Autographs in the Rain
Page 22
a proper video system.'
'Who says?'
'I say. We say. The police, who are expending considerable time and
money investigating the consequences of other farmers too shortsighted
to invest in proper protection against theft. We say you'll have to, and you
can be dead certain that the insurance companies will back us up.'
The woman flared up again, her Latin eyes flashing. 'You can't threaten
me like that.'
Martin grinned at her, amused by her reaction. 'Sure I can,' he told her.
'I can back it up too. Don't make me have to; install that equipment.'
She seemed to capitulate; finally she smiled at him. 'Okay, okay,' she
exclaimed, raising her hands in token of defeat. Til need to speak to Mr
John, my bank manager, maybe . . . it's really him who runs this place ...
but I'll do it.'
'Is that Andrew John?' the detective asked.
'Yes. His office is in Edinburgh, but he comes to see me down here.'
'I know Andrew; I'll speak to him, tell him what the situation is. I
shouldn't think there will be a problem.'
The smile left her face in an instant. 'No!' she snapped. 'You no' do
that. That's my business; I'll deal with it.'
'Okay then, but you make sure you do. I'm going to send Detective
Sergeant McGurk back here on Friday; I'll expect you to show him a
functioning video setup.'
'If you say so,' she grumbled. 'But I have an alarm; I have a video system.
Kath,' she called to another, younger, woman, who was loading feed into a
dispenser. She stopped, laid down the big paper sack, and walked towards
them, a big strong-looking girl in the inevitable black rubber boots.
'This is Kath Adey,' said the Spanish farmer. 'She's my manager, and
she lives here.' She pointed to a cottage on the far side of the tank complex.
'She sees everything, and she has a loud voice to shout "Help", if she needs
to. Don't you, Kath?'
Sure do, Mercy. You want to hear?' she asked the policeman.
I'll take your word for it. Have you got plenty of groceries in that
cottage?'
The manager frowned. 'I need milk, but otherwise I'm okay. Why?'
'Because if you're the only alarm system this place has for now, you
cannot leave it until proper equipment is installed and running. Whatever
happens, suppose you have an emergency call telling you that your granny's
house is on fire and she's stuck on the roof, you do not leave that stock
unguarded. Clear?'
The woman frowned at him, and nodded. 'Clear.'
'Do you have the number of the police station in Coldstream?'
'It's in the book, isn't it?'
'Look it up. Keep it handy. Just in case. I'm not saying that anything
will happen, but still... It'd be nice if you and Ms Alvarez could get these
fish to market rather than have someone else do it.'
He looked back at the Spanish owner. 'Friday, remember.'
She sighed. 'Okay, Friday. You send your man back on Friday.'
He gave her a friendly smile and made to turn back towards his car.
'He'll be here,' he said. 'Count on it.'
He drove carefully back down the rough track, turning at last on to a
road which led to and through the border town of Coldstream. As soon as
he was in open country, he eased his speed and dialled the central number
of the Bank of Scotland.
He had to speak to two successive switchboard operators, human screens
between bank managers and an admiring public, before finally he was put
through to Andrew John's office.
'I'm sorry, Mr Martin,' the banker's secretary told him, 'but Mr John's
out of the office until Thursday. He has a series of meetings in England.'
'Too bad. I need to talk to him about one of his clients. Make me an
appointment first thing on Thursday. I'll come to him.'
Q46
Age for age, Naomi McConnell was as attractive as her daughter; from
Ruth's disclosure of the age difference between her parents David
Mackenzie knew that she was in her early sixties, but she could have passed
for ten years younger. He found it hard to believe that she had been retired
from teaching for two years.
'This is very distressing,' she said, as she ushered the policeman into the
sitting room of her neat bungalow on the outskirts of the seaside town of
Ayr. In common with most Glaswegians, he had been taken there by his
parents as a boy; in common with many, he had not been back since.
'For all that he was eighty, I was really shocked when I heard that he was
dead. With all that golf he played, he always struck me as such a fit man
that I thought he'd go on for ever. Now, to learn that there was something
suspicious about it...
'Ruth told me that someone drowned him in his bath!' she exclaimed.
- 'We don't know that for sure, Mrs McConnell,' the policeman cautioned.
'It's a possibility, but it'll probably never be any more than that. There
were no signs offeree on the body when we found it; we do believe that he
was drugged though.'
'Drugged?' She looked and sounded astonished.
'We suspect that he may have been taking tranquillisers, or possibly
having these administered to him.'
'My God. What sort of a world is this? Or what sort of a world was he
living in?'
'That's exactly what we have to find out. That's why I'm here; to ask
you what you knew of your brother-in-law.'
Ruth's mother drew herself up in her chair. 'As much as I wanted to, and
that wasn't much. I hope I'm not incriminating myself here, but I never
liked John McConnell. The last time I saw him was at Max's funeral... my
husband's funeral... five years ago. Since then we've exchanged Christmas
cards, but that's been it.'
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AUTOGRAPHS IN THE RAIN
'Why did you dislike him?' Mackenzie asked.
'I don't know for sure, but it was instant, I can tell you that. There was
something creepy about him; I remember the way he looked at me this first
time we met, and a few times after when I caught him off guard. I felt as if
he was sizing me up.'
Tm sorry to be blunt, but do you mean sexually?'
'That's exactly what I mean. I felt as if the man was undressing me with
his eyes.'
'What about his wife?' he asked. 'What was she like?'
'Cecily?' Naomi McConnell threw back her head in a gesture which
David Mackenzie had seen in her daughter. 'I never knew whether to feel
sorry for him, or for her. In the end, I suppose I felt sorry for them both.
They endured a sad, barren marriage for almost forty years, and they always
seemed bored in each other's company. Max and I visited them as a duty
rather than a pleasure, and entertained them on the same basis.'
The detective looked at her. 'Did Mr McConnell's attentions to you ever
go beyond glances?' he asked, cautiously.
She drew in her breath. 'Well, I learned early on never to dance with
him,' she snorted, with remembered indignation. 'In fact, I remember once,
oh, nearly twenty years ago, at a party we had here when Max retired, I saw
him dancing with Ruth. She was barely in her teens then, but she was a
well developed girl. I probab
ly let her over-dress a bit that night; she was
gorgeous and didn't even know it.
'Anyway, as I said, I saw John dancing with her, and I just wasn't having
it, so I walked over to the record player and stopped the music. He looked
at me afterwards, and it was the only guilty look I ever had from him. I
thought about asking Ruth if anything... anything untoward had happened,
but she didn't seem flustered so I let it lie.'
'Your suspicions were spot on though.' Mackenzie blurted the words
out in spite of himself.
'You mean ...'
He nodded. 'Ruth told me exactly the same story yesterday. In the
circumstances, and given her age, she seems to have handled it pretty
well.
'Tell me,' he continued quickly, 'how did your husband feel about his
brother?'
'Max tolerated John, but they were never close, by any stretch of the
imagination. No, there was something between them. He never said so
1
outright, and I never asked him, but I think that he either suspected or knew
that John had had an affair with Lorna, his first wife. Mind you, to listen to
Max talk about her you'd think she'd had everything in trousers. He was
very hurt when she left him, and he stayed bitter about her for the rest of his
life.
'She went off with a man John worked beside, in fact. Max held a bit of
a grudge over that too.' She paused. 'Now he did feel sorry for Cecily; he
thought it was sad that such an obviously a-sexual woman like her should
be married to a man like him.
'I asked him once why they'd married in the first place, all he said was
"Respectability". He believed that his brother was promiscuous; he even
said to me that he thought he probably cruised the red light district of
Glasgow in that big car of his.'
'So all in all, Mrs McConnell, you did not regard your brother-in-law as
a very nice man,' the detective summed up.
'Not a bit,' she agreed. 'He was mean too. "As tight as a fish's ..." Max
used to say.' She laughed.
'And yet, in the last few months of his life, he gave away all his money
and virtually all of his possessions of value . . . everything apart from his
Naomi gasped. 'Ruth didn't tell me that. If that's the case, I can only
suppose that the old fool compromised himself with a woman in some way,
and that she blackmailed him.'
'Maybe,' Bandit Mackenzie murmured. 'But if she was blackmailing
him, why did she take a video camera into his house, on the day he died?
That's the biggest mystery of all.'
They looked at each other across the room.
'You said that your husband's first wife went off with a workmate of his
brother.'
'Colleague,' Mrs McConnell laughed. 'John was management and never
slow to let you know it. He didn't have workmates. But yes, Lorna went off
with a colleague. I never knew his name though, and Max never mentioned
it.'
'Perhaps John kept in touch with her.'
'Quite possibly, but she can't tell you anything now. She died about
fifteen years ago. I remember John phoning to tell Max about it, to see if
he wanted to go to her funeral. As far as I know, he didn't even send
flowers.'
160
'Damn,' said the policeman, his frustration showing. 'Another closed
door. I tell you Mrs McConnell; your brother-in-law couldn't have covered
his tracks better if he'd tried.'
162
47
Way back, when the world was young and James Proud was merely an
Assistant Chief Constable, he met a young CID officer whose vision,
commitment, and intensity were such that he made a bigger impression on
him than any man had ever done before. He had marked that young man as
one who, some day, would command the force, and from that time on had
taken a personal interest in his career development.
Bob Skinner had known nothing of this at the time; he had been totally
focused on his twin ambitions of cracking every crime he confronted and,
possibly even more difficult, raising, as a lone parent, his young daughter
to womanhood. He had been given time in each CID posting to gather
experience and establish his track record, but once he had come within
sight of the top of the ladder the rest of his climb had been rapid.
As Sir James Proud looked at him across the coffee table in his spacious
office, he knew that only one act remained to bring about the final fulfilment
of his vision; his own retirement and the installation of his protege as Chief
Constable.
Yet it was something which the two men had discussed only tentatively
in the past, and never once in those conversations had the deputy allowed
himself to anticipate the time when he would sit permanently in the Chief's
chair.
Even after an extended period in charge, during his boss's enforced
absence on sick leave, Skinner had subtly avoided any detailed discussion
of the future, or at least of the post-Proud era; so much so that the veteran
wondered whether he might have developed an agenda of his own.
If he had, Proud mused, it was unlikely that Assistant Chief Constable
Theodore Chase featured in it prominently, if at all. Bob Skinner was almost
invariably tolerant of the views of others; he demeaned his own skills as a
man manager, yet he had gathered around him the most gifted team of
detectives on any British force, and in spite of his own inclination to keep
hands on, had given them the leeway they needed to achieve results.
Ted Chase, though, was the exception; rule-defying, rather than rule
proving. From the moment that he had settled himself into Jim Elder's old
chair, the newcomer to the Fettes Command Corridor had set out an agenda
which seemed to have been designed to challenge Skinner's position and
authority.
His peremptory appointment of Jack Good had started the rot; technically,
the Chief could have vetoed it, but Chase during his excellent interview
had subtly established that, in the event of his appointment, he would have
some say in the choice of his personal staff.
TJien there was his paper; his damnably well-crafted paper on the
conimand structure of the force, and of the benefits of the Deputy being a
mirror image of the Chief Constable, rather than someone whose different
attributes and skills ... however admirable they might be, as the document
had made a point of acknowledging ... had in the past caused crises in the
relationship between the police command and the elected board which
supervised its operations.
Proud Jimmy had hoped that Chase would have backed off, if not in the
face of Skinner's clear hostility, then of his own mildly discouraging signals.
But he had not; the man's ambition was built of strong materials. The old
Chief had bought time by the simple ruse of saying that he wished to give
Chase a chance to find his feet in Edinburgh, while he considered his
thoughts at length.
He knew that this was merely postponing the crisis point, the moment
when he would either have to tell Chase to fall into line, or put his paper up
for discussion
by the Board. Had no other considerations applied, he would,
of course, have told the ACC what to do with his paper on Day One. However,
he had more than a suspicion that, if he did that, Jack Good might carelessly
allow a copy to fall into the hands of Councillor Agnes Maley, Bob Skinner's
arch enemy. Although Sir James had contrived to have Maley removed