday night, Clyde?' said Agnes. She looked with some disdain at the daughter and putative son-in-law who had thought she might be dismayed to have this impressive black figure as the best man. ‘I work at the supermarket until eight, but you could meet me there. I'd like to introduce you to a few of my friends.'

‘Thursday's good, Mrs Blake. I could perhaps take you to the pub and sort out the details of the young people's big day.' Clyde Northcott, who was five years younger than Lucy and fifteen years younger than Percy, gazed over their heads with impressive maturity.

Agnes Blake looked up at the smooth features of her new black Adonis. ‘You don't play cricket, do you, Clyde?'

Monday morning. The phone rang almost incessantly in Darren Pearson's office, as journalists and broadcasters sought desperately for a quote on the sensational demise of the colourful chairman-owner of Brunton Rovers. ‘Colourful' was the most popular epithet in the days after his passing, when death demanded a certain circumspection. James Capstick would revert again to ‘controversial' in a week or so.

In the room Pearson had allocated to the police investigators, the club's football manager, Robbie Black, was being interviewed by Peach and Blake.

He was nervous. They noted it, but did not as yet attach any particular significance to it. People involved in the investigation of murder were anxious for all sorts of reasons, many of them entirely innocent and understandable. Black was a man who relied for his reputation and his work principally upon his physical prowess and coaching ability rather than any facility with words. He had become a household name and an international footballer through his skills in controlling and manipulating a football. As a manager and coach, his principal duties were to perceive and develop those skills in the men within his charge. Men like Robbie Black often felt at a disadvantage under questioning, feeling rightly or wrongly that their ability to frame replies did not match the questioning of experienced interviewers.

They took him through the events of the previous Saturday. He was eloquent about the game itself and the way it had evolved, still excited despite himself by his players, especially Ashley Greenhalgh, by the team's success and his own role in achieving it. When they moved forward to Jim Capstick's announcement in the hospitality suite and the reactions to it, he was immediately less forthcoming, more suspicious of where the CID questioning might be leading him.

‘I didna get up there until quite late, ye ken. I like to stay with my team while they wind down, whilst they shower and dress. I usually stay until most of them leave.' He gave a grim little smile as he allowed them into an area he usually protected from the public. ‘When we've lost, there can be arguments, even punch-ups if you don't control things. People think we're all buddies together, but it's like any other job – we don't always get on with those we have to work with.'

‘But you didn't have to deal with any of that on Saturday.'

‘No. Things are usually fine when we've won. And Saturday was our best win of the season.' Again the professional pride in the achievement burst through the jacket of caution he had adopted.

‘So what time did you go up to the hospitality suite?'

This was what he had been expecting and he had his answers ready. ‘Quarter past six. The lads had left by then and I thought the Liverpool directors would be either gone or about to go.'

‘You didn't want to speak to them?'

A rueful grin as he recognized a situation familiar to him but foreign to the CID pair. ‘I don't like to get involved with the other team's supporters more than I have to. They often want to talk about referees' decisions and key points in the match.'

‘And you don't like discussing these things with amateurs.'

Again that doleful smile. ‘It's no because they're amateurs. I've had some pretty fierce moments with the professionals – other managers and their assistants. We're all at the mercy of our results. We're better paid than we used to be, but it's an even more precarious business. When there's so much at stake, you don't often see things the same way as the opposition, whether you're professionals or amateurs.' He felt himself being lured on to familiar but dangerous ground. ‘What's this got to do with the death of Jim Capstick?'

Peach smiled, not at all put out by the challenge. ‘Time will tell. Maybe nothing. But it's my belief as it's probably yours that someone in that hospitality suite on Saturday night killed Mr Capstick later in the evening. As CID officers, we come to this situation knowing nothing about the people involved in it, Mr Black. The more we can find about the way those people think and behave, the nearer we may be to perceiving how a man died. A lot of what we learn will be completely irrelevant, as you imply. But the feelings you took into that room are part of the picture, as are the very different feelings which other people took there. Tell us what happened after you arrived at six fifteen.'

‘The Liverpool people had gone. Jim Capstick had obviously been waiting for that. There was a lot of noise and a lot of pleasure over our victory. Capstick soon put a stop to that.' Black paused, obviously waiting for a reaction, but neither Peach nor Blake spoke and he had to go on. ‘He told us he was selling the club. That put a stop to all the laughter.'

BOOK: Only a Game
13.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Suck It Up by Brian Meehl
Miss Emily by Nuala O'Connor
Maggie MacKeever by Bachelors Fare
The March North by Graydon Saunders
Chelynne by Carr, Robyn
Thunderstruck by Roxanne St. Claire
Millionaire's Last Stand by Elle Kennedy