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Dead and Buried
  • Текст добавлен: 9 октября 2016, 06:07

Текст книги "Dead and Buried"


Автор книги: Stephen Booth



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Текущая страница: 14 (всего у книги 21 страниц)

‘Thursday. Why?’

‘Because it’s market day.’

‘Are we going shopping?’ asked Villiers.

‘No,’ said Cooper. ‘We’re going to make some arrests.’


21

Markets always seemed to be the coldest, windiest spots. He supposed it was in the nature of the layout – an open space with streets funnelling into it from every direction. In winter, stallholders often shivered in heavy overcoats and fur hats, as if they were trading on a street market in Moscow.

Shop windows all around the market square in Edendale were filled with posters advertising the town’s campaign against the building of a new Tesco store. There was a Sainsbury’s Local right here on the market square, but many of the other businesses were independents.

The register office was still located here in the town hall, but the magistrates’ court and county court round the corner had a less than promising future. Court facilities were being closed and centralised in bigger population centres, just like police stations

Cooper had to admit that Edendale market wasn’t the most exciting in Derbyshire. Chesterfield and Bakewell were both better. On this side of the market, the main attractions seemed to be a fish van, a plant stall, a hot-dog trailer, and a trader selling Union Jack rugs.

Ian Gullick was doing business today on his vegetable stall. Piles of potatoes and carrots failed to hide his beer gut, which stretched a T-shirt and a leather money belt to breaking point. Though his stall was right in front of Jack’s Barbers, he clearly hadn’t been inside recently for a wash and cut.

‘Okay, we’re going to go in nice and easy,’ said Cooper into his radio. ‘Gavin, can you see him from your position?’

‘Yes, got him.’

Murfin was standing by the window of the tattoo parlour, just behind the artisan bakery, partially obscuring a poster advertising ear-lobe tattoos.

‘Becky?’

‘Right behind the stall.’

‘Excellent. Let’s hope the uniforms stay out of sight until we’ve got the cuffs on.’

Without showing any signs of hurry or drawing attention to themselves, they closed in towards Gullick’s stall. A young assistant was weighing out onions for a customer, and Gullick himself moved down to the end of the stall to shift some empty boxes. When Cooper was within a few yards, the customer paid for her onions and the stall was clear.

‘Right, move in.’

Cooper picked up speed as he moved towards the stall. But Gullick, seeming to sense that something was wrong, looked up and spotted him. Cooper saw the flash of recognition in his eyes. A pile of boxes went flying as Gullick barged his assistant out of the way and ran round the end of the stall, toppling a pile of Golden Delicious, which spilled into the aisle and rolled under the feet of passing shoppers.

‘He’s spotted us, Ben,’ said Hurst. ‘He’s doing a runner.’

Cooper could see Hurst grabbing for Gullick, but missing.

‘Police!’ he called. ‘Stay where you are!’

‘Damn, I almost had him there,’ called Hurst.

‘Police! Stop!’

Gullick took no notice. It never did work anyway, unless you had a dog handler to enforce the command.

Cooper tried to dodge between the shoppers, who milled about in confusion, getting in his way. There was a crash, a splintering of wood, and someone screamed as if they’d fallen on to the stone paving.

‘Gavin?’ said Cooper.

‘Yeah?’

‘Where the hell are you?’

‘Right here. Just waiting for you to join me, like.’

‘What?’

Cooper pushed his way through the crowd, and Becky Hurst came panting up behind him. When the press of bodies cleared, he saw Gavin Murfin in his old anorak, standing there like someone’s mildly confused uncle out doing his weekly shop.

At Murfin’s feet lay a large shape in jeans and a white T-shirt, squirming desperately in his efforts to free himself from a heap of Union Jack rugs. Murfin bent, snapped on the handcuffs in two quick movements and straightened up again.

‘You youngsters,’ he said. ‘All that running about, and it doesn’t achieve a thing.’

Today was also Emergency Services Day in Edendale. Cooper had forgotten that. The whole of Victoria Park had been taken over to mount displays for the public. Crowds of civilians were passing through in their hundreds.

This park was also the site of the annual Christmas market. It was a popular attraction, bringing crowds of people into town. There was always a smell of roasting chestnuts in the air, and the sound of a fairground organ. In the evening, mime artists, stilt walkers and clowns would mingle with the crowds in the lamplit streets, and Santa would turn up on his sleigh.

It was where David and Trisha Pearson should have been on their Peak District Christmas break, not trekking across Oxlow Moor.

A few uniformed officers and PCSOs from E Division had been allocated to Emergency Services Day. The mobile police office was here, with a PC inside demonstrating the old-style fingerprinting technique, which was always popular. A liveried Vauxhall Astra sat with its blue lights flashing and its doors open, so that children could sit in the driver’s seat and tap the steering wheel to set off the siren.

‘We’ve located Ian Gullick’s vehicle,’ said Becky Hurst’s voice in his earpiece.

‘A blue Transit?’ asked Cooper.

‘Yes, it was in the town hall car park, close to the market.’

‘It’s not a priority.’

‘I thought not. Uniforms have picked up Gullick, and Gavin’s processing him, since he made the arrest.’

‘Okay.’

Cooper looked around the park. There was a dog handler too, with his modified Zafira and two dogs in cages at the back – a German Shepherd and a young Springer spaniel training for drug-sniffing work. There might only be two handlers on duty in Derbyshire at any one time, and they covered huge areas in those Zafiras. During the course of a shift they could do up to three hundred miles, a lot of that at night, and mostly on blue lights.

To complete the police presence, an off-duty officer dressed in a tracksuit had set up a couple of punchbags in front of the Ozbox van. Ozbox had been one of the big success stories for Derbyshire Constabulary since it was set up by Sergeant Steve Osbaldeston. It ran six mobile gyms, with two hundred officers volunteering their time to teach boxing skills to thousands of youngsters from problem areas. Old Ozbox himself had got the MBE a few years ago for his work. This was real community relations in action.

‘Carol?’ said Cooper. ‘Are you still on Vince Naylor?’

‘We’re sitting behind him on Hulley Road.’

‘What’s he doing?’

‘He’s in his pickup making a phone call, as far I can tell from here.’

‘Damn, that might mean he’s already heard about Gullick.’

‘Possibly. What do you want us to do?’

‘Nothing hasty,’ said Cooper. ‘Just stay with him for now.’

‘Fine.’

Cooper walked past the E Division Neighbourhood Watch tent. Buxton Mountain Rescue were performing an operation on a scaffolding tower using something called a Petzl nappy. Below the scaffolding stood the BMRT Ford Transit ambulance and Land Rover. Next to them, Derbyshire Cave Rescue Organisation had set up a plastic cave for kids to crawl through with lights strapped to their heads.

He stopped to pat the head of a SARDA rescue dog, a broken-coated collie with odd eyes. It was odd to find the rescue dog here in the park in the centre of Edendale, being fussed by the public. He’d just been thinking that the Pearsons ought to have been here enjoying the Christmas market instead of walking across the moors in the snow. And this dog might have been the very animal to locate them if they’d been lost or injured out there. Despite its appearance, he knew it had the ability to sniff out a human scent over a kilometre away in the right conditions.

‘Hold on, it looks as though he’s moving again,’ said Villiers.

Cooper looked across the park in the direction of Hulley Road, which ran towards the bridge over the river and the traffic lights at Fargate. He couldn’t see the white Toyota pickup from here, or the CID pool car behind it containing Carol Villiers and Luke Irvine. He pictured them moving off and passing the back of the Royal Theatre.

He began to head towards the corner of the park. A Fire and Rescue team were drawing a crowd by rescuing a mock casualty from an adjacent roof with the extending ladder and cage. He’d probably missed the chip-pan fire demonstration, which always attracted a lot of attention, especially when a firefighter threw water on to the burning pan to illustrate the wrong way to deal with it, sending a sheet of flame and smoke shooting up and over the demonstration vehicle.

He’d once seen a fireman playing up to the kids in the audience by wearing a wig that showed long hair peeping out from under his helmet. Then, after the blaze, he pretended his hair had been scorched, and removed his helmet to reveal a totally bald head. That was always good for a laugh.

Cooper looked for the Fire and Rescue Service’s Argo Centaur 9500, the 8x8 ATV with fat tyres and a fire fogging system that was normally here for Emergency Services Day. But the Argo was missing today.

Of course, like every other bit of available specialist equipment, it was in demand. It would already be in use out on the moors – not battling a snowstorm like David and Trisha Pearson, but helping to fight those out-of-control moorland fires.

‘He’s stopping again,’ said Villiers. ‘Yes, he’s getting out. Looks like he’s working on a job here. Property on the corner of Hulley Road and Bargate.’

‘I’m on my way,’ said Cooper. ‘Don’t do anything until I get there, and we have backup. We don’t want another runner.’

‘No,’ said Villiers. ‘Especially as we don’t have Gavin here to make the arrest.’

The custody suite at Edendale wasn’t one of the newest in the county. If the station ever closed in a further round of rationalisation, the cells might have a sustainable future as a museum of post-war policing. Basic wasn’t the word for the facilities. But they weren’t designed to encourage a long-term stay.

A few months ago, Cooper and some of his colleagues from E Division had travelled into Staffordshire to view a brand-new custody suite. A main desk like the Starship Enterprise, a phone connection from each cell to the desk, cells steam-cleaned every five weeks. Washbasins, no graffiti. It encouraged personal hygiene, reduced work and minimised risks for staff. They could put legal calls through to the cells.

‘Gavin, we need to do the interview as soon as possible,’ said Cooper.

Murfin nodded. ‘Okay. I’ll have a word with Custard.’

Villiers watched him go. ‘I hesitate to ask, but … Custard?’

‘The custody sergeant.’

‘Oh, obviously.’

Vince Naylor had been drinking when he was pulled in. Stale beer seemed to leak out of his skin in place of sweat. He was a big man, bigger than Gullick, and it took three officers to escort him to the custody desk.

As soon as he was inside, he began to swear and shout. He became frustrated at the way the custody officers ignored him and went calmly about their job taking fingerprints and obtaining a DNA sample.

‘What do I have to say to get a response out of you bastards?’ he shouted.

‘We’re trained not to react to insulting or abusive words and behaviour,’ said the custody sergeant calmly.

‘Well fuck you then!’

‘Cell Four.’

‘I know you,’ said Ian Gullick half an hour later, sitting across the table in Interview Room One. ‘Cooper, right? I know you. And your brother.’

‘That could be so.’

He laughed. ‘Yes, I know you all right.’

Gullick’s face was unnaturally flushed, and his eyes bulged slightly, as if he was permanently struggling under some intolerable pressure. He looked like a man unable to escape from the murderer’s hands round his throat.

Cooper exchanged a glance with Carol Villiers, who was sitting alongside him with the tapes running. He tried to put some reassurance into the glance.

‘We’re here to talk about Aidan Merritt,’ he said.

‘Oh, Aidan.’ Gullick sniffed. ‘He was always a bit too clever for his own good, Aidan. Read books and things. He thought it made him better than the rest of us. Look how that turned out.’

‘Mr Merritt is dead.’

‘Exactly.’

‘You knew him well, didn’t you?’

‘We were at school together. Didn’t have many interests in common, though. Aidan carried on into the sixth form, did his A levels and all that stuff. He even went to college, I think.’

‘So you went your separate ways.’

‘Sort of. But, you know, he never moved out of the area. We all thought he’d head off for London. Get away from the rest of us soon as he could. Lots of folk have done it before him, when they got a bit of an education.’

‘But he didn’t do that?’

‘Not Aidan. I don’t know why, but he stayed. Got himself a job in Edendale and stuck around. So we bumped into each other quite a lot. You know what it’s like – you can’t exactly avoid people for long in a place like this, can you?’

‘He drank at the Light House, didn’t he?’ said Cooper.

‘Yeah, that’s right. Sometimes.’

‘You must have talked to him when you saw him in there.’

‘We passed the time of day. I mean, what do you think? We weren’t exactly bosom buddies, though. To be honest, he came over as being a bit weird.’

‘Because he read books?’

‘That and other stuff.’

‘He was a teacher, though. You might expect a teacher to be familiar with a few books. That’s what he was interested in, teaching English.’

‘Yeah, right. They do say it was something else he was interested in.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Well, what else do you get in schools other than books? Children.’

Cooper regarded him coolly. ‘There have never been any allegations against Mr Merritt that I’m aware of.’

Gullick shrugged. ‘I’m only telling you what people say.’

‘That sort of thing is just pub gossip,’ said Cooper. ‘Because he didn’t fit in with your group, he has to be some kind of pervert. What was the problem? He didn’t like playing pool? He didn’t want to get drunk like the rest of you?’

‘He was odd. That’s all I’m saying.’

Cooper took a breath, trying to resist the impulse to defend someone he’d never even known. It would only take the interview in the wrong direction.

Villiers stepped in, picking up her cue from his pause.

‘What sort of relationship did Mr Merritt have with Maurice Wharton?’ she asked.

Gullick swivelled his eyes towards her. Cooper noted with interest that their suspect seemed much more wary of Carol Villiers than of Cooper himself. The threat of the unfamiliar?

‘Maurice had a go at him a couple of times for not drinking enough beer. Said Aidan wasn’t contributing to the profits.’

‘What?’

‘That was normal for Mad Maurice. But his heart wasn’t in it with Aidan. He counted as a regular, you see. So he was accepted.’

‘Why would Mr Merritt have been at the Light House on the day he was killed?’

‘I don’t know what Aidan was up to. He was a real dark horse, you know. A complete mystery to the rest of us. His brain worked differently somehow.’

‘What do you think happened to the Pearsons?’

‘Out on the moor, in the snow? Probably they just walked round in circles. That happens to people in bad weather. You can’t get a proper sense of direction. I don’t suppose they had a compass with them or anything like that. And don’t forget, they were strangers to the area.’ He shrugged. ‘Hikers … Well, you know – they do all kinds of stupid things on the hills.’

‘Yes, sometimes.’

‘It’s surprising no one heard them calling out for help. I mean, they must have shouted when they realised they were lost, mustn’t they? Anyone would do that.’

Cooper thought Gullick was talking too much. He wasn’t used to that in the interview room. Everyone had watched TV and knew they were supposed to say ‘no comment’ all the time. But Gullick had even declined the presence of a duty solicitor. And now he seemed positively chatty. It didn’t ring true.

‘Mr Gullick, where were you at the time Aidan Merritt was killed?’

‘Working, of course. Monday, was it?’

‘Yes.’

‘I was at Bakewell Market, then. It’s Bakewell on Monday, Buxton on Tuesday, Derby Wednesday, Edendale Thursday, Matlock Friday and Chesterfield on Saturday. So I had the stall set up at Bakewell. I was there all day, from the crack of dawn to the bitter end. You can ask anyone – I’m not easy to miss.’

‘Can I take you back a few years?’ he said. ‘There was an incident at the Light House.’

‘What? Who …?’

Cooper glanced at his notes. Your friend Vince Naylor got into an argument with David Pearson.’

‘Oh, that. Old Vince, he’s a bit of a devil when he’s had a few drinks. He started chatting up the woman, and the bloke took objection. He had a bit of a temper on him, if you ask me. I mean, it was all in fun. No harm in it. And it came to nothing anyway.’

‘You left, didn’t you?’

‘Oh, yeah. Well, Maurice told us to. It was nearly closing time, so it was no hardship.’

‘Were you driving?’

Gullick looked shifty for once. ‘Er, well …’

‘I’m not interested in drink-driving right now,’ said Cooper.

‘Well, yes – we were in my van. We sat outside the pub for a bit to get some fresh air and sober up, then we went home.’

‘A bit of fresh air wouldn’t sober you up enough to drive legally.’

‘I thought you said—’

‘Yes, all right. But I’m thinking that you must still have been outside when the Pearsons left.’

Gullick brooded for a while.

‘I wouldn’t know about that,’ he said. ‘I never saw them. It’s not my concern what happened to them later. And it’s years ago, surely? All water under the bridge by now.’

‘Were you aware that Maurice Wharton was a former police officer?’

‘Yes, I was. He didn’t talk about himself, but it was fairly well known. Among the regulars anyway. He got shafted by the top brass. Took the blame for some incident down south.’

‘Is that the way the story goes?’

‘That’s it.’

‘He seemed to get a bit of respect in the pub, though. He sorted the lads out, when needed. He sorted you and Mr Naylor out, didn’t he?’

Gullick held out his hands palm up, a gesture of innocence.

‘Look, you had to keep on the right side of Maurice. If he gave you the hard word, you took notice. We didn’t want to get ourselves banned. And, to be fair, we’d drunk quite a bit. Vince in particular. Oh, there was plenty of alcohol drunk.’

‘I’ve heard that Maurice was drinking heavily himself by then,’ said Cooper.

‘Yes, that’s true. And then there was Eliot.’

‘Eliot Wharton doesn’t drink. He told me so.’

Gullick laughed. ‘Well, not any more. He was totally wasted that night in the Light House. Someone had been giving him spirits, I think.’

‘He would only have been fourteen or so.’

‘Kids start drinking early these days. You know that. But I reckon Eliot would have suffered for a few days. He wasn’t used to that amount of alcohol.’

Cooper regarded Gullick thoughtfully. He couldn’t make his mind up about him. Gullick was either very clever, or he’d failed to grasp the situation.

‘What do you do now, since the Light House closed?’ he asked.

‘We drink at the Badger, near Bradwell. But it’s not the same.’

‘What do you think?’ asked Villiers, when they’d let Gullick leave the interview room and go back to his cell.

‘Well I wouldn’t trust him. Would you?’

‘Not even to sell me a bag of carrots.’

‘We’re no closer to knowing what Aidan Merritt was up to.’

‘That only leaves one avenue then,’ said Cooper. ‘I’ll have to ask the first Mrs Rochester.’


22

When Diane Fry heard about the arrests, she was furious. DCI Mackenzie didn’t seem quite so perturbed by developments, which made her even more angry.

‘Why does it bother you so much, Diane?’ he said. ‘I thought being back among your old colleagues wasn’t a problem for you?’

That made her pause. ‘No, it isn’t.’

She could leave the self-analysis until later, but right now she felt as though somebody had got one up on her, and she knew who it was.

‘Sir, what can we do to take control back in this inquiry?’ she said.

Mackenzie smiled. ‘That’s better. Have you got any ideas?’

‘We could interview Henry Pearson again. Make it more formal this time, rather than the kid-gloves approach he’s been getting so far.’

‘Yes, we could certainly do that.’

‘We need to give forensics a kick up the backside to get some results from the Pearsons’ clothing and possessions.’

‘You’ve got it.’

‘Also, I want a new search of those abandoned mine shafts.’

‘It was done before,’ said Mackenzie.

‘I know.’

‘So what’s your reasoning, Diane?’

‘My reasoning? Well, where’s the best place to hide something so that it won’t be found?’

‘It depends on the circumstances, doesn’t it?’

‘In general terms.’

Mackenzie shook his head. ‘I still don’t know.’

‘The best place to hide something,’ said Fry, ‘is where it’s already been looked for.’

‘Okay. But how does all this progress the Aidan Merritt murder inquiry? Isn’t that what you’re supposed to be concentrating your efforts on?’

Fry had to acknowledge that was true. It was the way she’d wanted it from the beginning, the fresh case coming to the Major Crime Unit, the rehashing of the older Pearson inquiry being left to local CID.

But she felt differently now. For reasons she couldn’t quite articulate to herself, or would want to explain to Mackenzie, things had changed. She felt as though she’d been issued with a challenge, and she was going to meet it.

‘If we can get to the bottom of the Pearsons’ disappearance, then the reasons for the death of Aidan Merritt will resolve themselves,’ she said.

‘The two are so closely connected?’ said Mackenzie. ‘Is that what you believe?’

‘Yes, I do.’

‘You have my support, then. We’ll get a new search started straight away.’

Fry nodded. Her brain was immediately ticking over, planning where to go to get the next bit of information that she needed – and wondering whether she could get there before anyone else did.

With exaggerated caution, Betty Wheatcroft looked right and left before letting Cooper in to her house.

‘Is there a problem?’ she whispered.

‘Just something I didn’t ask you before,’ said Cooper.

‘You’d better come in, then.’

She sat Cooper down in her sitting room and automatically began to make tea.

‘Yes, Aidan did used to come and see me,’ she said from the kitchen. ‘He called in after school sometimes, particularly if he’d had a bad day. I think there were a lot of bad days recently.’

‘Difficulties at home, in his private life?’

‘I don’t think so. At school, I’d say. Teachers get like that sometimes.’

‘Why did he become a teacher in the first place, then?’

‘Good question. Aidan once said to me that he couldn’t think of any meaningful way to fill the terrible yawning void that stretched in front of him until the day of his death. So he became a teacher instead.’ She looked at Cooper as she came back into the room. ‘I think he was joking.’

‘He had problems at work, then?’

She set a cup of tea in front of him. ‘Aidan was soft. Too soft. Some of the older children must have made mincemeat of him in class. He was always worried about doing the right thing, you see.’

‘There’s nothing wrong with that,’ said Cooper.

Mrs Wheatcroft narrowed her eyes as she looked at him. ‘Oh, but it might not be the same as what you think of as the right thing. I’m not talking about automatically punishing people because they’ve broken some law. That isn’t always what some of us would call justice. Not my version of justice, and not Aidan’s either.’

Cooper nodded, though it wasn’t in agreement, just an acknowledgement of what she’d said. He understood that position. Or at least he thought he did.

‘Are you thinking I’m a daft old woman?’ asked Mrs Wheatcroft. ‘I know I get confused, and my memory isn’t as good as it used to be. But I know what I believe in.’

A light dawned on Cooper. ‘Have you been in trouble with the police yourself at some time?’

‘Yes, I was arrested once,’ she said with a proud smile.

Looking at her now, it was difficult to imagine.

‘What for?’

‘I was at Greenham Common.’

‘Ah.’

‘I was part of the women’s peace camp in the eighties. The cruise missile protest.’

‘I remember. Well, I say ‘remember”; I was quite young then.’

‘December 1983, it was. Difficult to think it’s nearly thirty years ago. Fifty thousand of us joined hands and made a circle round the nuclear missile base. We cut through the fences, and some of us got arrested. I was at Yellow Gate.’

‘Interesting times.’

‘Interesting? You can’t imagine the living conditions. We were outside in all kinds of weather. Cold, snow, rain, with no electricity and no running water. Frequent evictions, attacks by vigilantes. But we gave up comfort for commitment. We stopped nuclear convoys, disrupted their training exercises. Though it was non-violent direct action, a lot of women were arrested, taken to court and even sent to prison.’

‘What about you? You didn’t go to prison, did you?’

‘No. I just got a fine and a ticking-off. I didn’t take much notice. None of us did.’

Cooper drank some of his tea. It was horrible, and the milk tasted slightly off. But you had to be polite.

‘We still haven’t found any clue as to why Aidan Merritt was at the Light House on the day he was killed,’ he said.

‘I’m sorry. I wish I could help.’

‘He talked to you about things, though, didn’t he?’ persisted Cooper.

‘Yes, I did know there was something on his mind.’

‘You did?’

‘But he was all secretive about it. He said there was something he had to do. It was his moral duty.’

‘But he didn’t tell you what it was?’

‘No, not him. He just sort of put his finger to his lips, and winked and nodded. If I’d been sitting next to him, I reckon he would have nudged me in the ribs. He gave the impression I ought to understand what he meant without him having to spell it out. I don’t know what it was with Aidan. He’d read too many spy stories, perhaps. Thought he was George Smiley or something.’

Cooper thought it was interesting that Mrs Wheatcroft had referred to George Smiley when most people might have been expected to mention James Bond. It suggested she’d read a few Cold War spy novels himself. John le Carré, at least. If Diane Fry had been here, she wouldn’t have noticed that. She wasn’t much of a reader.

Mrs Wheatcroft eyed him curiously. He could practically see her mind working, trying to figure something out for herself.

‘Didn’t Aidan tell anyone else what he was doing?’ she said.

Cooper decided to let her in on a bit of information. He felt sure it couldn’t do any harm in this case.

‘He phoned his wife, Samantha, and left a message. But she couldn’t make any sense of what he was saying. It was something about the ninth circle of hell.’

‘Ah,’ she said. ‘Dante’s Inferno.’

‘Of course. Dante’s Inferno,’ repeated Cooper. ‘Yes, you’re right. He was there while the moor was on fire, you see.

‘The fires, yes. I know about them. Was that it?’

Mrs Wheatcroft watched him silently for a while, until Cooper began to feel uncomfortable under her expectant gaze. There had been a teacher just like her years ago, when he was at school. She had never needed to shout or raise her voice to get his attention. All she had to do was look at him in that way, and it forced him to cudgel his brain for the correct answer, the one she was hoping for.

But this time he seemed to have failed. Mrs Wheatcroft’s expression turned to disappointment. A moment later, she changed the subject.

‘I heard they found some old mine buildings on the moor,’ she said.

‘You hear a lot of things,’ said Cooper. ‘But yes, you’re right.’

‘Aidan’s father was interested in the old mines.’

‘Was he?’

‘He passed away recently, old Charlie Merritt. I suppose that might have been something else Aidan was depressed about. Charlie was a member of the local society.’

‘You mean the Mines Historical Society?’

‘That’s it. He did some research for them, I think. Helped out with mapping the sites around the moors here. There were a lot of them at one time, you know.’

‘Yes, I know.’

‘Charlie Merritt always said there were some abandoned mines that no one had ever found. They just got lost, and then the heather and bracken grew over them.’

‘Did he mention any locations in particular?’

Mrs Wheatcroft shook her head. ‘Not to me. He was pretty vague. I suppose we just thought he liked telling stories.’

‘What kind of stories?’

‘Oh, about the superstitions the old lead miners had. And he liked to tell tales about children who fell down mine shafts years ago and got killed. They are all superstitions, aren’t they?’

Cooper put his cup down half finished, hoping Mrs Wheatcroft wouldn’t notice until after he’d gone.

‘I can’t answer about the superstitions,’ he said. ‘But his stories about the children were probably true.’

When he got back into his car, Cooper sat for a few minutes before driving away, thinking about Mrs Wheatcroft’s remarks on mining superstitions and Charlie Merritt’s knowledge of the mines. Why had she mentioned that? Was there some connection that existed only in the old lady’s mind?

He knew that a few mining enthusiasts still kept one peculiar Peak District practice alive. On Christmas Eve they went down into an old lead mine to light a candle as a tribute to T’owd Mon. It could be difficult to explain the concept to outsiders. It wasn’t a specific old man, though it could sometimes refer to an unknown long-dead miner, or to entire previous generations of miners. In other cases, it was a reference to the actual mine workings.

Miners looked on T’owd Mon as a kind of collective spirit, an embodiment both of their predecessors and of the mines themselves. It had been their custom before finishing work on Christmas Eve to leave a burning candle on a good piece of ore as a tribute.

That ongoing connection with history was very strong in the Peak District. Cooper thought it was related to the fact that so much of the area’s heritage was visible right there in the landscape, from the Neolithic stone circles and Iron Age hill forts to the mounds and shafts of the abandoned mines, all the way through to remnants of a more recent industrial past.

Cooper started the engine and put the car into gear.

Yes, when you could see it and touch it and smell, it ceased to be history. You were part of it then. In many ways, it became your present.

Naylor and Gullick had been reinterviewed by Carol Villiers and Luke Irvine, and they were all getting exhausted.

‘They’re like the pair of figures in one of those little wooden weather houses,’ said Villiers when they came out for a break.


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