âWho's he?'
âYou're the detective â
you
work it out.'
He sounded furious, and she thought she understood why that was. He had been agonizing over what he could he tell her and what he couldn't, and when, out of this struggle, he finally produced what he no doubt considered a precious pearl of information, she treated it â from his perspective, at least â as if it were nothing.
âI need you to guide me,' she said. âIs this Michael Eccles you're talking about Elizabeth's estranged husband?'
âYes, he is.'
âBut he left her over twenty years ago.'
âI know he did.'
âAnd she hasn't heard a word from him since. For all we know, he could be dead by now.'
âHe may indeed be dead,' the caller agreed. âBut if he
isn't
, you could learn a great deal by talking to him.'
âAre you suggesting that he might have killed Lilly Dawson or Bazza Mottershead?' Paniatowski asked.
âNo, I'm not. In fact, I'm certain that he didn't kill either of them.'
âThen does he know who
did
kill them?'
âI can't be sure of that â but I don't think he does.'
âSo how could he possibly be of any help to the investigation?'
âYou'll know that when you find him,' the caller said.
And then he hung up.
âHe's yanking your chain â giving you the runaround,' Beresford said, when Paniatowski had outlined the conversation with Mr X.
âHe's not,' Paniatowski told him.
âUntil you got that telephone call, wasn't your plan to cast a bigger net and see just what got caught in it?' Beresford asked.
âNice analogy,' Paniatowski said, smiling. âWhere'd it come from? Have you just taken up fishing as a hobby or something?'
But Beresford did not smile back, and if she'd hoped to deflect him from what he wanted to say, it was clear that she had failed.
âThe whole point in trying to persuade Walter Brown to talk was to widen the investigation, wasn't it?' Beresford asked.
âYes, it was,' Paniatowski admitted â because she had little choice
but to
admit it.
âYet now, instead of
widening
the investigation, your Mr X wants us to
narrow
it! He's throwing us back on the Eccles family, who â it's already been established â have nothing to do with the case.'
âOr, at least, they have nothing to do with it that we're
aware of
,' Paniatowski argued. âFred Howerd may have been innocent of the rape and murder he was charged with, but he wasn't as pure as the driven snow, you know.'
âNo, I
don't
know,' Beresford said exasperatedly. âAnd neither, if you're honest with yourself, do you.'
âWe know that he liked to visit fifteen-year-old prostitutes.'
âAgain, we don't. All we know is that Dyson Trypp told
Clegg
that the prostitute was fifteen. But he might have been lying. He might just have said it to stop Clegg from coming forward with his alibi.'
âAnd we know that Howerd confessed he'd taken Lilly Dawson to his pigeon loft, the night before she was murdered.'
âHe confessed to a lot of things. He confessed to killing her, and we know that's not true â so maybe he was lying about her being in his pigeon loft too. Maybe he only said it because that was what Mr Woodend and Sergeant Bannerman
wanted
him to say.'
âCharlie is convinced Lilly
was
in the loft.'
âAnd Charlie could be as wrong about that as, it now turns out, he was wrong about so many other things.' Beresford sighed. âLook, boss, Robert Howerd's already an extremely angry man â as anybody who saw his little performance on the news will tell you.'
âI know that.'
âAnd what you're planning to do â at the instigation of an anonymous caller, who
I
still think is off his head â will only make matters worse.'
âWe can't let members of the public like Robert Howerd influence the way we carry out our investigation,' Paniatowski said.
âBut he's not
just
a member of the public, is he?' Beresford demanded. âHe's a man who feels â entirely justifiably â that his family's been very badly treated by the police.'
âI just want to talk to Michael Eccles,' Paniatowski said soothingly. âThat's all, Colin. I just want to have a little conversation.'
Beresford shook his head in dismay. âYou're dancing barefoot round a steel trap â and, sooner or later, the jaws are going to snap shut and have your leg off.'
âMaybe they are . . .'
âIf you know that, then why don't you walk away while you still have the chance?'
â. . . but I'd still like you to check with all the regional police forces to see if they know where Michael Eccles is. And if they
don't
know, I want you to ask them to keep an eye out for him.'
âSo you want thousands of bobbies to be on the lookout for Eccles?'
âThat's right.'
âHow long do you think it will be before one of them mentions to a reporter that you're interested in finding Fred Howerd's son-in-law? And when that happens â and it
will
â how long will it be after that before Robert Howerd learns that you're still conducting a vendetta against his family?'
âIt's
not
a vendetta.'
âMaybe not â but it certainly looks like one, and it smells like one.'
âI'm really not prepared to discuss this any further,' Paniatowski said, waspishly. âYou know what I want doing â see to it that it's done.'
Beresford sighed again. âYou're the boss,' he said.
âYes, I am,' Paniatowski agreed.
âBut how much longer that will be the case is anybody's guess,' Beresford told her.
TWENTY-TWO
W
hen the lorry driver had stopped to pick up a hitch-hiker on the slip-road out of Manchester, he had not known either that his potential passenger was drunk or that he was a walking advertisement for the need for a deodorant, but both these things soon became apparent once the man had climbed into the cab. Still, the driver told himself philosophically, even a drunk's rambling conversation could help break up the monotony of the journey, and as long as he kept smoking, the smell would not be too bad.
âSo where are you going?' he asked his passenger.
âWhitebridge,' Mike Eccles told him.
âDo you live there?'
âI used to â but it was a long time ago.'
âSo what made you decide to go back now? Do you have family still living there?'
âOh yes, I've got family, all right,' Eccles said, slurring his words more obviously now. âI've got an evil bitch of a wife who I haven't seen for twenty-one years. But I'll be seeing her soon, won't I?'
âI imagine it'll be a bit of a shock for her, you just turning up like that,' said the lorry driver, who was beginning to wonder if he was doing the right thing in helping this man reach his destination.
âShe made a
big
mistake by appearin' on the telly,' Eccles said. âIf she hadn't appeared on the telly, I'd never have known.'
âKnown what?' the lorry driver asked.
But Eccles was clearly bored with this particular strand of the conversation, and wanted to move on to something else.
âNobody would have her but me,' he said. âNobody
wanted
her but me. An' do you know . . . do you know why
I
wanted her?'
âNo, I don't,' the lorry driver said, uncertain that he really needed to hear the answer to that particular question.
âI wanted her because of what I've got up here,' Eccles boasted, tapping his forehead with his dirty index finger. âBrains,' he amplified, in case the lorry driver had missed the point. âOh yes, I knew which side my bread was buttered on â make no mistake about that.' Then his mood suddenly changed, as drunks' moods are apt to. âBut it all went wrong,' he continued, as tears began to trickle from his eyes. âIt all went wrong, an' it wasn't my fault.'
With fellers like him, whatever happened was
never
their own fault, the lorry driver thought.
âListen,' he said aloud, âif you
are
going to see your wife, it might be a good idea to smarten yourself up a bit first.'
âWhat d'ya mean?' Eccles asked aggressively.
âWell, to be honest with you, I don't think you can exactly expect a warm welcome home under any circumstances â not after you've been gone for twenty-one years,' the lorry driver said. âBut you'll stand a better chance if you look as if you've at least made the effort.'
âI don't need to make the effort,' Eccles told him. âAn' d'ya . . . d'ya know why?'
The lorry driver said nothing.
âAn' d'ya know why?' Eccles repeated.
âNo,' the lorry driver admitted. âI don't know why.'
âBecause that family owes me!' Eccles said. âBecause, by marryin' that bitch, I made them
respectable
.'
If he'd made them respectable by marrying her, it was hard to imagine what they'd been like
before
the wedding, the lorry driver thought.
âStop!' Eccles said, with a sudden urgency. âStop right now! I gotta . . . I gotta throw up.'
The lorry driver checked in his side mirror, and indicated he was about to pull in.
âQuick,' Eccles gasped, as he swallowed in an effort to postpone the inevitable.
The lorry came to a halt.
Eccles opened the door, missed his footing halfway down, and fell into a crumpled heap on the grass verge. For a moment, he just lay there. Then he rolled over, forcing himself back on to his knees, and the moment he'd done that, his body â finding itself in the optimum position for vomiting â restrained itself no more.
The lorry driver watched, with increasing disgust, as Eccles spewed up the results of his morning's drinking on to the vegetation. He considered himself a tolerant man by nature, he thought, but, really, he'd had enough. He reached across and closed the passenger door shut, then slid into first gear and pulled away.
Still on his knees, Eccles heard the sound of the lorry moving off, and just managed, between bouts of retching, to gasp the word âbastard'.
Edward Wilberforce looked first at the man sitting opposite him and then at the document which lay on the desk between them.
âI have been your family's solicitor for a good many years now, Robert,' he said.
âI know you have,' Robert Howerd agreed.
âOver those years, I have done my very best to offer you advice which was both cautious by nature and in your best long-term interest.'
âAnd you've made a splendid job of it,' Howerd told him.
âI have also, despite occasional misgivings about the wisdom of a particular course of action you have chosen, always obeyed the instructions you gave me to the letter.'
âThank you.'
âAnd that is what I've done on
this
particular occasion, Robert, though with more misgivings than I can ever remember before.' Wilberforce tapped the document on the desk. âThis, in my opinion, is neither prudent
nor
in your best interest.'
âIt's what I want,' Howerd said firmly.
âBut surely we can find some compromise â some middle ground,' the solicitor suggested.
âNo.'
âI simply do not see why . . .'
âThe Howerd family follows the teachings of the Holy Catholic Church,' Robert said. âIt always has.'
âI know that.'
âI have tried to be true to my faith, though I have sinned many times, because man, by his very nature, is imperfectâ'
âYes, well, I'm sure we're all guilty of a few sins, now and again,' interrupted Wilberforce, who â as a staunchly
social
member of the Church of England â was finding the whole direction the conversation was taking to be slightly uncomfortable.
âWe must do penance for our sins,' said Howerd, not to be put off. âAnd the greater the sin, the greater must be the penance.'
âI quite understand that.'
âAnd this,' said Howerd, tapping the document as Wilberforce had done earlier, âis
my
penance.'
The sun was slowly sinking behind the mountains. Soon the twilight would descend, and with it would come the chorus of tiny insects whose job it was to close the day. Yet the day was far from drawing to a close for Charlie Woodend, who was still sitting on his terrace, gazing at the sheet of paper with the names written on it.
âWhy don't you take a break, Charlie?' asked Paco Ruiz, concerned for his friend. âWe could both go down to Pedro's bar, and play dominoes with the boys for an hour or so.'
âI don't have time for a break,' Woodend replied, more curtly than he would normally have done. âMy reputation's at stake here.'
âI know,' Ruiz agreed. âBut perhaps, if you thought about something else for a whileâ'
âAn' it's not just mine that's threatened,' Woodend interrupted him. âIt's Monika's. I know her. She'll go out on a limb for me â she always has â an' there's a good chance that if I go down, I'll drag her down as well. An' I simply can't have that, Paco.'
âShe's not just an old colleague to you, is she?' Ruiz asked softly. âYou love the woman, don't you?'