The Scold's Bridle (32 page)

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Authors: Minette Walters

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #antique

BOOK: The Scold's Bridle
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The other man eyed him for a moment then consulted his watch. "Interview with Dr. Blakeney suspended at 3:42 a.m." He spoke abruptly, then pressed the "stop" button.
"Thanks. Now, will you explain something to me, Sarah?" Keith murmured plaintively. "Why did you drag me all the way down here if neither you nor Jack will listen to a word I say?"
"Because I'm so bloody angry, that's why. They should be grateful to Jack; instead they're condemning him."
"The Inspector's paid to make you angry. That's how he gets his results, and you're making this very easy for him."
"I object to that remark, Mr. Smollett. I am paid, among other things, to try and get at the truth when a criminal offence has occurred."
"Then why don't you stop bull-shitting," suggested Keith amiably, "and deal in straightforward fact? I can't be the only one here who's bored stiff with all these idiotic threats of criminal prosecution. Of course you can charge Mr. Blakeney if you want to, but you'll be a laughingstock. How many people these days would have bothered to go in and do what he did with only a and a torch as protection?" He smiled faintly. "We're a non-involvement society these days, where heroism is confined to the television screens. There was a case the other day where a woman was sexually assaulted by two men in full view of several taxi-drivers at a taxi rank, and not a single one of them lifted a finger to help her. Worse, they wheeled up their windows to block out her screams for help. Should I infer from your attitude towards Mr. Blakeney that that is the sort of behaviour you approve of in our so-called civilized society?"
"Vigilante behaviour is just as dangerous, Mr. Smollett. For every case of non-involvement you cite, I can cite another where rough justice has been meted out on innocent people because a lynch mob decides arbitrarily who is or is not guilty. Should I infer from your attitude that you approve of the kangaroo-court approach to justice?"
Keith acknowledged the point with a nod. "Of course not," he said honestly, "and had Mr. Blakeney taken a private army with him I'd be on your side. But you're on very thin ice describing him as a lynch mob. He was one man, faced with an impossible decision-to act immediately to stop the rape or to abandon the girl to her fate while he drove off to summon assistance."
"He would never have been there at all had he and his wife not conspired together to withhold the information about Miss Lascelles. Nor for that matter would Hughes and his gang have been able to subject the young lady Mr. Blakeney rescued to the terror she was put through, for the simple reason that they would all have been under lock and key charged with the rape of Miss Lascelles."
"But Miss Lascelles has told you categorically that she would have been too frightened to say anything to the police, assuming the Blakeneys had reported what she told them. She lives in terror of Hughes carrying out his threat to rape her again the minute he's set free, and there's no guarantee, even now, that she-or tonight's victim-will find the courage to give the evidence in court that will convict him. Your best bet, quite frankly, is Jack Blakeney's testimony. If he remains strong. which he will, Ruth will gain courage from his example. and if the other girl and her parents are made aware of just what they owe him, then she, too, may find the courage to speak out. By the same token, if you insist on pursuing these charges against Blakeney, then you can kiss goodbye to any co-operation from two terrified young women. Quite reasonably they will conclude that justice is on Hughes's side and not on theirs."
The Inspector shook his head. "What none of you seems able to grasp," he said irritably, "is that if we fail to charge Mr. Blakeney we make the prosecution case against Hughes so much harder. His defence will have a field day in court pointing up the contrast between police leniency towards the
admitted
violence of a middle-class intellectual and police harshness towards the
alleged
violence of an unemployed navvy. Hughes was outside the van, remember, when the rape was taking place, and he's sitting there now claiming he had no idea what was going on. The lad who was raping the girl when your client burst into that van is only fifteen, a juvenile, in other words, who can be sentenced to detention but not to custody in an adult prison. The oldest boy there, if we exclude Hughes, is eighteen and his age will be taken into account at his trial. At the moment, they're all shell-shocked and fingering Hughes as the instigator and prime mover, but by the time they come to trial it will have become a bit of harmless fun that was the girl's idea and which Hughes knew nothing about because he had wandered off for a walk along the beach. The worst of it is, Mr. Blakeney will have to testify to that in court because he saw him doing it." He rubbed his tired eyes.
"It's a mess, frankly. God knows if we will ever succeed in bringing a conviction. Without clear evidence of intent I can see Hughes getting off scot-free. His MO is to manipulate youngsters into doing his dirty work while be stands aloof and collects the money, and once these boys realize how short their sentences are going to be because the law is relatively powerless against juveniles, they'll stop grassing him up. I'm so confident of that, I'd lay my last cent on it."
There was a long silence.
Sarah cleared her throat. "You're forgetting the girls," she said. "Won't their evidence carry weight?"
The Inspector's smile was twisted. "If they're not too frightened to testify, if they don't collapse under cross-examination, if their stealing isn't used by the defence to blacken their characters, if the speed with which they were prepared to spread their legs for Hughes doesn't lose them the sympathy of the jury." He shrugged. "Justice is as fickle as fate, Dr. Blakeney."
"Then release him now and be done with it," she said coldly. "I mean, let's face it, it's going to be a damn sight easier to fill your productivity quota by prosecuting Jack than by having to put the counselling effort into bringing thieving little tarts up to scratch. Perhaps you should ask yourself why none of these girls felt confident enough to come to the police in the first place?" Her eyes narrowed angrily as she answered her own question. "Because they believed everything Hughes told them, namely that
he
would always be acquitted, and
they
would always be left to fend for themselves. He was right, too, though I'd never have guessed it if I hadn't heard it from you."
"He'll be charged and hopefully he'll be held on remand, Dr. Blakeney, but what happens at trial is out of my hands. We can do our best to prepare the ground. We cannot, unfortunately, predict the outcome." He sighed. "For the moment, I have decided to release your husband without charge. I shall be taking advice, however, which means we may decide to proceed against him at a later date. In the meantime, he will be required to remain at Mill House in Long Upton and, should he wish to travel anywhere, he must advise Detective Sergeant Cooper of his intentions. Is that clear?"
She nodded.
"In addition, please note that if he ever involves himself again in similar activities to those he engaged in tonight, he will be charged immediately. Is that also clear?"
She nodded.
The Inspector's tired face cracked into a smile. "Off the record, I rather agree with Mr. Smollett here. You: husband's a brave man, Doctor, but I'm sure you knew that already."
"Oh, yes," said Sarah loyally, hoping that her expression was less sheepish than it felt. For as long as she'd known him Jack had always maintained the same thing. All men were cowards but it was only a few, like himself. who had the courage to admit it. She was beginning to wonder if there were other aspects of his character that she had misjudged so completely.

 

 

 

Father rang today to give me the inquest verdict on Gerald's death. "They've opted for misadventure, thank God, but I had to pull every string in the book to get it. That damned Coroner was going to bring in suicide if he could." Poor Father! He could never have shown his face in the House again if his brother had killed himself. Heaven forbid! What stigma is still attached to suicide, particularly amongst the upper classes. Nothing is so bad as the ultimate weakness of taking one's own life.
I am naturally delighted with the verdict, if somewhat piqued to have my brilliance overlooked. There is an extraordinary urge to confess, I find, if only to draw attention to what one has achieved ... I won't, of course.
Gerald was putty in my hands when it came to writing the codicil because I told him he'd go to prison for raping his niece if he didn't. "Lord, what fools these mortals be!" The only purpose of the codicil was to convince the idiot solicitor that Gerald had committed suicide when he discovered whose child Joanna really was. Once persuaded, he alerted Father to the fact that a document detailing Gerald's incest existed, and they both performed to perfection. They made such a song-and-dance about pulling their various strings in order to suppress any hint that Gerald might have done away with himself that everyone, including the Coroner, was in no doubt that he had. It is all so very amusing. My only regret is that I had to involve Jane, but I am not unduly concerned about that. Even if she does have any suspicions, she won't voice them. She can't afford to, but in any case no one has questioned where Gerald acquired his barbiturates, or if they have I suspect Father has claimed them as his. He's so drunk most of the time, he probably believes they were.
Father's relief was short-lived. I told him I had a signed carbon copy of the codicil in my possession and he became apoplectic at the other end of the wire. He calls it blackmail. I call it self-preservation...

 

 

*16*
Two faxes were waiting on Cooper's desk when he arrived at the station later that morning. The first was brief and to the point:
Fingerprints on Yale key, ref: TC/H/MG/320, identified as belonging to Sarah Penelope Blakeney. 22 point agreement. No other prints. Fingerprints on bottle, ref: TC/H/MG/321 agree in 10,16 and 12 points respectively with prints located in Cedar House on desk (room 1), chair (room 1), and decanter (room 1). Full report to follow.

 

The second fax was longer and rather more interesting. After he had read it, Cooper went off in search of PC Jenkins. It was Jenkins, he recalled, who had done most of the tedious legwork around Fontwell in the days following Mrs. Gillespie's death.
"I hear you've been busy," said Charlie Jones, dunking a ginger biscuit into a cup of thick white coffee. Cooper sank into an armchair. "Hughes, you mean."
"I'm going down there in half an hour to have another bash at him. Do you want to come?"

 

"No thanks. I've had more than enough of Dave Hughes and his fellow-lowlife to last me a lifetime. You wait till you see them, Charlie. Kids, for Christ's sake. Fifteen-year-olds who look twenty-five and have a mental age of eight. It scares me, it really does. If society, doesn't do something to educate them and match a man's brain to a man's body, we haven't a hope of survival. And the worst of it is, it's not just us. I saw a ten-year-old boy on the telly the other day, wielding a machine gun in Somalia as part of some rebel army. I've seen children in Ireland throwing bricks at whichever side their bigoted families tell them to, adolescent Palestinian boys strutting their stuff in balaclavas, negro lads in South Africa necklacing each other because white policemen think it's a great way to get rid of them, and Serbian boys encouraged to rape Muslim girls the way their fathers do. It's complete and utter madness. We corrupt our children at our peril, but by God we're doing a fine job of it."
Charlie eyed him sympathetically. "Not just a busy night, obviously, but an exhausting one, too."
"Forget
in vino veritas
," said Cooper acidly. "
In insomnio veritas
is more like it. I wake up in the early hours of the morning sometimes and see the world as it really is. A bear garden, with religious leaders twisting souls on one side, power-corrupt politicians twisting minds on the other side, and the illiterate, intolerant masses in the middle baying for blood because they're too uneducated to do anything else."
"Stop the world I want to get off, eh?"
"That's about the size of it."
"Are there no redeeming features, Tommy?"
Cooper chuckled. "Sure, as long as no one reminds me of Hughes." He passed the first fax across the desktop. "Gillespie never left the sitting-room, apparently, and the key's a dead-end."
Jones looked disappointed. "We need something concrete, old son, and quickly. I'm being pushed to drop this one and concentrate on something that will get a result. The consensus view is that, even if we do manage to prove it was murder, we're going to have the devil's own job bringing a prosecution."
"I wonder where I've heard that before," said Cooper sourly. "If things go on like this, we might as well pack it in and let the anarchists have a go."
"What about the diaries? Any progress there?"
''Not really. The search was a wash-out, but then I knew it would be. I went through every book in the library the first time we searched Cedar House." He frowned. "I had a word with Jack and Ruth last night, but they're claiming ignorance as well, although Jack does remember Mrs. Gillespie being in a paddy one day because she said her books were being disturbed." He fingered his lip. "I know it's hypothetical but, let's say the diaries did exist and that someone was looking for them, then that might at least explain why the books were disturbed."
Charlie snorted. "Hellishly hypothetical," he agreed, "and quite unprovable."
"Yes, but if whoever was looking for them found them, then it might explain why they've been removed." He took pity on Charlie's baffled expression. "Because," he said patiently, "they could tell us who murdered her and why."
Charlie frowned. "You're clutching at straws. First, convince me they existed."

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