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The Corpse Bridge
  • Текст добавлен: 6 октября 2016, 02:07

Текст книги "The Corpse Bridge"


Автор книги: Stephen Booth



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Текущая страница: 39 (всего у книги 39 страниц)

‘And you coached the rest of your group, didn’t you?’ he said. ‘They all played their parts well. Congratulations.’

‘Thank you,’ said Poppy again. Then she paused. ‘But the final act isn’t over yet, I’m afraid.’

Cooper found himself at the foot of a flight of metal steps leading up on to an overhead walkway. It might once have passed over the cheese vats, but now there was nothing but a bare concrete floor below.

He thought he saw Poppy’s pale figure above and ahead of him, and he mounted the steps on to the walkway.

‘Where are you?’ he said.

But the voice came from behind him.

‘I’m here. Very close.’

Cooper stopped moving. He became certain that there was more than one other person in the factory with him. Someone had been here all the time. They’d been keeping very quiet in the darkness. But now he could hear their breathing and a footstep coming closer. So Jason Shaw had come after all. Or had he?


41

Diane Fry slammed her foot down on the accelerator pedal as her Audi hurtled down the A515 towards the Hartington turn-off.

Ben Cooper wasn’t answering his phone, which was typical. He’d probably got himself into a situation where he couldn’t answer it or had no signal. Or perhaps he’d simply turned it off.

Fry cursed him under her breath. Did he really need her help, after all? Had his call been a test: request her help knowing she wouldn’t come, just so he could point to a final betrayal? She couldn’t let him have that satisfaction.

There was a marked car behind her, but the other had taken Jason Shaw back to the custody suite in Edendale, where Becky Hurst would process him. With Luke Irvine in the car with her, she hoped there would be enough manpower. There was no one else available at such short notice, unless she sounded the alarm. And she couldn’t do that yet, without any clear idea about what was happening.

‘Turn here, Diane,’ said Irvine, pointing at the junction to the left.

He seemed to be as worried as she was herself. But then, Irvine knew as well as anyone that his DS was capable of doing something rash.

‘Try Ben’s phone again,’ she said. ‘And keep trying.’

Another face appeared from the darkness, lit for a second by a bursting firework, a blue-and-white flash and crackle through the broken skylights high in the roof of the old cheese factory.

‘Are you on your own?’ said a voice.

‘What do you think?’ replied Cooper.

‘I think you might just have made a mistake.’

Cooper experienced another disorientating memory. The thickset, middle-aged man who’d been raking leaves in the churchyard at Hartington vigorously. He was wearing the same baseball cap, forcing those same untidy clumps of grey hair to stick out at the sides. Cooper remembered that grimly determined expression as he’d lashed out with his rake at the weeds. A deep anger in his expression, an intense physical concentration.

‘Hello, Mr Naden,’ he said.

Naden didn’t reply. Cooper looked from him to Poppy and back again. These two made an unnerving team.

‘It should have been obvious you were the leader,’ said Cooper. ‘I could see it on that photo taken on the testing grounds at Harpur Hill. The one on the old coffin road. The photo that Poppy took, I imagine, since she wasn’t in the shot herself.’

Naden glowered at Poppy Mellor, who shrank a little further into the shadows.

‘What about it?’ he said.

‘We would have been able to identify all the members of the group from that photo anyway,’ said Cooper. ‘I suppose you guessed that. And you were right at the front, Mr Naden. As if you were conducting a guided walk. The others were looking to you. Nothing could disguise that.’

‘I told Sandra to delete that photo from her phone,’ said Naden grimly.

‘And she may have done. But she emailed it to herself first. She must have wanted a memento, I suppose. We found it on her laptop.’

‘Idiot woman. She was mad, you know.’

‘She is dead.’

‘Well, I didn’t kill her.’

‘No. But I know who you did kill, Mr Naden.’

Naden had moved closer without him noticing. He didn’t know which way to face now, which direction the threat might come from. The training manuals said you should make sure to have an escape route if you were likely to face a threat. But Cooper was aware only of the drop to the concrete beneath him, the low rail that wouldn’t stop anyone going over.

‘That night, when you were supposed to be at the bridge with the others,’ he said. ‘It didn’t all go wrong by accident, did it? You had a different plan from everyone else.’

He could sense Poppy stiffen and draw in a sharp breath.

‘You said it was the wrong day,’ said Cooper, ‘but your wife thought it was the right day. You knew who was actually wrong, didn’t you?’

With a smug smile, Naden leaned closer to stare into Cooper’s face. ‘She kept insisting it was the right day,’ he said. ‘She didn’t believe me, but kept on and on about it, even after we got home. That gave me the excuse to go out again later that evening, to check what was happening.’

‘But you went to meet George Redfearn instead.’

Naden nodded. ‘Well, he never suspected me. I looked too harmless, I suppose. But I’ve thought about it often enough over the years. Just not in relation to Redfearn.’

‘So how did you do it?’

‘I told him I knew his wife. I said I had some information to give him about her.’

‘Mrs Redfearn was in Paris at the time,’ said Cooper.

‘Exactly. One of her regular trips. She’s ten years younger than him, you know. He was bound to have a sneaking suspicion about what she was up to.’

‘But how did you know personal details about the Redfearns like that?’

Naden pursed his lips. ‘It’s general gossip.’

Cooper could tell Naden was lying.

‘Oh, I get it now,’ he said. ‘You employed Daniel Grady from Eden Valley Enquiries. He purported to be a property enquiry agent asking questions on behalf of a prospective house purchaser. His job is to pick up all the bits of gossip about the neighbours. I bet he’s very good at it, too. Even when money doesn’t change hands. He must be a godsend to potential blackmailers.’

Naden shrugged. ‘It doesn’t really matter, does it? I had the information I needed. And it worked. Redfearn came to meet me at Pilsbury Castle. It’s a very quiet spot, you know. No witnesses.’

‘Except there were,’ said Cooper.

‘Were there? That’s a shame.’

‘Some tourists staying at Pilsbury saw your car.’

Naden shrugged. ‘It hardly matters. As long as you realise Sally had nothing to do with it. I wouldn’t have involved her in something like that.’

‘How did you know she would keep insisting it was the right day?’

Now Naden laughed. ‘I take it you’re not married, Detective Sergeant?’

Cooper swallowed. ‘No, I’m not.’

‘It was obvious. Well, take it from me, when you’ve been married for a few years, some things become all too predictable. You don’t need to be able to read minds to work out what your partner will say. Sally has become very easy to predict.’

His tone of voice seemed to contradict the sense of his words. Cooper detected something deeper that Naden wasn’t saying, some aspect of his relationship that wasn’t on the surface.

‘But why do something so drastic?’ he said. ‘Why take the risk? It doesn’t make sense.’

‘Doesn’t it?’ Naden looked at the ground, as if contemplating the distance of the fall. ‘Sally is very sick, you know. She’s in a lot of pain most of the time.’

‘No, I didn’t know that.’

‘We’ve been together for so many years. It’s funny how nothing else seems to matter when you know someone’s going to die very soon. You consider all the things you’ve ever wanted to do, that you ought to do but have never dared to because of the risk to your liberty and reputation. And you start to think, Well, why not?’

Cooper nodded. That was something he could definitely understand. For months after Liz had been killed in the fire, he’d driven around the steepest roads in the Peak District late at night thinking, Well, why not?

‘I think that’s why Sally thinks about murder a lot too,’ said Naden. ‘She once told me that the best way to kill someone and get away with it is to lure them on to a high place and push them off. As long as there are no eyewitnesses, it’s impossible to prove forensically whether they were pushed or just fell.’

‘I’m not sure that’s true,’ said Cooper. ‘It depends on a lot of factors. For one thing, you’d need a good pretext to get someone into that position.’

Naden’s footsteps clanged on the metal walkway. The sound reverberated around the empty shed. And bounced off the hard concrete floor below.

‘Oh, it’s not that difficult,’ he said.

Diane Fry and Luke Irvine entered the factory through the same door Cooper had used. Outside in Hartington, the last few fireworks were spluttering to a halt after a spectacular finale.

Fry kicked against a pair of wellington boots standing by a doorway and crunched through a pile of dusty leaflets on the floor.

‘What a mess,’ said Irvine in a hushed tone.

‘Let’s hope we find nothing worse,’ said Fry.

They moved steadily through the rooms and were joined by two uniformed officers. The beams of their torches illuminated the darkest corners, alighting on old filing cabinets and mysterious heaps of abandoned equipment.

‘Ben?’ Fry called.

She moved ahead, passing through a doorway, then another, following some instinct she couldn’t explain. She knew Cooper was here, because his car was parked nearby. But she didn’t know who else was.

Ben Cooper hardly knew what happened next. He and Geoff Naden were staring into each other’s eyes. He was aware of Naden’s left hand reaching out to grasp his shoulder, and Naden’s right hand coming up with a length of steel pipe he must have picked up from the floor.

Cooper instinctively grabbed his wrist. He wasn’t as heavy as Naden. He could feel the difference as soon as they made physical contact. He didn’t want either of them to go over that rail. But he was also conscious of Poppy Mellor immediately behind him. Cooper needed to turn round to see what she was doing, but he was reluctant to take his eyes off the other man. He felt for his extendable baton, concealed in a pocket of his coat.

‘Be sensible, Mr Naden,’ he said. ‘This won’t help anyone. It will only make things worse for you.’

‘It doesn’t matter to me any more,’ said Naden grimly.

And then there was a chaos of people shouting and lights swinging across the ceiling, picking up the figures on the walkway, then passing on and reflecting off the skylights, flashing like the starbursts in the sky over Hartington. Cooper heard his own name called, boots clanging on the metal steps.

In an explosion of light he saw Naden raising the length of pipe. Then an impact from behind threw him off balance and he dropped his baton as he threw out a hand to clutch at the rail and save himself from falling.

He dropped to his knees with the breath knocked out of him, expecting a blow to fall at any second. He heard Naden cry out – one loud, angry yell that turned into a scream of fear. Then a sickening impact thudded through the empty shed.

Cooper raised his head. He saw Diane Fry standing at the top of the steps, white-faced and ghostly behind the light of her torch. And Geoff Naden had gone.


42

43

It was so difficult to know what to talk about in the car with Diane Fry. She had so little in the way of small talk. But Cooper knew he had to make conversation, because he was getting a lift, was on the receiving end of a favour. So he asked her about the outcome of her interviews with Jason Shaw.

‘For some reason Shaw became more extreme in his intentions after Sandra Blair’s death,’ said Fry, when she’d outlined the results.

‘Well, don’t you think he was in love with her?’ said Cooper.

Fry looked at him. ‘That’s what he said. I didn’t believe it.’

‘Why not?’

‘Well, he’s not that sort of person.’

‘Are you kidding? Anybody is capable of love, no matter what else they do in their lives. Yes, even people who commit murder can be in love. You understand that, don’t you, Diane?’

She didn’t answer directly, but gripped the steering wheel a bit tighter. ‘That still doesn’t explain his reaction,’ she said.

‘It was jealousy, I think,’ said Cooper.

‘Who of?’

‘Poppy Mellor perhaps. Oh, not in that way. But Sandra and Poppy were enjoying themselves too much. It was as simple as that. Jason didn’t see it as fun. With Sandra gone, he only had two options – to give up or take it to the extreme. And he wasn’t a man who would just give up.’

Fry looked as though she were struggling to understand the emotional complexities of ordinary human beings. She concentrated on the traffic as they headed out of the town centre and over the bridge towards Welbeck Street.

‘I dare say you’re right,’ she said in the end.

‘So in a way, you see,’ continued Cooper, ‘the earl paid the price for Sandra Blair’s death, not for his development plans at Bowden, or even for the quarry scheme. He became the target for one individual’s thwarted passion, an unfocused rage.’

He watched Fry trying to digest the interpretation. He knew it wouldn’t fit with any of her logical constructs. In fact, in Diane Fry’s world, motive could be pretty much dispensed with, once you’d collected enough evidence to prove your case. Guilt was important in the criminal justice system, not reasons. The system represented by Fry didn’t want to know why people did things. It was much too hard to understand, impossible to write down on a report form. It was too human.

Cooper wished he could tell her that one day, when he thought she would understand.

They turned into Welbeck Street and Fry drew up outside his flat.

‘That was a big help,’ he said. ‘Thanks a lot, Diane.’

Fry waited while he got out of the Audi. Cooper turned and stood on the pavement, expecting her to accelerate away. He was planning to give her a little parting wave as she disappeared from his life round the corner of the street. But she didn’t do that. And his instinct for politeness kicked in again.

‘Do you want to come in for a bit?’ he said.

‘Sure.’

He could hardly believe that he’d asked her in. Even more alarming was the fact that she’d accepted. Cooper couldn’t get to grips with what was happening to him today. The world had taken a strange turn.

Inside the flat the cat padded forward to greet Cooper, then paused suspiciously before sitting down and staring at Fry.

‘I suppose you’ll have another funeral to go to soon,’ said Fry. ‘Your landlady.’

‘Mrs Shelley, yes. It’s next Monday.’

‘What’s going to happen to this house?’ asked Fry.

‘I think the nephew will sell them. He doesn’t want to be bothered dealing with pesky tenants. He’ll do them up and get a good price for them when he puts them on the market.’

‘But as a sitting tenant you have legal rights.’

‘I know, but…’

‘It won’t be the same?’

Cooper had thought it would sound odd to her if he’d said that himself. But she’d hit on what he was thinking exactly. He’d almost forgotten Fry’s ability to read his mind so well. It had never seemed like a positive asset before. But now her insight made it easier to explain his feelings. For once he felt she might actually understand what he meant.

‘No, it won’t be the same at all. In fact, it doesn’t feel the same now. Number six is empty already. They took Mrs Shelley’s dog away. I imagine he’s gone in a sanctuary or more likely he’s been taken to the vet’s to be put down. Well, he was quite old, I suppose.’

Cooper found Gavin Murfin drifting into his mind, remembered the impression he’d been given in Superintendent Branagh’s office that Murfin was regarded as an old dog past his day, a useless mutt who lay around sleeping and eating and was no good to anyone. At least there was a sanctuary for an aged copper.

He was still acting on instinct, following the accepted practices of hospitality, despite the unlikely presence of Diane Fry in his flat.

‘Would you like a drink?’ he said.

‘That would be good. What have you got?’

‘Oh. Well, there are some beers in the fridge. And I’ve got a bottle of cheap Australian white somewhere. That’s all, I’m afraid. I don’t entertain very often.’

‘It’s lucky I brought this, then,’ said Fry.

She opened her bag. Where Cooper had thought she was carrying reports back to Nottingham, the bag was heavy because it contained a bottle.

‘Champagne? Are you kidding?’ he said.

Fry held the bottle up and peered at the label. ‘Isn’t it a good one? I have no idea really.’

‘I’m sure it’s fine.’

‘Good.’

Cooper opened the bottle, poured them each a drink and put the bottle down on the coffee table. Fry had settled on his sofa and he sat down opposite her in the old armchair, with the cat rubbing anxiously against his legs.

‘Cheers,’ he said.

He watched Fry take a long gulp and cradle her glass, and found himself copying her. It was good champagne too, so far as he was any judge. There hadn’t been many occasions in his life to celebrate recently.

‘So what did you make of your little protest group in the end?’ asked Fry. ‘Poppy Mellor and her crew of armchair anarchists.’

‘They were a strange bunch,’ admitted Cooper. ‘But I think Poppy Mellor was right in something she said to me. They were like a family. They didn’t choose each other, but they were thrown together, almost against their will or their better instincts.’

‘Is that the way it happened?’

‘Of course,’ said Cooper. ‘Think of all the things that happen in people’s lives. Coincidence, fate, circumstances beyond their control. It’s all just the nature of events. They bring individuals close together and they pull them apart again.’

‘That’s very true. Very true.’

Fry got up and poured him a second glass. He seemed to have finished the first one very quickly. He always drank too fast when he was nervous.

He watched Diane Fry drifting around the room with her glass. It reminded him of the first time he’d ever set eyes on her, as she walked into the CID room at West Street. He’d just returned from leave and she was the new girl on a transfer from the West Midlands.

But then she stopped and reached out to straighten a picture on the wall. Cooper’s heart lurched. She’d effortlessly replaced that first memory with another one. The day he moved into this flat in Welbeck Street, Fry had turned up unexpectedly, the way she had last Friday. She’d even brought him a gift to welcome him into his new home. A small, decorative clock. It was standing on the mantelpiece now.

The rarity of that occasion made it all the more memorable for him. He’d witnessed a strange transformation that day, suddenly seeing a side of Fry that was usually hidden, the vulnerability behind the cynical façade. It was the Diane he’d been looking for, ever since she walked into West Street that first time, all those years ago.

‘So – you’ve been offered an inspector’s job?’ she said. ‘I hope I’m right. It’s the reason I brought the champagne, after all.’

‘Yes,’ said Cooper, with a guilty surge of triumph. ‘I’m sorry, and all that.’

She raised an eyebrow and put down her glass. ‘Sorry? Why?’

‘Well, I can’t imagine it’s what you wanted. You’ve been watching me so closely for the past few days, hoping I’d slip up. And then, in the end, I did what I never wanted to do. I had to ask you for help. It must have been satisfying for you.’

‘Is that what you think?’ said Fry. ‘Don’t you realise that I was asked to make an assessment? It was my input that helped you to get the job.’

‘Seriously?’

‘I’m always serious.’

Fry laughed then, as if she’d made a joke. That was twice Cooper had witnessed it. Something was definitely happening.

‘Well, I don’t know what to say. Except thank you, Diane.’

‘That’s okay.’

She took another drink and looked thoughtful. Cooper waited on tenterhooks for the next direction the conversation might be about to take.

‘I visited my sister in Birmingham the other night,’ she said. ‘You remember my sister, I’m sure.’

‘Angie?’

‘I only have the one.’

‘Is she well?’ said Cooper.

‘Amazingly well. Ridiculously well. You’d hardly recognise her. I certainly didn’t.’

‘That’s … good, I suppose.’

‘Yes. She’s deliriously happy in a new relationship. And now she’s pregnant.’

‘Pregnant? Really?’

‘That’s what I said. My big sis is having a baby.’

‘Good for her.’

‘Absolutely,’ said Fry. ‘Good for her. I hope she’s very happy.’ She tilted her head on one side and gave him a quizzical look. ‘But here we are, you and me, talking about murder. I suppose it’s whatever turns you on.’

Cooper was beginning to feel exactly the way he had with Poppy Mellor in the old cheese factory, trying to talk calmly to a woman whose behaviour had become unpredictable, who might do something completely unexpected at any moment.

‘We don’t have to talk about murder, if you don’t want to,’ he said.

‘No, we don’t. We could talk about something else. Any ideas, Ben?’

‘Er…’

‘No? That’s not like you.’

Fry seemed to be slightly tipsy. He’d never seen her this relaxed before. She was even saying things that didn’t make any sense.

‘But it’s strange, isn’t it?’ she said. ‘Strange that a corpse could turn out to be a bridge.’

‘You’re mad.’

But Cooper smiled. Wasn’t that exactly what had happened? A new sort of connection had formed between them with that first body lying in the shallow water of the River Dove. He hadn’t understood what it was until now. But it was true – a corpse might provide a bridge in a way. And more than that. Three corpses could be enough to carry you across a void, transporting you from one place to another. They could take you away from a world you didn’t want to be in to a different universe altogether. A place where … well, where anything could happen.

But something was wrong here. Fry wasn’t going to be around after today. She had a whole new career of her own to look forward to.

‘So that’s your parting gift,’ he said. ‘When you finally leave Edendale, you want to make sure that you leave me feeling in your debt.’

Fry dropped her gaze to the floor. ‘Something like that, I suppose. Yes, something like that.’

Cooper was feeling very strange. Perhaps it was the alcohol. The first real drink he’d had for months. Well, the first time he’d felt relaxed enough to enjoy it. It was odd that he’d spent days working out how he could get away from Fry and now he discovered he didn’t want her to leave.

‘Are you really going, Diane?’ he said.

‘I’m already gone.’

‘You can’t be quite gone,’ said Cooper, putting down his glass.

‘Why not?’

‘Because I’ve still got your TV in the boot of my car.’

‘So you have.’

‘You’ll need it for the new apartment in Nottingham. You’ve moved everything else. That old place at Grosvenor Avenue must be empty now.’

‘Pretty much. But we can’t move it tonight,’ said Fry. ‘You’ve been drinking.’

‘So have you.’

‘True.’

Fry gazed at him. And it felt as if everything that had ever passed between them over the years dissolved in that moment, in that one look. Cooper’s doubts about Fry fell away. For the first time he found himself looking past the brittle façade and seeing the real person underneath, vulnerable and lonely. Fry was like a 3D picture, baffling at first. But if you stared at it for long enough, your eyes slipped through the surface to a different focus and found something surprising that took your breath away.

‘So, Diane…’

‘So let’s leave the TV where it is,’ she said. ‘We’re not going anywhere tonight.’

Cooper was awake early next morning. Quietly, he opened the back door into the garden behind Welbeck Street.

A strong wind had been blowing from the north all night. He walked out of his flat into a world of bare branches and swathes of dead leaves covering the ground. So that was it, he thought. Autumn was truly over. Nothing could stop the winter now.

For a while he sat on a garden chair and watched the sun rise. Fry had been right that a death could provide a bridge to the future. It meant a new start in so many ways. But nothing was quite so simple, was it? It was all very well trying to look ahead, to think about what might still be to come. But it was all daydreams, a lot of wishful thinking. Whatever you did, there was no escaping your fate. No one had any idea what the future would bring.

Cooper gazed up at the hills around Edendale, the ever-changing landscape of the Peak District, the countryside he’d grown up in. The colours of those hills altered season by season, month by month. They might look bare and bleak now, but new life was just below the surface, waiting to burst through again, if it was only given half a chance.

Yes, winter always ended. And, if you could look far enough into the future, spring was just around the corner.


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