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Authors: Stephen Booth

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BOOK: Blind to the Bones
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There were certainly more Oxleys nearby. The fourth house in the terrace was occupied by Mr Scott Oxley, and number 5 was Ms Frances Oxley. But 6 and 7 provided a bit of variety – their occupiers were Mr and Mrs Melvyn Tagg, and Mrs Ruby Wallwin respectively. The eighth house was said to be unoccupied.

‘Who should we tackle first?' said Cooper to himself. ‘Eeny, meeny or mo? Oxley, Oxley or Oxley? I wonder if they've ever thought of starting a firm of solicitors?'

He looked at the terrace of houses again. Logic dictated that he should start at number 1 and see if Mr Lucas Oxley was home again. But he wasn't feeling logical today, and something told him it might be helpful to approach the Oxleys at a tangent. Besides, he could still remember the dog.

‘Number 7 it is, then. Mrs Wallwin.'

Closer to, the bricks weren't really black at all. They had an almost purplish tinge, as if they had been steeped in blackberry juice. Number 7 showed few signs of decoration. Its paintwork was a sort of chestnut brown, or had been at one time. The combination with the black bricks was somehow depressing. There were lace curtains in the windows, which gave it an old-fashioned air. It might have been part of a setting for one of those urban townscapes painted by L. S. Lowry. After all, the painter had lived for a number of years at Mottram, down the valley, so it was possible he had seen Waterloo Terrace.

To reach number 7, Cooper and Udall had to pass a fenced-off area where six green wheelie bins were stored. They reached the front walls of the row of gardens. All the gardens were long and narrow, and all were overgrown, despite the past efforts at growing vegetables. They walked up the path, avoiding the nettles that were spreading from the soil on to the stone flags. Cooper took a quick glance at number 8, which was on the other side of one of the dark brick passageways. Its windows were dirty and curtainless, and it had an air of neglect. There was nothing more depressing than a house that had been left empty for a long time, and in Waterloo Terrace it was more depressing than ever.

‘I
haven't complained to the police about anything,' said Mrs Wallwin, when she found Ben Cooper and Tracy Udall on her doorstep.

Cooper was surprised at the defensive note in her voice. Though she was slight and rather frail looking, she stood right on the step, as if she hoped to block the doorway. Many old people were far too trusting about who they opened their doors to. But not in Withens, it seemed.

‘Mrs Wallwin? Good afternoon. We just want to ask you a few questions,' said Udall in her pleasant est manner. With most elderly people, her charm would have worked perfectly.

‘What about?' said Mrs Wallwin.

‘May we come in?'

‘What for?'

‘It doesn't matter,' said Cooper. ‘Do you know a young man called Neil Granger?'

And Mrs Wallwin's face softened a bit then.

‘Yes, of course I do. I know him and his brother. They used to live here.'

‘Here?' said Cooper. ‘You mean here, in Waterloo Terrace?'

‘Next door. They were looked after by their uncle and aunt when they were teenagers. Their dad was sent to prison, and they never saw him again after he came out. Then their poor mother fell ill with cancer and couldn't look after them herself.'

‘Their uncle and aunt would be Mr and Mrs Oxley?'

‘That's right.'

‘They have quite a few children of their own, don't they?'

‘Yes.'

‘Do they cause you any trouble, Mrs Wallwin?'

‘Not to speak of. They can be a bit noisy, but all kids are like that.'

Mrs Wallwin was wearing rather worn pink slippers, and her legs were painfully thin. Cooper could detect a musty smell, like old newspapers or clothes that hadn't been aired properly.

‘When did you last see Neil Granger?' he asked.

‘He was by here the other night.'

‘Which night?'

‘It would be Friday.'

‘Do you know what time?'

She shook her head. ‘He went off with the others. His uncle and his cousins. They went off up to the pub, I should think.'

‘Thank you.'

Beyond Mrs Wallwin, Cooper could see a small table in the hallway. There were a couple of familiar-looking envelopes on it, with red slogans on the outside. ‘You're a winner!' ‘Open now for some wonderful news!' The usual junk mail, not yet thrown away.

‘Neil and Philip don't live here any more,' said Mrs Wallwin. ‘The house is empty now. I only got this one because my son works for the company.'

‘The company?'

‘The water company.'

‘Do you live alone, Mrs Wallwin?' said Udall. She sounded genuinely concerned, but it didn't wash.

‘Why do you ask?'

‘There have been a few problems in this area. A lot of houses have been broken into. We just want to be sure that you're safe and secure.'

‘I'm safe, all right. Nobody comes here.'

‘Nobody?'

The old lady looked suddenly worried, as if she had given the wrong answer.

‘My son comes to see me,' she said. ‘Of course he does. Why shouldn't he?'

‘As long as you're all right, love,' said Udall.

And this time the sincerity of her concern seemed to get through.

‘I wouldn't want to die here alone,' said the old lady suddenly. ‘It might be days and days before anyone found me.'

‘I'm sure that wouldn't happen, Mrs Wallwin. You've got neighbours here.'

‘Yes, I have,' she said. ‘I'll say goodbye now.'

And suddenly she began to close the door. But Cooper noticed that she left it on the chain and watched them through the narrow gap as they walked down the path.

‘Are you sure about that, Ben?' said Udall as they reached the gate.

‘What?'

‘I attended an incident once when I was stationed in Chesterfield. Someone living in a block of flats reported to the housing office that she hadn't seen an elderly neighbour in a while. I knew the man was dead before we even got the door open. The smell was on the landing – that smell you know is going to cling to your uniform for ages, until you wash it.'

‘I know the smell,' said Cooper.

‘But, of course, I had to call for the doctor to certify death. The old man was lying on his bed. There was fungus growing around his eyes and dead maggots lying on the floor all around the bed. The doctor said he'd been dead for quite a long time. Not days, or weeks – months.'

‘And you're saying it took that long for the neighbours to notice?'

‘It wasn't really their fault. The old man made it clear he didn't want any contact. He always refused to answer the door, even though they knew he was in, because they could hear him through the walls, moving about the flat. Now and then, they'd catch a glimpse of him scuttling towards the stairs like a sneak thief, but that was all.'

Cooper nodded. He knew there were some people like that. People who lived in fear of a human touch. People who were terrified of making contact with another person, perhaps because they were afraid of their own lives being exposed for what they were. They heard a voice outside their door and prayed that whoever it belonged to would walk on past.

‘Let's see what the Taggs are like at number 6,' he said.

M
r and Mrs Melvyn Tagg turned out to be a young couple, in their twenties, with a harassed air. Melvyn answered the door with an open bottle of Jeyes Fluid in his hand. When Cooper took a breath to speak, the odour of the disinfectant made his eyes water.

‘You'll have to talk while we get on,' said Melvyn. He ran his free hand through a fringe of long, dark hair, leaving it glistening with Jeyes Fluid.

‘That's fine,' said Cooper. ‘We won't keep you long.'

In the front room, the Taggs had a small baby lying on a towel spread on the table. It was naked, and its legs and arms were wriggling with irritation. Melvyn introduced the blonde woman holding the nappy as his wife Wendy. She looked at their visitors with suspicion, and a hint of panic.

‘Mel,' she said, ‘what are they doing here? Why did you let them in?'

‘I couldn't just stand on the doorstep, could I?'

A slightly older child was sitting on the floor in the corner, surrounded by toys. There were building bricks, wooden blocks, small furry animals and drawing books scattered in a random pattern around. Cooper smiled at the child, and she stared back with her mother's expression. This was a house where he would have to be careful where he put his feet, in case he crushed some treasured plaything and set off a crisis.

‘Sorry to bother you,' said Cooper. ‘But I'm glad we've been lucky enough to find you both at home.'

‘There's nothing lucky about it,' said Wendy. ‘We're both stuck here all week. Mel was laid off at the refractory, and now he can't get a job. And as you can see, I've got these two to look after.'

‘We're making enquiries about a young man called Neil Granger,' said Cooper.

‘Oh, yes. We've heard,' said Melvyn.

‘You have?'

‘His brother Philip rang Lucas after some of your lot had been to see him. Lucas is their uncle.'

‘And he's your neighbour, too. I take it you mean Lucas Oxley?'

‘Of course.'

‘Word gets around fast then.'

‘It does around here.'

‘Neil was all right,' said Wendy. ‘It's a shame. Do you know what happened?'

‘Not at the moment.'

‘Philip said it wasn't an accident. Neil had been in a fight.'

‘Well, something like that.'

‘There was a bit of a rough lot he mixed with in Tintwistle. Bikers, some of them.'

‘Do you know any names?'

‘No,' said Wendy. ‘We hadn't seen much of Neil lately. We don't get involved like we used to – we have our hands full.'

Cooper turned to Melvyn Tagg. ‘How long have you been unemployed, sir?'

‘About a month. There's no call for unskilled blokes these days,' said Melvyn apologetically. ‘I never had much education. Wendy's got GCSEs, though. She ought to go to college and learn to be a secretary or something.'

‘How can I work or do college, when there are these two round my neck?' said Wendy.

‘Perhaps when they're a bit older …' said Cooper.

‘We'd never be able to afford a nursery. They charge more than I could earn at any job that I could get. Besides, the nearest nursery is in Glossop. Not much use to us, is it?'

‘What about family? Or your neighbours?'

‘They're never in.'

Cooper noticed there was no suggestion of Melvyn Tagg looking after the children. He quite liked children himself, and hoped he might adjust to being a house husband in the same circumstances. He looked at the nappy and baby powder and the other paraphernalia. Of course, the circumstances might never arise.

‘There's your next-door neighbour, Mrs Wallwin. She's at home all the time, she says.'

‘Her? We couldn't ask her to look after our kids.'

‘Why not?' said Cooper. ‘What's wrong with her?'

‘She's shifty, for a start.'

Melvyn was still hanging on to his sterilizing fluid, as if he needed it for a reassurance. ‘She seems decent enough to me,' he said. ‘She's just quiet, that's all.'

‘Melvyn, people are quiet because they've got something to hide.'

‘Like what?'

‘Well, I don't know. Have you looked at her hands?'

‘What about her hands? Are they covered in blood, or what?'

‘They shake when she's talking to you.'

Cooper felt he was losing control of the conversation. He looked around for Tracy Udall, and discovered she was squatting in the corner, talking to the older child and admiring a picture book.

‘That means nothing,' said Melvyn. ‘She probably has that nervous condition – Parkinson's Disease, is it? Or she might just be scared of you. I wouldn't blame her for that.'

Wendy tossed her head. ‘Oh, ha ha.'

‘Er, sorry to interrupt,' said Cooper.

‘No, really,' said Melvyn. ‘She's probably just very shy and nervous of meeting new people. Some folk are that way.'

‘Don't talk daft. She's shifty.'

‘But, Wendy, you know nothing about her at all.'

‘I know enough. I've got a feeling about her.'

‘Oh, right.'

‘Don't put on that tone. You know my feelings are usually right.'

There was a brief pause. Cooper saw that the baby's face had started to become screwed up in an expression of serious annoyance. In a moment, there was going to be an ear-splitting noise.

BOOK: Blind to the Bones
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