Authors: J.M. Gregson
Eddie felt a need to arrest this torrent of words and accusations before it engulfed him. âShe were a right cracker, that sergeant you sent in. Lovely bum and tits on 'er. Wouldn't kick 'er out of bed, mate.'
âI see. Well, I'll tell my wife what you said, Eddie, but I wouldn't hold out any great hopes, if I were you.'
Barton's face registered first incomprehension, then consternation, then abject fear. He turned his eyes from Peach's faintly amused round face to the ebony features beside him, and found that for the first time DS Northcott was smiling. His mouth looked very wide and his teeth looked very white. His amusement was an even more frightening sight than his previous impassivity.
Peach said, âYou're a lucky lad, Eddie. We're not going to prosecute you for the Thorley Grange business. If you offer us full cooperation, we might even put in a good word for you with the JPs on the bench when that golf club nonsense comes to court. Might even suggest you were led astray by an older man.'
Eddie said automatically, âI ain't a grass. I don't cooperate with no pigs.'
Peach shook his head sadly. âI was hoping you'd have more sense â your mum seemed to think you were quite an intelligent lad. But then mums do, don't they?'
âI'm not stupid. If I grass that lot up, they'llâ' He stopped abruptly.
Peach made the most of Barton's mistake by allowing a smile to creep very slowly across his expressive features. âAnd who would “that lot” be, Eddie?'
Barton shook his head glumly, not trusting the tongue which had already got him into trouble. Peach said earnestly, âWe protected you whilst you were in hospital, Eddie â used expensive manpower to do it, as I pointed out to you a moment ago. But we can't protect you for ever, now that you're back in the community. You must have realized by now that you bit off more than you could chew up at Thorley Grange. There are some very nasty people up there. Your best policy would be to have us pigs on your side.'
âFat lot of use you lot were, whenâ'
For the second time he had reacted without thinking; for the second time Peach welcomed it with a broad beam of comprehension. âThey've already visited you, haven't they, Eddie?'
Barton's hands felt automatically for the still painful ribs on his left side. He did not deny Peach; words only led you deeper into the mire with this persistent man, who seemed to know most things and to understand everything.
The DCI moved his own hands slowly and unthreateningly to the young man's slim waist, then lifted the shirt as tenderly as a nurse. The blue, green and yellow hues of various bruises covered most of the lean torso. âYou could sue them for this, you know, even though you committed the first offence. Use of excessive violence, the lawyers call it.'
âBut I'm not going to, am I?'
This time Peach's smile was small and rueful. Barton was right; Ketley and his minions would never allow a hostile witness to make it into court against them. The very suggestion might bring serious injury or worse to this pathetic creature who had strayed so far out of his depth. âNo, I don't believe you are, Eddie. Off the record, I can't even recommend that you should. But I think you should tell us everything you know about the set-up at Thorley Grange right now.'
Barton glanced at the tall figure beside him. DS Northcott nodded vigorously; even his encouragement seemed to carry menace. âThere's not much I can tell you. I was trying to pinch Mrs Ketley's jewels. I knew just where they were, see?'
He paused automatically, expecting them to ask about the source of his information. But all Peach said was a soft, âHow'd you get in, Eddie?'
âThrough the old building; through the room they call the old library. I forced a window and slipped in. Piece of piss, it was.' For a moment, his pride in the speed and efficiency of his entry shone through. Then he recalled to whom he was speaking and said hastily. âThen I was up the stairs and into the bedroom. I took the jewels and a couple of miniatures from the dressing table. Ignored everything else.'
âVery professional,' Peach murmured drily. âI expect you're going to tell us you almost got away with it.'
âI did. I was back through my window and away before anyone saw me.'
âBut someone did see you, didn't he?'
âNot until I was out of the place and away on my toes he didn't. I was away the way I came and back over the wall before he was. I'd have outrun him, too. I was leaving him well behind when he gunned me.'
âWho was he, Eddie?'
âI don't know. I don't know anything about the place, except where the jewels were.'
âAnd how to get in.' Again Peach didn't ask about the source of his knowledge. That would only put someone else in danger.
They asked him more questions, but his answers only confirmed that Barton had already told them all he knew. Eddie Barton rose automatically from the edge of his bed when he felt the easing of the springs as the big man beside him stood. He saw Peach go through the door, prepared to shut it behind his sidekick and collapse in relief on to his bed. But DS Northcott turned at the door to face him. Eddie thought for a moment that he was going to take a handful of his shirt, but he did not touch him.
Instead, Clyde Northcott stood tall above him, pinning his man against the wall by his very presence. âYou're probably not going to heed this. Daft buggers like you never do listen to good advice. But get yourself a job, son. You may think you've not got a lot going for you, but you're not on drugs and you've got a mum who still loves you. Get yourself a job, turn up on time, and do what you're told to do. That's what the Poles are doing and it's working for them. It might not pay much but you won't end up inside and you won't have a chest and a belly like that.'
Eddie cringed instinctively, but the man did not touch the bruises as he had expected. He held Eddie's eyes against his own deep brown ones for a second, then turned and went down the stairs without a backward glance.
Both officers were quiet as Clyde Northcott drove the police Mondeo back towards the station. The frowning Peach was thinking how a huge problem had appeared from nowhere with the arrival of Oliver Ketley and his crew at Thorley Grange.
Clyde Northcott reflected that they hadn't got very much out of Barton because he hadn't had much to give. Clive hadn't been Percy Peach's bagman for very long. But he had already learned that his DCI was an expert at making sizeable bricks from very little straw.
The work you do for a man gives you a different perspective. The people who served Oliver Ketley in any of his business ventures estimated him in almost the same way as the police who sought to trap him. He paid well, as you had to for work which was physically dangerous or outside the law. But they knew he was a villain, just as clearly as they knew that they must keep that knowledge strictly to themselves. Ketley didn't favour discussion of the work they did, even among his own staff.
But you saw things differently if you were merely the kind of domestic staff whom any person with Ketley's resources could afford to employ. Thorley Grange was a big house. When you added the old original wing to the vast modern complex which had been built so quickly, there were in all fourteen bedrooms in the place, as well as suites of entertaining rooms and a large indoor swimming pool in the basement. There were two gardeners, a housekeeper and a large domestic staff.
Yet for most of the year these facilities were not extensively used. This meant that the people who maintained the Grange enjoyed what was most commonly called âa cushy number'. Except for a few occasions in the year when the rooms were full and the meals in the dining room elaborate, the work was easy and the pay was good. If you kept your mouth shut and did your limited work conscientiously, it was an easier life than that experienced by most people who did domestic work.
Janey Johnson certainly found it so. She had worked at the Grange from the outset, being taken on two years ago, when the new building work was completed. She had worked here for a few weeks before even Oliver Ketley and his wife had moved in. She was thirty-five, small, dark, quietly pretty and self-effacing. The experienced housekeeper who had taken her on had recognized at interview a woman who was by no means stupid but had few qualifications, having left school to support an ailing mother without taking GCSEs. Just as important, she was a widow who needed the work. She was likely therefore to be uncomplaining and reliable.
Mrs Johnson proved just that. Like most of the staff, she lived in Brunton and came in daily to work at the Grange. She was never late; she could be relied upon to work steadily without being supervised; she never âthrew a sickie' to take time off when it suited her. On the rare occasions when there was room for it in a house that ran so smoothly, Janey Johnson showed initiative, as well as the eminent common sense which characterized most of her behaviour.
It was no surprise that the housekeeper developed a liking for the unobtrusive and uncomplaining Mrs Johnson. She was originally employed purely as a cleaner, moving as she proved her efficiency and trustworthiness from the kitchens and the more public rooms to the living quarters and bedrooms of the senior household staff and occasionally even into the quarters occupied by Oliver and Greta Ketley. Janey was willing and able to turn her hand to most things. She waited at table when a full house required it. She showed a talent for flower arrangement, so that eventually most of the floral displays in the house, including the one in the hall which everyone saw, were put together by her.
In her three years at Thorley Grange, Janey Johnson had scarcely spoken to the owner. Oliver Ketley was a man you only addressed when you were spoken to, and he had little occasion to speak to the unobtrusive Mrs Johnson. But a week after Eddie Barton had attempted his burglary at the house, she was called into the presence of the owner. She stood before him as demure and quiet as ever, but she felt her heart beating like a trip hammer in her breast at the interview.
With his very pale blue eyes, slicked back hair and square, automaton's face Ketley was a sinister figure, especially to one who had never been alone in his presence before. His size made him even more intimidating to the diminutive Janey. She was glad when he sat down, then fearful again as he looked her up and down for several seconds without speaking. The fact that he obviously intended to make her apprehensive only added to the effect. He left her standing in front of him for what seemed a long time before he said abruptly, âSit down, Mrs Johnson.'
Janey sat down as demurely as she could on the dining chair in front of him, crossing her trouser-clad legs at the ankles, feeling very exposed. She wished that he had taken her into the business office where she had never been, so that at least there would have been a desk between them.
Ketley assessed her legs for a moment, running his gaze slowly up her thighs and stopping without shame at her crotch. Then he said heavily, âI wanted a word with you about the burglary we had here a couple of weeks ago.'
âYes, sir. I don't know anything about it. I wasn't even here at the time. It happened on my day off.' She poured out every fact she could think of to establish her innocence, in a flow that only made her sound more defensive and more guilty.
âI know that. You wouldn't be still working here if I thought you'd any connection with what happened.' He tried to smile, to put her a little more at ease; he quite fancied this trim woman he had never noticed in his house. But smiling didn't come naturally to him. The only effect of his words was to leave her in no doubt that whoever crossed this man could expect big trouble.
âI'll tell you whatever I can, sir.'
âThat's all I need. As nothing was eventually taken, it didn't seem necessary to involve the police. Mr Hardwick and I have already conducted an investigation into the affair and we now have a clear idea of what happened. Do you know Mr Hardwick?'
âYes, sir. Not well, sir. We don't see each other very often.' Nor did she wish to. James Hardwick, bodyguard and enforcer for the boss, kitchen gossip said. There were dark tales of some of the brutality that unsmiling man had arranged in the course of his work, but Janey knew that rumour always exaggerated.
âNo. Mr Hardwick is largely concerned with my business affairs. But as he lives in, he has a detailed knowledge of the workings of the household.'
It sounded like another warning that she should hold nothing back. She wanted to assure him that she had no intention of doing that, but she merely nodded, her attention all on the big, expressionless face which made her feel as if she was sitting naked on her chair. Because he said nothing and she felt an overwhelming need to fill the silence, she blurted out, âI heard the man didn't get away with anything.'
âHe didn't. And he's been dealt with.' A trace of satisfaction coloured the inscrutable voice for an instant. âBut we are naturally concerned that there should be no repetition.'
âNo, sir. Of course not.'
âIt appears that the man who broke in was given certain information. What do you know about that?'
This was why she was here, then. To help in the hunt. Janey didn't want to incriminate anyone, but she knew in the same thought that she wasn't going to risk denying anything she knew to this man. She heard her voice shake as she said, âI don't know anything, sir.'
Another of those terrifying pauses followed. The pale blue eyes regarded her like those of a wild animal which has its prey cornered and helpless. âYou probably know more than you think you do, Mrs Johnson. I stress that no suspicion attaches to you, but you would be most unwise to try to withhold information.'
âI shan't do that, sir.' She managed to hold her voice steady this time, to imbue the simple statement with some of the conviction she felt.
âIt seems likely that someone informed the intruder about certain things. He seemed to know the most vulnerable window to force. He knew the way to our bedroom. Most significantly of all, he knew exactly where Mrs Ketley's jewellery was kept. He could only have been fed that information by someone who works here.'