In this derelict place, it seemed even colder than elsewhere. He found that there were rough tracks flattened through the debris, presumably made by the machines of the development company. He picked his way through the undulating mass of broken bricks and stone, using the small circle of pale light cast by his torch to make sure that he trod always upon crushed bricks rather than mud, so that the soles of his trainers would leave no trace behind him. He realized that he was behaving like a guilty being, but the knowledge did not alter the tactic.
He came eventually to strands of new barbed wire. He lifted the torch, casting its pale beam away into the darkness, wishing he had thought to renew the batteries before he came here. At the very fringe of his vision, the light of the stars caught the gleam of a wide, shallow pool of standing water. The scene in the darkness and the silence reminded him irresistibly of a First World War battlefield.
Except that only one body had been buried here, he thought, as he turned out his torch. He wanted to turn away, but he was held for a moment like one at a graveside, paying a last homage to the departed one. It was then, in the darkness, that he saw the covering tarpaulin sheets and the single light, a hundred yards and more away across this no man's land of detritus.
That must be where she had been found. The police had finished their work there now, had taken away anything which interested them. He wondered exactly what they had found amid this bleak and desolate industrial wasteland. He was going no nearer than this, that was for certain. He wondered belatedly why he had come here at all.
He moved more quickly on the way back to his car, picking his way still on hard ground, resisting the urge to break into a trot as the shape of the car loomed up through the gloom. He threw himself quite hard into the driver's seat, feeling the shape of it like a protection around him, shutting his door hard to cocoon himself in his cave of warmth against a hostile world outside.
He had always known that she would be found eventually, he told himself. The discovery of her body meant nothing, without evidence.
He had moved away too quickly for the solitary constable who now guarded the site to ask him why he had come there at this hour of the night. The PC had to content himself with noting the illuminated registration number of the Vectra, as it lurched swiftly away.
âYou'd better put me in the picture about this clearance site murder of yours,' said Thomas Bulstrode Tucker.
Typical of him, thought Peach. All the murders which look like being insoluble are mine, all the straightforward domestics where we have a confession with hours and a killer pleading guilty are his.
But at least the sun was shining brilliantly into the Chief Superintendent's office on this last Wednesday morning in February. Peach gave his chief his most brilliant smile and said, âI think you'll find this is one of yours, sir.'
Tommy Bloody Tucker responded with the look of apprehension which always cheered his Chief Inspector. âIt's no use trying to shrug these things off, you know, just because you think they might be difficult. I didn't secure your promotion to DCI just so that you couldâ'
âWasn't even around, sir, when this one died, I'm afraid. Right in the middle of your patch it seems to have been, when you were still a humble DI yourself, slaving away at the crime-face. If you can still remember those days, sir.'
âOf course I can, Peach. But before you shuffle off the responsibility, you should be very sure thatâ'
âI'm very sure I wasn't around when this woman died, sir.'
âI don't see how at this stage you can be so certain exactly when thatâ'
âHirohito, sir.'
âPardon?'
âHirohito. Japanese Emperor, sir. In power at the time of the 1939â45 War, sir. Said the Japanese had to fight on to the last man, sir. Americans dropped the atom bomb and changed his mind, sir. Apparently. I wasn't around at the time myself. Don't suppose you recall theâ'
âOf course I don't, Peach! And what on earth has this Haryhoto in 1945 got to do withâ'
âHirohito, sir. And he hasn't got anything to do with it, sir, not in 1945.' Peach took pity on the blank-faced man on the other side of the big desk. âHis funeral was on the twenty-fourth of February, 1989, sir. And that's the week when those terraced houses where the body was found were vacated by their last official tenants, sir. So I am reliably informed.' He didn't think it politic to inform Tucker that his reliable informant was the 86-year-old mother of a petty criminal.
âAnd you think this woman was killed at around that time?'
âNot clear on that yet, sir. Could have been before or after that date. We have a house-to-house going on at the new estate to which most of the inhabitants were transferred. But as yet no one has come up with an identification of the victim, or given us any reason to think they may be concealing significant information.'
âBut you think that this death dates from around that time?'
Peach repeated himself patiently. âProbably a little before or a little afterwards, sir. When you were the CID Inspector dealing with that particular patch.' That thought seemed to give Percy Peach considerable satisfaction. He nodded thoughtfully two or three times at the wall above Tucker's head and then said brightly, âYou don't recall anyone reporting a particularly puzzling MISPA in the area at around that time I suppose, sir?'
Tucker shifted uncomfortably. âThousands of people go missing in this country every week, you know.'
âActually I do know that, yes, sir.'
âYou really can't expect me to remember a particular MISPA at this distance in time?'
âNo, sir. I didn't really expect that. Especially as there's nothing on the files.' He didn't think there was much chance of Tommy Bloody Tucker remembering the Abominable Bleeding Snowman, fifteen years on, but he might as well make as much as he could of a murder on Tucker's patch that had passed him by. âFiles seem pretty sparse for those years.'
âIn those days, we didn't have the abundant clerical help and the computers which you have, Peach. Now, if you've quite finished taking up my few spare minutes, it's time for me to get on with a busy day.' He waved his arm expansively over his empty desk, as if the gesture could produce the paper evidence of a hectic schedule.
âYou don't recall any reports of a young Asian woman going missing, sir?'
âAsian?' It seemed a new concept to Tucker, though the town had one of the highest intensities of Pakistani immigrants in the country. He made a pretence of giving the matter some thought, then said, âI can't say I remember any Asian girl being reported missing at the time. They tend to be close-knit families, you know, the Asians.' He sounded as if he were announcing some mystical religious rite, the result of intensive research on his part.
âReally, sir? I'll bear that in mind.' Alongside all the other blindin' bleedin' obvious clichés you visit upon me. âThere's a strong possibility this woman isn't a native of Brunton, sir. The local dentists haven't turned up anything for us. And we're not likely to have any success with dental records nationally without a name.'
âThen I suggest you set about the business of finding a name, Peach. It's already nearly two days since this corpse was found, and you haven't even got an identification yet.'
Peach thought as he went back down the stairs how hard he had worked the system to have got what little they had by this stage from forensic and the post-mortem. For a few delicious minutes, he toyed with the beguiling thought of burying the body of Tommy Bloody Tucker beneath tons of concrete and a five-storey office block.
But his first piece of luck in the case was waiting on his desk.
âI suppose you're involved in this latest murder case, our Lucy. This woman who was murdered years ago in a slum house.' Agnes Blake found herself falling into a ritual of anxiety about the well-being of her only daughter.
DS Blake said stiffly, âWe're not allowed to talk about cases at home. I've told you that before, Mum.'
âGlad to hear you still think of this place as home.' Agnes ticked off a small point scored in the motherâdaughter phoney war.
Lucy looked round the familiar low-ceilinged living room in the cottage where she had grown up. It held many dear memories for her, but at this moment it seemed a long way from her own neat modern flat. And even further from that bleak and cheerless spot where the anonymous woman had been unearthed by the bulldozers and cranes. âThis will always be home to me, Mum.' She looked automatically at the mantelpiece, where the silver-framed photograph of her dead father in his cricket gear held pride of place, with the more surprising image of Percy Peach, dapper in his white sweater and red cap, now beside it.
Agnes Blake was nearly seventy now, but her brain was as acute as ever. She caught her daughter's glance and exploited the situation immediately. âIt's true I don't feel quite as worried about you now that I know that Percy is around to look after you.' She smiled at her daughter and added, complacently and unnecessarily, âHe's a good lad, your Percy.'
âSome lad! He's thirty-eight and bald as a coot! And I'm not sure he'd like to be described as
my
Percy.'
âOh, but he would, you know! He's smitten, is your Percy. Men are a daft lot â without the sense they were born with, most of them, when it comes to women. But your Percy's got his head screwed on the right way. He's got all his chairs at home, has Percy.'
âIt's a long time since I heard anyone use that expression, Mum.' DS Blake played for time, trying to think of a way of diverting this conversation from where she knew it was heading. It was a source of lasting surprise to Lucy that her mother and Percy, whom she had thought would have so little in common, had got on like a house on fire since their first meeting.
Agnes went and picked up the picture of Peach from the mantelpiece, looked at it fondly for a moment, and set it down even nearer to the black and white photograph of her dead husband. âPercy will be wanting to settle down, I don't doubt, now he's given up cricket.'
Lucy decided to ignore this glorious non sequitur. âHe's very wrapped up in his career, Percy. He's a Detective Chief Inspector now, don't forget.'
âHe's not so wrapped up that he doesn't recognize a pretty girl when he sees one. And he's bright enough to see that this girl has more than good looks and a few curves, too. And don't give me this Chief Inspector stuff. He's not interested in rank, your Percy. He's interested in villains, and locking villains away.'
Agnes gazed out of the stone-framed window at the long slope of Longridge Fell, and her daughter was left wondering how the old lady who rarely journeyed even as far as Brunton could know so much about her man. âYou're probably right, Mum. About putting villains away, I mean. He was even refusing the promotion at first, because he knew an inefficient superintendent was riding upwards on his back. I had to badger him into taking it.'
âListened to you though, didn't he, our Lucy? When he wouldn't have listened to others, no doubt. I shouldn't think our Percy listens to many people. It's time you let him make an honest woman of you. He'd listen to you about that as well, I've no doubt.'
Lucy found herself blushing in spite of herself. âWe wouldn't be allowed to work together if the police authorities realized we had a serious relationship, Mum.' It was one of the few good things about Tommy Bloody Tucker's inefficiency, that he still didn't recognize that she and Percy Peach had become an item.
âThere's ways and means, I'm sure, our Lucy,' said Agnes Blake gnomically. âIt's high time you two were thinking about giving me some grandchildren. I shan't be here for ever, you know!' But by the set of her chin, she intended to survive for a considerable period yet.
âI've a career to think of, you know. I enjoy my work.' The familiar argument sounded a little desperate even in Lucy's own ears.
Agnes sniffed. âModern women!' The phrase carried a contempt for the whole of contemporary mores. âYou can't stop the march of time with your talk of careers, you know, our Lucy. You might pretend not to hear it, but your biological clock is ticking, all the time.' She nodded home the phrase; she had been storing it up all week, since she had heard it bandied about in the supermarket where she still worked part-time.
It was uncomfortably near the thoughts Lucy had been indulging herself, but she could never admit that here. âI've worked hard to get where I am, and I don't want to give it up now.'
Agnes smiled unexpectedly. They had this conversation about three times a year, and it was time for her to switch her ground if she was to keep it going. âI'm not against women having a career. I'm glad you've had opportunities I never had. But you needn't give up your career when you have a family. Not nowadays. Not in the police force.'
âIt's good to have such a well-informed mother,' said Lucy acidly.
âPerhaps I'd better ask Percy, if I can't get any more sense out of you,' said that mother darkly. If persuasion and sound arguments didn't work, you might as well try threats.
âDon't you dare!' said Lucy, a little too hastily, her mother thought. She added earnestly, âI really do like the work, Mum. This latest death you mentioned, for instance. That body found under the bricks and mortar is a real puzzle.'
Agnes knew when she was being diverted, but she'd said her piece. She contented herself with a derisive sniff. âSo long as they don't find the skeleton of my daughter in a place like that, in twenty years' time.'
âThere's no danger of that, Mum, and you know it. But we don't even know who that poor woman is yet. And when we do, we'll have a devil of a job discovering who it was that killed her all those years ago.'