Read Crossing the Line (Kerry Wilkinson) Online
Authors: Kerry Wilkinson
with your wife.’
Another sigh, which might have been because of Jessica’s request, but also coincided with another
dedication being made on the radio: ‘This is going out to Claudia in Bromsgrove, whose husband
Graham says that he loves her very much . . .’ Blah, blah, blah. Graham was definitely having an
affair. Probably Claudia too, not that Jessica blamed her – if someone had phoned up to dedicate a
Barry Manilow song to her, she’d be having second thoughts too.
Humphrey gave Jessica a name and address, asking if she’d tell Beverley for him that he was fine
and would be home later. Jessica said she would, not asking the obvious question about why she
hadn’t been notified already. Sometimes you didn’t want to get involved in more personal business
than you had to.
‘What about Georgia?’ Jessica asked.
‘I’ll tell her this afternoon.’ Not a complete coward then, only a partial one. He must have sensed
Jessica’s disapproval, because he followed it up with: ‘It’s not what you think.’
‘What do I think?’
‘We’ve been going through the motions in the marriage for a long time. We’ve been married for
over thirty years. At first we stayed together for the kids, then it became more about the house and
maintaining a quality of life. If you split up, you end up having to divide everything and neither of us wants that.’
‘Does your wife know you’re having an affair?’
‘Not exactly . . .’
‘So, “no”, then?’
‘She doesn’t say anything when I spend nights away from home – it’s why she won’t be worried
today. I’ve always thought she probably just assumes.’
The bedrock of any relationship: an assumption that your partner is having an affair.
‘Your attacker escaped through the crowds. We’ve got lots of footage of people entering and exiting
the festival which we’ll get through as and when we can but, for now, we don’t have any actual
suspects. The obvious question is if you know anyone who might have a grudge against you . . . with
the obvious exception of your wife.’
‘Who says she has a grudge?’
‘That’s what I’m going to find out. Is there anyone else? Have you had previous extra-marital
relationships, for instance – perhaps with other married people where there might be an angry
husband?’
Humphrey reached up and removed the cotton wool from his eyes. He blinked rapidly, reaching for
a small bottle of solution that was on the table next to the bed and squirting some drops into his eyes.
It was clearly a method to get out of answering the question but Jessica waited anyway. His eyes
were bloodshot and unfocused.
Eventually he took a mouthful of water and replied. ‘There have been a few but everything ended
on solid terms. Usually I would break up with them and we’d move on. If any of them had husbands
then I didn’t know anything about it.’
‘I’m still going to need the names.’
‘They’re on my email at work. I signed up for this dating site – that’s where I met Georgia. At first
it would just be a quiet drink or a meal to see if we got on. Every now and then it would turn into
more. Georgia said she was moving to the area and wanted to get to know a few people. We hit it off
straight away. I’ll be able to get you the names of the other women – but not until tomorrow when my
office opens again.’
‘I also need to know who you told that you were going to the festival yesterday.’
‘No one – only you, Georgia and Adam knew.’
‘That can’t be true.’
‘Why?’
‘Because if this was a targeted attack – which we have to assume it is given what the attacker said
to you – then how else would they have known where you were?’
36
Humphrey continued to insist that no one else knew he was going to the festival, making the point that,
although he assumed his wife knew about his affairs, he wasn’t going to go out of his way to make
sure she or anyone else knew for sure. It was a speck of truth in an ocean of dishonesty.
Jessica contacted DS Cornish at the station, asking if she could begin looking into linking
Humphrey to Luke Callaghan, Alan Hume and Victor Todd. If she could do that without letting DCI
Cole know Jessica had asked, that would be even better.
When she saw the house that belonged to Humphrey and Beverley Marsh, Jessica could at least
understand why he said he was concerned about having to split the property if they divorced. It was a
beautiful detached home at the back of a modern estate, complete with its own stables and four-berth
garage. From the size, it must have had at least six bedrooms and who knew what else. Having to sell
it and then move into two separate smaller houses would have been a comedown.
Beverley was more or less what Jessica expected: late-fifties, her looks gone and she knew it.
Some women made the best of what they had; some didn’t care and had no reason to. Others had once
been pretty and couldn’t cope with the fact they weren’t any longer, caking on the make-up and
bathing in perfume in an effort to maintain what they’d once had. Beverley fell firmly into the final
category – dressed as if she was set for a posh night out, rather than a day around the house.
When Jessica introduced herself, Beverley seemed ready for the worst – with a husband who
stopped out so regularly, she’d probably been waiting for bad news for years. Jessica told her that
Humphrey had been attacked with pepper spray from very close range but that he should be released
in the late afternoon or early evening. His wife didn’t exactly seem disappointed but there was no
pleasure there either – she simply wasn’t bothered. Some partners would have been in their cars and
roaring their way to hospital but Beverley nodded an acceptance, inviting Jessica in and offering her
a cup of tea.
They sat on either side of a breakfast bar in an immaculate bright white kitchen sipping their drinks
as if neither of them had a care in the world, with a small yappy dog snapping around Jessica’s feet.
‘Don’t mind Terrance,’ Beverley said.
Jessica scowled down at the ball of hair and then back up at Beverley. ‘You weren’t down as his
next of kin.’
The woman shrugged. ‘I’m not that surprised – we’re not really in each other’s lives other than
sharing a roof. We’ve got separate bedrooms, bathrooms, cars. I’ll still cook every now and then but
that’s it.’
‘The person who attacked your husband gave him a message just before he sprayed the liquid. He
said: “Be nice to your wife”.’
Beverley put her mug down so quickly that tea lapped over the top onto the counter. ‘
Really?
’
‘Really. Which leaves me with an obvious question—’
‘I wasn’t even around – I was at work.’
Yap, yap, yap went Terrance in agreement.
‘I’ll take the details to verify that but you’re getting ahead of me. What I was going to ask was if
there’s anyone you know who might want to stand up for you – friends, family, that sort of thing.’
Beverley picked up a dishcloth and started mopping away the tea as Terrance did his best to help
by running in and out of her legs. ‘Did Humphrey tell you about his “indiscretions”?’
‘He told me a few things.’
‘He’s had other women on the go for years. I suppose it’s partly my fault for knowing but not saying
anything. Have you been asking any of his other women?’
‘We’ll get to that but the attacker very specifically said, “Be nice to your wife”, which is why I’m
here first.’
Beverley dropped the cloth into the sink and returned to her mug, eyes fixed on the counter. ‘I don’t
really talk to people about things like this. Who can you tell that you know your husband’s having
affairs? I don’t even mind that much – I just wish he’d talked to me about it, plus he’s never as clever with it all as he thinks. Whenever he’s wearing new clothes, I know it’s because he’s off out to meet
one of his women.’
‘Isn’t there anyone you talk to about things?’
‘Only Paula and a couple of the girls at work – we both complain about our husbands; the usual
stuff.’
As Terrance continued to add his opinion with a series of high-pitched barks, Jessica took the
details of Beverley’s workplace. It was already Sunday afternoon and she was going to struggle to get
much sense out of anyone at this time of day. The chances of getting any officers to help would be zero
too – especially as she was supposed to be taking a day off. Jessica pocketed the slip of paper,
thinking she’d deal with it on Monday.
Beverley let Jessica out, saying she’d be around for the rest of the day if there were any other
questions. Her parting words were perhaps the most biting: ‘I know this might all seem strange to a
young person like yourself but it comes to us all in the end.’
On that happy piece of advice, Jessica decided she’d finally make the visit she’d been putting off for
weeks. Her mother’s retirement home was just outside Heywood, halfway between Bury and
Rochdale, north of Manchester city centre. It was barely ten miles from her house and compared to
the ninety-mile journey she used to take to her parents’ place in Cumbria, Jessica really didn’t have
much of an excuse for not going. Her family had no historical connection to the area and she suspected
her mother had chosen the place because she liked the name of the home as opposed to any other
reason.
Meadowside Retirement Home gave the impression that it was on the edge of sprawling fields
stretching far into the distance with patches of pretty summer flowers constantly in bloom. The truth
was that it was probably once quite impressive. The first time Jessica had seen it, she’d been glad
Adam was with her because the outside made it look like another large stately home. He’d gripped
her hand and told her it was fine and then she’d been all right as soon as she’d gone inside. The smell
was difficult to describe; definitely cleaning products but also a large dose of
old
. Jessica couldn’t think of a better way to put it. It was probably a mix of the faded flowery carpets and dusty
chandeliers. What was good to see was the interaction between the staff and residents. After years of
horrendous undercover stories on the news with workers in places like this taking advantage of the
elderly patients, here you could sense the friendly atmosphere as soon as you entered.
As Jessica walked into Meadowside, two of the older gentlemen appeared to be racing from one
end of the entranceway to the other in wheelchairs, egged on by a twenty-something worker in a white
smock and three other residents sitting in armchairs waving their walking sticks in the air. Jessica
stood watching as one of the men crossed a line at the far end, where one carpet met another, and
raised his arm in victory. The other one instantly accused him of making a false start and they went
back and forth, bickering with enormous smiles on their faces as if they were schoolchildren again.
When Jessica thought of retirement homes, this wasn’t exactly what she pictured.
A woman wearing the same white smock as the younger man sidled up to Jessica and introduced
herself as the duty manager. ‘Can I help you?’
‘I’m here to visit my mother.’ Jessica started to give details and then stopped herself, nodding
towards the men. ‘Were they racing?’
The woman smiled. ‘That’s Walter and Brian – they’re always trying to outdo each other at
something, so it wouldn’t surprise me. It doesn’t matter what we have on – bowls on the lawn,
tiddlywinks in the canteen, bingo or quiz night – it always comes down to those two trying to beat
each other.’
Jessica watched as the man in the smock got in between the two arguing men, getting poked in the
thigh for his troubles as they continued arguing over who was the rightful winner. After taking her
mother’s name, the duty manager led Jessica up a staircase and along a brightly lit hallway to the
room. She knocked, got the ‘come in’ and then left Jessica to it.
Lydia Daniel kept her room as immaculate as she used to keep the family home. The bed was tidily
made with perfect corners, her cosmetics were arranged in straight lines beside the basin and there
was a neat pile of clothes on the dresser. She was sitting in a rocking chair by a curved window that
looked out over the front of the house, watching television. As Jessica entered, her mum began to
stand but Jessica quickly moved across the room to stop her, kneeling and giving her mother a hug
before sitting on the floor under the window.
‘You’ll hurt your back sitting on the floor,’ Jessica’s mother scolded.
‘I’ve been sitting on floors since I was a kid and I’m fine.’
‘Then why did you wince when you sat?’
She had her there. Always one step ahead, even now. Perhaps that was why Jessica’s back hurt a
lot.
‘Fine.’
Jessica climbed up and carried a wooden chair across from next to the dresser and sat by her mum.
On the television was a quiz show where the contestants were getting incredibly excited every time
they got a question correct. Her mum’s eyes flickered towards her and then back to the screen.
Although there was still a spark there, physically she was a shadow of the person Jessica
remembered when growing up. Then, she’d walked everywhere and carried huge bags of mail at their
post office. She refused to let her husband do anything for her that she could do herself and in many
ways was the strong woman that Jessica had herself hoped to be. Now, little brown blotches ran the