Authors: Peter Helton
âI saw it happen on the infrared screen, looked like someone clouted him from behind,' I said.
âDid you see what they looked like?' Stoneking asked.
âNo, it was right at the edge of the screen.'
âPity.' He swept the torch beam up and down the ground. âCan't see any kind of implement lying about.'
âDon't go looking for it,' I warned him. âThe police are going to be unhappy enough with all of us trampling the ground around here. Whatever it was, it's probably in the lake now anyway.' Now more figures appeared silhouetted against the light in the French windows. âProbably best if not everyone comes down here now.' I could see one cagouled figure coming towards us already.
Stoneking handed me the torch. âI'll shoo them back into the house. Nothing I can do here anyway.'
It was not long afterwards that the ambulance drove on to the lawn with blue flashing beacons, bathing us all in light from its headlamps. The paramedics briefly asked who he was and what had happened while they got oxygen to Paul and a drip into his arm, but otherwise they focussed on the victim. By the time they were ready to move him into the ambulance two uniformed police officers with torches were walking towards us and behind them, inevitably, strolled Superintendent Michael Needham. He was wearing a black raincoat over his suit but no hat. When he stepped into the beam of the ambulance headlights I could see he was not a happy man, but apparently his unhappiness had deeper roots than not enjoying getting wet at three in the morning.
âHoneysett, I would have put money on you standing next to the victim. And now you have brought the rest of the gang with you,' he growled. âIt was inevitable, I suppose.' He exchanged a few words with the paramedic men who had now lifted Paul into the back of the ambulance, then, as they drove off in a wide circle across the lawn, turned his attention back to us. âLet me begin by thanking you for trampling all over the crime scene and thereby making our work so much harder. Can we all walk away from here in the direction the ambulance took?' We followed him some twenty yards towards the house, then he started on us. âOkay, who found the body?' I put my hand up to that, knowing that in the police handbook called
Three Easy Steps to Solve a Murder
whoever reported the finding of a body shot right to the top of the suspect list. âAnyone with you?' he asked, looking at Tim and Annis.
âNo, those two were . . . asleep at the time,' I said.
âRight, start explaining what you were doing out here in the middle of the night, in the rain, on your own . . .'
I explained. I explained the nighthawks, the nightly comings and goings. I left out the greenhouse full of cannabis and how it attracted visits from the diggers and also failed to mention Guy being blackmailed â I could claim client confidentiality as an excuse there â but I did explain the cameras in the trees. I also mentioned that the hat Paul had been wearing was in fact Guy Middleton's. âIn the dark it would have been easy to assume that one was clobbering Middleton when in fact one was braining someone else wearing his trademark hat.' Even by torchlight I could tell that Annis was giving me a meaningful look. I didn't mention but I hadn't forgotten that only last night it was me masquerading as Guy Middleton under that hat.
âThen why the hell was . . .' Needham searched for the name and found it â. . . Mr Fosse wearing it tonight?'
âI saw the hat lying in the drawing room earlier,' I lied. âFor some reason Paul decided to borrow it.' In truth I had left Guy's hat and jacket in the drawing room on my return to the Hall the night before. Guy had remained groaning and moaning in bed all day so there the hat had probably stayed until Paul decided to put it on.
More police arrived, a lot more police, both plain-clothed and uniformed. Generators and arc lights were being set up; a forensics van drove on to the lawn. Watching the ghostly army of white-suited scene-of-crime officers from the downstairs windows of the Hall were the entire VIP crew. A growing group of diggers and geo-physics technicians were gathering on the lower edge of the lawn, held back by a police constable in a yellow high-vis jacket. I was made to point out the location of the cameras and after a forensics technician had taken a good look at the laptop in my car he promptly confiscated it.
âOver here, Super,' a SOCO called to Needham from beside the hedge along the greenhouse.
Needham, himself wearing crime-scene gear now, strode across. Soon he was back. âLooks like we have a good candidate for the weapon. A spade, chucked into the hedge. It has fresh blood and hair on it. I've no doubt it will match. Okay, you and I,' he pointed a latex-gloved forefinger at my nose, âwill have a private little chat. Do they serve coffee in this dump?'
A short while later Needham and I sat down with a cafetière of coffee and some biscuits courtesy of Carla. I made an inviting arm gesture. âThere you are, Mike, it's Mr Honeysett in the library with a candlestick.'
Needham sniffed as he looked the place over, wrinkling his nose at the stuffed alligator and Indian statuary. âNot what I expected to see in a rock star's mansion.'
âAll courtesy of the previous owners. What
did
you expect?'
âNot sure, come to think of it.' Then his eyes fell on the musket hanging on the wall above the fireplace. âHe'd better have a licence for that thing,' he growled.
âHe's got a couple of fine shotguns in his gun locker.'
âYeah, I know.'
Of course he did; what had I been thinking? At the first sign of trouble at Tarmford Hall the computer would have spat out the information about firearms licensed to the homeowner. Needham was merely looking for an opportunity on which to vent his displeasure. And I was it.
âThis whole thing stinks,' he said emphatically. âThat's the second attack now. I have a mind to scoop up the lot of you and put an end to this palaver. The last victim, the re-enactor that got himself shot with the bolt, is recovering, though still in hospital, but this one looks bad. I spoke to the paramedics. Now I'm aware he was wearing the TV chappie's hat and that Middleton wasn't universally popular, but did Paul Fosse have any enemies himself?'
âNot that I know of. He's the main camera operator, he seemed okay. Mind you, he wasn't a great fan of Guy Middleton's, so pinching his hat was probably just sticking two fingers up to him. Apart from the fact that it was still raining.'
âWhy would he wander about the place in the middle of the night?'
âCouldn't sleep? Visiting one of the diggers in her tent? Perhaps he was looking for nighthawks and found them â that's what my money is on. There is one other thing. Did you know the mechanical digger was sabotaged?'
âNo one mentioned it.'
âIt was. Someone poured water in the tank. Now if you wanted to sabotage this dig then bashing Guy Middleton's head in would probably work. But then so would laying low the cameraman, although I've no doubt the producer has already screamed down the phone for a replacement.'
Needham slowly nodded his head, digesting it, then sighed. âThis coffee is pretty good. That's the one thing I can say for you, Chris, wherever you are a good cup of coffee is never far away. How do you manage it? Wherever I am there's usually brown water in a polystyrene beaker.' He poured himself another cup and proceeded to shovel sugar into it. âThe figure you saw coming from the house. Was it Paul Fosse?'
âCouldn't say.'
âThink!' he barked. âHat? Did you see the hat? It's pretty distinctive.'
âI didn't see them clearly at all.'
âYou're useless, Honeysett. Call yourself a detective.'
âI was miles away in my car and it was dark and raining and I had just poured a mug of coffee into my laptop.'
âReally? You're not supposed to do that, I'm told.'
âI'm aware of it. But it's still working and one of your chaps has confiscated it.'
âGood.'
âIs it?'
There was a knock on the door, immediately followed by a plain-clothed officer I had not seen before. He was a tall and eager-looking man in his mid-thirties with tightly curled brown hair; he wore a brown leather jacket and reminded me of an Airedale terrier.
âWhat is it, Reid?' Needham asked. DI Reid, who as it turned out was the superintendent's new sidekick, stayed by the door and beckoned Needham who went to have a murmured exchange. The officer left and Needham turned to me. âWe have just made an arrest.'
âReally? That was quick. Who?'
âWe arrested Mark Stoneking.'
âReally? You think he clobbered Paul Fosse?'
âNo. But his greenhouse is full of cannabis.'
âOh, that.'
Needham had lifted his coffee cup but set it down again hard. â
Oh, that
?' he boomed. âAre you telling me you knew about it but didn't think it worth mentioning?'
I tried to look innocent. âErm, well, I wasn't
completely
sure they were cannabis plants. I mean how would I know?'
âDon't give me that. I wasn't born yesterday and neither were you.'
âWell, I happen to be of the opinion that an Englishman ought to be able to grow what he likes in his greenhouse as long as it doesn't hurt anyone.'
âYou can opine all you want; it's illegal and I'm going to throw the book at Stoneking. Just because you're rich and surrounded by acres of land doesn't mean you're above the law.'
âI don't think Stoneking knows about those plants.'
âThat's just what he said, apparently. What makes you think he didn't know?'
âBecause he's not a pothead and it didn't look like a professional cannabis factory. I think that's his gardener growing himself a year's supply of the stuff.'
âRight, I'll have him. Where is he?'
âYou already have him. He's Sam Gower and he's doing time.'
âSam Gower rings a bell.' Then he remembered. âThe Bristol Bullion robbery, he was the driver.'
âHe's now Stoneking's rehabilitated gardener.'
âRehabilitated? I beg to differ.'
âHe's inside for some ancient burglary you lot fingered him for.'
âDNA, don't you just love it?'
âDue to be released this week.'
Needham smiled grimly. âInto my open arms.'
It was the arms of Morpheus I wanted to sink into but when after another hour of bickering I eventually opened the door to my room Annis and Tim were once more asleep. Our rickety triangle had never included any hint of three-in-a-bedness so I grumbled downstairs again and made myself uncomfortable on a sofa in the drawing room, just as the first finger of dawn touched the sky above Tarmford Hall. A few short hours later I woke with creaking joints and a back that refused to properly straighten up. Feeling ancient and hard done by, I followed the smell of coffee to the dining room. With the exception of Paul, Annis and Tim, everyone who stayed at the house was here; there was a new face sitting next to the sad-eyed soundman who I presumed must be the new camera operator. Apart from the newcomer everyone looked as tired as I felt, having all been forced to stay up and give statements. I had tried to subdue my hair on the way to breakfast but had obviously failed because Stoneking, who had been reluctantly released on bail by Needham, looked up from attacking a sausage on his plate and said: âNot another one who had bad dreams. Did you see eerie green lights too and hear whisperings in your dreams?'
âNot me. Who did?'
âI did,' Middleton said through clenched teeth. âAnd I wish people would stop trying to make fun of it. I was not
dreaming
. I woke up and there was a strange green light in my room and someone was whispering.'
âThat's interesting,' I said and meant it. âWhat were they whispering?'
âI couldn't make out any words but it was menacing and when I tried to switch on the bedside lamp it didn't work.'
âWhat did you do?'
âWell, I . . . er . . . I . . . er . . . hid under the sheets.' Giggles rippled round the room. âI know, I know, you all think it's pathetic but I would like to see you wake up and find a strange presence in your room!'
âSo what happened?'
âIt disappeared. Eventually I put the central light on and there was nothing. I had put the chair against the door; no one could have come in that way.'
âTold you the place is haunted,' Stoneking said.
âYou didn't see the ghost of a girl, did you?' Emms said, suppressing a laugh. âPerhaps she wanted her drawing of a horse's head back.'
Middleton kicked his chair back impatiently. âYou're not funny, Emms.' I thought he would storm out but all he did was get himself some scrambled egg which he slapped angrily on to his plate. âLast night someone hit Paul over the head while he was wearing my hat. What if someone thought that was me? What if it was me they were after?'
âNo one expected you to be out there,' I said reasonably. âNo one waited out there for you with a shovel on the off-chance you might turn up in the middle of the night. Paul probably went looking for nighthawks and when he ran into them they laid him out.'
âThen maybe it serves him right for wearing my hat without asking,' he said prissily.
Perhaps it was wise to change the subject. âIs there any news of Paul?'
âYes, he was briefly conscious,' said Emms. âI called the hospital a few minutes ago. They think it's a good sign but he's out cold again.'
âDid he say who hit him?'
âHe didn't say much apparently. His skull isn't broken but he has a slight swelling on his brain. His chances are good, though.'
I looked surreptitiously round the table, looking for any out-of-place reactions but everyone just got on with their breakfast, giving nothing away. The new camera operator, whose name was Keith, looked benevolently from one speaker to the other, probably wondering if taking over from Paul had been such a wise move. In his shoes I would have too.