Those Who Feel Nothing
Page 1
Table of Contents
Cover
A Selection of Recent Titles by Peter Guttridge
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Epilogue
Author’s Note
A Selection of Recent Titles by Peter Guttridge
The Brighton Mystery Series
CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT *
THE LAST KING OF BRIGHTON *
THE THING ITSELF *
THE DEVIL’S MOON *
THOSE WHO FEEL NOTHING *
The Nick Madrid Series
NO LAUGHING MATTER
A GHOST OF A CHANCE
TWO TO TANGO
THE ONCE AND FUTURE CON
FOILED AGAIN
CAST ADRIFT
* available from Severn House
THOSE WHO FEEL NOTHING
The Fifth Brighton Mystery
Peter Guttridge
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain and the USA 2014 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
19 Cedar Road, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM2 5DA.
eBook edition first published in 2014 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Copyright © 2014 by Peter Guttridge.
The right of Peter Guttridge to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Guttridge, Peter
Those who feel nothing.
1. Murder–Investigation–England–Brighton–Fiction.
2. Cambodia–Antiquities–Fiction. 3. Detective and
mystery stories.
I. Title
823.9’2-dc23
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8360-5 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-545-1 (ePub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This eBook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
For my friend and mentor Stephen Fleming.
Another good man gone.
‘The world belongs to those who feel nothing.’
Fernando Pessoa
PROLOGUE
You’re waiting for your tailoring to arrive, sitting in the now quiet shop. Bales of silk, cotton, linen and mohair line the walls around you. It is humid. A sluggish fan above your head scarcely stirs the thick air. The sweat pops from your pores.
Under the glass top of the low table in front of you, business cards from all over the world are laid out. You have been encouraged to leave one yourself but you do not have one. You look at the ones that are there.
Alix De St Albin from some French recruitment consultancy has left his or hers. Lorenzo Monticello is in Italian water filtration. A couple of American dentists have ‘selfies’ with toothy white smiles on their cards testifying to their orthodontic skills. Academics from newer universities in the UK are there in abundance.
All have come to this shop in this little town on the coast of Vietnam to take advantage of its rapid, cut-price tailoring. The town of Hoi An is known for it. Cheap knock-offs of expensive western clothes and designs done in a day.
You ordered a suit last night. There were various things wrong with it this morning. Too tight on the chest. Too long in the sleeves. Pockets too shallow.
Your eye catches a card from Brighton. Brighton, Australia. Trudy Smart, Human Resources Executive.
Here’s another Brighton card you almost miss. Brighton, England. You look at it intently. An address in the Lanes. You look around. Nobody is paying you any attention. You reach down and slide the card from underneath the glass of the table. You turn it over. Another office in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Your suit arrives for your final fitting. You don’t even look at it. You thrust a wad of US dollars in the hands of the startled manager of the shop and take the suit. You stumble out into the noisy street. It’s hectic, bustling. The town is celebrating the full moon tonight so all electric lights are turned off. Paper lanterns illuminate the streets. Candles in hundreds of tiny paper boats have been set adrift on the river. It is a beautiful sight but you’re not in the mood for beauty.
You barge your way through the crowds, rattle across the rickety boards of the medieval Japanese bridge, ignoring the soft lights floating below you to the sea.
You’re in a daze all the way back to the old wooden merchant’s house that is your hotel.
In a daze when you drop the suit on a chair and grab the gin from your suitcase, and when you straighten out the business card crumpled in your hand and stare at it by the wavering light of the candles that have been lit about your room.
You look at the Brighton number on the card and check your mobile for a signal. You try for an international line on the telephone by your bed. Nothing available right now. You’re drenched in sweat so grab towels from the bathroom. You lie down on one and mop your face with the other, balancing the glass of gin on your chest. The man on reception phones back. He has a line and can put you through. You repeat the number to him and after clicks and tunnel sounds the number rings, surprisingly loud in your ear. You wonder what you will say if the telephone is answered.
There is another click and a voice on an answerphone message. Deeper than you remember. Older, of course. Tired, too – but then the voice has been travelling a long time. It has been travelling for thirty-five years.
ONE
Constable George Stanford liked the night shift. Aside from the money for unsocial hours he enjoyed the dark, especially here on the other side of the South Downs. He enjoyed the sight of a fox or a badger in the flare of the headlights. Occasionally he saw a wild-eyed deer, although he’d nearly wrecked the patrol car once avoiding one that had unexpectedly leaped out in front of him.
But three in the morning by the railway line in Hassocks on copper cable thieving watch was nobody’s idea of a good time. Certainly not grumpy Constable Dennis Richardson with whom he’d been lumbered for the past six months. Stanford hated time-servers.
Richardson was grumbling about something or other – Stanford had tuned out ages ago – when they both saw a medium-height man with what looked like a heavy bag climbing over a fence on to the railway embankment.
‘Where the hell did he come from?’ Stanford said, nudging Richardson.
‘It’s where he’s going we need to worry about,’ Richardson said, opening his door.
Stanford followed.
Although both policemen were careful, the man turned, either at the sud
den flash of light or at the sound of the car doors closing in the still night.
‘Excuse me, sir,’ Stanford called, his voice oddly amplified by the darkness.
The man didn’t hesitate a moment. He dropped off the fence, abandoned his bag and set off at a run.
‘Bugger,’ Richardson said.
‘You get the bag, I’ll go after him,’ Stanford said.
God, he hated chasing people when he was weighed down with all the stuff the modern copper was lumbered with. Clanking and clattering along, he heard Richardson get back in the car and start to follow. The man ducked away from the embankment and ran into a side street.
Stanford was a fit bloke. He ran on the treadmill in the gym three times a week. But all this bloody clobber hanging off him sapped him within a hundred yards.
By the time he got on to the side street the man had disappeared. He stopped and listened for the sound of the man’s running feet. He could hear him – but where? He knew Hassocks well. A man could easily lose himself in the network of streets.
‘Bugger it,’ Stanford said.
Richardson pulled up alongside him. Stanford climbed back in the car.
‘Judging by the clobber in his bag he’s a copper thief all right,’ Richardson said as he turned into the side street.
They crisscrossed the streets for ten minutes, windows down, listening for footfalls. They didn’t see or hear a soul.
‘Let’s leave it,’ Richardson said. ‘We’ve done our duty – prevented a crime. And we can probably get some prints off the gear.’
He pulled on to the main road through Hassocks and headed towards Ditchling. As they came into the snake bend at Keymer, Stanford pointed at a car parked half on the pavement in front of the gates of Keymer church. The boot was open.
‘He’s after the copper in the church now,’ Stanford said.
Richardson pulled up about ten yards down the road, also half on the pavement, and both policemen started back towards the car. Stanford glanced to his right, into the churchyard. He nudged Richardson. They stopped to watch as a light moved across the front of the church and disappeared around the side.
The wall was low and both men climbed over. Stanford grimaced as he splattered a slug with his hand. He wiped his palm on his trousers as Richardson pointed him to the left of the church. Richardson set off the other way to follow the torchlight.
Stanford moved cautiously between old gravestones. He had his torch in his hand but didn’t want to use it yet. He didn’t need to. It had been a cloudy night but suddenly a shaft of moonlight illuminated the ground in front of him.
Stanford looked at a mound of earth. He stepped closer and looked down into an open grave. He shone his torch into it. It took him a moment to make sense of the rotten planks pushed aside and the pale skull embedded in mud. Then someone pushed him hard in the middle of his back and he fell, forward and down.
Bob Watts was back. The disgraced poster boy for modern policing examined his face in his bathroom mirror as he pulled off his running gear. Not too bad, Bobby boy. The ex-chief constable of Southern Police had assumed his career in policing was dead in its tracks after the debacle of what the press dubbed the Milldean Massacre, in which armed police had shot and killed apparently innocent people. But now, thanks to stupid politicians who didn’t understand policing but liked headlines, he was a law enforcer again.
Admittedly, his route was via an apathetic public, uninterested in what the politicians had foisted on them. But that didn’t matter. He had won his election fair and square.
He might think the politicians were misguided but their decision gave him a new opportunity to make a difference. He hadn’t thought the new, elected post of Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) was a good fit for the way policing was done in Britain but if the Southern Force was going to have a PCC, he was going to be it. He genuinely believed he was the best man for the job. And even if he wasn’t he wanted it.
He had scheduled a private meeting for late morning with Chief Constable Karen Hewitt, his deputy back in the day, but he expected to encounter her before then at the champagne breakfast for the launch of the annual Royal Escape boat race from Brighton to Fécamp. That could be awkward.
Karen had taken over when he’d been fired as chief constable. He could guess how she’d feel about him being her boss again. He was eager to get started; she would be less eager.
After his shower he stepped on to the balcony of his newly purchased Brighton apartment and breathed in the salt air. He looked at the dozens of yachts and motor boats and sailing ships bobbing on the tide a couple of hundred yards out. They would set off at seven a.m. for the annual race that notionally commemorated the famous escape to France of the future Charles II after his defeat at the Battle of Worcester. Watts knew the story well because he had heard it so many times.
Charles hid in an oak tree for one night – this act bestowing on the future a myriad of pubs called the Royal Oak – then made his desperate way to Brighton where a local fisherman, Nicholas Tettersell, had been hired to take him from Shoreham to France. When Tettersell realized who he was carrying he demanded more money.
Watts could imagine that might have pissed the future king off, but on his return to England Charles had rewarded Tettersell and the skipper had died a relatively wealthy man.
Tettersell was buried in the graveyard of St Nicholas’s Church up on the Dyke Road, his memorial the oldest in the oldest church in Brighton. His grave had been despoiled a couple of years ago, one of a number during a strange black magic thing going on in the town.
Watts looked down at the seafront lights and the lamps strung along the stubby finger of the Palace Pier.
This was his city. He was back.
Breakfast for Detective Inspector Sarah Gilchrist was unusually healthy. Muesli, mixed berries, yogurt and honey washed down with a big pot of green tea. She ate it on the balcony of her flat, looking down into the pretty communal garden below.
She stretched out her long legs and wiggled her bare toes. There was redness around them. She’d done a brisk run earlier in new trainers that had chafed a bit.
It was the first day of the rest of her life. She didn’t necessarily believe in such markers but a number of things had happened at once to make it seem that her life was moving into a new phase.
From today she was officially confirmed as a detective inspector, after acting the role for six months. Her friend, Kate Simpson, who had been sleeping on the sofa bed in recent months, had moved out yesterday. Although Gilchrist had been happy to help Kate, and had enjoyed her company, getting her flat back felt great.
She cleared away her breakfast things, showered and dressed in a new trouser suit she’d forced herself to shop for at the weekend. She’d gritted her teeth a few months before to buy another trouser suit that she’d thought would last her a couple of years.
However, in her job she expected the unexpected, and she had not been disappointed. That suit had been binned about a week after its purchase when a bag of faeces had been dropped on her. She gave a little laugh as she muttered to herself: ‘As so often happens in life.’
She much preferred her regular uniform of jeans, T-shirt and leather jacket, but the region’s first PCC was coming into the office today so she felt she should make an effort.
Daft, really, given Bob Watts, the new PCC, had seen her naked more than once during their brief and unsatisfactory affair. In recent months they’d reached a friendly, companionable state of being – albeit one with a soupçon of sexual tension. She wasn’t sure how their friendship would play out now, given his new status.
She’d acknowledged him an hour or so earlier as their paths crossed running in opposite directions in tracksuit (hers) and shorts (his). She knew he’d got a swanky seafront flat with the money from the sale of his father’s Thames-side house in London, but she hadn’t seen it yet.
She heard the sharp beep of a car horn below her balcony and waved down at her colleague, Detective Sergea
nt Bellamy Heap, before locking the French windows. They were off to interview a club owner on Marina Drive.
She gave herself the final once-over in the hall mirror and let herself out of the flat. Just as she was closing the door she went back in and grabbed two chocolate bars from a drawer in the hall table. Being virtuous about healthy food was all well and good but no point being silly about it.
‘Here’s to Nicholas Tettersell, who made this possible.’ The ruddy-faced man in the navy blazer and slacks raised his champagne flute to the assembled company.
‘Nicholas Tettersell,’ the company said in ragged unison as they drank his health.
Watts took only the smallest sip of his champagne. Drinking at six-thirty a.m. on an empty stomach was not something that appealed. He glanced round. That creep Bernard Rafferty, Director of the Royal Pavilion, looked like he was having trouble staying awake as he stood beside Karen Hewitt on the opposite side of the room. Well, she could be hard going.
Hewitt sensed Watts was looking and tilted her glass at him, a knowing smile on her face.
They were in a high-ceilinged, long-windowed room of a newly refurbished seafront hotel. A lavish breakfast buffet was laid out along one wall. There were about sixty people clustered near and on the room-length balcony looking out at the fleet of boats ready to sail.
Watts was with the new leader of the council, an affable but ruthless politician. ‘Good to have you back in policing, Bob,’ he said. ‘Much missed.’ He gestured discreetly towards Karen Hewitt. ‘Not that the chief constable isn’t doing a grand job …’
Watts gave a non-committal smile. He didn’t expect the leader to be sexist, so he assumed there must be some other reason for the veiled comment. He looked out at the sun glittering on the water. ‘That’s a remarkable range of boats and yachts,’ he said.
‘Gaff-rigged, solo and motorised,’ the ruddy-faced man said, coming up beside them. ‘We’ve got them all.’ As he shook hands with the leader he handed Watts a pair of binoculars. ‘But look at that one just coming past the end of the West Pier. It’s steam-powered.’