Authors: J M Gregson
Tags: #Fiction, #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective
âI've been dealing with the cheaters and the beaters and the killers for a long time now. I see the illegal drugs trade sweeping over us like an incoming tide, whatever our small successes. It's easy to throw up your hands and say it's not worth bothering, or to be like Tommy Bloody Tucker and think only of PR and your pension. You need passion, if you're going to succeed when evil seems all around you.'
Lucy leaned across and kissed him on the forehead, then on the lips. âYou're quite a philosopher, Percy Peach, underneath all that aggression.'
âNo. I'm just a copper, fighting villains and trying to maintain a sense of proportion.'
âYou're a little more than that.' There was a pause. When he didn't respond, she said quietly, âPassion, you said.'
âYes, I did, didn't I? Speaking of which, I've had a busy day and it's high time I was in bed.' But he showed no immediate sign of moving from the sofa. His hands actively explored the curves and recesses which were so warm and so willing beside him. After a few minutes of increasing delight, he murmured into the ear beneath his lips, âShe has a lot of good ideas, your Mum, doesn't she?'
Alarm bells she did not wish to heed tinkled at the back of Lucy's brain. She forced herself to sit upright. âAnd what particular ideas would you be thinking of?'
âHigh time she was made a granny, she said. Very understandable, that, in a woman of her years.' Percy nodded enthusiastically.
âVery understandable, but there are other considerations as well.'
âI prefer to defer to the wisdom of age. There isn't enough heed given to that in our society.' And he led her firmly up the stairs to pursue this philosophy.
NINETEEN
T
he big living room of the old farmhouse had a ten-foot ceiling, but the top of the Christmas tree reached to within six inches of it. Once it had its lights and all of its decorations, it would certainly impress the three children who would focus on it and the presents at the foot of it on Christmas Day.
âIt's going to look really good,' said Jane Cassidy.
âI shan't do anything more with it at the moment. Thomas will want to help me with all the trimmings.'
âI'm glad we're coming round here on Christmas Day. Damon and Kate will be less likely to miss Adam if they're not at home.'
âLiz will be here to chaperone us. But don't worry, my sister's good with children. She was a big help with Thomas when Jessica left.' Paul Barnes reached across and took her hands in his. âDo you think Christmas will be a big problem for the children?'
Jane had already given that a lot of thought. âNo, I don't think so. Adam had seen so little of them over the last few months that they're not as distraught as I'd expected. They seem to have taken it almost too well. I expect there'll be the odd tear when they're going to bed, but not a lot more than that. A small part of me wants there to be more, wants them to feel the loss of their father.'
Paul had too much sense to say anything in response to that thought. After a few moments, he said, âIt will be good to spend Christmas together. It will be another step towards getting the kids used to us being together.'
âKate asked about you, last night. Asked whether we were good friends. I said yes. She didn't seem to make any connection with Adam.'
âThomas asked me about us, too. He likes you; I think he's quite looking forward to our being together. Of course, it's different for him; he scarcely remembers Jessica now.'
âThe counsellor came to see me yesterday. I imagine the police arrange it. I talked to her mainly about the children. She said children accept things quickly and easily, so long as you make it seem natural to them. They're remarkably adaptable.'
âIt's good that Thomas gets on so well with your two. I think he enjoys feeling in charge, having the responsibility for the younger ones.'
âThey're great together. Ingrid was quite happy to have the three of them for the morning. She's planning to take them out for a walk, when the sun gets a bit higher in the sky.'
âIt's a lovely day. But we'd getter get on with wrapping these presents if we're to justify your nanny's gallant efforts.' They proceeded to do just that, working in companionable silence, apart from comments about the presents and how they would be received in five days' time.
The rambling old stone building had thick walls, but the irregular windows had not been double-glazed, so that exterior sounds penetrated fairly easily when things within were quiet. Barnes's sharp ears caught the sound of the vehicle as it turned off the lane and began the half-mile journey up the paved track to his farm. Jane Cassidy caught the note later, as the engine changed gear and climbed the last two hundred yards. The pair were at the window by the time the police car turned into the cobbled farmyard and parked unhurriedly near the door.
Detective Chief Inspector Peach, dapper in a light-grey suit, and the much taller Detective Sergeant Northcott, black and menacing in a navy-blue roll-neck sweater. They looked up at the window of the living room for a moment, and caused Jane and Paul to recoil like guilty things, staring at each other with a wild surmise.
Barnes had composed himself by the time he ushered the two men into the room. He said a little awkwardly, âIt's the CID, Jane. Here to ask us a few more questions, though I don't see what we can add to what we've already told them.'
He stood in a light-blue V-neck sweater beside Clyde Northcott, almost as tall as the policeman, looking in that moment almost as white as Northcott was black. Paul seemed almost rooted to the spot after his introduction, so that Jane said hurriedly, âWe were just about to have coffee, gentlemen. Would you care to join us?'
Rather to her surprise, Peach accepted the invitation, once she had given her assurance that the kettle was already on the Aga and it wouldn't take long. She didn't realize that he was content to assess the situation, to take the pulse of the relationship between these two, to assess the degree of collusion there had been between them and where they planned to go from here. It was also the first time that Northcott had been involved with him in a situation like this, where you needed to play the cards you held with skill, if you were to secure the further evidence you needed.
Peach looked round the big room, taking in the impressive half-decorated Christmas tree and the gaudy Christmas paper upon the floor. He stared for a moment without comment at the space rocket which was destined for Thomas and the paint-set Paul had just begun to wrap for young Kate. It felt to Barnes like a violation. He wanted to hustle these things away from prying police eyes, to protest against the smearing of childish innocence which this CID study seemed to him to imply.
Instead, he went and sat down awkwardly on the edge of the old red leather sofa which was normally so comfortable and waited for Jane to return with the coffee. The visitors seemed much happier with the silence than he was. Paul's first thought was that they had already made a mistake; by offering to make the coffee, Jane had showed them how familiar she was with the geography of his house, how much she already felt at home here. Then he realized that they had already admitted an affair, that the discretion they tried to exercise with the rest of the public had no place here.
As if he had read these thoughts, Peach took up that idea when Jane had handed round the coffee and biscuits, with the lithe assistance of DS Northcott. Only when Jane was sitting on the leather sofa beside Barnes did Percy break the silence, which seemed to Barnes to have stretched him to breaking point. Peach said with typical pugnacity, âHow long have you two been lovers?'
There was a silence in which Northcott, poised with notebook open beside his mentor, felt he could almost feel the electrical charge. Peach watched the pair glance at each other in alarm, then added, âIt's just as well that the two of you are together, don't you think? That way, you won't be likely to contradict each other.'
It was Jane who recovered first. She said, âDo you set out to be objectionable as a tactic, or does it just come naturally to you, DCI Peach?'
Peach was not at all put out. He allowed himself a half-smile. âPerhaps I just don't take kindly to people trying to deceive me. Particularly when a man has been brutally murdered.'
âIt wasn't like that!' The words were out before Paul could prevent them, his tongue frozen too late by the sudden look of horror on Jane's face.
Jane tried to rescue him. âPaul means our affair wasn't like that â wasn't something tawdry. To answer your question, we've been lovers for just over three months. That's if your question is when did we first have sex together, as I presume it is. If you really mean love, it would be a little while before that.'
Peach noted the precision of her reply. A woman to whom this relationship was important, who might perhaps kill or accept killing to further its progress. âDid Adam Cassidy know about this?'
âNo. He took plenty of lovers himself, you know.'
âWe do know, yes. You did your best to draw our attention to it. But his lovers are not relevant to this case. Whereas your affair with Mr Barnes most certainly is.'
âWe would dispute that. And I would ask you not to publicize our relationship at this point. It will leak out soon enough, I'm sure â country folk love the latest gossip. But we both have children to think of. It is no business of yours, but this isn't a casual bit of sex on the side. We shall get married in due course, when people have had time to get used to the idea. Maybe in the autumn.'
She was talking too much, probably because she was afraid of Barnes speaking at all. Peach said grimly, âYou will certainly not be marrying this autumn, Mrs Cassidy. Both of you may well be in prison then.'
She tossed her fair hair angrily in the warm air. âThis is ridiculous! You cannot possibly substantiate that statement.' She could feel Paul's eyes upon her, but she forced herself not to look at him. Turning desperation into fury, she said to Peach, âWhy are you doing this to me? Why do you hate me so?'
She had expected him to deny it, but he did not trouble to do so. He said with distaste rather than admiration, âYou proved your credentials as an actress on Wednesday, Mrs Cassidy. You sold us the tale about being here last Friday night with considerable skill.'
âI don't know what you mean. I was here on Friday with Paul. I'm sorry I deceived you about it in the first place, but I apologized for that when you saw me on Wednesday.'
âYou did indeed. You told us on Monday that you'd been in your own home at the time when your husband was being killed, then confessed with some embarrassment on Wednesday that you'd been deceiving us, that instead you'd been here for the evening. You acted out your charade with great skill. I think that at the time both DS Northcott and I believed you.'
âI'm flattered that you think I was acting so well. But my account was convincing because I was telling you the truth.' Jane was conscious now of the horror on Paul's face, but still she would not turn to look at him, sensing that the action might bring words from him which they could not afford.
Peach insisted quietly, âYou were at your own house throughout the evening. You answered the phone when Luke Cassidy rang to try to speak to Adam.'
Jane opened her mouth to bluster her way out of it, but suddenly no words would come. Her brain forced her to accept that there was no escape from the steely determination of the two very different-looking men who sat opposite her, that they had the facts to refute anything she had to offer. She remained silent, unconsciously biting her lip and staring at the rich dark red of the Turkish carpet.
Peach let this moment of her defeat stretch for long seconds. Then he said quietly, âWhy did you put those hairs beside the passenger seat of the BMW, Jane?'
It was the first time he had used her forename. She wondered if this marked her acceptance of guilt, whether the move to the informal marked some key stage in the arcane rites of police interrogation. She gathered her resources for a last denial. âI don't know what you're talking about. If Adam had had some floozy in his car, it's nothing to do with me.'
âIt was a mistake, Jane. The woman whose head those hairs came from had never been in the BMW. You collected them from another car, with a comb, didn't you?'
She had no energy any longer for denial, only a vague wish for self-justification. At first she spoke slowly, as if she were observing the actions of some other woman. âThey were in the Mercedes. I brushed them up intending to confront Adam with them. But when I heard he was going off for the weekend in the sports car, I thought I'd dump them in there. In case it was some other tart he was bedding!' Only as she spat out the last phrase did she reveal the intensity of her hatred for the man who had been her husband.
âYou thought you'd frame someone else for murder.'
A pause. Then in a weary monotone, âNo. I thought he might like to explain away those dark hairs to some blonde he'd picked up for the weekend.'
Peach did not trouble to argue. This might make her an accessory to a carefully planned murder, if it was accepted as an attempt to divert suspicion from Barnes. Or it might be what she said, no more than an attempt to embarrass her husband when a different woman found the clutch of dark hairs in the BMW. Leave that for the competing counsels to argue out months from now in court. It was Northcott, deep-voiced and quietly persuasive, who now said, âYou were at home for the whole of that evening, weren't you, Mrs Cassidy?'
âJane had nothing to do with this!' Barnes could restrain himself no longer, and the words sprang out harsh and raw in the quiet room.
Jane's hand stole across the sofa and gripped the top of his. When he felt her touch, Barnes uncurled his clenched fist and clasped her fingers in his. Her voice was almost a whisper as she said, âLeave it, Paul.'