by Wonny Lea
The Coopers Field Murder
Wonny Lea
The first novel in this series, Jack-Knifed, saw the introduction of Detective Chief Inspector Martin Phelps, together with his sidekick, Detective Sergeant Matt Pryor, and their team, investigating the horrendous murder of a gay man in Cardiff.
Now they are faced with a body found in Coopers Field, a Cardiff beauty spot – a naked body that has lain there so long it is almost unidentifiable. Pathology reports establish that the body is that of a woman – but who is she, and how did she die?
Local nurse Sarah Thomas, a helpful passer-by when the body is found, soon finds that she has another unexpected death to deal with – at Parkland Nursing Home where she works. Colin James, one of her favourite residents at the home, dies suddenly – but the reactions of those closest to him are surprising. Was Colin’s death due to natural causes – or is there something more sinister afoot at Parkland?
The Coopers Field Murder is the second in Wonny Lea’s DCI Martin Phelps series, set in the thriving Welsh capital city of Cardiff.
Contents
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
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter One
Body Discovered
The heavy rain that had been an almost constant feature throughout July had given way to intermittent warmish curtains of drizzle as the month drew to a close and visions of a glorious summer faded once again.
‘Maybe August will be better,’ suggested DS Matt Pryor, as he and his boss walked up the steps leading from the car park in Sophia Gardens and started to cross the bridge leading to Coopers Field. As they got to the middle of the bridge Matt looked in both directions, but what should have been a stunning view was limited to the short distance he could see through the miserable weather.
He bounced up and down and the bridge gently moved with him, making him smile. ‘My nieces call this the bouncy bridge,’ he told Detective Chief Inspector Martin Phelps. ‘You can see why – it really does feel a bit like a trampoline.’ He demonstrated further and the whole structure seemed to shake.
‘Yes, I get the picture,’ replied Martin. ‘Unstable bridges are not really my thing – so quit making it wobble and tell me exactly what Sergeant Evans said.’
Matt got back into step with Martin and the two men fell into their well-established pattern of briefing prior to their arrival at a crime scene.
‘Well, for once, he wasn’t the first on the scene,’ Matt began. ‘This time it was the dynamic duo of PC Davies and PC Cook-Watts, but the Evans team wasn’t far behind.’
‘The call came through to Goleudy at ten past seven this morning, and the first pair of officers was at the scene before twenty past, as they were already in the area. Apparently it was a dog walker that called, after her dog refused to bring back a ball that had been thrown for him – he chose instead to bark madly and sniff around a pile of discarded clothes. After a few minutes, and when he showed no signs of coming back to her, the woman went to drag the dog away from the clothes and that was when she found the dead body.
‘According to Sergeant Evans, the poor woman was in a hell of a state, as the body has apparently been there for some time with not a stitch on and with bits eaten off, presumably by rats or whatever animals lurk around here when the picnickers go home.’
‘Is it a man or a woman?’ asked Martin.
‘Sergeant Evans was in some doubt about that. It seems the genitals and the chest area are the most mutilated, so we won’t know for sure if the body is male or female until after the post-mortem. Professor Moore is already there and so is Alex Griffiths, and the message from both of them is that we are going to need our wellies – it’s apparently like a mud bath – what a good start to the week. No wonder I hate Mondays!’
The rain was actually easing off, and there was even a vague sighting of sun as the detectives walked through Bute Park, making their way along a path bordered to the left by a deep bed of seasonal flowers and a variety of shrubs. Martin reflected that it would be possible to walk this route every day and always be presented with a different canvas to admire. In spite of the dreadful wind and rain of the past month, the whole area had still managed to produce wave after wave of colour that contrasted and yet complemented one patch of flowers with another to make a perfect picture.
There were a number of benches, dotted at intervals in front of the flowerbeds, but the weather was not conducive to sitting on park benches and so they were all empty. To the right of the path were large areas of grass and several plots where shrubs and flowers had been planted carefully to produce the effect of having just been put there by Mother Nature.
The grey railings at the back of this area marked the bank of the River Taff and, looking around, Martin, not for the first time, told himself how lucky the people of Cardiff were to have such a terrific park at the very centre of their city. The trees, the flowers, the shrubs, and just the sheer open space – it was like a beautiful living picture.
What a shame that today they would have to be looking at a very different sight – one nothing like as pretty as a picture and certainly not living.
At the end of the path there was a choice of two directions – one going right and leading in to the city, with an offshoot to the landing platform for the Cardiff Castle waterbus, the other leading to Coopers Field. They took the left-hand option, walking away from the river. This immediately took them to a paved area, where more empty benches waited to welcome visitors to the park, and behind that a rather old-fashioned garden of five raised beds surrounded by paths. In the round central bed was what Martin thought looked like a shaped bay tree, but he was no tree expert – his guess was based on it looking like a much smaller version he had in his back garden. The four surrounding beds were shaped to form a small inner circle and a larger outer circle, with the edges framed by neatly cut low hedges and the middles full of pale pink roses.
The vast expanse of Coopers Field stretched to the right and to the left, bordered by a huge expanse of trees of variable types, shapes, and sizes. It was in this area where nature and nurture worked hand in hand that they sighted the cold reality of what they were looking for – the familiar white tent that signalled a crime scene.
As they got nearer they spotted another familiar sight in the form of Sergeant Evans, who was patrolling the outer edge of the surrounding area that was cordoned off with blue and white scene of crime tape.
A veteran in the procedure for protecting a crime scene, Sergeant Evans issued Martin and Matt with suits, masks, and boots before lifting the tape and allowing the senior officers through.
‘We were worried about Mrs Pattern, the woman who found the body, as we thought she was having a heart attack – but luckily a nurse walking to work, helped us out. She used the paper bag that her lunch was wrapped in and after Mrs Pattern had taken a couple of large breaths into the bag she recovered.
‘Since then we haven’t been able to stop her talking and, as you can see, PC Cook-Watts is standing over there with Mrs Pattern, still having her ear bent. The nurse has gone to work as she says they’re short of staff, but we have all her details and she’s prepared to give a statement or whatever is necessary.’
 
; ‘OK, thanks for that,’ said Martin as he focused his mind on the scene that would now unfold inside the white tent.
‘I won’t say good morning – it’s hardly that,’ said Alex as Phelps and Pryor walked under the canvas. ‘At least you’ve frightened off the rain. And is that pale yellow thing actually something called sun?’
Alex Griffiths greeted his colleagues and made a feeble attempt to lighten the atmosphere, knowing that the two detectives were about to witness an ugly, and what had struck him as a somewhat pathetic, sight.
‘The body hasn’t been moved yet as we knew you’d want to see it as it was found – but we have photographed extensively and taken samples of everything and anything that surrounds it. The professor is, as always, keen to get the body back to the laboratory and look for clues that will help us with identification and cause of death – we can’t even be sure at this stage, if we have the remains of a man or a woman.’
‘It’s a woman.’
The words came from the mouth of Professor Dafydd Moore, who was kneeling at the side of the body and who continued examining the head without saying another word.
No one was surprised at that as when it came to conversation at a crime scene the professor was best known for his silence. He had acknowledged the presence of the CID officers with just a nod of the head while continuing to be completely absorbed with the left hand side of the partly revealed skull.
Alex looked at Martin. ‘Well I’m not sure how he can tell the sex considering the state of the body, but if he says it’s a woman then I’ll put my next month’s salary on it being a woman – never known him say anything he isn’t able to substantiate.’
Being able to substantiate theories had seemingly always been a way of life for the professor. He was first and foremost an academic with a brilliant mind but unlike most of his university colleagues he was immensely practical and the combination of these two qualities made him a brilliant criminal pathologist.
It was the latter that for most people allowed them to excuse his personality, but did not prevent Matt from frequently referring to him as a ‘miserable old git’.
Martin knew better than to ask Prof. Moore a load of questions at this time. A man who was often silent, morose, and some would say downright rude, the professor would become more animated during the post-mortem and become a complete show off during his presentation of findings to the assembled murder enquiry team.
Although he believed he already knew the answer, there was one question Martin had to ask. ‘Do you think she died of natural causes?’
‘She was murdered! Her skull was hit hard on one side but I won’t know if that was the cause of death until I have done a full PM examination.’
Prof. Moore picked up his Gladstone bag, lifted the flap of the tent, and started to walk out when Martin risked another question. ‘How long has she been here?’
The prof. turned back and viewed Martin over the top of his half rimmed glasses. ‘I am not a clairvoyant, Detective Chief Inspector Phelps,’ was his reply. ‘I can’t tell you when she arrived at this exact spot but I can say she has been dead for some time – unlikely to be just days, could even be weeks – but the absence of flesh on the face and other parts is not just down to tissue decay, it has been eaten away by small animals. However, if you will let me get away, I will be able to offer you some scientific evidence rather than attempting to gaze into a non-existent crystal ball.’
On that note of sarcasm the professor left, and Alex shrugged his shoulders. ‘There is no denying the brilliance of that man, but an occasional smile or kind word wouldn’t go amiss. You should have been here when he first arrived – anyone would have thought I had personally and deliberately set out to ruin the start of his week.’
Martin turned his attention to the pile of clothes that had been partially scattered by the dog that had found them earlier. In spite of the fact that the shoes and one of the garments were strewn around, the majority of the clothes were in a peculiarly neat pile and looked to have been deliberately placed at the lower end of the body, close to the feet.
‘Was this how you found the clothes?’ asked Martin.
‘It’s exactly as we found them,’ replied Alex. ‘I would think that all the clothes including the shoes were originally placed together, and I guess the dog took the shoes off the top first and then pulled that jacket along by the sleeve. Everything else is very precisely folded and we should be able to get quite a bit of information from them.’
Matt had been looking over the body and pointed out the area of the skull where the woman was likely to have been bludgeoned. ‘It’s not a very big area,’ he remarked. ‘But then she isn’t very big, is she?’ He continued looking around and making random observations. ‘She definitely wasn’t very tall, and look at her shoes – they look quite new and what I would call very sensible. Certainly not the height of fashion.’
‘Could even be school shoes,’ suggested Alex. ‘So perhaps we aren’t looking at a short woman but a tall child, or maybe a teenager.’
‘We do have one child still unaccounted for, missing since April,’ Matt told them. ‘But he’s just six years old, and as the father has also disappeared it’s likely to be a family thing and we have no reason to suspect external foul play.’
‘Well, this is definitely not a six-year-old, and we aren’t likely to find out anything else by just looking here, so let’s get everything back to Goleudy and start unravelling the mystery.’
Martin referred to Goleudy with his usual due reverence, as he believed beyond doubt that it was one of the best places in the world for solving crime. To the public at large it was their local police station, but behind that front the enormous, modernised Victorian building were floor after floor of the very latest crime-busting technology.
The thing Martin liked best about the place was that it brought all the facets of modern day policing together in a building that was solidly constructed with tall ceilings and a general feeling of space. It was not unusual for police forces from other parts of the country, and even foreign constabularies, to visit the set-up and be highly impressed with the opportunity it gave for experts in the various fields of criminal detection to work so closely together.
The body they had found this morning would be taken to the fourth floor, where Professor Moore headed up a team of brilliant technicians and forensic scientists, each one with a particular skill and all eager to be part of discovering facts crucial to the solving of cases. Even as Martin thought of the PM rooms and their proximity to the laboratories he could mentally smell the pungent odour that signalled entry to Prof. Moore’s domain.
As if reading his boss’s thoughts, Matt declared. ‘The only good thing about finding a body in the open air is that you aren’t knocked over by the smell. Do you remember when we were called to that place on Newport Road where the couple had been dead since the day after their daughter went for a ten-day holiday to Egypt?’
Alex interjected. ‘I really don’t want to be reminded about that case. It wasn’t just that the couple had decided on a suicide pact for themselves, but overdosing their cat, dog, and tropical fish meant we had the stench of decomposing pets as well – and after a week of warm weather. I could still easily throw up at just the memory of it.’
Alex indicated to members of the SOC team that the body could be removed and the clothing put into four separate bags in line with the four positions in which it had been found. Each shoe was bagged separately, as was the jacket that had been partly pulled from the main pile, and finally the remaining items were lifted – ready to be put into one of the larger evidence bags.
‘Hold it there!’ shouted Matt as he spotted something white near the bottom of the neatly folded clothes. ‘Is that a letter or something – is it too much to hope it’s a suicide note?’
Alex carefully folded back two-thirds of the clothes, all of which were soaking wet, and looked at the single sheet of A5 size white paper which had been revealed, without touching it.
‘It looks to be a blank sheet of paper,’ he said and he sounded somewhat disappointed. ‘I won’t touch it here as it’ll probably fall to pieces, and there’s nothing written on it as far as I can see. If there ever was anything written on it our best bet will be to get it back to the lab and look at it there.’
With the body now moved all three men could take a closer look at the site where it had lain, but there was nothing of any obvious significance to be seen. Alex called to his team to work quickly, because murky water from the saturated surroundings would soon seep into the recently vacated space and dilute any existing evidence.
The team were ahead of him and had thrown a large plastic sheet over the whole area. The newly positioned cover was already capturing the incoming fluid and protecting the crime scene.
‘We have taken samples of the mud and grass surrounding the body and if, as the professor suggests, she was murdered by a blow to the skull we would probably expect to see more evidence of blood. However, we all know what the weather has been like over the past few weeks, and much of it could have been washed away. That may not be the case for any evidence underneath the body, so we need to make sure that nothing stops us from looking more closely at that area.’
Martin nodded in agreement. ‘Of course, the other reason for lack of blood here could simply be that she was killed somewhere else and her body dumped here – although I have to say that never before have I come across a murderer who dumps a body and puts the victim’s clothing in a neat pile at her feet – that is weird.’
‘The other thing is that there was no real attempt to hide the body. She was just put under the trees not far from the edge of the field. There is some growth around the base of this tree and it did provide a bit of cover for the body, but not that much. If there had been less rain in July more people would have been walking around the area and she would almost certainly have been discovered earlier.’
‘Yes, this field’s also used for festivals and the like,’ said Matt. ‘I got two of my sisters tickets to the Florence and the Machine gig in June, and we bring all the nieces here for the Sparks in the Park firework display every November – it’s brilliant. Don’t know the last event that was held here but I’ll check it out when we get back.’