Read And None Shall Sleep Online
Authors: Priscilla Masters
She was no longer dressed in mourning but in a scarlet miniskirt and lots of gold jewellery.
She met Joanna's eyes boldly.
âI feel I ought to congratulate you, Miss Wilde,' Joanna said smoothly, âon your excellent fortune. Now can we go somewhere private, please, to talk?'
The blonde's eyes flickered and suddenly she looked younger, less sure of herself. And Joanna wondered how big a part Daddy had played in her luck. She led the two officers to a small ante room.
âTell me, how much do you think your inheritance is worth?'
“I don't know. I really haven't a clue.' Her innocent eyes met Joanna's. âI didn't think ... Not for a moment. It was a complete surprise.'
âI'm sure.' The girl pouted. Sticky red lips dropped. From beauty to the grotesque in one swift move. Joanna watched her curiously. Glamour, not beauty, had been this girl's calling card. She was not a natural. She would need that money.
The girl blinked. âMrs Selkirk ...' she began.
âAh yes, Mrs Selkirk,' Joanna said. âI don't think she's very pleased with you.'
Mike spoke from behind her. âSays you were having it off with her husband.'
The girl was quick to defend her honour. âNo,' she protested. âNo, absolutely not. We never did.'
âJust a little harmless flirtation?' Joanna ploughed on ruthlessly. âTitillation?'
âYou've no right to say that.' Rufus Wilde was standing in the doorway, wearing a threatening solicitor's hard face. If you're insinuating ...'
âI'm just curious,' Joanna said, âabout why Jonathan Selkirk left all his money to your daughter.' She was past caring about people's feelings. âWhat was she giving him that was worth so much?'
âI don't like your tone, Inspector.' Wilde's eyes narrowed. âHe was fond of her. We were far more of a family to him than ever his own were. He liked my daughter.'
âLiked?' Mike's jaw squared. âI like lots of people,' he said. âI wouldn't dream of leaving them my money.'
Joanna cleared her throat. âYou see, Mr and Miss Wilde.' And again she was reminded of the game of Happy Families. Mr and Miss Wilde. But they wouldn't be cast as solicitors, would they? âSelkirk leaving all his money to you is an anomaly,' she paused, âif you were no more to each other than friends. After all, this is a double murder we are investigating.'
Father looked at daughter. âDid you know Mr Selkirk was intending to leave his money to you?'
She shook her head and couldn't resist a swift glance at her father. For what? â approval?
He gave an almost imperceptible nod.
âAnd where were you both the morning of last Tuesday?'
âHere,' they answered swiftly in unison.
Rufus Wilde cleared his throat. âWith Jonathan in hospital we had a lot of extra work here,' he explained. âSomeone had to manage the business.'
âAh yes,' Joanna said. âThe business.' She watched Rufus Wilde carefully. âThe business currently under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. Tell me, Mr Wilde, as a solicitor. If Mrs Selkirk were to contest her husband's will, would she stand a chance of winning the case?'
He cleared his throat. âMy daughter had considered making some sort of a settlement...' he began.
âTo shut her up?' Joanna said sharply. âJust answer the question, please.'
âUnder current law,' the solicitor began, âa person's will is carried out, unless it can be proved he or she was of unsound mind when making out the will.'
Joanna derived some satisfaction from the fact that Rufus Wilde was patently uncomfortable. Good. It suited him.
âAnd was he?' Mike asked brusquely. Wilde stared at them. He opened his mouth to speak, then shut it again.
âI see,' Joanna said pleasantly. âThe three monkeys â see, hear, say nothing. But we both know, don't we, Mr Wilde? Selkirk was not of unsound mind when he made that will and you know it will be contested in a court of law, don't you?'
Wilde nodded.
âA wife can surely claim half, can't she? So any sum you gave Sheila Selkirk would be a token â nothing else â something to try to keep her away from the courts.' Joanna thought for a minute, her brain working overtime. âAnd of course your daughter, I presume, is an employee of Selkirk & Wilde rather than a partner. And as such could not be liable for the firm's debts of corruption. Neat trick,' she said blandly. âProvided Jonathan Selkirk's assets were not seized by the SFO.'
âNow look here.' Wilde was rattled now. Joanna could not suppress a quick, triumphant grin at Mike. âJonathan was entitled to leave his money wherever he liked,' Rufus Wilde said. âHe chose to leave it to my daughter, someone he had grown very fond of in the course of his work.'
The blonde was blinking rapidly, her head turning from one to the other in an attempt to follow the conversation. âWhen was the will dated, Mr Wilde?'
âLast month,' Wilde said a little less confidently.
âI see. Well, thank you very much. You've been a great help.'
âIs that all?' Wilde demanded. âI've got a business to run.'
âYes, that's all.' But she couldn't resist a Parthian shot. âGood luck with the SFO,' she said. âI've heard they like to cook their pound of flesh before they eat it.' She didn't even look back to see what effect her words had had but left the doors swinging behind her.
She felt good.
They headed back to the station.
Joanna settled behind her desk and spoke to Mike and Dawn Critchlow. âI've plenty of ideas now,' she said. âI'd just like one more detail. Have we got the forensic report on the letter sent to Wilde the morning he died?'
He handed it to her. âArrived this morning,' he said. âConfirmed it was done on a different machine from the original letters. That's the official verdict.'
âGood,' Joanna smiled. âI was hoping it would be.'
She had both their attentions now. âThe boys have done a bit of probing into Justin Selkirk's financial affairs. He sold his house six months ago.'
âNegative equity,' Mike muttered, but Dawn had something up her sleeve.
âThat isn't true,' she said. âHe sold the house for thirty- eight thousand pounds. His mortgage was only thirty.' Joanna gaped. âBut ...' She was conjuring up the sordid, cramped interior of the caravan.
âYou tell me,' Dawn said, âbut according to Constable Phil Scott there aren't eight thousand pounds in his bank account now.'
âWell, well, well.' Mike looked pleased. âLooks like we have someone wriggling in the bag'
Joanna shot him a warning glance.
Dawn hesitated before pulling something out from behind her back. âThere's something else you should see. I saw it at the local newsagent's.'
She dropped a magazine on the desk. A woman's magazine with a photograph on the front of a pretty, laughing child. Slashed across the picture was a caption. Rowena Carter, five years old, another child killed by a drunk driver. And underneath in smaller black letters was added,
And he got away with it â or did he? Read inside for full story.
Joanna looked up. âSo that's where the picture of Rowena Carter had disappeared to. I was wondering.'
She opened the magazine. The article bore Ann Carter's name at the bottom, a picture of her tearful face, her husband's arms wrapped around her. Joanna read through the article twice. There was a certain tone to it, gloating, malicious but less vindictive than she would have imagined. At the end was a picture of Selkirk and a brief description of the events at Gallows Wood. The last sentence contained the predictable words, âjust desserts'.
Joanna flicked to the front of the magazine. It had come out that day. Thoughtfully she passed it to Mike. He read it without comment. She stood up, unhooked her coat from the back of the chair, draped it round her shoulders. She was getting quite adept at coping with the plaster cast. It had become less of an encumbrance as the days had moved on.
âSo we've got the answer to at least one of our questions,' she said. âThat's where the photograph went. Funny, isn't it?' she said. âThat first day we met them it was already written on the wall, as it were.' Neither Korpanski nor Dawn had the faintest idea what Joanna was talking about.
She stared at them. âYou don't see, do you? Come on, Korpanski, I should buy you lunch. As a chauffeur you haven't been bad.'
They were almost through the door when the telephone rang. She was in two minds whether to pick it up. Her conscience won.
âAm I speaking to Detective Inspector Piercy?'
âYou are, Mr Prince.'
His voice was strong and steady. People had their own ways of dealing with grief. âWe feel we must speak up for our daughter,' he began. âThe newspapers are making suggestions.'
Joanna didn't even try to apologize for the tabloids' excesses. The reporters were an intelligent pack, on the whole, and they had scented blood the moment Yolande's death had been made public. They had soon started speculating with their talent for making suppositions sound like facts.
âShe wouldn't have done it,' he said. âWe knew our daughter extremely well. She was protective towards anyone in her care, no matter what their past was. She didn't discriminate.'
Joanna's instinct was to discount a fond father's assessment of his daughter's character, but there was no emotion behind his statement. This was a statement of fact.
Mr Prince spoke again. âI suggest, Inspector,' he said quietly, âthat you stop blaming my daughter for the abduction of Mr Selkirk and look instead at the other nurses on duty that night. My daughter,' he said with dignity, âhas been made a scapegoat.'
âSo what do you think, Mike?' Joanna had relayed the conversation to Mike. Her desk was littered with the contents of all the files connected with the case. Her computer screen was switched on. She had finished leafing through all the statements.
Mike's square face was pensive.
âIf Yolande's father is right it would put the case under a different light, wouldn't it?'
He nodded slowly.
She leaned forward, her elbow making a dent in the cover of the magazine. âI think we're getting closer. Let's visit Emily Place and see if we can get an answer to our second question. Then we'll do a bit of talking.'
Mike stood up, towering over her. âWe've nearly got them,' she said.
His eyebrows almost met in the middle. âProof?'
âWe'll play one off against the other. There won't be any trust between them, only fear.'
Emily Place looked quiet and dull in the middle of the day. No one was there. There was no sign of life at all.
Except at number fourteen.
Andy Carter was painting an upstairs windowframe. He saw them from the top of the ladder. âBloody hell, aren't you done with us yet?' he exclaimed.
âJust two more questions, Mr Carter.'
He stepped down the ladder, made no attempt to invite them inside.
âYou've raked it all up,' he said resentfully. âAnn hasn't had a wink of sleep since you first came.'
âWe didn't rake it up,' Joanna said quietly. âWe weren't the ones to shoot Selkirk. Once he'd been shot we had no option but to pursue our investigations until we found the perpetrator. Understand?'
Carter blinked. âI suppose you're only doing your job. What was it you wanted to know?'
âHow did you know Selkirk had been forced to kneel before he was shot?'
Carter looked rattled. His eyes bounced from Joanna to Mike and back to Joanna again.
âCome on, Carter,' Mike urged.
Carter pressed his lips together.
âThen we'll have to take you down to the station for further questioning.'
âNo, no. I have to be here. Ann'll go mad if I aren't here when she gets home.' The two officers waited and finally Carter relented. âI've got a mate,' he said. âHe sometimes wanders up those woods. He saw him, lying on his side, his hands tied behind his back.'
Joanna let out a long sigh. Another piece of the puzzle had slipped into place.
âYour mate's name wouldn't happen to be Holloway, would it?'
âI can't tell you that,' Carter was defensive, âbut it's the truth.' He turned his back on them. But Joanna waited until the penny dropped and Carter turned around again. âAnd the other question?'
âI suppose in the last five years you've bought yourselves a new word processor?'
A sharp indrawn breath was the only sign that Carter had heard. âLeave us alone.'
âWhere is your wife, Mr Carter?'
âWhere do you think? She's at work.'
It was an extraordinary sight, the bright, fluorescent green coat, the huge lollipop, STOP, Children Crossing. They watched her for a few minutes, painfully aware of what she was doing.
A crowd of children gathered at the side of the road. Ann Carter waited. A car approached, slowly. She waited ... another approached, gathered speed, determined not to be halted.
The car hurtled towards her. Herding the children back on to the pavement, she stepped boldly out. The car screeched to a stop. Two fingers appeared over the driving wheel.
Ann Carter smiled.
The children crossed.
They met her back on the pavement.
She frowned. âWhy have you come here?'
Joanna said nothing but watched her steadily.
The woman's eyes slid away from the two officers and towards the traffic belting along the road and the waiting clusters of mothers and children. âI should go to them,' she said.
Joanna put a hand on her arm. âI think you should come with us.'
Mike radioed in for a constable to cover the crossing and they drove Ann Carter to the station. She neither argued nor complained. Neither, they noticed, did she ask them to ring her husband. While he had worried about her returning from work to an empty house she had no thought for him. As they watched the thin, tense face they both knew her mind was still with her daughter.