âTomorrow,' Walker repeated, as if he still couldn't get his mind round the idea. âWe'll still be searching tomorrow?'
âIs there a problem with that, Sergeant?' Beresford asked.
âNo, sir, not exactly a problem, as such.'
âWell, then?'
âBut I can't quite see why you'd think it might be necessary to continue the search.'
âIt could be that I'd
still
like you to find the stiffs,' Beresford said.
âFair point,' Walker agreed, nodding his head. âVery fair point. But surely, once you've got Stan What's-'is-name safely under lock and key, he'll tell you exactly where you need to . . .'
âWhat makes you think that we're going to arrest Stan Szymborska?' Paniatowski wondered.
âWell, for a start, I did hear it on the grapevine that you were planning to hold a press conference in a couple of hours' time, ma'am.'
âI am.'
âAnd naturally, I assumed that you'd have Stan banged up by then, so you could have something to brag to the hacks about.'
âYou think I should arrest Stan Szymborska just to make myself look good for the press?' Paniatowski asked incredulously.
âNo, not
just
to make yourself look good, ma'am,' Walker said. âThat would be quite wrong. But since you're going to have to arrest him sooner or later, why not make it sooner?'
âBecause we simply don't have enough
evidence
to make an arrest yet,' Paniatowski said.
âDon't we?' Walker asked. âLook, ma'am, we know that he doesn't have any kind of alibi for the night of the murder. Right?'
âYes, we do know that.'
âAnd we also know that his wife was having an affair with Tom Whittington â the
second
victim.'
âAgreed.'
âAnd, most damning of all â we know he's a bloody foreigner.' Walker paused, and grinned at Paniatowski. âThat last part was a joke, ma'am.'
âOf sorts,' Paniatowski agreed. âListen, Sergeant, I know you have a gut feeling that he's guilty . . .'
âIt's a feeling that I've had from the very first moment I clapped my eyes on him, ma'am.'
â. . . and it's one that Inspector Beresford and I both share with you. Isn't that right, Colin?'
âDefinitely,' Beresford agreed.
âBut the fact is that without proof, we've no chance of making a case against him.'
âUnless he confesses,' Walker pointed out.
âHe isn't
going
to confess,' Paniatowski said.
âNow, you see, that's just where you and I fundamentally disagree, ma'am.'
âIt's in his military record that when he was shot down over Germany, he was interrogated by the SS,' Paniatowski said exasperatedly. âHave you got that, Ted? The bloody
SS
! And if he didn't tell
them
anything, then he's certainly not going to tell you.'
âMaybe he
did
tell them something,' Walker said stubbornly.
âHe'd never have been awarded all those medals if he had, now would he?' Paniatowski asked.
âPossibly not,' Walker agreed reluctantly.
âBut you still think you can do it, don't you?' Paniatowski challenged. âYou still think that even though the SS â who were world champions when it came to extracting information from people â got absolutely nowhere with him, you can succeed.'
âWell, I'm certainly willing to give it a go,' Walker said gamely.
âIt isn't going to happen,' Paniatowski told him. âDo you understand that, Sergeant?'
For a moment it looked as if Walker was going to continue to argue, then he nodded his head.
âWhatever you say, ma'am,' he agreed. âYou're the boss, and we have to be guided by your judgement in these matters.' He glanced down at his wristwatch. âWould you mind if I stepped outside for a couple of minutes? I want to contact my lads, just to see how they're getting on â and the radio reception's much better in the car park.'
âGo right ahead,' Paniatowski said.
Walker stood up, and walked to the door.
âIf Stan Szymborska
is
the killer, how are we
ever
going to prove it?' Paniatowski asked Beresford.
âWe need to break his non-alibi,' Beresford replied. âWe need witnesses who can testify that he wasn't at home at all â but was riding around Whitebridge behind the wheel of his wife's Jag.'
âYou think that
is
what he was doing?'
âI don't know how he could have managed it otherwise. Let's say, to give us a workable example, that the bodies are currently residing in an abandoned warehouse on the south side of town.'
âAll right.'
âHe could either have killed his victims first and driven them there, or he could have driven them there â probably drugged or tied up â and then killed them. I suppose there's a
third
possibility, that he somehow persuaded Tom and Linda to
meet
him there, but I don't think that's very likely.'
âIt's highly
unlikely
,' Paniatowski agreed. âIf I was having an affair, the last thing I'd be willing to do would be to go with my lover to an out-of-the-way place where I knew my husband was waiting for us.'
âSo, whether he killed them before he took them to the theoretical warehouse, or killed them once they were there, he'd have needed a car.'
âCouldn't he have used his own car, rather than Linda's Jag?'
âHe doesn't
own
a car. He has a motorbike,' Beresford said. âAnd I can hardly see him driving his Honda 750 through the centre of Whitebridge with a corpse draped over his shoulder,' he added with a grin.
âHe could have hired a car,' Paniatowski pointed out.
âHe didn't. I've already had my lads check that out. Besides, if he didn't use the Jag, where is it? You can't leave a car like that on the streets of Whitebridge without it being noticed, and if it had been picked up by joy-riders, we'd have heard about it by now.'
âSo you think he decided to hide the car in the same place as he hid the bodies?'
âNot necessarily. He could have left it somewhere else entirely. But whichever it was, I'm convinced he did hide it.'
âIf you
could
find witnesses who could put him in the Jag, that would be a big breakthrough,' Paniatowski admitted. âBut I'm not prepared to pin
all
my hopes on that.'
âSo what other lines of inquiry do you want us to follow?'
âI want a comprehensive background check on Stan Szymborska, going right back to the time he first settled in Britain. I want to know if he is actually the spotless hero he appears to be, or if he's ever been in trouble before. And if he has been in trouble, what
kind
of trouble? Was any of it violent â and if it was, was that violence directed against women?'
âWe should probably talk to his old girlfriends â if he has any,' Beresford said.
âOh, he'll have had them all right,' Paniatowski said confidently. âA man like Stan won't have gone long without some kind of female companionship. We also need to talk to people who knew him when he was running his delivery service â and the people who've been working with him at the bakery.'
âGot it,' Beresford said.
âAnd since we're devoting most of our resources to Szymborska, we'd better pray that he really
is
our man,' Paniatowski said.
âHe is,' Beresford said. âIt's gone beyond a gut feeling. We both
know
he did it, don't we?'
âYes,' Paniatowski agreed. âWe both
know
he did it.'
Once out in the car park, Sergeant Walker made no attempt to establish radio contact with any of the constables he was supposed to be supervising, but instead walked quickly towards the nearest public telephone box.
It wasn't his fault that he was going to have to make this call, he told himself. Not in any way, shape or form. The blame rested entirely on Monika Paniatowski's shoulders.
She should have listened to him. She should have been
guided
by him. Because despite having a good mind â and he was forced to admit that her mind
was
quick and analytical â she clearly didn't know villains like he did.
And
because
she didn't know villains, she was making one big mistake on top of another.
It was as he was fumbling with the change from his pocket that he realized he was drunk.
But not
that
drunk, he told himself.
Not
so
drunk that he was doing something now that he might live to regret later.
He managed to insert the coins in the slot at the second attempt, and to dial the
Evening Chronicle
's number largely without incident.
When he'd been connected, he said, âI'd like to speak to Mike Traynor, ace reporter,' and then he giggled.
âWho shall I say is calling?' asked the woman on the switchboard, somewhat frostily.
âNever mind who it is,' Walker growled, his good humour deserting him as quickly as it had arrived. âYou just tell Traynor I've got a very big story for him, and he'll never forgive himself if he misses it.'
Traynor came on the line almost immediately.
âWho is this?' he asked.
âNo names,' Walker said.
âIs it Sergeantâ'
âI said no names, you bastard! Just shut up and listen to what I've got to tell you.'
âAll right,' Traynor agreed.
âChief Inspector Polack's holding a press conference in about an hour and a half's time. You'll be there, won't you?'
âYes, I will, butâ'
âThen before the conference starts, I think there's a couple of things that you should know.'
Walker spoke for two minutes, then slammed down the phone and stepped out of the box.
Once on the street again, he was surprised to discover that he was looking around, almost guiltily.
Well, he had nothing to feel guilty about, he told himself angrily.
His conscience was clear. What he'd done had been for the good of the Police Force and in the interests of justice.
And if it also served to bring DCI Paniatowski down, that was no more than a bonus.
NINETEEN
T
he press room in Whitebridge Police Headquarters had seating for twenty reporters, which, at any normal briefing, would have been more than adequate. But this was not a normal briefing â this was a
national
story which was being covered, and the room was full to overflowing.
Monika Paniatowski, on the verge of delivering her first-ever press conference, looked straight ahead â and tried to ignore the bright lights which the presence of two television camera crews had made necessary.
She cleared her throat.
âThank you for coming, ladies and gentlemen,' she said. âI would like to begin this press conference by releasing the names of the two victims of this shocking crime. They are Linda Szymborska, aged thirty-eight, who was the managing director of Brunskill's Bakery, and Thomas Whittington, also aged thirty-eight, who was the head baker in the same company.'
All the reporters were jotting down these details as she spoke, she noted. All, that was, apart from Mike Traynor. He had his arms ostentatiously folded across his chest, and a smirk on his face that was so wide the rest of his features seemed in imminent danger of being swallowed by it.
Paniatowski had already decided what details she would reveal to the press â and the order she would reveal them in â before she'd walked into the room, and once she started speaking again, she pretty much stuck to that plan.
Not bad, she thought, when she'd finished.
True, the briefing had lacked Charlie Woodend's flair, but it had been both clear and succinct enough to be more than satisfactory.
She took a sip of water from the glass on the table in front of her, and steeled herself for the next stage in the process.
âI am now open to questions from the floor,' she said. âI will answer them as frankly as I can, but you must accept that I will inevitably be holding back
some
information in order not to prejudice the investigation.'
Mike Traynor's hand had shot into the air before she'd finished speaking.
For a moment, she considered ignoring the man who had damaged her investigation by leaking the story of a second hand to the nationals. But
only
for a moment, because to ignore him would be seen as a sign of weakness â and being seen as
weak
was the last thing she needed at that particular juncture.
âYes, Mr Traynor?' she said.
âWhat's the connection between the two victims, Chief Inspector?' Traynor asked, almost innocently.
âI thought I'd already spelled that out more than clearly enough, Mr Traynor,' Paniatowski said. âThey were colleagues.'
âAnd that's all there is to it?' Traynor asked, in a tone which he was clearly hoping would sound surprised, but instead gave the impression of a man
pretending
to be surprised. âThere's no closer link between them than the fact that they happened to work in the same bakery?'
âNone that we've yet established,' Paniatowski lied.
âReally?' Traynor asked.
âReally,' Paniatowski confirmed stonily.
âWell, I must admit I'm astonished to hear you say that, Chief Inspector,' Traynor told her.