Authors: Stephen Booth
âWhat do you mean, Luke?'
Irvine smiled. âIt seems Jason Shaw is known for producing the occasional rabbit or pheasant in return for a favour. No questions asked about where they came from. You get the picture?'
âHe's a poacher.'
âAnd so was his father before him. They say that's where his skill came from â he learned the tricks of the trade from his dad. In fact, Shaw has a conviction on file for an offence fourteen years ago, when he was a teenager. He was caught out with his father taking a deer. So whoever gave him the job as a gamekeeper probably made a smart move.'
âThe tricks of the trade,' said Cooper. âHe'll have learned how to use a shotgun at an early age too.'
âWe don't have any real evidence against Jason Shaw,' pointed out Hurst. âIt's only speculation. All circumstantial.'
âWhat do we know of his whereabouts now?'
âHe's not due at the quarry today, but he has a late shift at the abbey. Apparently, they're drafting in some of the estate staff to provide a bit of extra security at night-time.'
âWait a minute â who interviewed Shaw? Wasn't it you, Luke?'
Irvine shifted uneasily. âMe â and Carol Villiers. When we came back, we reported to DS Fry.'
âI see.'
âYou weren't here, Ben.'
âRight.'
Cooper found he couldn't fault Irvine. Though the excuse he'd just relied on was the same one he'd used at the scene of George Redfearn's murder, when it was the other way round and Fry had been absent. It sounded like a shift in loyalties. But he was probably imagining things.
âIt seems to me that Shaw developed a relationship with Sandra Blair after they met in the protest group,' said Carol Villiers. âWe know it was Jason Shaw she met up with in Longnor on the evening she died.'
âAnything else?'
âWell, he does have a link with the Nadens,' said Becky Hurst.
âDoes he?'
âYes.' Hurst consulted her notes. âGeoff and Sally Naden were both made redundant from the cheese factory in Hartington. Mr Naden had been a cheese-maker for twenty-five years and his wife worked in the offices. When they lost their jobs he became a parking attendant at Knowle Abbey and she went to work in the kitchen making sandwiches for the café.'
âInteresting.'
Cooper imagined those jobs weren't as well paid as the Nadens had been used to, but they had probably felt they were secure working for the earl. With so many visitors, their services would always be needed. But then they must have found out that Lord Manby was planning to get rid of them â and the visitors too. He had no interest in the welfare of his staff, only in the money he could make from the estate's assets.
âWe know about Rob Beresford,' said Hurst. âHe appears to be an open book. A bit hot-headed maybe, but he doesn't seem the type to be violent.'
âAnd Sandra Blair we know too,' added Irvine.
âThere was the note in her diary about a meeting at the Grandfather Oak. What was that meeting all about?'
âI'm not sure it ever took place,' said Cooper.
It seemed to Cooper that the graveyard protest campaign had drawn attention away from the real issue. Among the protest group there must have been a more extreme faction, one or two individuals who wanted direct action. Well, more than direct action â they intended violence. They were very angry.
âI think there were two factions, who had a disagreement,' said Cooper. âAnd it all fell apart that Halloween night. Somebody wasn't where they were supposed to be according to the plan. That person was out killing George Redfearn at Pilsbury Castle. Mr Redfearn's murder was a message the earl couldn't ignore.'
âBut who was that?' asked Villiers.
âWhoever Sandra Blair was supposed to meet at the bridge that night.'
âWe've talked to the members of the group we can identify. They all insist there were only five in the core group â the Nadens, Jason Shaw, Rob Beresford and Sandra Blair herself.'
âIt's not true, though,' said Cooper.
âWhy, Ben?' said Villiers.
He indicated the group photo on his screen, the one taken at Harpur Hill with the Nadens, Shaw, Beresford and Sandra Blair.
âWell, think about it,' he said. âThis photo was taken on Sandra's phone. But she's in the shot herself. So who took the picture?'
B
en Cooper was anxious to get an opportunity to see inside Jason Shaw's house. But at the moment he didn't have enough justification for a search warrant. As Irvine had said, it was all speculation and suspicion. It was a shame, though. A person's home told you more about them than any amount of background checks you could do. No matter how many friends, colleagues and neighbours you talked to, you wouldn't ever get a true picture of the person. Everyone created a public façade for themselves, sometimes several. You could be one person at work, a different one with the family, and another when you were down the pub with your friends. But inside the home was where the façade broke down. You could see the aspects of a person's life that they didn't want anyone to know about.
It was only inside Sandra Blair's home that he'd got a proper feeling for the sort of person she was. And, though she had some unusual interests, he didn't feel she was the fanatical type who would be willing to take violent direct action, as she'd been described by the Nadens.
And of course he'd seen inside Knowle Abbey too. That was an eye-opener. Yet he'd learned almost nothing about its present owner, while learning perhaps too much about some of his eccentric ancestors. Earl Manby remained an enigmatic figure, a sort of figurehead for the estate, like the eagle's head emblem of the Manby family, representing something more than just itself.
Cooper would have liked to be able to see behind the façade being presented at Knowle on behalf of his lordship, if only for the sake of his own curiosity. But it probably wouldn't happen now. He wondered if Detective Superintendent Branagh had ever managed to get a few words with the earl, as he'd suggested. That was a conversation he would love to have overheard. They were two people accustomed to exercising power.
In a way coffin roads represented the worst aspects of the hierarchical structures so many people had lived with. They weren't legacies from an ancient past, but were deliberately brought into being during medieval times. They were an unintended side-effect of an old canon law on the rights of parishioners. As Bill Latham had said himself, they were just one more exercise in power and privilege.
Cooper put on his jacket and set off to visit Knowle Abbey for the final time.
S
taff interviews were under way at Knowle. The Major Crime Unit had taken over the estate office, ousting Meredith Burns from her desk.
Cooper thought of that message they'd found: âMeet Grandfather, 1am'. But that must have been a different meeting, surely? It had been marked in Sandra Blair's diary for 31 October. And this killing had happened earlier than one o'clock. It had been planned for the period when the bonfire was blazing away in Bowden, a time when many of the staff from the abbey were either at home themselves or distracted from their duties.
âA shotgun,' he said when he met Fry at the outer cordon. âThat's a totally different situation altogether from the other deaths, Diane.'
âAbsolutely.'
Of course, there were many legally held shotguns in the possession of ordinary individuals in an area like this. Farmers always had them. Cooper owned one himself, though he kept it in the gun cabinet at Bridge End Farm with Matt's.
But right now he was thinking of the men he'd seen at that remote farmstead on Axe Edge Moor. Bagshaw Farm, the home of Daniel Grady. Had one of those men been sent on a different kind of rat hunt?
He hadn't liked Grady and felt sure a bit of digging would turn up all kinds of dubious activities. But was Grady so closely involved with the protest group? Or did somebody simply have enough money to pay him for this kind of service?
Cooper told Fry about the plans for Alderhill Quarry and the link to George Redfearn's company. Her mouth fell open when he mentioned the sum of two hundred million pounds.
âDo you remember what Meredith Burns said that first time we visited Knowle Abbey?' said Cooper. âWhen I offended her by asking for a photograph of the earl?'
âYes, she said he wasn't a rock star. I thought that was stating the obvious myself.'
âNo, not that. She said he would much rather find some other way of paying for the upkeep of the abbey, instead of letting all these visitors in. Because it was his home.'
âOh, yes. I do remember,' said Fry.
âWell, this is it, isn't it?'
âThis is what?'
âThe quarry scheme is his alternative way of funding the repair and maintenance of Knowle Abbey.' Cooper waved a hand at the visitors being turned away at the gate, at the car parking area, and the buildings converted for use as a restaurant, a craft centre, a gift shop. âThe revenue from the quarry would have enabled him to put a stop to all this. No more crowds of visitors coming in to gawp at his home.'
âWell, it would be a shame, I suppose,' said Fry, âif you're interested in that sort of thing. But there are plenty of other historic houses in Derbyshire. Chatsworth is much grander, they tell me. And Haddon Hall is supposed to be better preserved.'
âNo, no, you're missing the point,' said Cooper. âThink about it for a minute. No paying visitors means no restaurant, no craft centre, no gift shop and no plant nursery. And without those there would be no guides, no car park attendants, no catering staff or shop assistants. A lot of people would lose their jobs.'
âYou're right.'
Cooper sighed. He didn't want to be right. Not all the time. Not when the truth seemed so tragic and so inevitable.
âAt the moment Knowle Abbey is putting a lot of money back into local communities through the wages paid to all these staff. That would stop if the quarry goes ahead. Eden Valley Mineral Products would have no interest in employing local people.' He shook his head in despair. âIt's just like the cheese factory all over again.'
âWhat?' said Fry, puzzled.
âNever mind.'
âYou know, that's not what I expected you to say.'
âWhat did you expect me to say, Diane?'
â“I told you so.”'
âS
o it's a smokescreen, isn't it?' said Fry.
âWhat is?'
âThis business about the Corpse Bridge. It was all designed to distract our attention, to make us think the deaths were connected with the redevelopment of the graveyard. I have to say that if I'd been the investigating officer myself in those initial stages, the idea would never have occurred to me.'
âThat's because of your local ignorance,' protested Cooper. âYou'd never heard of the Corpse Bridge or a coffin road.'
âExactly,' said Fry. âExcept that I wouldn't describe it as ignorance. I'd call it the advantage of an unbiased mind.'
Cooper thought about it for a moment. Could she be right about this? To be fair, she sometimes
was
right. That cold objectivity of hers had its place.
âBut if it was a deliberate distraction,' he said slowly, âthat would meanâ¦'
âYes, Ben. That whoever was responsible expected to be dealing with a local person, who knew the history of the Corpse Bridge. They anticipated it would be someone like you, in fact.'
Cooper shook his head. âSurely anyone would have made the connection eventually, once they started asking a few questions.'
âEventually, perhaps. But we'd have picked up more useful lines of inquiry by then. And we'd have saved ourselves a lot of time and effort. And perhaps some lives.'
âSo you're fixing your mind on the quarry protests.'
âAnd you're still fixated with the Corpse Bridge and the Bowden protest group.'
âSomeone planned all this,' said Cooper. âAn individual who knows all about lying and when to tell the truth â or, at least, a partial truth. They all followed the same strategy. They gave us the truth when there was no point in trying to conceal it. Rob Beresford admitted straight away that he knew Sandra Blair. Both the Nadens and Jason Shaw came forward to admit they were in the area at the time she died. It made them look innocent and willing to cooperate. And Brendan Kilner pointed me in the direction of the burial ground at Bowden when I enquired about a connection between the names. Once I'd asked him that question, he knew I'd find out the answer some other way. So he told me. But even Kilner only gave me as little as he needed to and no more.'
âSo what are you saying?'
âI think there was a policy at work here. Rules of engagement, if you like. It's a bit too neat for each of them to have thought of doing that separately. People just don't react in that way without some advance preparation. The instinct of the guilty is to tell a lie.'
âThere's still a big question for you to think about, though, isn't there? Who was with Sandra Blair at the bridge that night?'
Cooper couldn't answer that question, no matter how much he would have liked to. He had to let it pass. Instead, he considered the crime scene, with its tents and arc lights and figures in white scene suits going backwards and forwards to the forensic vans.
âSo the earl was attacked at the Grandfather Oak?' he said.
âHis attacker was standing under the tree,' said Fry. âThe earl was shot at close range the first time. He probably saw his attacker and turned away to escape. The first blast caught him in the back of the right shoulder.'
âYes, I see.'
Then the earl had run. He almost reached the back of the abbey, the west wing where the family apartments were located. The killer must have pursued him before firing the second and fatal shot.