The Ten Commandments (19 page)

Read The Ten Commandments Online

Authors: Anthea Fraser

'Too bad they can't charge him with the Feathers case, while they're at it.'

Frederick shook his head, then winced slightly. 'He's not guilty of that one, Paul – believe me. But the race is on now. Will we find Philpott's killer first, or will the police?'

Blake looked at him despairingly. 'Aren't you satisfied with one knock on the head?'

'That's why they're hanging on to me, damn it. I'm quite well enough to go home, but they won't hear of it. Which is why I'm concerned about you.'

'I'm anonymous enough; no one's seen
me
on TV or giving talks in public.'

'You think my attacker could have been at the library?' Frederick sounded startled.

'Not necessarily; you were fully reported in the press.'

'But if he was, and he was still here the next evening for the break-in and to bash me over the head, it points to his being a local man – Judd's killer rather than Philpott's.'

'It's hardly a Sabbath day's journey from here to Oxbury,' Paul pointed out.

'True.' Frederick brightened. 'Lucky, anyway, that my notes were under lock and key, though to be honest they wouldn't have been much help to him. So far, we've only scratched the surface, but now that I'm feeling so much better, I intend to occupy my time more productively.

'Which reminds me: I've rung home a couple of times to ask Edwina to bring in my notebooks when she comes, but there's no reply and the answerphone's not on. Could you possibly pop round and, if no one's in, drop a note to that effect through the letterbox?'

'Of course.'

Frederick shot the younger man a look under his eyebrows. 'After which, I presume you'll be on your way back to Oxbury?'

'No, actually, I thought I'd avoid it for a while. Things will be hotting up once news of Philpott's reputed affairs breaks, and I don't want to tread on police toes.'

'But now's just the time to go, man, while we have the advantage! People speak freely in a bar, but they button up when the boys in blue arrive.'

To Frederick's surprise, Paul didn't meet his eyes. 'I'm sorry, sir, but I've rather a lot on at the moment. I'll see if I can fit it in next week.'

Frederick was considerably taken aback; this was the first time Paul had failed to fall in with one of his suggestions, and he found he did not appreciate it.

'By next week,' he said stiffly, 'any advantage we might have will have been lost.'

'I'm sorry,' Paul said baldly.

'Very well; I realize you have other things to do. I mustn't keep you.'

And Blake, rightly taking it as a dismissal, had gone, leaving the uncomfortable atmosphere behind him.

Damn! Frederick thought impotently. Damn, damn, damn! What had caused that sudden digging-in of heels? Had Frederick been taking him too much for granted? After all, as he'd just allowed, the man had other jobs besides working for him – a fact he tended to forget.

But he'd had the distinct impression it was that particular request Paul had balked at, that for some reason he was reluctant to go back to Oxbury. In God's name, why?

If only he weren't so dependent on others! Frederick fumed in an excess of frustration. If only he could get out of this place and see to things himself, he was sure he could come up with something.

There was a tap on the door and the uniformed constable looked in apologetically.

'Excuse me, sir, did that gentleman by any chance bring you anything?'

Frederick gazed at him blankly.

'Any fruit or –?' His eyes fell on the box of chocolates on the bed. 'Ah! I'm afraid I'll have to remove those, sir.'

'
Remove
them?' Frederick spluttered.

'Sorry, sir; I should have stopped him at the door, but he didn't appear to be carrying anything. Thought I'd better check, though, and it's as well I did, or they'd have had my guts for garters. I've got instructions, see, to confiscate anything edible that's brought in, for examination.'

And, bearing the offending box of chocolates, he left the room, leaving Frederick staring speechlessly after him.

Back in the interview room at Ashmartin, Webb studied the man across the table, comparing him in the flesh with his pencilled likeness. The resentment and antagonism were still there, but they were now overlaid by anxiety. Possibly Baring had detected a new confidence in the police officers.

The usual rigmarole was enacted, the tape switched on and Baring tensed, watching them closely.

'Now, Mr Baring,' Good began, 'since we last spoke we've obtained some important new evidence.' He paused, and the man moved uncomfortably on his chair. The solicitor beside him remained motionless. Webb was aware of his annoyance; Baring had been all but due for release.

The hair was produced in a plastic envelope and Baring regarded it stonily. When no one spoke, he said defiantly, 'Another of them samples, is it?'

'Yes, and this one belongs to you. Furthermore, it was found inside the jacket belonging to Simon Judd.
Inside,
mind you. Speaks for itself, doesn't it? Couldn't have been picked up casually; it must have been when you were lugging him out of the car.'

Which disposed of that loophole, Webb thought with relief.

Baring stared at the small envelope which could condemn him. 'Who says it's mine?'

'It has your DNA.'

'But why should I kill a bloke I'd never seen in my life?' It was said with bluster, playing the only card left to him, and Webb wasted no time in disposing of it.

'But, Mr Baring, you
had
seen him, hadn't you? Every day of your trial, in fact.'

Baring stared at him, and Webb saw the sudden hopelessness in his eyes.

The solicitor frowned; obviously, this was news to him. 'Chief Inspector, I'd like a word with my client.'

But quite suddenly. Baring had had enough. Either he couldn't face his brief's recriminations, or he simply realized the game was up. At any rate, he burst out impatiently, 'Well, your client doesn't want a word with
you
!'

Good leant forward and offered him a cigarette, moving the interview into a new phase. Baring took it, bent to the lighted match, then raised his head, inhaling deeply with half-closed eyes. Webb, the nonsmoker, nevertheless welcomed the ritual as a prelude to confession.

Good, who had also lit up, leaned back in his chair. 'Suppose you tell us about it,' he said. 'Remember you're still under caution.'

Baring inhaled again. 'First off, let's get one thing straight – I never done that robbery I went down for. Gawdsake, I'd no previous on violence, they should have known that's not my form.'

The fact that he was now suspected of something much more serious seemed, in his indignation, to have escaped him.

'I ask you,' he went on, warming to his grievance, 'how would you feel, knowing you're clean, being banged up while the real villains scarper? Circumstantial evidence – that's what they got me on. Bloke that ID'd me got it wrong – it happens.' He grimaced, tapping ash on to the saucer on the table. 'I'm not saying he done it on purpose, but he makes a cock-up, and I go down – his word against mine. Call that ruddy justice?'

No one answered and after a moment he went on: 'Gawd knows that was bad enough, but then the wife ups and legs it. One for the bright lights was Shirl, and I'm no use to her, cooped up inside, now am I? Really got to me, that did. Thought the world of her.'

He paused again, remembering his wife. Then, suddenly, he slammed his hand on the table, making all three men jump.

'And it was all that poncey sod's fault!' he burst out. 'Sitting there passing judgement, all prissy and mealy-mouthed, fair revelling in it, he was! The rest of 'em was on my side – I could feel it. Nice, ordinary folk, the lot of them. I'd have got off if it hadn't been for that bastard Judd. I caught his eye once, before he'd time to look away. Cold as a fish.'

Webb said almost gently, 'You can't
know
Mr Judd swung the verdict.'

'Oh yes, I bloody can! You should have seen the smirk on his face when he gave it. The rest of 'em wouldn't meet my eye. Ashamed, most likely. It was his fault all right, and I swore there and then he'd pay for it.'

'So what did you do?' prompted Good.

As so often happened, Baring was now actually enjoying himself, boasting of how he'd achieved his end. 'Well, see, I remembered that murder down Oxbury way a few years back, the one the bloke got away with. So I asked Shirl to bring in everything she could find on it. (This was in the early days, like, before she went.) I reckoned if I could knock off Judd and leave him in a pub car park, you lot would think it was the same bloke. And since you didn't get him last time,' he added logically, then you wouldn't get me, neither.'

'Wasn't it rather risky, taking a dead body to a busy car park? Any number of people could have seen you.'

Baring looked surprised. 'They'd not seen the other bloke. Anyway, it was getting dark by the time I got there, I made sure of that. Did meet one car as we turned in, which threw me a bit. Still, no harm done. I kept my cool and drove to the far end, pulled him out, dumped him between two cars, and drove off like a bat out of hell.'

'As it happens, Mr Baring, some harm, as you put it,
was
done. The driver of that car gave us a description of yours. A local garage remembered doing an MOT on it and supplied the registration number, and Swansea did the rest.'

Baring stared at Good disbelievingly. 'You're telling me I'm sitting here now because of that bloke in the gateway?'

'He gave us the first lead,' Good confirmed.

'Where and how did you kill Judd?' Webb asked.

'In the car.' Baring answered almost absent-mindedly, still numbed by the consequences of that chance encounter. 'Dropped something on the floor, asked him to pick it up, and clobbered him with the wrench. Nothing to it.'

'Presumably you were parked at the time.'

'Yeah, I'd driven him into the country. Piece of luck him turning out a social worker. I just spun him a hard-luck story, and he never smelled a rat till right at the end.'

'What did you do with the murder weapon?'

Baring grinned mirthlessly. 'You'll have a job finding that, mate. Hurled it into a Welsh lake, didn't I, on me travels. And don't ask me which, neither, because they all look alike to me and I can't say their names anyway.'

Webb remarked, though without hope, 'You say you based the killing on the Feathers murder. Weren't you in fact responsible for that one, too? You might just as well admit it; you're going inside for a long while anyway, so it won't make much difference.'

Baring looked at him scornfully. 'Come off it. Wouldn't have tried to throw suspicion on meself, now would I?'

To which, Webb supposed, there was no answer. It would have been too easy, anyway. After all, there was still the man with the size-nine shoes out there somewhere.

It was Saturday afternoon, and Roy had taken the boys to a cricket match. As usual, they'd invited her to go with them, but of course they'd known she wouldn't. If she had to be bored, Alex told them, she preferred to be bored at home in comfort.

Restlessly, she prowled barefoot round the house. The cleaner had been the previous day, and there was nothing for her to do. She'd prepared the supper, she'd finished her library book, and there was only cricket on television.

The house was dim and cool behind slanted blinds but outside the sun was merciless, killing stillborn any thought of doing some gardening. She was hot, sticky and depressed; there were all at once so many things to worry about – the hostility her father'd aroused, her marriage, her relationship with Patrick.

She stood in the middle of the hall, absorbing the atmosphere of the house. To her left the sitting-room clock ticked comfortably. Behind her in the kitchen the fridge gave one of its periodic roars and clicks. Outside, some boys shouted as they rode past on their bicycles.

It was no use ringing Gilly, she and Hugh would be at the club watching Loveday play tennis. Mother was probably at the hospital, but she didn't feel like making the effort of changing and driving there. She'd go along for a while this evening while Roy stayed with the twins, thereby avoiding having to spend the evening together and make small talk.

With both hands she lifted the heavy mass of her hair so the air could get to her neck. She'd tie it up – that would make her cooler. In fact, she decided, halfway up the stairs, she'd have a shower and wash it, let it dry naturally, and then pin it up. After which, to complete the cooling process, she'd make some fresh lemonade, using Mother's recipe. It would help to fill in the time, and the boys would be glad of it when they got back.

In the bedroom she stripped, stepped out of her clothes and, leaving them in a damp little pile, walked naked to the bathroom, welcoming the breeze of her movement on her body. She would treat herself to the expensive shower gel she kept for special occasions.

Moments later she was standing under the cool water, lifting her head to let it run in prickly streams over her face and neck and dripping hair. She squeezed the gel into her palm and massaged her body, feeling the heat and stickiness drain away. Then, reaching for the shampoo, she turned her attention to her hair. It felt almost decadent, to be performing these rites at three o'clock in the afternoon.

It was as she was rubbing her hair dry that she thought she heard the doorbell. Who could it be? Perhaps Susie about the scout picnic? She'd said she'd be in touch, but anyone would be welcome, to help pass this interminable afternoon.

She shook back her damp hair, reached for the robe hanging on the door, and ran barefoot down the stairs, pausing to look through the spy-glass in the door. Patrick stood on the step outside.

Alex flung open the door, noticing in that first moment that he looked tired, and a muscle was jumping at the corner of his eye.

'Alex,' he said.

Suddenly aware of her appearance, she took him by the arm, pulled him into the house and shut the door. In the cool, dim hall they stood looking at each other.

He said, 'You smell delicious.'

Other books

Empty Promises by Ann Rule
Tuck by Stephen R. Lawhead
The Whole Truth by James Scott Bell
His Destiny by Cosby, Diana
Still Falling by Costa, Bella
Disaster for Hire by Franklin W. Dixon