Read Ramsay 06 - The Baby-Snatcher Online

Authors: Ann Cleeves

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Teen & Young Adult, #Crime Fiction

Ramsay 06 - The Baby-Snatcher (8 page)

BOOK: Ramsay 06 - The Baby-Snatcher
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‘You knew her?’

She shrugged. ‘ Saw her about. We never spoke. She thought she was too good for me.’

‘What’s the story, then?’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Tell me about the Howes. What do people say about them?’

‘That they keep themselves to themselves. That’s what the charitable ones say.’

‘And the others?’

‘That they’re stuck-up gits.’

‘And you?’ He leant forward confidentially. ‘ What do you think?’

‘They’re not normal, are they?’ The answer was flip. She didn’t really care one way or the other. This was a bit of drama, a bit of fun. There’d been reporters knocking on the door and now this detective. Very tasty. She’d always kept her distance from the law but if anyone could make her change the practice of a lifetime…

‘In what way not normal?’ His tone was more serious and she struggled to explain.

‘They don’t drive, don’t drink, don’t have a telly. They never go out except to walk. That’s not normal, is it?’ For the first, time she was on the defensive.

‘Are they religious?’

She looked blank.

‘Do they belong to one of those sects? Jehovah’s Witness or something?’ It was the only explanation he could come up with for the aberrant lifestyle.

‘I don’t think so.’ She rushed a little giggle. ‘ They haven’t tried to convert me.’

‘How long have they lived on the Headland?’

‘Just over five years. They moved in about the same time as Ray and me.’

‘Any family connections on the Headland?’

She shook her head.

‘So why move here?’

‘Same reason as me and Ray I expect. Because the houses were dirt cheap. Ray’s a builder and he knew he could do the place up. The Howes speak posh but I don’t think there’s much money there. Bernard works on the computers at the Ministry but it’s all agency staff now and they pay peanuts.’

‘How do you know?’

She shrugged again. ‘People talk. You know how it is.’

‘I wonder what they say about you?’

She answered immediately, but without rancour. ‘They say I’m a dirty slut because I threw out Ray and I’m bringing up the bairn on my own. And because I like a night out with my friends once in a while. A few drinks and a laugh and a bit of a dance down Whitley on a Friday night.’

‘How do you manage that with a kid to look after? Does your mam live close by?’

‘Na, and she wouldn’t be keen if she did. She still likes a night out herself. She thinks she’s too young to be a gran.’

‘So who minds the bairn?’

‘Claire. She’ll always sit if she’s free. Glad to get out of that house, I expect.’

‘Claire?’

She looked at him as if he was stupid. ‘Claire Irvine. Kath Howe’s sister. They took her in when her parents died. She works as a nanny up at the Coastguard House, but they don’t need her much in the evenings. Like I say, I think she’s glad to get out – can you imagine being shut up with those weirdos and no
telly
? But she owes me a favour anyway. It was me that got her the job.’

‘How was that?’ Hunter thought this was probably irrelevant but the boss had ordered gossip and he was following instructions. Besides, it was more pleasant here than in some of the houses he’d visited, with their smells of old age, talcum powder and cat pee. He thought again he’d be happy to stay here all day.

‘I take Kirsty to the playgroup in. Heppleburn. There’s no nursery round here. Mrs Coulthard from the Coastguard House sends her oldest boy there too. Sometimes she gives me a lift home. She was talking about getting a nanny and I mentioned that Claire had done the course and was looking for a job.’

‘Very convenient.’

‘Yeah, though you wouldn’t think she’d need a nanny, would you? It’s not as if she works. Some people have got more money than sense.’ There was a silence. She twisted a bangle on her wrist. ‘Is it true what they’re saying?’

‘Depends what they’re saying.’

‘That Kath Howe was murdered. It wasn’t an accident.’

‘She was stabbed.’ Hunter said. He drained the last of his coffee noisily. He wouldn’t have minded another cup, wouldn’t have minded anyway another glimpse of her bum as she bent over the sink to fill the kettle.

‘Jesus!’ She seemed honestly shocked. ‘I thought it was just talk.’ There was a pause. ‘Was she mucked about first? You know what I mean.’

‘There was no indication of sexual assault.’

‘Oh.’

‘When did you last see her?’ Hunter asked. She was still so dazed that he had to repeat the question.

‘I’m not sure.’

‘Did you see her on Saturday?’

‘Saturday? No, I don’t think so.’

‘Where were you that day?’

‘Here for most of the time.’

‘Didn’t you go out at all?’

‘Not in the morning. Unless you call standing on the doorstep going out. I’d been down Whitley on Friday night and a friend stayed over. I went out to wave him off. I didn’t see anyone then. Except the bitch across the road who had her nose pressed to the bedroom window.’

‘I’ll need the name and address of your friend.’

There was a moment of uncertainty then she said, with an attempt at the old flippancy, ‘You’ll be lucky.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘I mean we weren’t on those sort of terms.’

‘You only met him that night?’

‘Na, I’d bumped into him a couple of times. He’d been back here once before.’

‘You must have a name for him then.’

‘He called himself Paul.’

‘You don’t think that was his real name?’

She shrugged. ‘Could have been. But he’s married, and he wasn’t giving much away.’

‘And where did “Paul” live?’ Hunter recognized no contradiction in his previous fantasies about Kim Houghton and the disapproval of her behaviour which expressed itself in sarcasm.

She seemed not to notice. ‘Newcastle.’

‘You can’t be more specific?’

She shook her head.

‘What about a phone number?’

It wasn’t that sort of thing. Just a bit of fun. At least it was supposed to be.

‘What do you mean?’

She had been smoking a cigarette and stabbed it out fiercely in a glass ashtray.

‘Went all weepy on me, didn’t he? About how his wife didn’t understand him. About how screwed up she is. Just what I needed. Not.’

‘How did you get here on Friday night? Taxi or his car?’

‘His car.’

‘Which was?’

‘A red Mazda. Very fancy. Very fast.’

‘Number plate?’

‘New. N reg. That’s all I noticed.’

‘And it was parked in the street all night?’

‘That’s right.’

Hunter sat back in his chair and looked at her. ‘Didn’t it bother you? Folks knowing you had a bloke to stay. Going out in the morning to see him off?’

He imagined her standing there in her dressing gown. With nothing on underneath.

‘Stuff them,’ she said. She picked up the packet of cigarettes from the table, knocked one out, lit it. Her hands shook slightly but her voice was steady. ‘ Stuff them. They could do with some excitement in their tired lives.’

‘What time was that?’

‘I don’t know. Too early.’

‘You didn’t see Mrs Howe’s daughter? She walked down to wait for the bus into town.’

‘I didn’t notice.’

‘What about later?’

‘I didn’t see anyone. I put on a video for Kirsty and went back to bed.’ She caught his eye and held it. ‘I was knackered, wasn’t I?’

‘Did Claire Irvine babysit for you on Friday night?’

‘Yes.’

‘So she will have met your friend Paul. When you got back.’

‘No. He waited in the car until she’d gone home.’

‘Tactful.’ Again the sarcasm was intended.

‘Yeah!’ she blazed back at him. ‘Tactful. If you must know he was really nice. We had breakfast together, him, me and Kirsty. He made a real fuss of her. He didn’t have to do that.’

‘Did you talk to Claire before you went out?’

‘A bit. While I was getting my things together, waiting for the taxi.’

‘How did she seem?’

‘Same as she always seems. About a hundred and fifty. And it’s not surprising, is it? Wiping kids’ bums all day and staring at the walls in that house all night. I’ve offered to take her out clubbing with me but she’ll not go.’

‘Did she mention Mrs Howe at all?’

Kim shook her head. ‘All she could talk about was the kiddies’ party and how good it would be.’

‘Did your daughter go to that?’ Hunter was surprised.

‘Oh yes! Kirsty and me had a royal invitation. Very honoured too. No one else on the Headland was asked.’

‘What was it like?’ He was intrigued.

‘It was all right. I mean, I only went because I thought Kirsty would like it and she’s friends with Owen at playgroup. But it was OK. Plenty of booze. Decent food. A proper buffet, not just stuff for the kids. And that Bernie Howe was good. I was surprised. You’d never think it to look at him. I mean, he could make it really big. He’s better than blokes I’ve seen on the telly. And though most of the mothers were stuck-up cows, the fellas were friendly enough once they’d had a few drinks. Yeah, it was a good party. Until mad Marilyn came knocking on the door, shouting that her mam was missing.’

Chapter Ten

On his way down the hill from the Coastguard House Ramsay saw Hunter leave Kim Houghton’s house. The sergeant paused for a moment outside number eight, leaning his notepad on the window sill to scribble a few notes, then he knocked at the door. It was opened immediately by a large elderly woman brandishing a mop like an offensive weapon. She seemed nervous about letting him in, stood, blocking the doorway, feet apart, but Hunter must have talked her around because when Ramsay looked again the door was shut and Cotter’s Row was quiet.

The whole Headland was quiet. There were no dog-walkers or pram-pushers. Even the washing lines along the backyards were empty. The only activity was in an area around the jetty. There a group of overalled officers were stooped, searching, but they were too far off for Ramsay to hear voices. The cloud had lifted and there was pale sunshine, a view down the coast as far as St Mary’s Island.

He was tempted for a moment to walk on down to the jetty to ask what had been found. He would have welcomed evidence that Kath Howe had been killed
there
, her body tipped immediately into the cut to be carried away and brought back on the next tide. It would have been something to work on. But it seemed a dreadful discourtesy to walk down Cotter’s Row without calling on the Howes and at number two he stopped. He stood on the pavement, preparing what he might say, especially to the girl.

In the house across the road a curtain was lifted then fell back into place. He tapped gently on the door. Sally Wedderburn answered it and let him in.

Sally was a redhead with a pale, freckled skin and brown eyes. Hunter thought Ramsay was grooming her for stardom, and perhaps he was. Perhaps he wanted to prove to Prue that he could take positive action to push a woman up the ladder, that he was doing what he could to support her cause. Recently he had recognized the danger of trying to please Prue and made an effort to be more clear-sighted. Sally was a good officer but she needed to learn patience. Which she would be doing sitting in this tiny house with nothing to do but listen.

‘How’s it going?’ he asked in a whisper. They were standing very close together in the narrow hall.

‘The women are in the living room. Mr Howe’s upstairs. He said he wanted to be on his own.’

‘Distressed?’

‘Not outwardly. He was all set to go to work this morning until I persuaded him it probably wouldn’t be a good idea. More puzzled. As if he can’t get his head around the idea that his wife’s dead.’

‘And the women?’

‘Shocked I suppose. No tears. Not while I’m there at least. They don’t talk. Not to each other or to me.’ She was disappointed. She had hoped to have something for him and felt she had failed.

‘Time enough for that.’ But he was disappointed, too.

‘Do you want to come through?’

‘I’ll see Mr Howe first. Don’t announce me. I’ll go on up.’

He found Bernard Howe in a room at the front of the house. Although it was clearly the biggest bedroom most of the space was taken by a high double bed, spread with a blue candlewick quilt. There was a wardrobe but no chest of drawers and clothes were piled untidily on shelves which covered one wall. The shelves also held books and the equipment for Uncle Bernie’s magic act. There were strings of brightly coloured ribbons, chiffon scarves, wooden boxes. A cup hook had been fixed to the highest shelf and hanging from it, by its neck, was a ventriloquist’s dummy. The latex head was egg shaped, bald at the top with long wispy strands of hair at the back and the sides. It looked remarkably like Mr Howe, a mirror image of the man who sat on the bed, playing with a pack of cards, shuffling and twisting them with supple fat fingers.

‘Practising?’ Ramsay asked.

Bernard Howe looked up, startled. He had not heard the footsteps on the stairs.

‘I find it very relaxing,’ he said. ‘ The doctor wanted to give me tranquillizers, but Kath wouldn’t have approved of that.’

‘Wouldn’t she?’

‘No. She was a strong woman. She didn’t like props of any sort.’ He set down the cards and gave both hands a little flick so the cuffs of the shirt and the cardigan he was wearing settled back over his wrists.

‘Who are you?’ he asked. It was a direct, childlike question which Ramsay found unnerving.

‘Stephen Ramsay. I’m a detective inspector. In charge of the case.’

‘There is a case then? She didn’t just fall? No one’s said. Not really. I mean perhaps Miss Wedderburn explained but I didn’t take it in.’

‘We weren’t sure until this morning. But she didn’t just fall. She was stabbed.’

‘Ah.’ All his reactions seemed very slow. Ramsay thought they would have made an odd couple: Kathleen with her principles, her tense and purposeful marching, and Bernard. He groped for a word to describe Bernard and came up with simple. Not in the sense of unintelligent because it was clear he held down a reasonable job, but uncomplicated, easily satisfied.

‘How long have you been married?’ Ramsay asked. He took a seat beside Bernard on the bed.

BOOK: Ramsay 06 - The Baby-Snatcher
4.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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