Authors: Sally Spencer
âTrue,' Hoskins agreed reluctantly, âbut we are very undermanned, you see. I could probably get you something tomorrow, which is still a lot quicker than if you went through the official channels. Will that do you?'
âIt'll have to, won't it?' Rutter said, trying not to sound too ungracious â but without much success.
â
I
realise that the announcement of this tragic event must have come as a great shock to all of you here,' the deputy headmaster said.
He paused for a moment, and ran his index finger across his pencil-thin moustache.
âA great shock,' he repeated. âBut as callous as this might sound, I think we must all accept that, even in the face of it, normal life still has to go on.'
Positioned just behind Hargreaves's shoulder, Woodend scanned the faces of the audience the deputy head was addressing. All these teachers were strangers to him, and most of them would remain strangers, but there were a few, his instincts told him, whom he would have much more contact with before this case was over. He had already picked out two of them â men who, by their reactions to the news, stood out from the rest of the group.
One, a thin, gaunt-faced young man, seemed absolutely stricken. The other, slightly older and wearing heavy-framed glasses, had initially adopted the same look of surprise and disbelief as his colleagues, but soon he was glancing nervously down at his watch, as if he had a pressing appointment which was far more important than anything he might hear about the violent death of a woman he had worked with.
âIn just over half an hour the bell will ring for the start of afternoon classes,' the deputy headmaster continued, âand once it does, I must ask you to remind yourselves that you have been entrusted with the education of several hundred young minds, and that that must be your first duty and consideration. Are there any questions?'
One of the teachers raised his hand, almost as if he were back on the pupils' side of the classroom, and when Hargreaves nodded at him, he said, âIs there anything we can do?'
âYou will have noticed Mr Woodend standing just behind me,' the deputy head said. âI have no doubt we will be seeing a great deal of him and his team over the next few days, and I would like you to co-operate fully with the police, while, at the same time, sticking as closely to your normal classroom routine as possible. Any more questions?' He waited for more hands, and when there were none, he said, âIn that case, I suggest you spend as normal a lunchtime as is possible under the circumstances.'
While he'd been addressing it, the staff had been a single entity, with its whole attention focused on the deputy headmaster. Now that entity was shattered, as the teachers broke up into their familiar cliques.
But not all of them followed a herd instinct, Woodend noted. The teacher with the heavy glasses who had been consulting his watch made straight for the door. And the gaunt man who had seemed consumed with grief at the news of Verity Beale's death sat alone, his head in his hands.
Woodend made his way across to the gaunt man. âI'm sorry to intrude, Mr . . .?' he said.
âBarnes,' the man replied, looking up. âSimon Barnes. Do you want to talk to me?'
âIf you wouldn't mind.'
âWhere should we . . . I mean, there must be somewhere quiet where we can . . .'
âI'm sure Mr Hargreaves would have no objection to us using his office,' Woodend said gently.
There were already half a dozen vehicles on the Spinner's car park when Monika Paniatowski arrived, but seeing two uniformed constables standing there, the owners had all, perhaps wisely, decided to leave their cars as far away from the black Mini as possible.
Paniatowski herself parked her MGA on the road, and walked over to the two uniformed officers.
âHow many of these have arrived since you got here?' she asked, indicating the other cars with a backward-pointing thumb.
One of the constables shrugged. âTwo?' he said. âOr it may have been three.'
Paniatowski sighed. âNo more,' she said.
âPardon, Sarge?'
âI don't want any more cars parking here until either we've established that this is a wild goose, or the lab boys have been over the entire area.'
âThat won't be popular,' the constable said.
âI don't really give a bugger whether it's popular or not,' Paniatowski told him.
She walked around the front of the Mini. Between the end of the car park and the road was a flower border, which was edged with red bricks partly buried in the soil. She was not the least surprised to see that one of the bricks was missing. This was where it happened, she told herself. If it wasn't the place where Verity Beale had been murdered, it was certainly where she had been knocked unconscious.
She turned back to the constables. âAnother thing,' she said. âTo minimise contamination of the scene, I want a clear path â about a yard wide â marked out from the road to the pub door. And I want you to make sure that anybody who comes to the pub sticks to it.'
âHow do we mark it out?' one of the constables asked.
âYou could use chalk,' Paniatowski suggested.
âBut we haven't got any chalk, Sarge. It's not somethin' we normally carry with us.'
Paniatowski sighed again. âThis is a pub. Right?'
âRight.'
âAnd pubs have dartboards. And when you play darts, you need to mark the score up. And what you mark it up with is chalk. So the chances are, the barman will have all the chalk you need.'
âI never thought of that,' the constable admitted.
âYou amaze me,' Paniatowski said. âIf anybody comes looking for me, I'll be in the bar, talking to the landlord.'
She turned and headed for the pub door. The two constables followed her progress with their eyes.
âNice arse,' the first one said.
âNice legs, too,' the second agreed. âBut what a ball-buster that woman really is.'
âAye, she is. That's probably why she's a sergeant an' we're still constables,' his partner said.
Though they were sitting close to each other in the deputy head's cramped office, the gaunt teacher seemed hardly aware of the big policeman's presence.
âWas Miss Beale what you might call your girlfriend, Mr Barnes?' Woodend asked softly.
The other man looked up. âWhat?'
âI asked you if Miss Beale was your girlfriend.'
Barnes shook his head emphatically. âNo. No. She was nothing like that to me.'
âThen what
was
she to you?'
âShe was . . . an ordinary friend. I don't mean that she was ordinary in herself. In fact, she was very special. What I mean is thatââ'
âI know what you mean,' Woodend told him. âYou met her in this school, did you?'
âThat's right. We both teach . . . we both
taught
. . . history. But that's not what really brought us together.'
âGo on,' Woodend said encouragingly.
âI'm a member of the local Baptist church. I don't know what impression you've got of the Baptists â people often do have very odd ideas about us â but the church is a very welcoming place, open to the rich and the poor alike. People travel for miles to worship there. We even have some Americans from the air-force base whoââ'
âIf you don't mind me sayin' so, I think that you're gettin' a bit off the point, sir.'
Barnes nodded. âQuite right,' he agreed. âI'm always telling the boys to stick to the subject, and there I go myself, off at a complete tangent.'
âIt's not always easy to think clearly when you're upset,' Woodend said. âYou were tellin' me about you an' Miss Beale.'
âIt must have been the first week of term she came up to me and asked me about the church. She said she hadn't thought much about religion since well before she went to university, but she was starting to feel an aching void in her life, and she felt that God might fill it for her. Then she asked if she could come to church with me the following Sunday.'
âHow did she know you attended the church?'
âShe must have overheard colleagues talking about it.'
âAn' why would they have done that?'
âI beg your pardon?'
âOther people's religion isn't usually a topic for conversation.'
âMine is. For some of my colleagues, my faith serves as little more than fodder for their humour.'
âAye, there are always a few ignorant buggers around, wherever you go,' Woodend said. âWas Miss Beale already a Baptist?'
âNo, she'd been brought up in the Church of England, but she'd found it hadn't given her what she needed.'
âDid she find what she needed in the church?'
âShe'd only been attending for a few weeks, so it's difficult to say for certain what effect it was having, but she was starting to get to know some of congregation, and given time . . .'
âDid you see much of her aside from at church?'
âWe'd go for a coffee afterwards. Sometimes a group of us would go somewhere for lunch.'
âBut on other days? Outside school?'
âShe didn't really have the time. She was working very hard. Giving classes in other institutions.'
âAye, I've heard about that,' Woodend said. âWhy was that? Short of money, was she?'
âI don't think she was doing it for the money. She loved to teach. She loved to impart her knowledge to others.'
âSounds like she's a great loss,' Woodend said.
âThat's exactly what she is,' Barnes agreed sadly. âA
great
loss.'
The landlord of the Spinner examined Paniatowski suspiciously. âYou don't look like a bobby to me,' he said.
Paniatowski gave him what was a pretty fair impersonation of a good-natured grin.
âI know I don't,' she said. âFor a start, my little feet would be lost in size-ten boots. But I'm the Law, all right. I can show you my warrant card if you like?'
The landlord reluctantly returned the grin. âNo, I don't think that will be necessary.'
âTell me about the Mini,' Paniatowski said.
âPeople quite often leave their cars here overnight,' the landlord told her. âThey realise they've had a bit too much to drink, you see, an' they cadge a lift off one of their mates. But normally when that happens, they ring me up first thing in the mornin', to tell me they've left it an' ask if it'll be an inconvenience if it stays here until they've got time to pick it up. I was expectin' the same thing to happen with the Mini, but when it got to eleven, an' there was still no call, I thought I'd best ring the station.'
âIn case it was stolen?'
âThat's right,' the landlord agreed. âI didn't
really
think it was, because the woman who drove it here looked very respectable. But it's always better to be safe than sorry, isn't it?'
âYou're sure it was a
woman
who drove it here?'
âAbsolutely positive. I'd just taken a couple of empty beer crates to the storeroom across the yard, an' when I was makin' my way back to the pub, she was just pullin' in.'
âAnd you remember when all your customers arrive, do you?' Paniatowski asked sceptically.
âNo, but the reason I remember her is because she has this long red hair. Flamin' red, it is.'
âWas she alone?'
âThere was nobody else in the car with her, if that's what you mean. But she'd arranged to meet somebody.'
âHow do you know that?'
âA few minutes later, after she'd gone into the best room an' I was back behind the bar, a big American car arrived. The moment she saw it pull up, she ordered a drink for the driver. Bourbon was what she asked for. We don't get much call for that kind of thing round here.'
âAn American car and a glass of bourbon,' Paniatowski mused. âDo you think the man was an American?'
âI'm sure he was. He was wearin' a sports jacket like I've never seen in the shops round here. You know the kind I mean â really flashy. An' he had an accent which came straight out of
Gone with the Wind
.'
âWhat did he look like?'
âTall, skinny, short hair. He wasn't in uniform, but I'd guess from the way he carried himself that he was from the base.'
âHow long were the two of them here?'
âThey arrived at about a quarter to ten, I'd guess. The Yank left about an hour later.'
âBut not the woman?'
âNo. She was here until at least half-pastââ' The landlord came to abrupt halt. âWhat I mean to say isââ'
âIt wouldn't come as any startling revelation to me if I learned you'd been serving after time,' Paniatowski said. âMost country pubs do. Well, they've got no choice, have they? They'd never make a living if they didn't.'
The landlord nodded gratefully. âThat's true enough,' he admitted. âWhat with all the taxes the government puts on drinks, and havin' to pay the bar staff a small fortune to keep themââ'
âSo what time
did
she leave?' Paniatowski interrupted.
âAs I was sayin', it must have been at gone half-past eleven. I let her out myself.'
âHow many other customers were there in the pub at that time?' Paniatowski asked.
The landlord shrugged. âWell, you know.'
âI told you, I'm not the least bit interested in doing you for serving drinks after time.'
âThere must have been around a dozen customers,' the landlord admitted. âMost of them were regulars.'
âBut the pub had been fuller when she arrived?'
âThat's right. We'd had a busy evenin'.'
âHow did the redheaded woman and her American friend seem to be getting along?'
An awkward expression came to the landlord's face. âI . . . er . . . can't say I really noticed.'