Ellie rose and went to the door.
'It's salad,' she said as she passed through. 'I was a bit pushed.'
Pascoe leaned over and looked down at his daughter who returned his gaze from wide unblinking blue-grey eyes.
'OK, kid,' he said sternly. 'Don't play innocent with me. You're not leaving this sofa till you tell me where you've hidden the rusks.'
Next morning Pascoe, finding himself with a loose couple of minutes as he drank his mug of instant coffee, dialled the number of South Yorkshire Police Headquarters, identified himself and asked if Detective-Inspector Wishart was handy.
'Hello, cowboy!' came the most unconstabulary greeting a few moments later. 'How's life out on the range? Got running water yet?'
It was Wishart's little joke to affect belief that Mid-Yorks was a haven of rural tranquillity in which the only crimes to ruffle the placid surface of CID life were rustling and the odd bit of bestiality. Any note of irritation in Pascoe's response would only result in an unremitting pursuit of the facetious fancy, so he said amiably, 'Only downhill. In fact things are so quiet here I thought I'd give myself a vicarious thrill by talking to a real policeman about some real action.'
'Wise move. Anything in particular, or shall I ramble on generally while I'm beating up these prisoners?'
'You could fill me in on one Colin Farr, of Burrthorpe. He got done for thumping one of your finest last week.'
'Oh. Any special reason for asking, Peter?' said Wishart suspiciously.
'It's all right,' laughed Pascoe. 'I'm not doing a commando raid. It's personal and unofficial. My wife knows him, in a tutorial capacity, I hasten to add. She was concerned that he'd missed one of her classes, that's all.'
'Blaming it on the police in general and you in particular, eh?' said Wishart, who had the shrewdness of a Scots lawyer which is what his family would have preferred him to be. 'Burrthorpe, you say? Indian territory that. It was almost a no-go area during the Strike. You'll remember the great siege? They just about wrecked the local cop- shop. I believe they've rebuilt it like a fortress. There's a sergeant there I've known for years. I'll give him a buzz if you can hang on.'
'My pleasure,' said Pascoe.
In the ensuing silence Pascoe cradled the phone on his shoulder and burrowed in the bottom drawer of his desk in search of a packet of barley sugars he kept there. Man could not live on health food alone. When he surfaced, he found himself looking into the questioning gaze of Andrew Dalziel. Usually the fat man came into a room like an SAS assault team. Occasionally, and usually when it caused maximum embarrassment and inconvenience, he just materialized.
'Busy?' said Dalziel.
'Yes,' said Pascoe, carefully letting the barley sugar slip back into the drawer.
'Won't bother you, then. I just want a look at your old records. Mine are a mess.'
He peered towards Pascoe's filing cabinets, with the combative expectation of a new arrival at the Dark Tower. Pascoe, who knew why his superior's records were in a mess (if he couldn't find anything, he shook the offending file and shouted threats at the resultant shower of paper), rose in alarm. The phone was still silent.
'Was it something in particular, sir?' he said.
'I'm not just browsing if that's what you mean,' growled Dalziel. The Kassell drugs case will do for starters. I know you weren't concerned directly but I know too you're a nosey bugger, so what have you got?'
What's he doing digging up old bones? wondered Pascoe as he put the phone on the desk and went to the cupboard in which he stored his personal records.
‘Thanks, lad. I'll keep an ear open for you, shall I?'
Sticking his head out of the cupboard, Pascoe saw that Dalziel was in his seat with the telephone at his ear, taking the paper off a barley sugar.
'That's OK,' he said with studied negligence, it's not really important.'
'It better had be, lad,' said Dalziel sternly. 'Official phones these are. Some bugger rang Benidorm last week and no one's confessing. Wasn't you, was it? No. Not cultural enough for you, Benidorm. Can you find it?'
Pascoe resumed his search, spurred on by the need to get Dalziel out before the need arose to explain his query to South.
'Got it,' he said in dusty triumph a moment later. But it was too late.
'Hello,' said Dalziel in a neutral voice which, probably deliberately, might have passed for Pascoe's. 'Go ahead.'
He listened for a moment then exploded. 'Ripper! What do you mean he's a ripper? No, this isn't Peter. This is Dalziel. And who the fuck are you? You're not speaking from Benidorm, are you?'
He listened a while longer then passed the phone to Pascoe.
'Inspector Wishart from South,' he said. 'Says your man's a ripper down Burrthorpe Main. Gave me a nasty shock, that. This the Kassell stuff? I'll take good care of it, lad.'
'Yes, sir.' said Pascoe, who foresaw already the dog-eared, beer-stained state in which his lovely records were likely to return to him. 'Official inquiry, is it, sir?'
From the door Dalziel flashed him a smile as reassuring as a crack in new plaster.
'As official as yours, I expect, lad.'
He went out. Pascoe said, 'The coast's clear.'
'Jesus,' said Wishart. 'You might have warned me Geronimo had broken out again; let's do this quick, eh? Here's what the record says.'
That night he said to Ellie, 'I picked up some info on your protégé, if you'd like to hear.'
'Official version, you mean? Go on. I like a well-crafted
tale.'
'Simply, he got drunk, took offence at something a stranger in the street said to him, got into a fracas and pushed the man through a shop window. That may have been an accident. Certainly, it turned out the man didn't want to bring charges. Which was odd. As evidently he turned out to be a journalist, one Monty Boyle, chief crime reporter on the Challenger. Makes you think . . .’
Ellie was not in the least interested in what it made him think.
'But the good old fuzz persuaded him to change his mind,' she said angrily.
'Not really. A couple of local cops witnessed the incident. When they approached, Farr attacked one of them, throwing him through the window too, and had to be restrained by the other. That was the assault he was charged with.'
'Now I've got it,' cried Ellie in mock delight. 'A bit of drunken horseplay, the kind of thing that passes for high spirits at Twickers or Annabel's, is escalated to a criminal assault by heavy-handed police intervention.'
'It's a point of view,' said Pascoe gravely. 'It's certainly true that if he hadn't assaulted the constable, the whole thing might have been smoothed over with a police caution.'
'But you can't turn a blind eye to saying boo to a bobby,' said Ellie.
'Not when he needs seven stitches in his hand,' said Pascoe, incidentally, since you don't ask, the Challenger reporter was hardly damaged at all. It appears that Burrthorpe's not the kind of place you encourage cop-bashing. They had a full-scale riot there during the Strike and the police station was just about wrecked.'
'So a young man goes to jail and gets a permanent criminal record pour encourager les autres?'
'The record was there already,' said Pascoe. 'He had several counts against him during the Strike.’
'Who the hell didn't? And they can't have been all that serious, otherwise he wouldn't have kept his job under the famous victimization scheme!'
'True. But beyond and outside the Strike, he's obviously been a wild lad. Most serious was when he got done for assaulting a Customs officer at Liverpool. Before you ask, no, he wasn't coming back from holiday. He was a merchant seaman, didn't you know that? A good teacher should know all about her pupils. Anyway, it didn't amount to too much, I gather. Farr felt he was being unduly delayed by officialdom and threw the man's hat into the ocean, then offered to send the man after it. He's very fond of throwing people around, it seems. But you can see why the magistrate wouldn't think a mere fine was enough in this last case.'
'Oh yes,' grunted Ellie. I suppos
e he was lucky to escape the strappado.'
'He only got a week. Five days with remission. He'll be back for your next class. What's the topic to be? Law and Order?'
'Peter, that's not funny, merely crass,' snarled Ellie.
Pascoe considered.
'No, I don't think so,' he said quietly, it may not be terribly funny but I don't think it's at all crass, not between consenting adults in domestic bliss. As a professional communicator, you should be more careful. Intemperance of language is to thought what drunkenness is to courage: it makes a little go a long way.'
'Is that original? Or is it a quote from some other prissy, pusillanimous time-server?'
'Is that live? Or are you miming to the latest hit on the Radical Alliterative label?'
Ellie smiled, with only a little effort.
'I'll let you be original if you let me be live,' she said.
'Deal.'
He smiled back and went upstairs to see Rose, who was also smiling as she slept.
The difference was, her smile looked as if it went all the way through.
Chapter 6
'Carry your bag, miss?'
For a sliver of a second Ellie's hand started to proffer the battered old briefcase. She had felt unusually drained after today's class and had taken her time packing her papers while the cheerful chatter and clatter of the young miners faded down the corridor. When she finally followed them, Colin Farr had emerged from the door of the Gents as she passed. He was dressed in motorcycle leathers and carried a helmet.
'Real offer or just winding me up, Colin?' she said.
He fell into step beside her.
'Depends, miss.'
'On what?'
'Whether you think it's real or winding you up.'
'But which depends on which?' she wondered.
She also wondered, but this to herself, if Farr had emerged coincidentally by coincidence or if he'd been lurking in that doorway.
'Don't follow you, miss.'
'Yes, you do, Colin,' she said, smiling at him. 'That's one game you can stop playing. Another is calling me miss all the time. I told the others last week that if I was going to use their first names, they'd have to use mine. Even though you seemed a little abstracted today, you may have heard one or two of them call me Ellie.'
'Ell ee. Thought them were your initials, miss. Or mebbe a title.'
He grinned openly as he spoke.
They had reached the central landing. They were on the fourteenth floor of the Ivory Tower, a glass and concrete monument of the expansive and affluent 'sixties whose gnomonic shadow marked the passage of epochal as well as diurnal time on the scatter of redbrick buildings which had survived from the old civic university. Descent was by stair, conventional lift, or paternoster. The stairs were long and exhausting and the lift took an age to arrive, but Ellie usually preferred one or the other.
Farr, however, had made straight for the paternoster. The moving platforms were just large enough for two. He glanced at her, touched her elbow, and stepped forward. She stepped with him but as always the sense of the floor sinking away beneath her was so disconcerting that she gave a slight stagger and leaned against Farr whose arm went round her waist to support her.
'I'm all right,' she said, trying to disengage herself. But there was little spare room on the platform and he made no effort to move away.
'You'd not do to ride the pit,' he observed.
'Ride the pit?' she said brightly, aware of the closeness of his body and aware also that she was slipping beneath a protective carapace of schoolmarminess. 'Let me see. That means go down the shaft in the Cage, doesn't it?'
'Aye. Down or up,' he said, smiling slightly.
He knows how uncomfortable he's making me feel, thought Ellie.
She said dismissively, 'At least the Cage is standing still when you get in.'
'You're right. And when it starts going down, you wish it'd stood still for ever.'
His tone was so intense that she forgot her discomfiture and said curiously, 'You hate it that much, do you?'
Strangely this shift towards conversational intimacy seemed to affect him as the physical contact had affected her. He removed his arm and swayed away from her and said in a much lighter voice, 'Energetic buggers, these students," nodding at the graffiti-scrawled interstitial floor beams. 'They must've had to go round three or four times to get them written.'
'That sounds like a considerable misdirection of effort,' said Ellie.
'Most things are when you look at them straight,' said Colin Farr. 'This is us.'
His hand grasped her elbow lightly, its touch chivalric rather than erotic, and they stepped out in a unity of movement worthy of Astaire and Rogers.
Outside in the cool air of the shadowy side of the Ivory Tower, they paused.
'I'm going over to the crèche,' said Ellie.
'The what?'
'The nursery. Where staff can leave their children while they're teaching. And students too.'
'Very democratic. I'm off to the car park. Where staff can leave their cars. But not students.'
'That'd be a male decision,' said Ellie. 'It's a wonder the attendant doesn't get you. He's a terror. It took three phone calls to persuade him I was entitled first time I came.'
'You should try a motorbike,' said Farr. 'You can be round the back of his hut before he notices.'
They stood in silence for a moment. Ellie glanced at her watch.
'See you next week, then.'
'Likely,' said Farr. If I can manage.'
'Colin, I was sorry to hear about your bit of trouble.'
She did not care to hear herself using the euphemism, but she was treading carefully. No one had mentioned the young man's week in jail today and she'd taken this as a signal that he didn't want it mentioned.,
Now he gave her his crooked little near-smile and said, 'It were nowt. I've been in worse places.'
'The pit, you mean?'
'Oh aye. That's worse. But I meant worse jails.'
He grinned openly at her look of surprise.
'I've not just been a miner,' he said, 'I've been a sailor too. Did you not know that?'
'How could I?' prevaricated Ellie. 'I mean, you're so young!'
'Old enough. I went down pit at sixteen like all me mates. But I got a bit restless after a bit and when I was nineteen I jacked it in and went and joined the Merchant Navy. I were in for nearly four years. I came back to Burrthorpe just in time to go on strike for a year!'
'And will you go back? To sea, I mean.'
'Mebbe. I can't say.'
There was another silence.
Ellie said, 'I've really got to go and pick my daughter up. Till next week, then. Goodbye.'
'Aye. See you.'
She walked away. He watched as she passed from the shadow of the Tower into the sunlight before disappearing into one of the two-storey redbrick buildings on the scattered and disorganized campus.
He checked the car park was clear before loping towards the gleaming Suzuki 1100 which cost him more than he ever dared tell his mother in monthly payments. But it was money he didn't grudge. As he started her up, the attendant rushed from his hut shouting, 'I want a word with you!'
Farr waited till he was about thirty feet away, then opened up the throttle and sent the bike leaping forward towards the man.
'Jesus Christ!’ he cried, jumping aside.
'See you next week!' yelled Farr over his shoulder.
He wove his way at a steady pace through the city traffic but once out on the open road he rapidly took the powerful machine up to the speed limit and held it there for a while. Then as the exhilaration of the streaming air, the blurring hedges and the throbbing metal between his legs got to him, he gave it full power and was soon cracking the ton on the straights.
It couldn't last long. Soon his eye registered the brief image of a police car sitting in a lay-by, waiting for just the likes of himself, and a couple of minutes later it was in his mirror, too distant t
o have got his number which in any case he always kept as muddy as he could get away with, but not receding. Ahead the road wound down a shallow hill to a small township which seemed to pride itself on having traffic lights every ten yards. Also there was a police station there, easily alerted by the car radio.
There were no turn-offs before he hit the town. He was travelling very fast downhill towards a sharp left-hand bend. Straight ahead was a tall hawthorn hedge with woodland behind it. There was a gap or at least a thinness in the hedge where it met a wall at the apex of the bend.
Instead of slowing for the turn, he twisted the throttle to full open. There might be something coming the other way; he might find the hedge more solid than it looked; even if he got through, the close clustering trees would be almost impossible to avoid.
He went straight across the road.
The hedge parted like a bead-curtain. He felt its branches scrabble vainly to get a hold on his leather jacket, then he was among the trees, bucketing over exposed roots, leaning this way and that as he twisted through the copse, decelerating madly. His shoulder grazed bark, a low bough almost took his helmet off. Finally he mounted the steep mossy bank of a drainage ditch, let the bike slide from between his legs and lay on the ground, his ragged breath drawing in the odour of leaf-mould and damp earth while his pounding heart settled back into the monotonous rhythms of safety.
Distantly he heard the police car go by. He sat up and removed his helmet. He was hot in his leathers and he took them off too. Almost without thought, he continued undressing, peeling off shirt and trousers till he stood naked among the trees feeling the cool air playing on his feverish flesh. He was sexually aroused. He thought of Stella Mycroft. And he thought of Ellie Pascoe. His hand moved to his groin, but a sudden gust of wind heavy with a chilling rain got there first.
Like a pail of cold water over a rutting dog, he told himself sardonically, Thanks, God!
He pulled on his clothes and protective gear, pulled the bike upright and set out across country easing the bike along ploughed furrows but opening it up across pasture land. Sheep scattered; cows regarded him with gentle curiosity. A man on a tractor stood up and waved an angry fist, mouthing inaudible abuse, Colin Farr waved back.
Dalziel 10 UnderWorld Page 4