Authors: Catherine Aird
She found rather to her surprise that she washed, dressed andâsometimesâate just as she had always done. She answered the telephone, wrote letters, did the dusting and attended, acolyte-fashion, to the washing-machine just as if nothing had happened.
That was in the daytime.
It was a constant source of wonder to her that after the day when her own Heaven had fallen and âthe hour when earth's foundations fled' she still got through the days at all.
The nights, of course, were different.
In a world that had tumbled about her ears the nights had turned into refined torture. There was no routine about the long watches of the night, no demands on her time to be met until morning, and no requirement of her body that could be satisfiedânot even sleep.
Especially not sleep.
The night-time was when she could have walked mile after mile, however weary she had been when she dropped into bed. Instead custom required that she spent it lying still in a narrow bed in a small room. The roomâher roomâgot smaller and smaller during the night. She could swear to it. There had been a horror story she'd read once when she was young about the roof of a four-poster bed descending on the person in the bed and smothering them â¦
She'd been of an age to take horror in her stride then, to laugh at it even. Horror in those days had been something weird and strange. Now she was older she knew that horror was merely something familiar gone sadly wrong. That was where true horror lay â¦
Why, she thought angrily to herself as she shook out a duster, hadn't someone like Wilkie Collins written about the bruising a girl's soul suffered when she'd been jilted? That should have given any novelist worth his salt something to get his teeth into.
CHAPTER 3
Tell the Sheriff's Officers that I am ready
.
Detective-Constable Crosbyâhe who could most easily be spared from the police stationâbrought the car round for Detective-Inspector Sloan as that officer stepped out of the back door of Berebury Police Station.
The constable was patently disappointed to learn that there was no hurry to get to wherever they were going.
âNo hurry at all,' repeated Sloan, climbing into the front passenger seat. âYou can take it from me, Crosby, that this particular problem isn't going to run away.'
The other man withdrew his hand from the switches to blue flashing light and siren.
âOn the contrary,' forecast Detective-Inspector Sloan, âI shouldn't be surprised if it's not going to be with us for quite a while.'
The trouble with Superintendent Leeyes was that his gloom was catching.
âYes, sir,' said Crosby, immediately losing interest. âWhere to, then, slowly?'
And the trouble with Detective-Constable Crosby was that he was only nearly insubordinate.
Sloan settled himself in the car, reminding himself of something he knew very well already: that Detective-Constable Crosby wasn't by any means the brightest star in the Force's firmament. As far as he, Sloan, could make out, the only thing that Crosby really liked doing was driving fast cars fast. That was probably why Inspector Harpe, who was in charge of Traffic Division, had insisted that the constable was better in the plain clothes' branch rather than the uniformed one.
âCall us “Woollies” if you like, Sloan,' Harpe had said vehemently at the time.
âI don't â¦' began Sloan: though there were those in plenty who did.
âBut,' swept on Inspector Harpe, âI'm not stupid enough to want that boy Crosby behind the wheel of one of Traffic Division's vehicles.'
âNo, Harry.'
âFirst time he was tempted,' sniffed Harpe, âhe'd be after a ton-up kid.'
For Adam and Eve temptation had been an apple. For a Traffic Duty policeman temptation was a youth behind the wheel of a fast car ahead of him and going faster, ever faster. The driver would be showing the world in generalâbut the police car in particularâwhat his car would do. If it was his car: ten to one it would be somebody else's car. Taken for a joy-ride. Taken on a joy-ride, too.
Luring on the law was practically a parlour game.
And as Inspector Harpe of Traffic Division knew only too well, what was begun âsae rantingly, sae wantonly, sae dauntingly' usually ended up on Robert Burns's present-day equivalent of the gallows-treeâa fatal motorway pile-up. Because as a rule the Law's cars could do rather better than anyone else's, and the Law's drivers were trained. They were trained, too, of course, not to respond to taunting behaviour. That training, though, took a little longer than learning to drive well.
âThe first time someone tried it on Crosby,' Harpe had predicted, âhe'd fall for it. You know he would, Sloan. Be honest now.'
âWell â¦'
âHook, line and sinker, I'll be bound,' said Harpe. âI'm prepared to bet good money that he'd go and chase some madman right up the motorway until they ran out of road. Both of them.'
âBut â¦' Even Superintendent Leeyes wasn't usually as bodeful as this.
âCatch Crosby radioing ahead to get the tearaway stopped instead of going after him.'
âOh, come off it, Harry,' Sloan had said at the time. âYou were young once yourself.'
At this moment now he contented himself with telling Crosby where to go. âDr Dabbe is expecting us at the mortuary,' he said as the police car swung round Berebury's new multi-storey car park and out on to the main road.
Crosby automatically put his foot down.
âIn due course,' said Sloan swiftly. âNot on two stretchers.'
The Consultant Pathologist to the Berebury District Hospital Group was more than expecting them. He was obviously looking forward to seeing the two policemen. He welcomed them both to his domain. âCome along in, Inspector Sloan, andâlet me see nowâit's Constable Crosby, isn't it?'
âYes, Doctor.' Crosby didn't like attending postmortem examinations.
The pathologist was rubbing his hands together. âWe've got something very interesting here, gentlemen. Very interesting indeed.'
âHave we?' said Sloan warily. Cases that were âOpen and Shut' were what made for a quiet life, not interesting ones.
The pathologist indicated the door to the post-mortem theatre. âWhat you might call a real puzzler.'
âReally?' said Sloan discouragingly.
âAs well as being âa dead, damp, moist, unpleasant body,' as Mr Mantalini said.'
âNot drowned, anyway, I hear,' advanced Sloan, who did not know who Mr Mantalini was. The case was never going to get off the ground at all at this rate.
âNot “drowned dead” anyway,' agreed the pathologist breezily. âYou know your Charles Dickens, I expect, Sloan?'
Sloan didn't but that wasn't important. What was important was what the pathologist had found.
He waited.
âIn my opinion,' said Dr Dabbe, getting to the point at last, âconfirmed, I may say, by some X-ray photographs, this chap we've got here ⦠whoever he is â¦'
âYes?' said Sloan, stifling any other comment. The body's identity was something else that the police were going to have to establish. Later.
â⦠and however wet he is,' continued the pathologist imperturbably, âwas dead before he hit the water.'
âAh,' said Sloan.
âFurthermore â¦'
Even Constable Crosby raised his head at this.
âFurthermore,' said the pathologist, âin my opinion he died from the consequences of a fall from a considerable height.'
Detective-Constable Crosby clearly felt it was incumbent on him to say something into the silence which followed this pronouncement. He looked round the room and said âDid he fall or was he pushed?'
âAh, gentlemen,' Dr Dabbe said courteously, âI rather think that's your department, isn't it? Not mine.'
Detective-Inspector Sloan was not to be diverted by such pleasantry. There were still some matters that were the pathologist's department and he wanted to know about them.
âWhat sort of height?' he asked immediately.
âDifficult to say exactly at this stage, Sloan,' temporized the pathologist. âThere's a lot of work to be done yet. I've got to take a proper look at the X-rays, too. I can tell you that there are multiple impacted fractures where the shock effect of hitting
terra firma
ran through the body.'
Sloan winced involuntarily.
The pathologist was more detached. âIt demonstrates Newton's Third Law of Motion very nicelyâyou know, the one about force travelling through a body.'
Sloan didn't know and didn't care.
âHe didn't fall from the air, did he?' he asked. There had been parts of a dead body dropped from an aeroplane on the Essex marshes just after the last war. That case had become a
cause célèbre
and passed into legal history and Sloan had read about it. âWe're not talking about aeroplane height, are we?'
âNo, no,' said Dr Dabbe. âLess than that.'
Sloan nodded. âBut he didn't fall into the water?'
âNot first,' said the pathologist. âI think he hit the earth first.'
That only left fire. If Sloan had been a medieval man he would have promptly enquired about the fourth elementâfireâthat always went with earth, water and air. He wasn't, he reminded himself astringently, any such thing. He was a twentieth-century policeman. âA fall from a height,' he said sedately instead.
âYes,' said the pathologist.
âAnd on to hard ground,' said Sloan.
âHard something,' said Dr Dabbe. âAs to whether it was ground or not I can't say yet.'
âNot into the sea, though?' concluded Sloan.
That stirred Detective-Constable Crosby into speech again. âWhat about Cranberry Point?' he suggested. âThat's a good drop.'
âRather less than that, too, I think,' said Dr Dabbe more slowly, âthough I can't tell you for certain yet. I'll have to have a look at the exact degree of bone displacement â¦'
The knee bone was connected to the hip bone and the hip bone was connected to the thigh bone â¦
âYou can get out on to the cliff above Kinnisport,' persisted Crosby, âif you have a mind to.'
âBut,' pointed out the pathologist, âif you go over the cliff there you don't hit the water.'
âNo more you don't, Doctor,' agreed the constable in no whit put out.
Sloan had forgotten for a moment that the pathologist was a Sunday sailor himself. He remembered now that Dr Dabbe sailed an Albacore somewhere in the estuary. He was bound to know that stretch of the river and coastline well.
âYou hit the rocks if you go over the edge up there,' pronounced Dr Dabbe, thus revealing that he had already given the cliffs beyond Kinnisport some thought.
âBut not the water,' agreed Sloan. That was what had saved Cranberry Point from becoming Calleshire's Beachy Head all right. âThe tide never comes in to the very bottom of the cliff.'
âExactly,' said Dr Dabbe. âHe wouldn't have ended up in the water if he'd gone over the cliffs there.'
âUnless,' said Inspector Sloan meticulously, âsomeone had then punted the body into the sea.' It might be Dr Dabbe's function to establish the cause of death: it was Detective-Inspector Sloan's bounden duty to consider all the angles of a proposition. âAfter he'd fallen.'
âOr been pushed,' said Crosby unnecessarily.
It was Sloan whom the pathologist answered. âYes, Inspector, I suppose you shouldn't discount the theoretical possibility that someone dragged him off the rocks at the foot of the cliff and into the sea.'
âThey'd have had a job,' said Crosby roundly, forgetting that it was no part of the office of constableâdetective or otherwiseâto argue with an inspectorâdetective or otherwiseâlet alone with a full-blown medical man.
Sloan regarded Crosby with a certain curiosity. It wasn't the breach of protocol that intrigued him. After all, protocol was only significant in one of two waysâeither in its observance or in its breaching. What he had noted was that Detective-Constable Crosbyâtraffic policeman
manqué
âdidn't as a rule take such an interest in a case early on. He wondered what it was about the matter so far that had caught his wayward attention.
âI must say, Sloan,' added Dr Dabbe, who never minded with whom he argued, âfrom my own experience I can confirm that it would be the devil's own job to get in there under the cliffs with a boat to do any such thing.'
âWould it, Doctor?' Cranberry Point, then, could be discounted.
âIt certainly wouldn't be a job for a man on his own,' said Dabbe, âand the tide would have had to be exactly right.'
âAnd as for walking round the cliffs from Kinnisport, sir,' put in Crosby.
âYes?' said Sloan, interested in spite of himself. Crosby was no walker. His stint on the beat had proved that.
âYou'd have had your work cut out to do it, sir, without the coastguards seeing you.'
If Superintendent Leeyes had been there he would have automatically added a rider to the effect that the coastguards hadn't anything else to do but look out at the sea and the cliffs. The Superintendent wasn't there, of course, because he never went out on cases at all if he could help it. He stayed at the centre while his myrmidons fanned out and then reported back. The still centre, some might say: others were more perceptive and spoke wisely of the eye of the hurricane.
âExactly,' said Dr Dabbe, who was fortunately able to concentrate entirely on the matter in hand. Forensic pathologists didn't have superior officers chasing them. In theory, at any rate, they pursued absolute accuracy for its own sakeâat the request of Her Majesty's Coroner and at the behest of no one else. The only people of whom pathologists had to be wary, thought Sloan with a certain amount of envy, were opposing Counsel in Court who wanted to give the Goddess of Truth a tweak here and there to the benefit of their particular client.