The Kill Call

Home > Mystery > The Kill Call > Page 12
The Kill Call Page 12

by Stephen Booth

Cooper tried not to look too smug. ‘Yes, I know what the kill call is.’

  ‘So …?’

  ‘These riders,’ he said. ‘Were they wearing hunting dress?’

  ‘They were in tweed jackets.’

  ‘Ratcatcher? But that’s autumn hunting dress.’

  Fry laughed. ‘It doesn’t matter what time of year it is, surely?’

  This time, Cooper couldn’t resist smiling at the awareness of his superior knowledge. ‘I think you’ll find it does, Diane. You don’t wear ratcatcher in March.’

  He saw Fry hesitate then. He had to say that for her, at least – if you sounded sure enough of yourself, it did make her stop and think twice.

  ‘Anyway,’ she said, ‘what I really wanted you for was to come with me to the Forbes place. The woman there is joint master of the Eden Valley Hunt. There are three masters, apparently, but the other two live in Sheffield, and she’s our local person. Do you know her, by any chance?’

  ‘I know of her,’ admitted Cooper. ‘I don’t think we’ve ever actually met.’

  ‘Good. I spoke to her on Tuesday, during the hunt. But it wasn’t a good time to get anything out of her. I want to corner her at home.’

  ‘Corner her? You make her sound like a trapped rat.’

  ‘Well, that’s kind of what I’m hoping for. I’m sure the hunt people were closing ranks against me. Definitely covering something up.’

  ‘So you said. But I wouldn’t be too quick to jump to that conclusion,’ said Cooper. ‘When do you want to go?’

  ‘This afternoon.’

  ‘No problem.’

  Feeling a sudden need to get a bit of distance from his colleague, Cooper walked as far as the dry-stone wall bordering the sheep pasture. The neighbouring field was much lower down the hill. Very unusually for this part of Derbyshire, the field was planted with an arable crop of some kind, its stalks already several inches tall and showing bright green. Some hopeful farmer praying for a break?

  He shook his head. ‘Diane, are you sure this is the way the riders came?’

  ‘We think so. Why?’

  ‘Well, on horseback, there would have been no way for them to get over the stile, or the wall. They must have come through the gate between the two fields.’ Cooper pointed at the gate some yards away. ‘Were there sheep in this top field when you first arrived?’

  ‘Yes, we got the farmer to move them.’

  ‘Well, the fact that the sheep were still in this field, and not raiding the crop next door, suggests to me that the riders closed the gate after them.’

  ‘Fingerprints?’ said Fry.

  ‘Exactly. The gate is closed by a steel latch, and the underside of it is protected from the rain.’

  ‘I’ll get Wayne Abbott on to it.’

  ‘Some of the prints will be the farmer’s, of course. But you never know.’

  ‘Here’s hoping, then.’

  Cooper thought even Diane Fry ought to have spotted something like that. It was pretty obvious, wasn’t it? Gates were made to keep livestock in, so this one must have been closed by someone. Ipso facto.

  But all she did was watch him in silence as he clambered over the gate, careful to avoid touching the latch, and studied the lower field. There was no mistaking those distinctive crescent shapes pressed into the soft ground, or the powerful odour lingering long after the horses had passed by. Brown, fibrous heaps lay on the soil, the weather too cold yet for the orange dung flies that would swarm around them in summer. But the hoof marks were in quite the wrong place.

  ‘Look, they rode down the tramlines, too,’ said Cooper.

  ‘Tramlines?’

  ‘The parallel tracks left by farm machinery through the crop. They’re there for a reason – to guide accurate spraying and fertilizing – and they’re easily damaged by horse riders, especially in wet weather.’

  ‘So?’

  Cooper felt himself bristle at her tone. He hated the way she said ‘So?’ like that. It seemed to sum up all her contempt for the way of life that he’d grown up with. She made that one word suggest that none of this could have any possible importance in the real world, the world that Diane Fry moved in. The implicit sneer made him so angry. He was glad that she couldn’t see the expression on his face right now.

  ‘Responsible riders don’t ride down tramlines,’ said Cooper, taking a deep breath to calm himself. ‘If you did that on a hunt, you’d get sent home by the master. You’re supposed to go round the outside of the field.’

  ‘Do hunting people really have all these rules to follow?’

  ‘Yes. And they stick to them rigidly.’ Cooper turned back to face her. ‘I don’t care what your video shows, Diane. These weren’t members of the hunt.’

  14

  Fry felt her determination harden as they drove to Watersaw House, where the Forbes lived. There was no way she was going to stand at her own crime scene and let someone like Ben Cooper tell her she was wrong. He wasn’t even supposed to be here, for heaven’s sake.

  Yet Cooper seemed to be unavoidable. Trying to keep him at arm’s length was as impractical as taking precautions against the plague.

  ‘This Eyam place,’ she said, as they passed the end of the village. ‘The Plague Village. What’s that all about, then? The Black Death as a form of entertainment? I know people are really stuck for things to do in these parts, but celebrating the plague is pretty weird, even for Derbyshire.’

  ‘I think it’s more a question of celebrating the village’s survival,’ said Cooper. ‘That’s what the story is all about.’

  ‘If the place was a bit more civilized,’ said Fry, ‘they might not have got the plague in the first place.’

  She heard Cooper sigh, and restrained a smile. He wasn’t invulnerable. There were ways to wind him up, too.

  ‘The plague came from London in a bundle of damp cloth,’ said Cooper. ‘Black rats had introduced the Black Death to England when they came off ships in the docks.’

  ‘I didn’t know you could catch bubonic plague from rats.’

  ‘Not from the rats themselves. From their fleas.’

  Fry shuddered, and began to regret that she’d mentioned Eyam at all. Rats and fleas were two of the things she hated most in the world.

  ‘Watersaw,’ said Cooper, when he saw the sign at the entrance to the Forbes’ drive. ‘There’s a Watersaw Rake near here. One of the old opencast workings. Abandoned now, but it would be the nearest one to the crime scene, I think.’

  There seemed to be horses everywhere at Watersaw House. As soon as Fry parked her car in the entrance to the stable yard, a huge black horse ran up to the post-and-rail fence and hung its head over to stare at her. She couldn’t squeeze past the car door without brushing reluctantly against its inquisitive muzzle.

  ‘It looks quite friendly,’ said Cooper.

  ‘Are you sure?’

  The one other thing Fry knew about horses was that they were supposed to like sugar cubes. But who on earth used sugar cubes any more, let alone carried them around in their pockets in case they met a horse?

  But she did have a packet of mints in her pocket, and she took it out. The horse nuzzled her jacket, as if searching the rest of her pockets, a quick frisk on suspicion of possession. When she unwrapped a mint and held it out on her palm, the horse went straight for it.

  Fry was used to seeing horses, but usually at a safe distance – the mounted unit controlling a crowd at a football match, Up close, she was amazed by the way the animal’s lips unfurled and grasped the mint. She had never realized horses had such prehensile mouths, almost like monkey’s. She supposed it was a characteristic you had to develop when you had no hands to use.

  ‘You seem to be bonding,’ said Cooper, sounding quite impressed.

  ‘Animals are all right, as long as they know who’s the boss.’

  But then the horse began waggling its ears, and showed its teeth. That was definitely a threat. She backed away, and turned to find the owner of Watersaw House regardin
g her with scarcely disguised contempt.

  Today, Mrs Forbes had removed her riding boots and replaced them with a pair of green wellies. Definite working boots, a crack in the side, mud and straw stuck in the ridges of the soles. They seemed to be at least a size too big, because they flapped as she moved about the yard. To Fry’s surprise, she was also wearing a head scarf. She didn’t think non-Muslim women wore head scarves any more – well, except the Queen, and Tubbs off The League of Gentlemen.

  ‘Mrs Forbes,’ she said. ‘Detective Sergeant Fry, Edendale Police. I spoke to you on Tuesday morning at the hunt, if you remember.’

  ‘Oh, yes. What can I do for you?’

  ‘We’d like you to assist us with our enquiries.’

  ‘Good heavens, do you people really talk like that?’

  Mrs Forbes laughed. Fry bristled.

  ‘It’s about the death of Mr Patrick Rawson,’ she said. ‘We’re trying to gather as much information as we can about the circumstances of his death. Oh, this is my colleague, Detective Constable Cooper.’

  Mrs Forbes examined Cooper with a critical eye, like a buyer weighing up a specimen of bloodstock. Fry wasn’t sure whether she was imagining it, but the woman’s expression actually seemed to soften a little. Mrs Forbes said nothing, but there was definitely a form of private communication going on that Fry wasn’t party to.

  ‘I see you run a livery stables, Mrs Forbes.’

  The woman waved a hand around the yard. ‘Yes, indeed. Twenty-eight stables, eighteen turn-out paddocks, purpose-built boxes, indoor and outdoor manèges … everything you could want. We offer full-time or part-time livery. These girls you see here are some of our DIY-ers.’

  Fry studied the youngsters brushing their horses and sorting out their tack. She could see straight away that these weren’t the kind of kids who hung around in the alleys of housing estates in Edendale, drinking bottles of lager and passing round a joint. These girls smelled of saddle soap and horse manure instead of alcohol and cannabis. Yet there was something elusively similar in their manner, a total absorption in their own world, and a hostile stare for the outsider. And in both cases, as Fry well knew, the outsider meant her.

  ‘We turn them out and bring them in, but the girls do their own feeding, grooming and mucking out,’ said Mrs Forbes. ‘I like to see young people who aren’t afraid of a bit of hard work, don’t you?’

  A younger woman dismounted from a horse and came across the yard to join them, leading her mount by its reins. When she reached them, she took off her helmet and shook her hair free. Mid-twenties, probably. She wore an expensive-looking riding outfit. Nice leather boots. And those beige jodhpurs – they fit her rather well. Fry glanced at Cooper to see if he was noticing.

  ‘This is my daughter, Alicia,’ said Mrs Forbes. ‘I started the yard about ten years ago, and Alicia has been helping me in the business full time for the past four, ever since she graduated. A BHS-qualified instructor, aren’t you, darling?’

  Fry blinked, but then realized the last comment had been addressed to Alicia, not to her or Cooper.

  ‘And she’s terribly interested in the use of complementary therapies,’ said Mrs Forbes. ‘Essential oils and all that, you know.’

  Fry looked at the young girls again, sweating under the weight of rugs and saddles. Feeding, grooming, turning out, bringing in, mucking out … She didn’t know what on earth it all was, but it sounded like an endless amount of work. And for what? For nothing more than the chance to climb on the back of one of these monkey-lipped creatures and prance about the countryside in a pair of fancy leather boots.

  ‘You appreciate we have to try to establish how Mr Rawson died, Mrs Forbes. You, and other members of the hunt, are potential witnesses. What we need from you is a list of who was present at the location of Tuesday’s meet from about eight a. m.’

  ‘Inspector Redfearn already asked us for that information.’

  ‘Yes, he did. But so far as I’m aware –’

  ‘Alicia?’

  The younger woman produced an envelope from the pocket of her body warmer. ‘This is the list you want. The hunt secretary drew it up for you. Names, addresses and phone numbers. The times that each person arrived, and what they were doing between eight o’clock and nine thirty.’

  ‘You’ll find it’s a very short list, I’m afraid,’ said Mrs Forbes. ‘Largely the hunt servants, plus Alicia and I. And we were all much too busy to notice what was going on half a mile away from the meet, I can assure you.’

  Fry could feel herself being pushed on to the back foot, and she didn’t like it.

  ‘Oh yes, of course,’ she said. ‘I suppose you all just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.’

  She had the satisfaction of seeing a pained reaction. ‘Possibly.’

  ‘We still need to talk to everyone. One of you might have seen something significant.’

  ‘You’ll do what you have to do, Sergeant. Personally, I can tell you right now that I didn’t see anything out of the ordinary, or anyone who shouldn’t have been there.’ Mrs Forbes smiled. ‘Apart from the antis, of course. But I don’t need to tell you that, surely? Now, if you’ll excuse me …’

  The woman walked away towards the stables, and could be heard speaking to the girls. Fry turned her attention to Alicia.

  ‘You’re a member of the hunt, too?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘And you were out on Tuesday, I gather?’

  ‘Of course. We all want to show our support. But we didn’t see anything, really we didn’t.’

  As the daughter spoke, she moved a hand to stroke the inside of her horse’s leg, where the skin looked smooth and soft. Fry found the gesture somehow disturbing.

  ‘I’ve no idea who that man was who died, and I’m sure Mummy hasn’t either,’ said Alicia. ‘We were just trying to get on with our own business, and avoid the antis. You’d be better talking to them, wouldn’t you?’

  ‘We have talked to them,’ said Fry. ‘But, you see, they weren’t on horseback.’

  Alicia looked away. ‘I can’t help you.’

  The horse swung around restlessly, pointing its haunches at Fry. Out of the corner of her eye, she noticed Cooper moving away towards Alicia Forbes. But she was feeling more confident now, and she stood her ground, even when the rear end bumped gently against her.

  ‘Do you happen to know the bridlepath called Badger’s Way, Miss Forbes?’ Cooper was asking.

  ‘Yes, I’ve ridden there a few times. But everyone uses it – it’s good to be able to get away from traffic for a while.’

  ‘Yes, of course.’

  ‘There have been several incidents of reckless driving near horse riders in this area. Perhaps you know.’

  ‘Any motorists identified are being warned,’ said Cooper. ‘They could face prosecution for driving without due care and attention.’

  Fry watched, feeling suddenly like a spare part, as Alicia Forbes looked Cooper up and down. She’d experienced this moment so often.

  ‘Do you have any animals yourself?’ she asked him.

  ‘Just a cat,’ he admitted, patting the horse’s neck.

  ‘Oh.’ Then she looked at his hand. ‘And you’re not wearing a wedding ring.’

  ‘No.’

  ‘I just wondered – I know not all men wear them, even when they’re married.’

  ‘So I’ve heard.’

  ‘So … are you? Married?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘You must be, what … thirty by now? Isn’t it time to settle down?’

  ‘Well, it’s not quite so simple.’

  ‘Mmm. I suppose not. Still – a single man, living alone with a cat. It could give the wrong impression.’

  Just then, a powerful odour filled the yard. Not just the pervasive background smell, but something much more pungent and immediate.

  ‘Diane, watch out,’ said Cooper.

  But he was too late. Fry felt the soft impact of warm, steaming lumps of fresh horse manu
re splattering on to her trousers and covering her shoes. For a second, she was so shocked that she couldn’t move. And the plops just kept coming. How did one animal manage to produce so much at one go?

  As if by magic, Mrs Forbes herself had re-appeared to witness the moment.

  ‘Oh, I’m so terribly sorry,’ she said. ‘It appears you were standing in the wrong place at the wrong time.’

  ‘These hunting people,’ said Fry angrily as she got back into the Peugeot. ‘Honestly, talking to them is like flogging a dead –’

  She stopped, realizing the stupidity of what she’d been about to say. As she started up the engine, Cooper got into the passenger seat. Fastening his seat belt, he wafted a hand in an exaggerated gesture.

  ‘Diane,’ he said, ‘I hope you don’t mind if I open the window? Only, it’s a bit –’

  ‘Yes,’ said Fry. ‘I know.’

  Back at the office, Cooper found a place to hang his damp coat and fetched himself a coffee from the vending machine. Hardly coffee, really – but it was hot.

  He stood for a moment watching Irvine and Hurst busy at work in the CID room. He was remembering again his first ever visit to Eyam, with the school party. He recalled that he’d brought back a souvenir from the village museum. Cooper smiled when he pictured it. His mother had hated the thing, and didn’t even want it in the house. She paid no attention to his explanation. Eyam was most famous as the Plague Village, right? So what else would you choose as a suitable souvenir to commemorate the Black Death? It was obvious, really. A black, plastic rat, with red eyes and a long, scaly tail.

  The young Cooper had thought it was a fine example of Rattus rattus, the Black Rat – now one of the rarest mammals in the UK, thanks to its more successful cousin, the brown rat. The souvenir rat even came with its own information leaflet, explaining that this was the little beast that had spread from Asia to Europe in the Middle Ages, bringing its little gift of the bubonic plague. In dark corners of barns and warehouses it could be active at all hours, and ate almost anything it could find, its family groups organized on a hierarchical basis, dominated by one strong individual. They carried not only the plague, but typhus, rabies, salmonella, hantavirus, Weil’s disease … oh, and trichinosis, the pork roundworm. Thank God the natural mortality rate of rats was ninety per cent.

 

‹ Prev