‘I touched the lid,’ Jonas said quietly.
Reynolds rolled his eyes. ‘I’ll tell him.’
Marvel returned, holding the lid by an edge.
‘Jonas found a button on the roof,’ said Foster with just the right note of submission.
Reynolds raised an interested eyebrow, but it was wasted on Marvel.
‘I don’t give a shit if Jonas found the fucking Rosetta Stone on the roof. I want to know what happened to the vomit.’
‘I don’t know, sir,’ said Jonas when it became clear Marvel expected a response and that Foster was too cowed to give one.
‘It was your job to keep the scene secure. Your fucking job!’
Jonas flared a little. ‘With respect, sir, you said my job was to stand on the doorstep and wait for the killer to come back.’ From the corner of his eye, Jonas saw Foster and Reynolds exchange puzzled looks. Good. Let them know Marvel was a prick.
Marvel glared at him, then turned away dismissively and muttered darkly, ‘Can’t protect a puddle of fucking sick …’
Nobody knew what had happened – and no amount of haranguing from Marvel could enlighten them. Finally he jerked his head at Reynolds and stalked away down the garden in his porous shoes. When Reynolds caught him up and asked where they were going next, he told him they were going to put the squeeze on Peter Priddy.
Jonas helped Mike Foster put his bags into his car and almost felt like hugging him goodbye. He was the first sensible official Jonas had met on the case.
*
Squeezing Peter Priddy didn’t go quite to plan.
For a start, Peter Priddy blubbing in his dead mother’s kitchen while in search of Jaffa Cakes was a very different person from Prison Officer Priddy, angry, embarrassed and defensive about being pulled off shift on a wing full of nosey cons to speak to homicide detectives.
Marvel squeezed and Priddy pushed back and the worry lines on Reynolds’s brow got deeper and more indicative of imminent hair loss the more evident it became that they were really just there taking a flyer.
‘Of course my hairs are going to be on the bed!’ said Priddy. ‘She’s my mother! I don’t stand at the door and shout at her!’
‘But you didn’t visit her on Saturday night?’
‘I told you.’
‘Were you in Shipcott on Saturday at all?’
‘No! I told you!’
Marvel nodded slowly as if he agreed 100 per cent with what Peter Priddy had told them. ‘Because we have a witness who saw your car parked on Barnstaple Road at …’ He stopped for Reynolds to fill him in on the details but never took his eyes off Peter Priddy’s face, so was perfectly placed to see the big man’s fair skin flush a deep red.
‘Between 8.45pm and 6am,’ supplied Reynolds.
‘Bollocks!’ Priddy pushed his chair back from the staffroom table with a loud rasp.
‘We have a witness,’ said Marvel with a careless shrug.
‘Who? Where? They’re lying.’
‘No need to get agitated, Mr Priddy,’ said Marvel in a tone guaranteed to agitate.
‘Fuck off.’
‘Are you saying you weren’t there, Mr Priddy?’
‘Yes I am.’
Marvel raised his eyebrows in open disbelief. ‘Well, maybe they’re mistaken.’
‘Yes they bloody are. Or mischief-making.’
‘Why would anyone want to make mischief with you, Mr Priddy?’ said Marvel. ‘You’ve just lost your mother in the saddest of circumstances. Why would anyone want to make life harder for you?’
Peter Priddy got up, not looking at Marvel or Reynolds. ‘I don’t know. Like you said, people are sick. I have to get back to work.’
‘Mr Priddy,’ said Reynolds soothingly, ‘we’re just going through a process of elimination. We’re speaking to everybody like this.’
‘Bollocks.’
‘We are,’ said Reynolds, hoping it would be true before too long. He looked at Marvel for confirmation and got a grudging nod. ‘It’s our job. You’re in law enforcement, Mr Priddy; you understand. We’re on the same team here.’
The flattery worked and Priddy softened a little. ‘Yeah. OK.’
Some of the tension drained from the room.
Reynolds cleared his throat. ‘Before you go, I wonder if I could ask you for a DNA sample?’
Priddy stared at the two men with undisguised disgust. Reynolds looked away and got out the kit. In silence he got the swabs from the sterile plastic. In silence, Peter Priddy opened his mouth and allowed Reynolds to scrape the inside of his cheek.
‘I’ve got to get back to work. And you do too, because the more time you waste with me, the more time you’re not trying to catch the man who killed my mother. And that really pisses me off.’
In the silence that followed him slamming the door behind him, Reynolds closed his notebook, turned his palms upwards and sighed. ‘Can’t blame him, I suppose.’
‘I’ll blame him for whatever the bloody hell I want,’ snapped Marvel.
As if Reynolds didn’t know that.
On their way out, the prison staff were noticeably less friendly than they had been on the way in.
Eighteen Days
Annette Rogers had been interviewed at the scene and had already moved on to care full-time for an elderly man in Minehead, but Gary Liss and Lynne Twitchett both worked part-time in Shipcott at Sunset Lodge, a large detached stone house in its own grounds set back from the road and conveniently adjoining the graveyard behind the church. As they got out of the car, Marvel wondered at the horror of growing old and infirm within a geriatric stone’s throw of your final resting place.
The home’s owner, Rupert Cooke, was a chubby, happy-faced man with the habit of bending slightly forward and turning his head attentively when he listened, even though Marvel wasn’t seated in a wheelchair. He offered Marvel and Reynolds his office for privacy and Reynolds thanked him politely.
‘I’ll give Lynne and Gary a shout,’ he said.
‘Don’t,’ said Marvel. ‘We’ll find them. Have a look around at the same time.’
‘If you don’t mind,’ added Reynolds hurriedly.
‘Of course,’ said Cooke. ‘Be my guests.’
‘Not for a while, I hope,’ said Marvel drily. Too drily, apparently, as nobody laughed.
He and Reynolds wandered through the large airy rooms where a few residents sat and did jigsaws or knitted. An old man with an oxygen mask on and ears so big he looked like a spaniel peered fixedly at an enormous television with the sound down so low that it was all but inaudible. Seemed that past a certain age, one functioning sense at a time was all any resident could really expect to enjoy.
Reynolds peered into a large aquarium. ‘They’ve got a Japanese fighting fish in here. Beautiful.’
Marvel ignored him. Ridiculous hobby, fish-keeping. Making yourself a slave to guppies.
A middle-aged woman in a blue uniform bustled towards them and Marvel stopped and raised his eyebrows. ‘Lynne Twitchett?’
‘In the garden room, I think,’ smiled the woman, pointing in the direction they were already heading.
The majority of the residents were in the garden room and Marvel understood why the moment they entered. It was hot. Saharan hot – even in the middle of winter. With its long windows and glass roof, the garden room was no more or less than a greenhouse for cultivating old folk. And it seemed to be working. At least two dozen old women with identical hair sat around the perimeter of the room, sunning themselves like lizards in wing chairs, sucking up the heat as if they’d outlived the capacity to make their own. Several of them wore hand-knitted cardigans and crocheted knee-rugs just to be on the safe side. A large tin of cheap biscuits was being passed around the room and examined at each station as if it were the Holy Grail. Ahead of the tin was all craning white heads and expectant muttering, behind it was silence and crumbs.
Lynne Twitchett sat at the upright piano against the far wall of the room, playing a faltering version o
f ‘Jingle Bells’ while perched on a piano stool. At least, Marvel assumed that was what she was sitting on. From behind it looked as if Lynne Twitchett’s giant blue arse had simply sprouted four spindly wooden legs, so completely had her bulk consumed the rest of the furniture.
Reynolds leaned in to him and murmured, ‘Who ate all the Jaffa Cakes?’ – the first funny thing Marvel had ever heard come out of his mouth.
They talked to Lynne Twitchett for less than five minutes in the office. Her near-impenetrable Somerset accent made her sound like one of Marvel’s yokels, but even Reynolds felt it was less a misleading anomaly than the cherry on the top of her dubious intellect.
Marvel loved dumb people. If guilty, they either confessed or were so transparent in their lies that there was never any doubt about their culpability. Similarly, if they were innocent it shone through despite their nerves or their rambling or their accidental self-incriminatory statements. Dumb people were a breeze and Lynne Twitchett was right up there with the breeziest he’d encountered. Added to which, he had discounted her as a suspect the moment they saw her; the thought of Ms Twitchett tiptoeing unnoticed past Annette Rogers, or bounding gracefully on to the lean-to roof, was comical. Reynolds thanked her and released her back into the greenhouse, where she would no doubt grow even bigger on a mulch of the residents’ biscuits.
They found Gary Liss changing beds upstairs, where it was cooler and apparently empty of old folk.
Gary Liss was nothing like Marvel had imagined. He was a small and lithe thirty-five-year-old. He had dark hair, an olive complexion and narrow blue eyes. He looked like a circus acrobat who had been reassigned to bedpans and taken to them like a duck to water. He didn’t miss a beat while they talked, and his military bed-making was hypnotic to watch. Marvel and Reynolds followed him from room to room asking their questions, and Gary Liss stripped beds, bundled dirty sheets, shook out fresh ones and then wound mattresses in them as neat and as tight as if he was working in the gift-wrap department of the Great Pyramid at Giza. Marvel wondered how the hell the old folk managed to fight their way between the top and bottom sheets every night, and had a mental image of residents spending years shivering above the covers, too frail to gain entry to their own beds.
Despite the efficiency of recall that his phenomenal work-rate promised, Gary Liss was almost as useless as Lynne Twitchett when it came to the details leading up to Margaret Priddy’s death. He had been on the early shift before she was killed – seven in the morning until three in the afternoon – and had gone to the pictures that night.
‘Alone?’ said Marvel.
‘No,’ said Liss, then volunteered, ‘with my girlfriend.’
‘What did you see?’
‘Some old French crap at the art-house place.’
‘Not a film buff?’ asked Reynolds.
‘Not all that foreign bollocks.’
‘Can you remember the title?’ persisted Marvel – it was a fact that could be checked.
‘Mister Somebody’s Vacation, I think.’
‘National Lampoon?’ suggested Marvel.
‘Nah, something French.’
‘Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday?’
Trust Reynolds.
‘Yeah,’ said Liss. ‘Total junk.’
‘I agree,’ said Marvel, although he hadn’t seen it. It was just to piss Reynolds off. ‘Give me Will Smith any day.’
‘Exactly,’ said Liss, turning a sheet over a blanket and tucking it in ruthlessly. ‘I, Robot.’
‘How about Dune?’
‘Yeah. You a fan?’
‘No. You left a book at Margaret Priddy’s.’
Liss looked blank for a second, then smiled. ‘That’s where it is!’
‘How did you get into this line of work?’ Marvel asked Liss as they moved to the next room. The man was starting to interest him.
Liss shrugged. ‘I cared for my father while he died. Lost my job because of it, so when I started looking again, it was just something I knew I could do.’
‘What did you do before that?’
‘Nothing special. Factory work. Glad to lose it, the way things worked out.’
‘What did your father die of?’ asked Reynolds.
‘Lung cancer,’ said Liss without emotion. ‘And I didn’t help him along, if that’s what you’re thinking.’ He winked at Reynolds, who at least had the decency to look embarrassed.
‘So how did you get on with Mrs Priddy?’ Marvel asked.
Liss looked a little confused by the sudden switch, but that was good – to catch them off balance …
‘Wasn’t much to get along with.’ He shrugged. ‘She couldn’t say anything or even let you know how she was feeling.’ He stopped bustling and stood still for the first time since they’d started talking to him. ‘It was fucking awful, ’scuse my French. I mean, the people in here, they’re old and lots are sick, but at least they can let you know what they want, but her …’ He picked a bundle of used sheets off the floor. ‘It was like she was already dead. If she hadn’t died I’d have left soon. Depressing.’
They followed him to the next bedroom.
‘You think maybe it was a mercy killing then?’ said Marvel carefully, but Liss was not fazed by the question.
‘Could be,’ he said and flapped open a new sheet.
‘You could understand something like that?’ Marvel asked.
Liss didn’t hesitate. ‘If she was my mother I’d have done it myself.’
Reynolds and Marvel didn’t speak for a long time as they drove back to the farm.
Reynolds broke the silence.
‘You think that was a confession? A kind of double bluff?’
‘I don’t know,’ said Marvel. It was not something he often admitted to, but on this occasion he felt it was OK to be a bit confused.
‘He had a door key, he hated the job, he obviously has no compunction about euthanasia …’
‘But to say it right out loud like that – to us!’
‘I know,’ said Reynolds. ‘He’d have to be a psychopath.’
Marvel shrugged. ‘Yes, he would.’
*
Less than an hour after Reynolds and Marvel got back to Springer Farm, Grey and Singh returned from interviewing Skew Ronnie Trewell and everyone crammed into Marvel’s room to hear how they’d got on.
‘It’s not him,’ said Grey.
‘Yeah, boss, I don’t think he’s our man,’ said Singh more tactfully.
Marvel was unwilling to let the only tentative lead they’d got from their sweep of the village go so easily.
‘He got an alibi?’
The two detectives exchanged looks.
‘Well, he says he was asleep,’ said Grey.
‘At home all night,’ added Singh.
‘Compelling,’ said Marvel sarcastically.
‘He just doesn’t seem the type, sir,’ said Grey. Then, when he saw Marvel’s face tighten angrily, he added, ‘I didn’t get a vibe off him. Nor did Armand,’ he said, turning to Singh, ‘did you?’
‘No,’ said Singh. ‘I didn’t get any vibe at all. The guy’s a car thief through and through. Obsessed. Couldn’t stop talking about them even while we were asking him about a murder!’
‘Yeah,’ added Grey. ‘His only interest in Mrs Priddy seemed to be that she used to own some sporty BMW.’
‘A three-litre CSi,’ remembered Singh.
‘Good car,’ said Grey approvingly and Pollard nodded in agreement.
Marvel glared at them all. He thought about Margaret Priddy dropping down through the cracks of society from horsewoman and BMW-owner to being bedridden while her savings ran out of her bank account like water from a punctured paddling pool. He thought about Peter Priddy and how he must have felt about that. He thought about Skew Ronnie Trewell and wondered if he should leave it at that or go and intimidate the little thief himself. It irked him that Jonas Holly had dismissed the man as a suspect; part of him wanted Ronnie Trewell to be the killer, for that reason alone. But
Grey and Singh were good men. He trusted their judgement. Usually. While these thoughts whizzed through his mind, his eyes never left the two DCs, who became more and more uncomfortable.
Unaware of Marvel’s train of thought, Singh decided to add another helpful observation. ‘He just didn’t seem … quite right, sir.’
‘No,’ said Grey, nodding in enthusiastic agreement. ‘Not quite right.’
Hearing Jonas Holly’s words echoed by Grey was what did it for Marvel. He made an all-purpose sound of disparagement, picked up the keys to the Ford Focus, and stomped out of the room to judge Ronnie Trewell for himself.
*
The boy was standing on the front step, squinting into the dim sun as it fell behind the moor. Ronnie Trewell was skinny and so gaunt he looked like an extra from a prison-camp movie. He had a shock of home-cut black hair, and a brow permanently creased by the confusion that was his life.
He saw Marvel pull up, threw down the roll-up he’d been smoking and backed towards the door.
‘I want to talk with you!’ Marvel yelled at him through the passenger window, and the boy stopped and waited.
Marvel liked a meek thief. He got out and went up the weed-strewn front path.
‘DCI Marvel,’ he said. ‘You Ronnie Trewell?’
‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘I haven’t done a thing. I spoke to your lot already. I haven’t done a thing. Is that a Zetec?’
Marvel was caught a little off-balance by the sudden change in direction. He glanced towards the Focus. ‘I haven’t come here to talk about cars, mate. Come about a murder.’
‘Yeah I know,’ shrugged Ronnie. ‘But I told the others about that already. Can I have a drive?’
As he spoke, he stepped off the porch and headed for the car. Marvel found himself in undignified pursuit.
‘No. Tell me where you were Saturday night.’
‘Here. Asleep. I said already. Just a quick one. You can come too. I’m not gonna nick a police car, am I? Not with you in it, anyway.’
‘Shut up about the fucking car, all right?’ Marvel was already starting to feel that he was wasting his time here. ‘You got any witnesses?’
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