They couldn't even mention the death which should be bringing them together now. It had become âthe present circumstances'. She had never been tongue-tied with Steve before. Now she could not think of anything to say. Eventually, feeling like a nagging wife as the words came out, she said, âI was glad to see that pistol go. It made me shudder even to touch it.'
He smiled, forcing himself to sit for a minute on a kitchen chair, pretending to have the time he had just told her he could not spare. He was already regretting coming here at this hour, remembering the shame of hiding in the car until her daughter had gone. He took her hand, but found it was a deliberate rather than a spontaneous gesture. He said, âHave you said anything to the children about us?'
âNo. It's too early yet. Peter was a good father to them. They need to get used to the idea that he's gone. Have you told your two?'
âNo. We're still arguing over my access to them, for most of the time. It seems best to keep it quiet until that's been agreed.'
They had thought that the death would release them, but they were still being as secretive as ever. She forced herself to sit down opposite him, but found she could not produce a smile for him. Sensing his unease, she was now wishing â as he did â that he had not come here. She could think of nothing to talk about except the subject she had determined they would avoid when she had asked him to call in on his way to work. She could not look at Steve as she said, âThat superintendent still thinks one of us might have done it, you know.'
He nodded, looking not at her but at the table and its uncleared breakfast crockery. âOne or both of us. It's understandable. We tried to deceive them about our affair, after all.'
He hadn't meant it, but it came out as an accusation. He had wanted to be honest about their liaison to the police, whatever else they concealed, arguing that the CID would discover it anyway. Which they had, of course. She said, âWe've just got to keep our nerve and wait for things to move along. Time is on our side.'
He wanted to question what she meant by that, to ask how time could possibly improve things with the police. But he sensed she would not have an answer, that she would take any query as criticism. They had never been careful about what they said to each other before, not since the very early days. He forced a smile as he stood up and leant forward to kiss her forehead, letting his dry lips linger there for a moment to try to transmit his love for her. âI must be on my way. We'll have plenty of time together, soon enough.'
That should have been a consolation. It was the sentiment they had offered to each other often enough in the past, when they had had to part.
As she watched him drive away, she found herself wondering for the first time whether that future was actually going to happen.
Daniel Price told his secretary not to put through any calls for the next hour. In the privacy of his own office, he paced around, then placed his forehead for a moment against the cool of the wall, trying to make the brain which worked behind it behave normally.
The voice on the phone had been calm and deliberate, the words enunciated carefully in the Herefordshire accent. A detective sergeant from Oldford, it said. They needed to see him urgently. He didn't like that word âurgently'. Nor did he like the fact that the voice would not tell him what this was about. He would find out soon enough: the rich local tones had suddenly taken on a threatening note in his ear.
The policemen came quickly, long before he had organized his teeming mind to deal with them. A tall superintendent and the sergeant, whose voice he recognized; he asked them to sit down and took up his station behind his desk. The clock on that desk showed half past nine: too early for coffee. He said briskly, âI hope this won't take very long. I'm anxious to help the police in any way I can, of course, but you will understand that I've a busy schedule andâ'
âHow long it will take is the least of your worries,' said John Lambert. âIt would be advisable to cancel your schedule for the rest of the day.'
He was looking at his man with unconcealed dislike. Daniel had never met such immediate and open hostility. He was used to business dealings, where you masked animosity in polite phrases and gestures, however false they might seem to you and your opponent. And even when the traffic police stopped you for speeding, they called you âsir' and told you what would happen with a cold politeness, keeping things deliberately impersonal. But these policemen in their grey suits seemed to have assumed he was guilty before they started and to see no profit in disguising their feelings. He found their hostility more unnerving than he would have thought possible.
Daniel Price went into the only speech he had had the time to rehearse. âI don't know what it is that you want to question me about. I run a legitimate business here. We supply computer software to a variety of reputable firms. I don't see why I should discuss them with you, but our financial statements and the record of our dealings are in a filing cabinet on the other side of that wall. You are welcome to peruse them for as long as you like and to come back to me with any questions you like to raise. In the meantime, you must understand that I haveâ'
âNot interested,' interrupted Lambert. âPrice Computer Supplies may be a wholly legitimate business. Probably is, if you've got any sense at all. It's your other activities which interest us.'
âI've no idea whatâ'
âIllegal drugs. Class A, for the most part.'
âI don't deal drugs. I never have.'
âPossibly not. The charges will be more serious than that. Running a network of dealers. Providing supplies of a variety of illegal drugs. You'll go down for it. The only question is how long you'll be inside.'
âYou've got the wrong man. You'll regret this, when I sue. Because I've never in my lifeâ'
âSave the denials for the Drugs Squad, Mr Price. They're the experts. They'll tie you up so neatly that Houdini wouldn't escape. I'm here to investigate something even more serious. The murder of Peter Logan.'
âYou can't possibly think I had anything to do with that.'
âCan't I? I'm prepared to listen to your explanations. They'd better be good. If they are, we shall be checking them out. Very carefully. Because I'd rather like to pin a murder charge on a man who lures youngsters into dependence on heroin and cocaine.'
âYou can't pin this on me. I didn't kill Logan!' Price could hear the fear in his own voice.
Bert Hook looked up from his notebook, adding his quiet insistence to the anger Lambert had allowed himself. âYou're going to have to convince us of that, Mr Price. We know you run a network of dealers. David Sullivan is already under lock and key. Your other four dealers are probably being arrested at this moment.'
âI don't believe that!' But even as he shouted the hopeless denial, he knew that it was true.
Hook continued as if he hadn't spoken. âYou were too greedy, you see. Pushed your men too hard, too soon. The Drugs Squad officers have been watching them for some time.'
It was true. He'd been greedy, had tried to grow too fast, in an industry where the profits were huge but caution was the watchword. He felt the sour bile rising to the back of his throat, had to fight down the need to be physically sick as his world collapsed about his ears. His voice was very low as he said, âYou can't have me for murder.'
âThat remains to be seen.' Lambert was at him again, brisk when Daniel needed the time to gather what remained of his wits. âPeter Logan knew about what was going on in his school. He was gathering information which could have affected the whole of your operations.'
âHe was being a nuisance, that's all.'
âA bigger nuisance by the day.'
It was almost the exact phrase he had used himself, when he had complained to those above him about Logan. To hear the words coming from this opponent with such chilling contempt shook him, convinced him that they knew far more than he had thought until now. Daniel said sullenly, âLogan was prying into things he should have left alone.'
âSo he had to be removed, didn't he?'
He nodded, scarcely believing that he was admitting this, not daring to put it into words.
Lambert's voice was as quiet as his question was deadly. âDid you kill him yourself, Daniel? Did you place the pistol against the back of his head and blow him out of your life?'
âNo!' He yelled out the monosyllable, as if decibels could convince them that he had not done this. âI never killed him. You can't have me for murder!'
âSo who can we have, Daniel? Who killed an innocent man to keep your evil work alive?'
âI don't know! Look, all I did was pass the word upward.'
âWhat word, Daniel? The word to eliminate Peter Logan?'
He shook his head, looked suddenly round the room as if he was a stranger in his own office. He wanted to convince them he knew nothing about this, that in all probability this wasn't a drugs killing at all, but he could find neither the words nor the manner to convince. He said in a flat monotone, âI passed the word upwards that Logan was finding out too much, that's all. He was keeping the information to himself until he knew enough to do us serious damage.'
Lambert studied Price in his wretchedness, calculating whether they had really had every scrap of information out of him, concluding reluctantly that he probably knew no more than he was giving them. That was the way with drugs: the barons at the top used ignorance as a tool, keeping those below them as unaware of their thinking as of their actions, operating like Stalin's secret police. It did not pay to know too much about what they planned, and if Price comprehended what was good for him he would not have tried to find out.
He stood over the hapless man for a moment, then said, âThe Drugs Squad officers are waiting outside. They already know quite a lot about your organization. You would be most unwise to hold anything back from them. And if you wish to offer anything in court in the way of mitigating circumstances, you had better give us any assistance you can in discovering the murderer of Peter Logan.'
The office staff of Price Computer Supplies stood awkwardly aside as the two CID men passed through the outer office. They had heard enough of their boss's desperate shouting to know that something was seriously amiss.
Price's secretary peered fearfully round the door of his room. She saw an abject figure with his head in his hands, a man whose prosperous world had fallen about his ears with an apocalyptic crash.
T
he Drugs Squad superintendent was uneasy. He was used to running his own show. He had undercover officers of both sexes operating within the seamy echelons of the drugs industry, and his prime concern was always to safeguard them from discovery. Murder had to be investigated, of course it did, but it was a complication. He had to be sure that following up even the most serious crime of all did not jeopardize the safety of his operatives.
DI Rushton understood all of this, knew that the tight-knit unit of the Drugs Squad enjoyed more autonomy than any other branch of the service. He understood the reasons for that autonomy. But he knew also that he and the rest of John Lambert's team had to discover the killer of Peter Logan.
If this death was drugs-related, that would make their task much more difficult: the illegal drugs industry employed contract killers, and these professionals were the most difficult of all to pin down. You might be certain in your own mind who had killed one of their targets, but you had to unearth the evidence which would convince the Crown Prosecution Service that this was a case worth taking on.
Chris Rushton wished he could see the man he was speaking to. It was difficult to conduct an argument with an officer of higher rank, and even more difficult when you were pitching your arguments into the mouthpiece of a phone rather than operating face to face. He said, âI think we've had all we're going to get from this man Daniel Price. He's scared and he's singing, but I don't think he's got any more to give us.'
There was a pause. He could almost see the other man nodding. Then the gravelly voice said, âYou could bail him. See what happens when he gets out. They won't like it, if he's been singing, these people. When they find he's given things away, they might want to make an example of him.
Pour encourager les autres
.'
The French phrase, perfectly pronounced, dropped oddly from that harsh voice. Rushton said, âUse him as a tethered goat to bring out the lion, you mean.'
âIf you like. He'd be no loss to society, even if they got him, a man like Daniel Price.'
âYou're probably right. But we can't do it, and you know we can't. Putting a man's life in danger to make an arrest. You know the view the law would take of that.'
He had quoted the book, as the other man had known he would. There was a sigh from the other end of the line, then a moment of silence in which the two very different men were united in a silent contempt for the judges who knew so little of the criminal world. Then the superintendent's voice said wearily, âWhat do you propose to do about it, then? I want Logan's killer caught as much as you do, but my priority has to be the safety of my officers.'
âThey use Minton for their contract killings, don't they?'
âRecently they've used Minton, yes.'
âWe could interview him. Put a bit of pressure on him. Ask him about his movements on Monday the twenty-eighth of September. See if he gives anything away.'
Chris thought he caught a snigger at the other end of the line, but he couldn't be sure of that. The deep voice was perfectly even as it said, âYou won't get anything out of Minton. He's a professional. He'll have covered his tracks efficiently enough, if he did it.'