âIt is the right thing to do,' he says. âIt is just. Betrayal must be punished. Give me the hatchet, Stefan.'
âSo, in a heartbeat, you went from not wanting it done
at all
to wanting to do it
yourself
?' Paniatowski asked sceptically.
âYes.'
âWhy?'
âWhat better way can a man convince himself that he has made the right decision than by making himself responsible for carrying out that decision?'
So far, Tadeujz has only heard the words, and though he knows that something bad is about to happen to him, he has no idea what. Now Stanislaw steps in front of him, and he can see the hatchet. His eyes widen with fear. He struggles harder, but it is useless. He tries to scream, but the gag will not allow him.
Stan brings down the hatchet with tremendous force, severing the hand at the wrist. Blood spurts everywhere.
The two men holding Tadeujz release their grip. He falls to the floor, blood bubbling from his severed limb like water from a fountain.
âWhat happens now?' Stan asks.
Stefan shrugs. âHe has no friends here â no one who wishes to help him. If he can make it to the wire, perhaps his
new
friends, the guards, will save his life. If he cannot . . .'
He cannot. He bleeds to death on the floor, without ever regaining consciousness.
She was starting to like Stan again, Paniatowski thought. She was starting to
admire
him again!
And that was bad!
âIt's a cracking story, I'll give you that,' she said. âBut, you see, it just doesn't add up.'
âDoesn't it?' Szymborska asked.
âNo, it certainly doesn't. If it was true, you'd have been shot the following morning, wouldn't you? Yet here you are, sitting in this room, still alive and telling me the tale.'
âWhen Stefan said that we would be shot, he was forgetting one important thing,' Stan told her.
âAnd what was that?'
âJust how much the camp commandant â the man with the power of life and death over us â despised Poles.
All
Poles!'
When morning comes, and the body is discovered during a routine check of the hut, the prisoners are all marched into the yard, where they are addressed by the commandant.
âWhoever killed this man will be punished,' he says. âThe killer should give himself up now to spare the others.'
None of the Poles moves.
âIf one of you does not admit to the crime, I will consider you all guilty â and have you all shot,' the commander says.
He nods to the guards, who raise their sub-machine guns and point them directly at the prisoners.
And still the Poles say nothing.
The commandant turns to go away.
âShould we shoot them now, sir?' one the guards asked.
The commandant thinks it over for a second, and then shakes his head. âThe dead man was only a Pole,' he says. âWhy should we waste our good German bullets to avenge his death?'
âDoes the story add up now?' Stan asked.
âYes, it does,' Paniatowski admitted. âAnd yes, you were right when you said it would point even more convincingly to your guilt. Tadeujz betrayed you, didn't he, and you cut his hand off.'
âYes.'
âAnd when Linda betrayed you, exactly the same thing happened to her.'
âLinda did not betray me,' Stan said.
âOh, come on now!'
âNot in the way that Tadeujz did.'
âYou're surely not going to start denying she had an affair with Tom, are you?'
âIt was a moment of weakness,' Stan said. âIn my mind â in my heart â I had already forgiven her, even as I stood watching her drive away, the night that she was killed.'
âWhy
did
she drive away?'
âBecause we'd had an argument.'
âOver the affair?'
âYes.'
âYou confronted her about it?'
âI did.'
âAnd what did she say?'
âShe denied it.'
âAnd you left it at that? Why? Couldn't you just have said you didn't believe her, but that it didn't matter, because you forgave her anyway?'
âYes, I could have â but she wasn't ready for my forgiveness. She needed time alone. Time to come to terms with what she'd done â to conquer her shame.'
âConquer her shame!' Paniatowski repeated. âThat's really a very good line. I really must remember it. But tell me, how do you know she had any shame
to
conquer? How do you know she hadn't fallen in love with Tom, and no longer gave a damn about you?'
âIf she'd had no shame, then what would have stopped her from admitting the truth?'
âYou see, that's where the cosy picture that you've been trying to paint of your marriage breaks down,' Paniatowski said. âYou say that you loved her and that you trusted her . . .'
âI did.'
âYet when she tells you there was nothing going on between her and Tom Whittington, you refuse to believe her. How much trust does
that
show? And how much does it reveal of a jealous nature which had probably been eating away at you for years?'
âShe
was
having an affair with him,' Szymborska said. âYou know that yourself.'
âYes,
I
know it, because I've got witness statements to prove it. But you had no proof at all, did you? And you didn't need any! Because for a jealous man like you, even the hint â even the merest suspicion â that she'd been unfaithful to you was enough to drive you into a rage.'
âI
had
proof,' Stan Szymborska said firmly.
âAnd what proof might that have been?'
âSomeone â I don't know who it was â sent me a photograph of them together.'
âOh, well that's it, then,' Paniatowski said scornfully. âImagine â a photograph of them together! And I've got a photograph of me and my inspector. Does that mean
we're
having an affair? Of course not. But for someone with your nature, even the most inconsequential trifle is proof enough.'
âThey were kissing,' Stan Szymborska said.
âAh, I see where you're going now,' Paniatowski said.
âDo you?'
âYes. You've finally given up hope of getting away with murder, and now you've begun the process of justifying yourself. I can almost hear what your brief will be saying in court. “My client is guilty of a terrible crime, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, but he is not accountable for his own actions. Imagine, if you will, how he must have felt when he saw this photograph. He temporarily lost control of himself. And who among us could say, with absolute certainty, that he would not have done the same?” Something along those lines, do you think?'
âYou don't understand me at all,' Szymborska said.
âDid you show this photograph to your wife?'
âNo.'
âWhy not?'
âBecause in the face of such damning proof she would have been forced to confess.'
âAnd you didn't
want
her to?'
âNot then. I wanted her to confess when she truly believed that it was the
right
thing to do.'
âWhere's this photograph now?' Paniatowski asked. âDo you still have it?'
âNo.'
âNow isn't
that
convenient!'
â
You
have it,' Szymborska said. âIt was in my wallet, which your officers took away from me.'
Colin Beresford was reading a copy of the Whitebridge
Evening Chronicle
when Monika Paniatowski finally entered the public bar of the Drum and Monkey, but the moment he noticed her coming towards him, he rapidly folded it up and slipped it on to his knee.
Paniatowski sat down, and held her hand out across the table. âLet's have the paper, Colin,' she said.
âYou don't want to spoil a victory piss-up by reading what's written in that rag, boss,' Beresford said, uncomfortably.
âAh, but you see, I do,' Paniatowski replied. âA good battering from the newspaper is just what I need to round off the day.'
âReally, boss . . .' Beresford remonstrated.
âHand it over,' Paniatowski told him firmly.
The headline said it all, but Paniatowski forced herself to read the rest of the article anyway.
Do we have the police we deserve?
By Mike Traynor
An arrest in the Linda Szymborska and Tom Whittington murder case is good news for the citizens of Whitebridge, who will be able to sleep more peacefully in their beds tonight.
But why was it so long coming, sources in police circles have been asking. Why was the obvious suspect â the only man with a real
motive
in the killings â allowed to remain at liberty for so long? Indeed, this reporter put exactly that question to DCI Paniatowski during her press conference.
And it is not merely a matter of justice postponed. A man who has killed twice may kill again, and who is to say whether it is more a case of luck than judgement that he did not strike for a third time?
This newspaper has always crusaded for the advancement of women in all walkexts of life, including the Police Force. And it will continue to do so. It is only proper that some senior police posts should be held by women. But the question we must ask ourselves here is not whether it is right that women should be chief inspectors, but whether the one who
is
a chief inspector is the
right
woman for the job.
âHe was well out of order writing that â and he knows it,' Beresford said. âIt wouldn't surprise me if he's already written the apology that will appear in tomorrow night's edition.'
It wouldn't surprise me, either, Paniatowski thought. But the damage is already done.
âWell, after all, tomorrow is another day,' Beresford said, trying to sound philosophical.
âNo it isn't,' Paniatowski countered. âNot for me â because this case isn't over yet.'
âNot over?' Beresford repeated. âHow can it not be over? We've got the killer behind bars and . . .'
âI want the man who
pushed
Stan Szymborska into killing his wife behind bars as well.'
âSorry, boss?' Beresford said.
Paniatowski took a black-and-white photograph out of her bag, and handed it to her inspector.
In the background was the Old Oak Tree Inn. In the foreground, a man and a woman were kissing. The woman had long, dark, wavy hair, and was giving the kiss her all. The man â judging by his stance â seemed far less comfortable with this public act of affection.
âBloody hell!' Beresford said.
âIt was this photograph â sent anonymously through the post â which tipped poor Stan over the edge,' Paniatowski said. âIf he'd never received it, Linda and Tom might still be alive today â and I'm holding
the man
who sent it partly responsible for their deaths.'
âHow can you do that, when you don't even know who he is?' Beresford wondered.
âBecause I can make a pretty fair
guess
at his name,' Paniatowski told him. âAnd so can you.'
âI'm not sure I can,' Beresford confessed.
âThink about it!' Paniatowski urged him. âWho would reap the benefit from causing discord at the bakery?'
â
Another
bakery!' Beresford exclaimed. âWarren Tompkins!'
Paniatowski nodded. âTompkins wasn't directly involved in the murders, as poor deluded Jenny so firmly believes, but he has been responsible for a number of dirty tricks aimed at hurting Brunskill's, and I think this one of them.'
âEven if that's true, Tompkins couldn't have
known
Stan would go so berserk when he saw the photograph,' Beresford pointed out.
âThat may be your opinion, but a judge and jury might think differently,' Paniatowski said.
âYou're . . . you're actually going to
arrest
him?' Beresford asked, incredulously.
âI am,' Paniatowski confirmed.
For some moments, Beresford was silent, then he said, âYou're on a hiding to nowhere with this one, boss. Even if you can get Tompkins to admit to sending the photograph, you'll never be able to make the charges stick.'
âYou're probably right,' Paniatowski agreed. âBut I'm still going to give it my best shot.'
TWENTY-EIGHT
I
t would have been something of an understatement to describe the managing director's office at Tompkins' Bakery as large. The room ate up almost half of the second floor, with the result that most of the other offices were the size of broom cupboards. Even so, the way that Warren Tompkins had chosen to furnish it â with a huge desk, two big sofas, a conference table, a full-sized snooker table and a rowing machine â made it seem almost cramped.
The term âlarge' would have been a charitable way to describe the man himself, Paniatowski decided. But she was feeling very low on charity that morning, and what
she
saw was a fat man who, though dressed in a sober suit, still reminded her of a dodgy used-car salesman.
âIt's a pleasure to meet you, Chief Inspector,' Tompkins said, standing up and reaching across his desk to shake her hand. âMay I introduce my associate, Mr Cutler?'
Paniatowski turned towards Cutler, noting his bullet-shaped head and the scar on his cheek. He was a nasty piece of work if ever she'd seen one, she thought, and if she were to learn that he had a criminal record â especially one that involved crimes of violence â she would not be the least surprised.