Suspicious Minds (Harry Devlin)

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Suspicious Minds (Harry Devlin) Page 10

by Edwards, Martin


  And expected it too, thought Harry.

  “What about boyfriends?”

  “There weren’t any. Not until lover boy showed up. Kuiper.”

  “How did they meet?”

  “At a place in New Brighton. The Wreckers, I think.”

  “That’s no youth club, Mr. Stirrup. Your daughter was only fifteen. Why did you let her go to such a dive?”

  Guilt slid across Stirrup’s face, making his cheeks glisten. He rubbed them with the flat of his hand.

  “Didn’t know, did I? She said she was going out ten-pin bowling with some of the girls from school. When she came in I gave her down the banks and she promised never to do it again. Too late. She’d met the bugger by then.”

  “What else do you know about him?”

  “Precious little, and even that’s too much. He’s a student, isn’t he? A layabout.”

  “Did you try to break it up?”

  “I’m not that daft. No, I let her bring him to the house. Not in her room, mind. They’d go for walks round the grounds, that sort of thing. I hoped it was a phase. A crush. You know what teenage girls are like. Easily impressed.”

  “Anything else you can tell us about him?”

  “Look, do you think Kuiper - did this to her?”

  “I’m not saying that, Mr. Stirrup. But Peter Kuiper still hasn’t returned to his digs. We don’t know why. So we need to see him, if only to eliminate him from our enquiries.”

  “By Christ, if he - ”

  Harry judged it was time to intervene. “What about The Beast, Inspector?”

  “What about him, Mr. Devlin?”

  “This is a sex killing of a teenage girl. You’ve a man on the loose who has been terrorising young women for months. Surely that’s no coincidence.”

  “I don’t need you to teach me my job,” Bolus said. It was the first time he had been betrayed into even a hint of temper or impatience. “And you can rest assured that we are already taking steps to - what’s the phrase in that old film? - round up the usual suspects. Even so, we need to investigate whether there may have been a more personal link between the murderer and your client’s daughter.”

  “Are you bothered because Claire didn’t have blonde hair?” Harry persisted. He wanted to provoke Bolus into showing more of his hand. “Worried simply that this crime doesn’t fit the nice little offender profile your people have built up?”

  “No,” said the detective. “We think Claire knew her killer.”

  “What makes you say that?” demanded Stirrup.

  Bolus took off his glasses and slowly polished them with a bit of cloth he had pulled from his pocket. Taking time to think. Weighing up, Harry felt sure, the relative tactical advantages of frankness and concealment.

  “It’s like this,” Bolus said eventually. “You’ll remember, Mr. Stirrup, that when we took a look at your daughter’s bedroom on Saturday we removed with your consent a number of personal items?”

  “Odds and ends, that’s all.”

  “One of them was your daughter’s personal organiser.”

  Harry remembered. Expensive, in black leather, with Claire’s initials in gold on the front. A present from last Christmas, Stirrup had said.

  “You’re barking up the wrong tree, Bolus. There wasn’t anything in the diary part for Saturday. I looked. She wasn’t much of a one for writing up a diary.”

  “Yes, Mr. Stirrup. But a page of brief notes in the memo section caught our attention. A list of items. Things you might expect to appeal to a young girl. Like a bottle of perfume by Christian Dior. A gold ankle chain. All of them crossed out - except for the last.”

  “I don’t follow you,” said Stirrup.

  “What was last on the list, Inspector?” Harry asked.

  “A dozen red roses.”

  Stirrup said, “So bloody what?”

  Bolus brushed an errant strand of hair from his eyes. Harry felt himself tensing, awaiting the revelation.

  “When your daughter’s body was found,” the detective said, “scattered over it were a dozen red roses.”

  Chapter Fourteen

  “Imagine how the kids who found her must have felt,” said Jack Stirrup. He was gazing blindly out towards the Irish Sea and Harry guessed he was seeing Claire’s face in his mind. “Two young scallywags larking about. I bet their parents have something to say to them. Everyone knows those caves are dangerous.”

  At last his control broke and his heavy body began to shake with the strain of suppressed emotion. Harry slipped an arm round his shoulder in mute support. He and Jack Stirrup would never be close friends, but Harry had not forgotten how it felt to have someone ripped out of his life by brutal murder.

  “The bastard, the bastard, the bastard.” Stirrup spoke softly; he might have been uttering a prayer. Harry could sense the tension in the man as he made an effort to steady himself and took a lungful of air before speaking again.

  “Whoever did that to her, I’ll find him. You wait and see. I’ll find him, no matter how long it takes. And when I do, I’ll kill him.”

  Harry moved his arm away. “Leave it to the police.”

  Even as he uttered the words, he had a clammy feeling of hypocrisy. After Liz’s death, he had experienced the same primitive urge for revenge. Nor did he regard that urge as unhealthy. To react less fiercely to the murder of the person whom one loved most in the world would surely be unnatural. And in the end, he hadn’t carried out his own threat. At least, not directly.

  They were sitting on a bench overlooking the front at New Brighton. In different circumstances, it would be pleasant to be here instead of cooped up in the office at the end of another glorious afternoon. But this was one day when no sun could warm them.

  Behind them, out of sight but at the forefront of their minds, bramble-covered cliffs marked the original line of the coast. At one time, waves had lapped where they were now sitting. A few hundred yards away, opposite the swimming pool, outcrops of brightly coloured sandstone stood out against the greenery. The Noses. Yes, Harry remembered, that was the silly name given to them. The Red Noses and the Yellow Noses. Caves ran beneath the rocks, caves where once, according to local legend, smugglers had hidden their contraband. In days gone by, wreckers had plied their trade here. Forget Frenchman’s Creek and all that Cornish crap, Harry could remember once telling Liz, after a glance at some local history book had aroused his interest in New Brighton’s discreditable past. This is where the action used to be.

  And so it was again today. Stirrup had insisted on coming here, as soon as Bolus had finished with him. He wanted to see where his daughter had been found and, unable to dissuade him with anything short of physical restraint, Harry had agreed to drive him here. The police were still on the scene, combing it for forensic clues. They had succeeded where Harry had failed in preventing the bereaved father from entering the cave. At last, Stirrup yielded to the inevitable and agreed to leave the investigators to their work. Yet he refused to go far, and from their bench they could hear the sound of crackling walkie-talkies wafting through the air.

  “Look at them,” Stirrup said after a short while. He jerked his thumb in the direction of the crowd of sightseers which had gathered by the edge of the cordon which the police had thrown round the caves. “Carrion crows. Feeding off the dead.”

  It was good that he had chosen anger, thought Harry. A positive response. The alternative would be to surrender to the senselessness of it all. Let him start to work the rage out of his system now, with violent, cathartic words. But not deeds.

  “They’ll be telling their mates about it in the pub tonight,” muttered Stirrup. “Trying to picture it. The body in that cold hole in the rocks. My daughter. My bloody daughter.”

  Two ten-year-old boys had found Claire. The caves were supposed to be sealed and inaccessible to the public, but the kids had found an entrance to an old passageway at the bottom of the garden of Hasbrook Heights, a small guest house standing under the shelter of the cliffs. The
y had found a gap in the perimeter fence which was, Bolus said, visible from a nearby path. Any local person might be aware of how to gain access to that particular cave. It even had a nickname in the neighbourhood. The Mouse’s Hole.

  And so the boys had trespassed through flower beds, broken into the cave through a trapdoor of rotting wood set in the lawn, squeezed down a narrow chimney-like shaft and discovered something that would haunt them the rest of their lives. Propped against the sandstone wall, the earthly remains of Claire Stirrup.

  “Suppose I should be glad those kids found her when they did,” said Stirrup after a long silence. “At least the waiting’s over. Soon as she disappeared, I knew it meant trouble. And I knew I hadn’t killed her, despite what the police thought.”

  “You were never a serious suspect.”

  “Are you kidding? There’s nothing those bleeding idiots wouldn’t accuse me of. Look at the way they’ve hounded me over Ali.”

  Harry said gently. “It’s time you told me the truth. What happened the last time you saw Alison?”

  Stirrup chewed his lip, evidently thinking hard. Harry felt a spurt of excitement. The man was checking off pros and cons, asking himself whether to reveal whatever he had been hiding from everyone for the past few weeks. For a second, Harry realised that he had now put the question he had long disciplined himself not to ask. What if the answer compromised him? What if Stirrup finally unburdened himself and confessed to committing murder?

  The dilemma was stillborn. Stirrup stood up, lifting his chin and rocking back on his heels before he spoke again.

  “Nothing happened, I told you. We had a few words, about nothing in particular. The mess in the house, I think. The builders’ lack of progress. That’s all.”

  “So you don’t know why she left?”

  Stirrup looked straight at him and shook his head. “And I don’t know where she is, either.”

  Harry was first to break eye contact. He inclined his head and looked back towards the knot of sensation-seekers. A haze of despondency blurred his vision. Stirrup had opted to keep his own counsel. From their long acquaintance, Harry was sure of it. Like most battle-scarred businessmen, Stirrup could lie without shame. And instinctively Harry sensed that he was lying now.

  “I want the full story, Jack.”

  “I’ve told you the full story.”

  “I don’t think so.”

  Stirrup reddened. “Prove it. Lawyers always go on about proof, don’t they? Well, prove that I’m not telling the truth.”

  For a long time neither of them said anything. Harry contemplated the scorched grass beneath his feet; the drought had led to a hosepipe ban in Merseyside, and lawns and parks were suffering because of it. Bare patches were showing through too in Harry’s relationship with his client.

  “Another thing,” he said. “When Bolus asked if you know of anyone who bore you a grudge, why did you say no?”

  “What are you getting at?”

  “Come on, Jack. Let’s not kid ourselves. You have enemies.”

  “Like who?”

  “Trevor Morgan, for one.”

  “Trev? Do me a favour. He knew I had no choice but to give him the elbow.”

  “And Grealish, too.”

  Stirrup snorted with contempt. “He’s nothing.”

  “You aren’t popular with either of them.”

  “For fuck’s sake, Harry, will you listen to yourself? Business is tough, or haven’t you noticed? You get knocks all the time. Trevor Morgan and Bryan Grealish have nothing to do with - with what happened to Claire. Even Bolus could tell you that.”

  “You didn’t give him the chance, because you never mentioned them.”

  “Listen,” Stirrup leaned towards Harry so that their foreheads almost touched. “All I want is for that lad to be found. Nothing else matters. I don’t want Bolus fishing after any more red bloody herrings. He’s wasted enough time accusing me of doing away with Ali.”

  “The lad? You mean Kuiper?”

  “Who else?”

  “What makes you so sure he killed Claire?”

  Stirrup glanced briefly skywards. “Come on, Harry boy. Use your nut. At first, when they told me the news, I was like you. I thought it might be the madman. The Beast. But the roses now…” He made a choking sound, perhaps picturing the scene in the dark cave almost below their feet. “The roses… they must mean something.”

  “What?”

  “She knew the man who killed her, of course. It wasn’t the fucking Beast after all. Not Morgan, or Grealish either. They might be pricks, but they wouldn’t kill Claire just to settle a score with me. I don’t believe it. So who’s left? It must Kuiper.”

  “Or what about some other boyfriend, someone you know nothing about?”

  “No chance. You saw the way she behaved when that lad was around. She idolised him, she…”

  Again he was on the verge of tears. After bowing his head for a moment while composing himself, he lifted it again and looked Harry straight in the eye.

  “She must have had a purpose,” he said, “going out to catch that bus into West Kirby without her library books.”

  “Unless she simply forgot them. It has been known for kids to forget things.”

  “I don’t believe it,” Stirrup said doggedly. “She’d fixed to meet Kuiper and he’d promised to bring her some roses. He brought her here on his bike. They had a row. I can guess what about, can’t you? The randy little shit. And - well, you know the rest.”

  Harry said nothing. The idea was plausible, he had to admit. And yet, if Stirrup was right, why had the student returned to Prospect House on the Saturday afternoon?

  “All I want is five minutes with him,” Stirrup said. “Five minutes, that’s all I ask. I’ll get the truth, even if it kills me.”

  Chapter Fifteen

  “He says it’s a matter of life and death.” Suzanne yawned as she spoke. Crusoe and Devlin’s clientele had an infinite capacity for exaggeration. The switchboard girl never disguised her resentment of callers who interrupted her enjoyment of sex-and-shopping fiction with their petty worries about moving house or breaking parole.

  Earlier in the afternoon Harry had instructed her to divert all calls to Francesca while he tried to make inroads on the work which he had abandoned the previous day after receiving Bolus’s summons. Yet, like a gambler unable to resist one last bet, he reminded himself of the one-in-a-hundred chance that the caller’s crisis might be genuine.

  “Who is it?”

  “Name of Peter Kuiper. He’s ringing from a phone box.”

  During the twenty-four hours since the discovery of Claire Stirrup’s body, Harry had kept asking himself where the student was hiding. And why. Now his mouth went dry. A long-locked door might at last be about to open. What would it reveal?

  “Put him through… Peter?”

  “Mr. Devlin, I need to talk to you urgently.”

  The student’s voice was barely recognisable. Gone were the sneer and the hint of swaggering smart-alec remarks to come. What remained was the sound of a young man, frightened and vulnerable.

  “Where are you, Peter?”

  “Never mind that.” Vulnerable, but nonetheless wary. “I want your advice. Can you help me?”

  “Is it about Claire?”

  “It’s true, isn’t it? She’s dead, murdered. I read the story in the paper last night. I couldn’t believe it. Went out and got myself pissed to take my mind off things. She was so - so… Shit! I don’t know how to tell you what’s going through my mind.”

  “Calm down, Peter. Take it slowly. One thing at a time. Why do you need me?”

  “I might be in trouble with the police. It hasn’t happened yet. May not happen at all.”

  “Connected with Claire?”

  “In a way.”

  Was he worrying about an underage sex charge? When that had been an unspoken possibility, he had seemed supremely unconcerned. Now his girlfriend had been killed and so had the chance of any prosecutio
n. So what was he afraid of?

  “Tell me.”

  “We - no, you don’t need to know that. Besides, you still haven’t answered your question. Will you act for me?”

  “I must know more before I can give you a straight answer, Peter. Surely you realise that? Advising you could put me in a conflict of loyalties - between you and Jack Stirrup.”

  “I don’t know any other solicitors,” said Kuiper. “That’s a laugh, isn’t it, for someone studying law? True, though. Besides, you know the background. And I think I can trust you not to tell anyone where I am or what I’ve been doing. There’s a place I go to in New Brighton. Will you meet me there tonight?”

  “Let’s get one thing clear before we go any further. Unless you’re completely up front with me, there’s nothing I can do for you.”

  To Harry’s anguish, the pips started to go.

  “I haven’t any more money. Your girl took an age to put me through.”

  “Give me a number where I can phone you back. Come on, Peter, there isn’t much time.”

  “No. I must think it over. I see that now. You’re Stirrup’s lawyer after all, you’re in his pocket.”

  The line died before Harry could utter another word. He slammed the receiver down and let out a loud groan of despair. Francesca, passing by, poked her head round the door.

  “You all right? I’ve got some Alka-Seltzer if that’s any use.”

  “No, thanks. Honestly.”

  “Suit yourself.” She assumed a martyred expression and disappeared in the direction of the loo, banging the door behind her with the finality of one who has mistyped her last letter of the day.

  When she was out of earshot Harry swore quietly, aware that he was no wiser than before Kuiper’s call. He stared disconsolately at the pile of unfinished paperwork languishing in front of him. The heat had drained him of energy and the evening ahead promised nothing.

 

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