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- Dorothy Simpson
Day for Dying
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To my niece, Alison, with love and gratitude
ONE
It was on a Saturday evening in late March that Ben dropped his bombshell.
Thanet and Joan had had a quiet evening at home. They’d eaten supper off trays in front of the television set and were now discussing their holiday plans before going to bed.
‘Didn’t you say the Dracos went Greek-island-hopping last summer?’ said Joan.
‘Yes. They had a marvellous time. The Super came back looking so relaxed we could hardly believe it was the same man. Of course, it was partly huge relief that Angharad was still in the clear.’
Angharad Draco, wife of the Superintendent of Sturrenden Divisional Police Headquarters, where Thanet worked, had been diagnosed as suffering from acute myeloid leukaemia four years ago. So far, she had been one of the lucky ones. The average outlook is only two years of life from diagnosis and there had been general rejoicing when she had passed this milestone and begun to put on weight, regain her spectacular good looks. Now, with every month that went by, the hope grew stronger that the danger really was over.
‘I ran into her in the town the other day,’ said Joan, ‘and she looks wonderful.’
I haven’t seen her for ages.’
‘Well, you will at the party.’
They both glanced at the invitation card on the mantelpiece.
Thanet grinned. ‘There are all sorts of rumours flying around . . . marquee, top-notch band, caterers, the lot.’
‘Well, you can’t blame him for wanting to celebrate. Her birthday must mean something pretty special these days.’
The front door slammed and they glanced at the clock. It was only 10.30. They raised eyebrows at each other.
‘Hi!’ said Ben, poking his head into the room.
‘You’re early!’ they said.
‘I wanted to catch you before you went to bed. I’ll just . . .’
‘ . . . get a snack,’ they chorused, smiling. Their son’s snacks were a family joke.
He gave a sheepish grin and disappeared.
‘Sounds ominous,’ said Thanet.
‘Certainly does. Must be important. Ten-thirty on a Saturday night? Unheard of!’
‘Perhaps he’s finally made up his mind at last.’
‘Let’s hope so!’
It was decision time for Ben. He was bright enough to have been offered a place at both Bristol and Durham Universities, and had been trying to decide which was his first choice. There had been endless family discussions on the respective advantages and disadvantages and they had all reached the stage where it would be a relief when the decision was made.
Ben came in carrying his ‘snack’ – a triple-decker sandwich flanked by an apple and a banana.
‘So,’ said Thanet when Ben was settled. ‘What did you want to talk about?’
Ben had taken a huge bite out of his sandwich and finished masticating before saying, ‘I’ve made up my mind what I want to do.’ He cast a swift, assessing glance at his parents before taking another bite.
Thanet felt the first stirring of unease. ‘And?’
Another pause. Ben swallowed, then put his plate carefully down on the table beside his chair before saying, ‘I’ve decided not to choose either.’
‘Ah.’ Taken aback, Thanet didn’t quite know how to react. He sensed a crisis looming.
‘What d’you mean, exactly?’ said Joan. Her tone was strained. She was trying, but just failing, to conceal her dismay.
Ben sat back, folding his arms across his chest as if to defend himself from the attack he was sure would come. I’ve decided not to go to university at all.’
Thanet knew his face must be betraying something of the disappointment which welled up in him, and was helpless to prevent it. Not having been to university himself and having always regretted it, he had pinned his hopes on Ben. Bridget had not been academic and he had been happy to encourage her in her chosen career, admired the success she had made of it. But Ben . . . Ben was bright, had sailed through his exams with ease. What a waste it would be, not to take up this unique opportunity to enlarge his mind, his experience, his knowledge. Careful, he told himself. We must be careful. He glanced at Joan and could see her thinking the same thing. Safer to say as little as possible, make sure that no bridges were burned.
‘At all?’ he said, echoing Ben’s last words.
Ben nodded.
‘You mean, you want to defer taking up your place?’ said Joan. ‘Have a year out?’
Thanet could hear the hope in her voice. That could be it, of course. So many young people these days did just that after taking their A levels, eager to see something of the world before they settled down to three or four years of further study. Having missed out earlier, Bridget was travelling at the moment. Perhaps that was it. Perhaps Ben had been made to feel restless by the postcards which had been arriving from the Far East and, of late, New Zealand and Australia?
But Ben was shaking his head. ‘I’ve made up my mind what I want to do, and I can’t really see the point of wasting three years going to university.’
‘What do you want to do?’ said Thanet. Ben had always said he couldn’t make up his mind.
Ben raised his chin and looked straight at his father. ‘I want to go into the police.’
Silence.
Thanet didn’t know what to say. This was the last thing he had expected and his reaction was mixed. He was touched, proud, yes, that his son was choosing to follow him. But he was, above all, dismayed. Apart from the tragedy it would be for Ben to throw away this chance, life in the force was not what it had once been. Over the last decade the problems of law and order had proliferated, slowly seeping out into the rural areas from the cities. He loved his work, had never regretted his choice of career, but of late had often wondered if, had he been starting again, he would have thought more than twice about it.
‘I see. I assume this isn’t a sudden decision?’
Ben shook his head. ‘I’ve been thinking about it for ages. But I knew you’d both be disappointed if I didn’t go to university, so I kept on putting off telling –’
The telephone rang and Thanet went to answer it, not sure whether to be glad or sorry that their discussion had been interrupted. He hoped it might be Bridget but it was Pater, the Station Officer.
‘Sorry to disturb you, sir . . .’
It’s all right, it’s too early for me to be enjoying my beauty sleep. What’s the problem?’
‘Report of a suspicious death just come in, sir. Out at Donnington. Body of a young man found in a swimming pool. There was a party going on.’
‘Sounds as though he might have had too much to drink. Have you notified the Super?’
‘He’s out. I left a message on his answerphone, then rang you.’
‘I’ll leave right away. What’s the address?’ Thanet scribbled directions and put the phone down. No need to tell Pater what to do, the sergeant knew the routine off by heart. He returned to the sitting room.
Joan stood up as he came in. ‘We heard.’
‘Yes, sorry, Ben. This is important to you, I know.’
Ben shook his head, it’s OK, Dad, I understand. We can talk about it some other time.’
‘Yes, of course.’ And it was probably best that way, thought Thanet. It’ll give Joan and me time to discuss how best to react.
Outside the air was fresh and cool after the warmth of t
he house. A light breeze had sprung up, chasing away the ragged clouds which from time to time had obscured the sun throughout the day. The sky was clear and the street and driveway were bathed in the silvery light of a moon that was almost full.
Thanet shivered and turned up the collar of his coat. Donnington wasn’t far, only a couple of miles from Sturrenden on the other side of the river. At this time of night it shouldn’t take more than ten minutes or so to get there. A party, he thought gloomily. The place would be crawling with potential suspects.
He found the house without difficulty. It was in a country lane leading out of the village, one of several properties standing well back from the road. There was a big bunch of balloons tied to the gatepost and a patrol car parked on the verge outside. A uniformed officer waved him down as he slowed.
‘Sorry, sir, there’s no room to park inside at the moment, drive’s crammed with cars already. There was a party going on.’
‘What sort of party, do we know?’
‘Engagement party for the daughter of the house. The dead man was her fiancé.’
Poor girl, thought Thanet as he parked his car. What a way for the night to end.
As he got out another car could be heard approaching along the lane and he saw with satisfaction that it was Lineham’s Escort. He waited for the sergeant to join him and told him what little he knew as they walked to the entrance to the drive. Then they paused for a few moments to look around.
The wrought-iron gates, hung on brick pillars, stood wide open. Just inside them the driveway forked, the narrower arm leading off to the right in the direction of a bungalow where lights still burned. A gardener’s cottage, perhaps? The grounds of the house were sufficiently extensive to warrant one; the drive was a couple of hundred yards long and the moonlight revealed wide lawns spreading away on either side, bisected by flower borders and flanked by stands of mature trees. Cars were parked nose to tail all the way along the drive and in the big parking area in front of the house. This was ablaze with light, a long, low, sprawling structure, 1930s stockbrokers’ Tudor by the look of it, built at a time when domestic help was still readily available. At one end, projecting forwards at right angles to the main house, was a single storey building and as he and Lineham drew nearer Thanet could see it was a separate structure, a block of garages. Somewhere behind the house a dog was barking, a big one, by the sound of it. It had probably been chained up for the evening.
‘Let’s hope things haven’t been disturbed too much,’ he said. ‘Looks as though there’s quite a crowd here tonight.’
But predictably Lineham was too busy taking in the general air of affluence to respond. ‘Four garages!’ he said. ‘Not exactly paupers, are they?’
Thanet grinned. Lineham’s stock reaction to any property larger than the average never failed to amuse him. ‘Fancy the place, do you, Mike? You’ll have to ask for a rise.’
‘Ha, ha. Very funny.’
Thanet could hear more cars arriving in the lane behind them. The SOCOs, perhaps, and Doc Mallard. ‘Come on, let’s get a move on, find out what’s what.’
They quickened their pace. The curtains had not been drawn and they glimpsed people standing around or sitting huddled in small groups. Even from outside the air of shock was evident.
Almost before the reverberations of Lineham’s knock had died away the door opened.
The woman was in her late thirties, with fashionably tousled long dark curly hair, deep-set brown eyes and a pointed nose. Her careful make-up could not disguise the hint of ill humour in the set of her mouth, the frown lines scored between the heavy brows. Her simple black dress looked expensive and she was wearing a chunky gold necklace and earrings. The ‘lady’ of the house, Thanet assumed. But he was wrong. She introduced herself as the housekeeper, Barbara Mallis, and gestured them into a large, square hall with panelled walls and a wide oak staircase. The subdued murmur of conversation emanating from the rooms on either side died away as people craned to catch a glimpse of them.
‘I’ll let Mr Sylvester know you’re here.’
But there was no need. A man emerged from the room to the left.
‘Ah, there he is,’ she said.
Sylvester was casually but expensively dressed in cashmere sweater and soft silky cords. He was around fifty, Thanet guessed, with thinning hair and the pock-marked skin of a former acne sufferer. He looked distinctly unhealthy. Heavy jowls and a protruding belly betrayed a penchant for too much rich food and the skin of his face was the colour of uncooked dough.
He acknowledged Thanet’s introductions with a tense nod. ‘This way.’
Sylvester obviously didn’t believe in wasting time on social niceties, thought Thanet as he and Lineham followed him across the hall and along a corridor at the back leading off to the left. They were presumably going to the swimming pool.
‘I gather it was you who found him, sir,’ said Thanet.
‘Yes.’
‘And he was your daughter’s fiancé, I believe?’
Sylvester nodded, tight-lipped. He had stopped in front of the door at the end of the corridor and was fishing a key out of his pocket. ‘I made sure it was locked before we left.’
Thanet’s heart sank. ‘We?’
Sylvester’s shoulders twitched impatiently. ‘Oh, I know, I know, I’ve seen the films, I’m aware that you shouldn’t disturb anything and looking back I can see I should have kept everyone out, but at the time . . . You’re just not thinking straight. You can understand that, surely.’
‘Only too well. Unfortunately it does make our job more difficult.’ It also ensured that if Sylvester himself had helped the unfortunate young man on his way, it would be more difficult to isolate scientific evidence against him.
Sylvester merely grunted and turned the key in the lock. Warm moist air and a smell of chlorine rushed out to greet them. Thanet caught a brief glimpse of dark water shimmering in the moonlight before Sylvester flooded the room with light.
Thanet caught Lineham’s admiring glance and knew what the sergeant was thinking. They really must be loaded. The pool house was indeed unashamed luxury. It must have been around twenty-five metres long and was built entirely of glass, and double glazed, too, for there was no sign of condensation on the windows or roof. Of irregular shape, the pool itself was deep enough to sport a diving board at the nearer end. Comfortable chaises-longues with yellow-and-white-striped cushions which would bring a hint of sunshine to the gloomiest of days were interspersed with groups of exotic potted plants, some of which were as tall as young trees. It would be a real pleasure to relax here after a hard day’s work – a pleasure which from now on would no doubt be blighted by the memory of what had happened tonight.
The body lay at the far end of the pool and as they approached it Sylvester was explaining that the only way he could get it out was to tow it to the shallow end. He had found that it was impossible to lift a dead weight out of deep water without help.
‘You went in after him yourself?’ said Lineham.
‘Yes.’ Sylvester glanced down at his clothes. ‘I had to go and change.’
Thanet was scarcely listening. He was bracing himself for his private purgatory, that first close look at the corpse. By now he was resigned to the fact that he was never going to overcome this weakness of his and that all he could do was grit his teeth until it was over.
And here it came.
This time it wasn’t as bad as he had expected, perhaps because apart from a bruise on one temple there were no outward signs of violence. The young man lay on his back in a puddle of water near the steps leading down into the shallow end, limbs neatly arranged, eyes closed as if he were asleep. He had been in his late twenties, Thanet guessed, well built and handsome, with the sort of looks a male model would envy. His dark hair was still wet, sleeked back from his forehead, his expensive suede trousers and silk shirt sodden.
‘What was his name?’ Thanet asked.
‘Max Jeopard.’
Max Jeopar
d. Thanet repeated the name in his head. Over the next days, weeks, perhaps months, he would come to know Jeopard in a way that no one else could possibly have known him. Thanet was aware that our view of the people in our lives is subjective, coloured by our own thoughts, attitudes, prejudices, life experience, and rarely do we learn what others truly think of us. But in a murder case the investigating officer is in the unique position of gathering together many different views of one person so that, gradually, a composite picture begins to emerge. Often it is only then that the true cause of the tragedy can be understood.
Thanet glanced around. There was no sign of a break-in. ‘Are the doors to the garden kept locked?’
‘Yes. Locked, bolted and morticed.’
Lineham was already checking. He nodded confirmation.
So, if Jeopard had indeed been murdered there was no question here of an intruder. Someone he knew, probably someone he knew well, had felt that life would be intolerable if Jeopard continued to walk the earth. Thanet shivered as the familiar frisson of excitement trickled down his spine. It was as if he had caught the first scent of his quarry.
He had to put another obvious question, even though he was sure of the answer he would get. ‘Could he swim?’
Sylvester compressed his lips. ‘Like a fish.’
There was a knock at the door and Barbara Mallis put her head in. ‘Inspector,’ she said, raising her voice to be heard across the intervening space, ‘the police doctor has arrived. And some more of your men.’
‘Right. Thank you. Show him in, would you? And the Scenes-of-Crime Officers too, if they’re there. Tell the others I’ll be out in a moment.’ Thanet turned back to Sylvester. ‘As soon as I’ve got things organised I’d like to talk to you again, get a little more detail. Er . . . is there a Mrs Sylvester?’
‘She’s with Tess, our daughter. The doctor’s with them. I believe he’s giving her a sedative – Tess, I mean. Naturally she’s in a terrible state. Anyway . . .’ Sylvester glanced at Doc Mallard, who was now approaching, accompanied by the SOCOs. ‘I’ll be around when you want me. But my guests – when will they be able to go home?’