Read The Butcher Beyond Online
Authors: Sally Spencer
Medwin, following his own instructions, hit the ground himself. The sand was damp against his skin.
âWe have to get out of here,' said a voice by his side, which he recognized as belonging to Ham-'n'-Eggs.
âI can't desert the lads,' Medwin said.
âYou've no choice,' Ham-'n'-Eggs gasped. âThis isn't a battle. It's a rout. And it's every man for himself.'
âWhat about the boxes?' Medwin asked.
âTo hell with the boxes. They're lost, whatever you do. You have to try and save yourself.'
âIn the morning, they took us down to the beach to clear away the bodies,' Ramón Jiménez said. âWe buried them in a mass grave. We asked if we might send for a priest, but Durán said no. He told us that these men had killed too many priests in their time to have their own burial sanctified by one now.'
âThe International Brigade did not kill priests,' Paco said. âI know, because I fought beside them.'
âI know that now, and I knew it then,' Jiménez said. âBut Durán would not be convinced. I think he hated them for their courage and nobility â hated them because they showed him more clearly than a mirror what he was himself.'
âWhat happened next?'
âOnce we had filled in the grave, he ordered a concrete mixer to be brought to the site. Then he stood there and watched as we cemented over the whole area. It is something I will never forgive him for.'
âHow many men did you bury that day? Do you know?'
âOf course I know. We counted them. We wanted to be sure we knew the full extent of Durán's crime.'
âSo how many were there?'
âThirty-four.'
âWhich means, according to your earlier calculations, that some of them escaped.'
Jiménez nodded. âA few,' he said mournfully. âA pitiful few.' There were tears in his eyes. âI sometimes wake up in the night wondering what happened to them. I would like to think that they returned safely to their own countries, but I cannot really bring myself to believe that they did.'
âThey made it,' Paco said.
âHow can you be so sure?'
âBecause a few of the few have finally come back!'
A
policeman was often a hunter, Woodend thought as he looked across the table at the heavy metal cross which hung around Sutcliffe's neck, but he was also â more commonly than most people ever imagined â almost a priest. And there was something of the priestly function about each and every interrogation. Crack one of a man's secrets â however small and insignificant that secret may be â and he soon comes to believe that you can crack them all. Catch the smallest glimpse of that same man's soul, and he will soon lay the whole soul bare before you.
âShall we begin?' Woodend asked.
Captain López, who was sitting next to him, merely nodded.
âI was just wonderin' what nickname the group gave
you
, Mr Sutcliffe?' the Chief Inspector said.
âI am Jacob. I am Esau. Men know me as Elijah,' Sutcliffe replied in a voice that was almost a chant.
âOh, I don't think it was ever anythin' as fancy as that,' Woodend told him. âThey called Mitchell “Ham-'n'-Eggs”, didn't they, because he was forever goin' on about how he could fancy a fry-up? Roberts, I imagine, was known as somethin' like “The Gambler”. So I was wonderin' which of
your
little peculiarities they would have latched on to.'
Sutcliffe ran his hands through his shock of grey hair. âAs the mighty and terrible God on High is my witness, I knew no Mitchell. Nor did I know any Schneider or Dupont.'
âFunnily enough, I never asked you about Schneider or Dupont,' Woodend pointed out. âAn' I couldn't help noticin' that when you swore an oath to your “mighty an' terrible God”, you acted as if I hadn't brought Roberts's name up at all. But here's the interestin' question. You say you didn't know them.'
âYes?'
â
When
didn't you know them?'
âYou make no sense,' Sutcliffe said.
âThat's where you're wrong,' Woodend told him. âMitchell's a common enough name, so the chances are you've come across at least a few fellers called that. I know I certainly have. So you were lyin' when you said you knew no Mitchell. Lyin' â and usin' your “mighty an' terrible God” to back you up. Unless â¦'
Sutcliffe struggled to keep silent, but despite what his brain ordered it to do, his mouth was already forming the words.
âUnless what?' he asked.
âUnless you were playin' games with me. Unless you were addin' a silent qualification to your words, so that when you said, “I knew no Mitchell,” what you really meant was “I knew no Mitchell
back in the days when
we were all here in Benicelda.
” Because then Mitchell was goin' by his real name, wasn't he? Just as Holloway was goin' by his real name of Medwin, an' Schneider an' Dupont were goin' by whatever
their
real names are. But Roberts was
always
Roberts, an' that's why you excluded him from your oath.'
Sutcliffe closed his eyes. âFor the Devil is a great tempter, and we must heed not his words,' he intoned.
âDon't think I've ever been confused with Old Nick before,' Woodend said easily. âBut let's move on, shall we? We've already established that you
were
here with the others, but we still don't know what your nickname was.'
âWhy should you want to know it?' Sutcliffe demanded.
âSo there
is
one to know, is there?' Woodend countered.
âNo, I â¦' Sutcliffe began. Then he closed his eyes again and said, âYea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff comfort me â¦'
âI suppose it all depends when you first came down with an attack of Godliness,' Woodend mused. âIf it's recent, then chances are you were a bit of a hellraiser before. Is that what they called you? Hellraiser?'
âThou preparest a table before me, in the presence of mine enemies â¦'
âNo, I don't think it was that,' Woodend said. âI think you'd been bitten by the bug before you ever came to Spain. So what was the name they gave you? Holy Joe? Bible Billy? Or were you just “The Lunatic”?'
âThey called me
Moses
!' Sutcliffe said angrily.
âMoses!' Woodend repeated. âNow that's an interestin' choice. What comes into
your
mind when you think of Moses, Captain López?'
If Paniatowski had been sitting beside him, she would have responded immediately.
Because she'd have known that it wouldn't really matter
what
she said, since her only real function was to remind the suspect that there were two of them â and only one of him.
Because she'd have appreciated the fact that one of the keys to a successful interrogation is rhythm, and her silence would have shattered the rhythm that Woodend had been working so hard to build up.
López should have known those things too. López should have said something â anything â no matter how meaningless it had been.
But López didn't.
López kept silent.
Let down by the man who should have been acting as his partner, Woodend turned his attention back to Sutcliffe, and continued to press on with his reluctant one-man show.
âMoses was a leader of his people,' he said. âYou're not a leader, Mr Sutcliffe. You're a follower. So I don't think they called you Moses at all. I think you just
wished
they had.'
âGod called on me to deliver his people from the heathen,' Sutcliffe said. âTo save them from the Whore of Babylon.'
âMoses led his people out of Egypt,' Woodend said. âHe never led them
back
again. So why did you â if you really are the leader you claim to be â lead your people back to Spain?'
âThe wicked shall not go unpunished,' Sutcliffe said. âThe dead shall not go unavenged. Yea, though the Whore rules in this land once more, yet did God call on us to enter it and serve as His powerful right hand.'
âWhat exactly was it you came back here to do?' Woodend asked.
Sutcliffe looked at him with genuine amazement in his eyes. âAre you a fool?' he demanded. âHave you not listened? Do you not understand?'
âI've almost got it,' Woodend said soothingly. âPerhaps you could explain one more time â in simple terms, so that even an idiot like me can finally understand.'
Sutcliffe nodded. âWe came back because we were called,' he said. âBecause in this town there still livesâ'
âConfess!' López exploded â almost screaming the words. âConfess to the murder, and I promise you that you will be the one who escapes the death penalty!'
And just as Mitchell had done earlier, Sutcliffe shut down.
D
usk was falling. The foreign visitors, who had basked in the sweltering heat on the beach for most of the day, now wandered the narrow streets of the old town, grateful for the gentle coolness which nightfall brought with it.
They all looked so relaxed, Woodend thought enviously, as he watched them walk past his table. And why wouldn't they be? They had left the stresses and strains of having to work for a living behind them, whereas he had merely transferred his job to a new â and more difficult â location.
He took a sip of his beer â the third he had ordered from the waiter since he sat down â and wondered just what he was going to do about the fix he found himself in.
Though he still had no clear idea why López was trying to sabotage the investigation, there was no doubt in his mind that that was exactly what the Captain was doing. Disrupting Mitchell's interrogation could just have been a mistake â an error of judgement. But he had done it again â not once, but four times. And if anything, his interruptions had only got worse with each session. Schneider, for example, had barely had time to sit before López was screaming at him to confess to the murder!
Woodend took another sip of his beer. He seemed to be completely boxed in, he thought. The investigation was getting nowhere, but appealing to López had proved a waste of time, and complaining to the Consul would achieve nothing, except perhaps gaining him a reputation for awkwardness. Nor was he willing to let López take over â it simply wasn't in his nature to sit back and watch an investigation being run into the ground.
There was something else he could do, he thought. He was sure of that. His only problem was that he had no idea what it was!
âJoan!' shouted a voice.
He looked up. The woman who had shouted the name was in her early thirties, as was the woman who turned round in response.
Nothing to do with
his
Joan at all, then.
Woodend felt a sudden shudder of guilt run through his whole body. They were in Benicelda for Joan's benefit. She needed to relax, and it was his job to see that she did. Yet he could not honestly say that he had thought about his wife â even for a second â since he had started to wrap his mind around the case that morning.
Captain López looked up at the picture of General Franco on his office wall â at the hard eyes and the disapproving down-turn of the mouth. The Generalissimo was not a man who was easily pleased. He did not tolerate failure, whatever the reason. And it was this attitude which had set the standard to be followed by anyone and everyone who held power in the Generalissimo's Spain.
âThere is no excuse for failure, and I have failed,' López told the image of the grim-faced
Caudillo
.
And not just on one front, but on several!
He had failed to stop Woodend asking questions which might eventually lead the English detective to a solution to the crime â whatever that solution
was
.
He had failed to learn why it was so important to His Excellency Don Antonio Durán, the
Alcalde
of Benicelda, that the crime should be covered up.
He would certainly be judged to have failed by his Captain-General in Madrid.
However he examined it, the future looked bleak.
The knock on his office door sounded like nothing less than a summons to defeat and disgrace, and he ignored it. It was only when the caller outside knocked a second time â with more insistence â that he found the strength to say, âCome on, damn you!'
The man who opened the door and walked into the office was a constable called Luis Alonso. He did not look like a policeman. Policemen did not sport a three-day growth of stubble on their chins. Nor did he live in the barracks, or wear the olive-green uniform and the three-cornered hat. There was no record that he was even based in the Benicelda barracks of the Guardia Civil, and his wages came not through the usual channels but out of a special fund which was administered from headquarters in Madrid.
There were a number of people rotting away in prison who wished they had never met Alonso â and certainly wished they had never confided in him. There were others who did not even know he was responsible for their condition â who never suspected that light-hearted, free-spending Luis might be the one behind their incarceration. His job was to infiltrate â to uncover troublemakers even before they had even thought of making trouble â and as his record of arrests showed, he was very good at it.
His work that day had been of a more private nature. He had not been searching out people who had the occasional bad word to say about the General, or people who might express the view that â just once in a while â it might be nice if they could actually believe what they read in the newspapers. That day, he had been working exclusively on behalf of Captain López.
âWhat do you want?' López demanded.