Read Winding Up the Serpent Online
Authors: Priscilla Masters
âI'm sorry. I have to talk to him now. It's about the murder of Marilyn Smith.'
âThe nurse?' Her voice was sharp.
Yes.'
The door was slammed in her face and Joanna stood on the doorstep, conscious of Mike's eyes boring holes into her. She turned and nodded at him, then the door was flung open.
âJoanna ...' Matthew hissed. âWhat the hell...?' He was furious.
âI need a statement from you, Dr Levin,' she said formally. âWould you mind if I came inside?'
He glared at her. âWhy have you come here?'
âBecause I couldn't waste any more time,' she said angrily. âI'm fed up with half-truths. All along, Matthew,' she said, âyou've fed me little bits of the truth. I want it all now.'
âAre you here officially?' He glanced over her shoulder at Mike in the squad car. âBecause if you are maybe you'd better invite Tarzan in too.'
âNot quite officially,' she said. âAnd that's a favour to you ... Matthew,' she said softly. âThis is a murder case.'
He stared at her dumbly, suddenly appalled at her manner. âJoanna,' he begged. âNot here. Darling, not here.' A shadow crossed his face. âIf you come inside ...' He took a deep breath. âIt will violate my home.'
âThen the station,' she said, âand a formal, taped interview. And you're bloody lucky to get the choice. This case has its own violations, Matthew.'
âAll right, Joanna,' he said. âYou win.' He turned round and she followed him into the house.
There was no sign of his wife as he led Joanna along a dark corridor lined with macs and wellies and an old bike. Matthew brushed against it as he passed and it wobbled and almost fell. He gave a quiet curse and steadied it. His hand was shaking. At the end of the corridor he opened a panelled door into a light, square study, lined with books from ceiling to floor, with two long windows facing out towards the crags in the distance and armchairs either side of the fireplace. He sat in one of them and motioned her to the other.
She tried not to look at the shelf of photographs, the centre one especially ... Matthew and Jane, bride and groom. And she wondered how many evenings they had sat in these chairs and talked, read, listened to music together.
Matthew leaned forward, biting his lip. âYou don't belong here,' he said.
âWell, I don't exactly feel comfortable either,' she bit back. âSo you'd better unload yourself and then I needn't return. I can leave you both alone.'
He looked serious. âWill it all have to come out? Will it mean prosecutions?'
She shrugged. âI don't know,' she said. âIt depends on the circumstances.' She leaned forward. âMatthew, your best chance is to be frank. Please â tell me absolutely everything. As far as I can I'll help you. I promise.'
He nodded, settled back in his chair, closed his eyes. âThank God for someone I can trust,' he said. Then, âActually, you know a lot of it.'
She grimaced. âI think I know about all of it,' she said. âExcept the most important parts.'
He ignored her comment. âJonah, Paul and I were in medical school together.' He paused. âPaul always had peculiar tendencies.' He stopped. âYou know the rest of that bit. So then there was Jonah and me. We muddled along, got drunk, did our studies, sat exams together. And then he met Pamella ...' He smiled. âFell for her, hook, line and sinker.' He stopped again. âPamella was really lovely,' he said. âSexy and beautiful and very clever. And Marilyn was her great friend. Plump and plain. But she was clever too, in a devious way. She'd hang around Pamella and pick up all the discarded boyfriends â came to think of them as her right. Until Jonah. Pamella didn't give him up and I think Marilyn just waited. Anyway,' he carried on, âPamella and Jonah got married. I was best man, Marilyn their bridesmaid. And Jonah came into general practice here in Leek. Then Pamella got pregnant.' He paused and rubbed his forehead with the palm of his hand.
âRight from the start we all knew something was terribly wrong. Even in the early weeks she was very strange.' He looked at Joanna. âDo you know what the phrase puerperal psychosis means?'
âA sort of madness,' she ventured, âconnected with having a baby?'
He nodded and smiled. A glimpse of the old Matthew returned. âSo you do listen when I lecture you! Anyway, when the baby was born she got quite a lot worse.'
âStevie,' she said, beginning to understand.
Matthew's face crumpled. âOh, God,' he said. âYou have no idea. He was so sweet... plump and pink and always chuckling. They called him Stevie after Pamella's father. He had been a surgeon in Manchester â a very clever man. He died a month before Stevie was born.'
âGo on. What happened?'
âAfter Stevie was born,' Matthew said, âJonah hardly dared leave her. He was so worried about what would happen.' He paused. âI think we all had the most appalling sense of dread. We knew something was going to happen. We could feel it getting nearer. But there wasn't anything any of us could do to prevent it. Jonah tried. He stayed at home for as long as he could but financially he had to return to work or lose his practice. And all the time we were all terrified to leave them alone together.'
âCouldn't she have gone to hospital?'
âShe had a short stay but got much worse. They wanted to separate mother and son and she got hysterical and threatened to kill herself. Jonah felt she might get better if she could remain at home. We all thought it was the only chance she had â if we treated her as a normal mum we thought she might snap out of it.'
âGod, Matthew,' Joanna said. âYou're a doctor. Had you no judgement?'
Matthew looked away. âIt's easy with hindsight,' he said bitterly. âBloody easy after the event. We took turns in going round and checking on her. Things did seem to get a bit better.' He stopped. âI suppose we all relaxed.
âThen one day Jonah came home a bit late from work. Pamella was sitting on the stairs. He told us afterwards it was very quiet in the house. Pamella told him Stevie was asleep.' Matthew closed his eyes. âPamella said not to worry, Stevie wouldn't cry again. Joanna ...' Matthew's eyes were bright with unshed tears. âHe was dead in his cot. There wasn't a mark on him. He just looked asleep.
We hoped it was a cot death. But underneath we were so afraid.' He waited and watched Joanna carefully and she knew there was more.
âI had to do the post-mortem ... This little child I'd rocked to sleep for most of his short life, Jo,' he said brokenly. âThere were cotton fibres in his lungs.'
She frowned. âI'm sorry,' she said. âI don't understand.' Matthew gave a tight smile. âYou don't know everything yet, then, Detective Inspector,' he said. âStevie had been smothered. He had inhaled cotton fibres from a pillow. And there were other findings too. When I went to Jonah's house later that night I saw a pillow on the spare bed. It was dented. And when I looked at the cot the blankets were all over the place.' He dropped his head down into his hands. âHe must have struggled,' he said.
Joanna felt her face grow stiff with shock. The picture was the ugliest of all the pictures this case had brought to mind. The baby struggling ... The expression of the mother pressing the pillow into the baby's face until it fell quiet.
The room was silent.
And now she understood. âYou certified it as a cot death,' she said, âwhen Pamella Wilson belonged in Broadmoor. She was criminally insane.'
Matthew shook his head. âShe was disturbed,' he said, âbut it was to do with having a baby. No more pregnancies and she would be fine. There was no danger to any one else. It was not the psychology of a murderer.'
She clenched her fists. âOh, really, Matthew?' she said. âI think you should think again. It was another error of judgement, wasn't it?'
He bowed his head.
And now she was merciless. âIt was a huge bloody cover-up! The whole damned medical profession ganged up together. She murdered her baby!' She was silent for a moment, then her anger erupted. âHow bloody convenient to have you as a friend, Matthew. It must be great having a pathologist as a pal when your wife's just murdered your baby.'
Matthew winced. âIt wasn't like that,' he protested. âThe trial ... the court case ... the interrogation ...'
âBy some heavy-footed police person like me,' she demanded, âwho happens to believe murder is wrong? Damn it, Mat,' she said, âthe law can be sensitive too, you know. She would simply have received psychiatric treatment.'
âAnd where would that have left the family doctor? Who would have gone to him with their problems? It would have finished Jonah.'
âHe could have moved,' she said. âHe could have practised elsewhere.'
Matthew stared beyond her, out of the window to the grey crags in the distance. âYes,' he said.
âSo where did Marilyn fit into all this?'
âJonah advertised for a nurse to help him with the work,' Matthew said reluctantly. âShe answered and Jonah thought an old friend might be good for Pamella.'
âInstead of which she blackmailed Jonah ...' Joanna finished. âAnd, I suppose, tried to pick up her friend's husband. So how did she find out about the baby?'
âI'd kept a copy of the old original post-mortem report,' Matthew said slowly. âJonah and I agreed that it might be necessary. It was in the safe with sensitive information. Marilyn had access to the safe for staff notes, drugs information. We never thought she'd snoop ... you trust a nurse.'
He stopped. âI know what else was in there,' he said. âThe psychiatrist's report on Paul Haddon. He was assessed following some treatment ...' He looked at Joanna.
âAnd then she started blackmailing,' Joanna said. âI suppose she got money out of a lot of other people as well as Jonah.'
âHe increased her salary,' he said. âBut what she really wanted was for him to divorce Pamella, put her away somewhere in an institution and marry her. She fancied being the doctor's wife.' Matthew stared hard at Joanna. âYou understand what I'm saying,' he said. âIt was the status she wanted.' He paused. âShe kept having all those bloody operations â breast implants, liposuction, teeth crowned in porcelain. What she didn't realize was that everything she did made Jonah more repulsed.'
âSo he killed her.'
The door burst open and a small girl in jodhpurs and a yellow sweater ran in and threw her arms around Matthew. âDaddy, Daddy, Daddy ... you said you'd watch me jump Sparky before tea. I've gone over four times and I didn't fall off once.' She tugged at his hand. âCome on,' she said. âCome on.'
Matthew looked fondly down at his wife's clone. âIn a minute, Eloise,' he said, stroking the girl's pale plait. âIn a minute.'
Joanna stood up. âI'll see myself out,' she said.
Mike was sitting far down in the seat, his feet propped up on the dashboard. He struggled to sit up as she opened the door. âGet what you want, Joanna?'
She slammed the door. âYes and no,' she said.
But she was hauling them in, kicking and struggling: Paul Haddon, Grenville Machin ... Jonah, Matthew, and the pathetic Pamella. They could fight as hard as they liked but it was futile. They were caught and she would spill them out into the legal system, one by one.
The forensic report on the coat dug up in Evelyn Shiers' garden was sitting on her desk the following morning. The coat had been buried for around five years and held no blood, no skin, but there were some white hairs. Jock Shiers had been renowned for having a full head of jet black hair.
Joanna sat, puzzled, disappointed that there was so little to be gleaned from what had seemed so promising. She glanced again at the report. It stressed that no one had met a bloody end while wearing the coat. So why bury it? And where was Jock Shiers? She sighed, pushed the report aside and looked at Mike.
âI want to talk to the woman Jonah Wilson visited the night of the murder.'
Mike looked puzzled. âWe've already been there once.'
âI know ...' Joanna was fumbling with the truth. âI just don't think we asked the right questions. We checked up that he'd been. I want exact times. I want to know how long he was out for. How long it would have taken him to get there. How long he spent in the house.'
âOK.' Mike stood up.
They drove to the end of the road where Jonah Wilson lived and Joanna set her watch. âDrive slowly,' she said to Mike. âI think he would be a cautious driver. I'll allow two minutes for him to unlock the car door, get in and drive off ...'
Twenty minutes later they stopped outside the farmhouse door, after a long, slow drive over narrow moorland roads with tight bends and steep hills. The farm was at the end of a long, gated drive.
Fay Dunwood looked unhappily at them. âHe did come here,' she insisted. âDr Wilson did come ... I did have a headache. He gave me an injection and waited for it to work.'
âHow long was he here for?'
âI don't know.' She was impatient with the police, protective of her doctor. âAll I know is I was worried. I'd rung earlier on in the day. Mrs Wilson said there was a lot of meningitis around. She said to ring back at eleven o'clock. The headache got worse ... Ask my husband there.'
Joanna looked at Mike. âAnd he came straight out?' The man in the corner grunted. âHe must have done. I did ring again but after that there was no answer. I thought I'd better give him instructions... This place isn't easy to find. He could have got lost. But he was already on his way. Got here a quarter of an hour later. I was going to tell him I'd meet him at the bottom with a torch. Open them gates for him. But he weren't in.'
âAnd his wife?' Joanna struggled to sound casual.
âShe weren't in neither â unless she'd gone to bed.'