River of Darkness (5 page)

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Authors: Rennie Airth

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #Historical, #Traditional British, #General, #War & Military, #Crime, #Police Procedural, #Police, #Serial murders, #Surrey (England), #Psychopaths, #World War; 1914-1918, #War Neuroses

BOOK: River of Darkness
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"Thank you, Chief Inspector. A fine summary, if I may say so.' Sir Clifford Warner paused at the top of the church hall steps to shake Sinclair's hand. Lord Stratton hovered at his shoulder. 'You'll keep me informed?' 'Of course, sir.' The Surrey chief constable glanced curiously at Madden as he moved away. 'They were talking about you earlier, John.' Sinclair was filling his pipe from a leather pouch. 'Warner wanted to hear about your run-in with the Lord Lieutenant.' 'Has Raikes lodged a complaint?' Madden's pallor seemed more striking in the morning sunlight. Sinclair wondered if he had been disturbed by the thought of the bayoneted bodies. They were colleagues of long standing, their acquaintance going back to before the war when Sinclair's eye had first been caught by the tall young detective, fresh out of the uniformed branch. Much had happened to Madden since then. 'Not that I know of, and not that I care. Let Raikes get back to doing what he does best, slaughtering innocent birds and beasts and stay out of police business.' The chief inspector struck a match. 'Oakley, you say?' 'Yes, sir.' Madden drew on the cigarette he had lit some moments before. 'It's on the other side of the ridge. I'd like to get over there. I think our man might have come that way.' 'You'll need a car, then.' 'Lord Stratton's offered to lend us one.' 'So he has. What's more I've accepted. God knows, we'll get no help from the Yard.' Scotland Yard's attitude towards motorized transport -- they saw no reason why any policeman should be supplied with a vehicle when he had two perfectly good feet - was a pet grievance of the chief inspector's. Second only to his dogged and so far unsuccessful campaign to have a central police laboratory established. 'He took your side, by the way, Stratton did. He said Raikes was wrong to go inside the house and wrong to invite him along. Called him a blockhead. Quite brightened my morning, his lordship did.' Madden trod on his cigarette. 'What about the press, sir? Have you spoken to them yet?' 'I'm meeting them at noon. Just for now, and between us, I'll not discourage the notion of a gang, if anyone brings it up. One man on his own - now that's a disturbing thought.' They moved aside as the first group of villagers come to be interviewed gathered at the foot of the steps. Dressed as though for church, Sinclair noted. Suits and ties for the men, hats for the women. He made his own silent prayer: Let just one of them remember something, anything, a face, a description . . . A young woman knelt to tie on a toddler's bonnet. The sight caused Sinclair's face to harden. 'I'll be seeing Dr Blackwell later,' he said. 'I'm not happy about that little girl staying in her house. She ought to be in hospital. It's something the doctor should understand. Can't she be persuaded to see reason?' 'Not an easily persuadable woman, sir.' Madden's face was a mask. 'Is she not?' The chief inspector's eyes lit up. 'We'll see about that. I intend to have words with this dragon.'

The car was parked in the cobbled courtyard of the village pub, where Madden had left his bag with the landlord earlier that morning. It was a well-worn Humber with a dent in the rear mudguard. Lord Stratton himself, bareheaded, stood talking to two of the villagers. When he saw Madden he came over. 'Inspector, I must apologize for what happened yesterday.' His thin, seamed face showed the ravages of a sleepless night. 'Raikes had no business taking me into that house, and I had no business accepting. Well, I've paid for it.' 'Sir?' 'I can't get it out of my mind. The sight of the bodies . . . Poor Lucy Fletcher, laid out like a sacrifice. What kind of man would do a thing like that? Then I find myself thinking perhaps there were more than one . . .' 'We don't know yet that she was raped, sir.' 'No ... no ... of course.' He thrust his hands into the pockets of his tweed jacket and stared at the ground. 'The villagers keep asking me . . . There are some things one doesn't want to know.' 'How are they taking it?' 'Badly.' Madden sought and obtained directions to Oakley. He drove along the same road he had travelled the day before, past Melling Lodge, where two uniformed policemen stood on duty at the closed gates and a man lugging a heavy press camera leaned against a car parked on the grass verge. A mile or so further on he came on another set of gates and another uniformed constable. He stopped the car and got out. 'Is this where Dr Blackwell lives?' Madden could see the house at the end of an avenue of limes. He only knew it from the other side. 'Yes, sir. We've got a man inside, but Mr Boyce sent me over to watch the gates. The doctor was bothered by the press this morning, they wanted to know about the little girl.' A mile further on he came to a signpost for Oakley, turned left and followed a road that led through a saddle in the wooded ridge down to the broad open plain he had seen the day before from the top of Upton Hanger. Another signpost directed him on to a dirt road and he drove through fields where the corn had already turned golden from the long, rainless summer. The hamlet of Oakley comprised no more than a dozen houses grouped around the church tower. Madden brought the car to a stop beside a whitewashed building with the picture of a stage-coach and the name 'Coachman's Arms' painted in faded lettering on the wall. As he was setting the handbrake a police sergeant stepped out of the doorway of a cottage across the road. He looked at Madden inquiringly. The inspector got out of the car and produced his warrant card. 'Gates, sir. From Godalming.' The sergeant touched his helmet. 'It's this Highfield business. I've been sent over here to talk to the locals. They don't rate a village bobby.' 'You'll ask them if they've seen any strangers?' Madden drew him into the shade of a chestnut tree growing in front of the church. 'Yes, sir. And anything out of the ordinary they might have noticed these past few days.' 'We're specially interested in any cars that might have passed through the village.' 'Shouldn't be too many of those, sir. Mind you, it was a bank holiday.' 'Also cars parked at the roadside. Perhaps even off the road where they mightn't be noticed.' Madden became aware that Gates was looking over his shoulder. His glance had turned to a flat, hard stare. The inspector turned his head and saw a man standing in the doorway of the Coachman's Arms with his hands in his pockets watching them. He faced the sergeant again. 'I'm going to take a walk through the fields, but I'd like a word with you before you leave. How long will you be here?' 'An hour should do it, sir. Then I've got to go to Craydon - that's a few miles away - and ask the same questions there.' 'Have you any transport?' "Just a bicycle.' 'Wait for me here. I'll give you a lift over.' Madden walked back the way he had come, on the dirt road, and continued along it until he found an even rougher track, which branched off through the fields towards the wooded ridge. The deep treads of tractor tyres were graven in mud that had dried and set like marble. Ditches a foot wide criss-crossed the rutted surface. At one point the track petered out entirely and the tractor marks continued across ploughed furrows until they picked up the path again. Stackpole had been right. No car could have passed this way. Feeling the sun like a weight on his back, Madden took off his jacket and walked steadily towards the ridge. Passing a small spinney he heard a jay call, and another answer. He was tempted to stop for a cigarette - the wood looked cool and inviting - but instead he pressed on and arrived at the foot of the ridge. He saw that it was steeper on this flank than on the Highfield side and also less densely wooded. Standing in the shade of an oak tree he marked the upward zigzag line of a footpath as it traversed the slope above. He looked left and right along the hillside, but could see no sign of any other pathway in the vicinity. The inspector began a careful examination of the area where he stood, scanning the ground in a gradually widening circle, and then extending his search along the base of the ridge at the woodline, looking for the tell-tale sign of a cigarette stub. He found several, but none were of the Three Castles brand. The footpath up the slope proved equally bare of clues. The dusty surface bore the marks of blurred footprints -- it looked like a well-used way -- but none showed the distinctive damaged heel outline discovered in the stream bed. It took him twenty minutes to scale the ridge, and half that time to make the return journey. He sat down then in the shade of the oak tree and took out his cigarettes. The green leaves overhead seemed to remind him of something: the image of Helen Blackwell in her patterned blouse came into his mind with a pleasant jolt. He lit a cigarette. Far away, beyond the golden fields, a faint blur on the horizon showed where the downs began. He watched a hawk circling in the air above. Etched clear against the brilliant blue sky, it wheeled and wheeled in ever-tightening turns. Wheeled . . . and dropped! Wheatstalks shivered and were still. The hunter had its prey. Madden extinguished his cigarette. He'd yet to catch the scent of his.

In Oakley, the door of the Coachman's Arms stood open. Sergeant Gates was seated at one of the tables in the taproom. Smoke-blackened beams supported the grubby ceiling. The smell of stale beer and tobacco soured the air. The man Madden had seen standing in the doorway earlier lounged over the bar, his elbows resting on the stained surface. He was in his early thirties with black slicked-back hair and a knowing smile. 'This is Inspector Madden,' Gates said tonelessly. 'Sir, this is Mr Wellings, the landlord. I was about to question him.' 'Go ahead, Sergeant. Don't mind me.' Madden sat down. Wellings directed his smile at the inspector. 'Still half an hour to opening time, I'm afraid. But if Sergeant Gates is prepared to turn a blind eye, I dare say I could draw you a pint.' 'No, thank you, Mr Wellings.' Madden didn't return the smile. 'We're interested in any customers you might have had over the weekend,' Gates began. 'Visitors, not

locals.' 'Starting when?' 'Saturday.' 'I had the Farnham Wheelers Club through here at midday. About a dozen of them. They parked their bikes outside and came in for a drink. And there was a party of four in a motor-car. Two men and their wives, I reckon. They had the ploughman's lunch.' 'Was that all?' Gates looked up. 'No, there was another couple in the evening. Bloke on a motorbike with his girlfriend on the pillion. Took me aside, he did, and asked me if I had a room for them. I told him I didn't run that kind of establishment. I did say he could try his luck in Tup's Spinney.' Wellings smirked. Madden waited to be enlightened, but Gates went on: 'Sunday, then?' 'There were more. Quite a few. Four parties in cars between midday and two o'clock. Six men and four ladies, as I recall. Two of the parties were travelling together, heading for the coast. And then in the evening there was one other car with a man and his wife and their son. But all they wanted was directions. They'd lost their way.' 'Did you see any other cars during the day? Travelling through the village, but not stopping?' 'Or motorcycles?' Madden said. Wellings paused, frowning with exaggerated concentration. He shook his head. 'No, I can't say that I did. But, then, I'm stuck in here during opening hours. Don't see too much of what's going on outside.' The smile was back. Sergeant Gates looked at Madden, who nodded. 'Thank you, Mr Wellings.' He closed his notebook. 'What did you think, sir?' he asked Madden outside. 'I thought he was lying.' 'I agree, but about what?' The sergeant wrinkled his nose. 'He's a right sow, if you'll pardon the expression. The last two landlords quit because they couldn't make the place pay. But somehow he manages to, and you have to ask yourself how.' 'After-hours drinks?' 'That, and he'll sell you a carton of fags at below market price, or so I've been told. We think he handles stolen goods, but we haven't been able to lay a finger on him thus far.' 'There's a list out of items taken from Melling Lodge. If any of them turn up locally, pull him in. Never mind if there's a connection or not. Put him through it.' 'It'll be a pleasure, sir.' Madden donned his jacket. 'What was that he said about the man with the motorbike and his girl?' 'He should try his luck in Tup's Spinney.' Gates gestured. 'That's over in the fields. Well known to the local lads and lasses, if you take my meaning.' He grunted. 'Wellings has an eye for the ladies himself, they say. Especially if it's someone else's wife. Nasty piece of work.' They loaded the sergeant's bicycle into the back of the Humber, and Madden drove him the few miles to Craydon. Returning by the same road, and passing through Oakley, he saw Wellings on the pavement outside the village shop talking to a young woman with bobbed hair. He paused in his conversation and watched Madden's car as it went by.

Madden parked the Humber where he had found it, in the courtyard of the Rose and Crown in High field. As he climbed out of the car, the door of the pub opened and a lanky man in a city suit came out. He had his tie loosened and his hat tipped back on his head. 'Mr Madden, is it? Reg Ferris. Daily Express.' He held out his hand. Madden shook it briefly. They hadn't met before, but he knew Ferris's name and recalled that he was no friend of the chief inspector's. 'Bad business.' The reporter's darting eyes went from Madden to the car and back as though he hoped to glean some information from putting the two together. 'I'm told it was like an abattoir in there.' Madden reached into the car for his jacket. 'We're waiting for Mr Sinclair. He's said he'll meet

us.' 'Then I dare say he will.' Ferris leaned against the car. He put his hands in his pockets. 'This is different, isn't it?' He watched to see how Madden would react. 'Different?' 'You've not had a case like this before - admit it. Slaughtering a whole household, and for what? A few bits of silverware? It doesn't make sense.' The inspector put on his jacket. 'Goodbye, Mr Ferris.' He walked away. The reporter called after him: 'From what I hear you don't know where to start.' *

Madden found the chief inspector on the church hall steps talking to Helen Blackwell. The doctor was wearing a man's white linen jacket with the cuffs rolled up over a light summer dress. She greeted Madden with a smile. 'Dr Blackwell has been giving us a statement.' Sinclair's grey eyes held a hint of wry amusement. 'She has also explained to me her reasons for wanting to keep Sophy Fletcher at her house, rather than send her to hospital. I found her arguments . . . persuasive. The child will stay here.' 'Thank you again, Chief Inspector.' The doctor shook his hand warmly. Her eyes brushed Madden's. 'Good morning to you both.' Sinclair's nod was approving as he watched her walk away. 'A fine-looking lassie.' He gave Madden a sideways glance. 'Dragon indeed! You might have warned me, John.' 'Nothing from Oakley, I'm afraid, sir.' Madden was smiling. 'The press are waiting for you at the pub. I bumped into Ferris.' 'Is that rodent here?' The chief inspector's face darkened. 'It must be the smell of blood.'

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