Read Blind to the Bones Online
Authors: Stephen Booth
âGail, can you believe this?' said Dearden. âSomeone from the police finally comes to see us, and he turns out to be from the wrong force.'
âI'm Derbyshire, not South Yorkshire,' Cooper explained again. But the woman said nothing.
âAh, but,' said Dearden, wagging a finger at him, âWithens is in Derbyshire, isn't it? Withens is on your patch.'
âYes, sir.'
âSo you can talk to us about the Oxleys.'
âIf you'd like to, Mr Dearden, I'd be happy to listen.'
âT
his was the old gamekeeper's lodge, which the estate sold off,' explained Dearden as he led Cooper through the house.
âIt was certainly built to last.'
âBuilt to stand the climate, you see.'
There were thick internal stone walls and solid floors that absorbed the sound of their footsteps. There was a stuffed fox's head mounted on an oak shield in the hallway, but it seemed to have been left purely as a reminder of what the house had once been. The rooms had been filled with furniture covered in bright covers and white tablecloths, cabinets of blue-and-white pottery, and stands of smaller items â a collection of snuff boxes here, a display of gleaming brass there.
âNow, the Oxleys are a problem to everyone,' said Dearden. âWhat I can't understand is why the authorities don't introduce one of those local child-curfew schemes. The power to do it is there. They can ban children from being in a public place after nine o'clock in the evening, and the police can take them off the streets. But they won't do it. It would be too politically incorrect, I suppose.'
âAnd perhaps impossible to put into practice.'
âAh. Because there are no police officers around to enforce it. That's right,' said Dearden with exaggerated glee.
âBesides, those curfew orders only apply to children under ten, sir.'
âThe ones beyond the criminal law. Well, there are some of those around here, too, believe me.'
âWhat sort of problems have you had?'
âThefts, damage. For about eighteen months that's been going on. Then they set fire to our old garage. Burned it out completely.'
âCan I see?'
Dearden took him through a side door, past some outbuildings and into a yard, where he showed him a garage made of timber and corrugated iron. Though the structure still stood, its interior was blackened and charred, and the door had been destroyed by the fire.
âThe trouble is, we can't see from the house when they come into the yard here. They've broken into the garage before, and into the other buildings. Nothing seems to stop them. We've got fed up of phoning the police. We've phoned so often that it's on our “Friends and Family” list â'
âYes, you said.'
âThen we started using the internet.'
âYou did?'
âOnline Police.'
Cooper had never before come across anyone who used the Online Police website. It had been set up to allow people to report non-urgent minor crime, with the aim of freeing up telephone systems, particularly the 999 service. The site did make the point that it shouldn't be used for crimes that were happening right then, or where the offender was still nearby, or where there was a witness, or evidence left at the scene.
He wondered if that warning was necessary. Did anybody think people would actually do that? Would a member of the public see a crime being committed, sit down at the computer, log on to www.online.police.uk and spend ten minutes filling in forms with details of their name and address, date, time and place of the crime? Maybe they would, these days.
âThey did all these break-ins, and then they burned my garage down.'
âWho did?'
âThe bloody Oxleys, of course. You did say you were listening?'
âYes, sir. But how â'
âThe bloody Oxleys from bloody Waterloo Terrace. Those kids burned my garage down. They came from Withens, on your patch, and they crossed into Yorkshire, my patch, and they burned my garage down. It's only a mile from here to Withens, but you'd think we had to call the FBI to do something about it, all because there's a boundary stone in between.'
âWhen your garage was set on fire, did nobody come from your local police?'
âSome woman came and looked for fingerprints and stuff,' said Dearden grudgingly. âBut she wasn't a proper policewoman. She said she was a civilian.'
âA scenes of crime officer.'
âYes. Well, she didn't seem to hold out much hope, anyway.'
âYou're a bit vulnerable out here, aren't you?' said Cooper.
âAh. You've noticed. Vulnerable is the word â and there's nobody interested in protecting us.'
Mrs Dearden had brought some tea. She hadn't spoken to Cooper yet. He smiled at her, but she didn't smile back. Her lips were tightly pressed together.
âDo you have any evidence to blame these incidents on the Oxley children?'
âOh, you think I'm just making it up, don't you? Well, check their records. You'll find that two of them were convicted for a burglary at this property eighteen months ago. It didn't stop them. But that was the only one they were ever caught for. And that's because they tried to sell an electric drill they stole, and it was traced.'
âWhich two were they, Mr Dearden?'
âRyan and Sean. A right couple of teenage tearaways.'
âBut since then?'
âWe've never managed to catch them.'
âMmm.'
Dearden started to go red when he detected Cooper's tone of scepticism.
âHave you been into Withens? Have you seen Waterloo Terrace?'
âYes, sir.'
âWell, you'll have an idea what they're like,' said Dearden. âI mean, look at the mess they leave. There's mud and rubbish all over the place. They're always dropping bits of broken pallet right the way along the road into Withens. One day I nearly hit a pile of roof tiles that had fallen off their lorry. They've even churned up the edge of the road by their houses, because they had a JCB parked there for a while. I never saw them actually do anything with it, either. It was just in the way for a week or two, then it was gone again. But it left the damage to the road, and all the water collects there now when it rains. You can bet the council won't make the Oxleys pay for the repairs, though. It'll come out of our Council Tax.'
âIs that why you started driving out of Withens via the old quarry track?' said Cooper. âBecause of the state of the road?'
Dearden hesitated. âIt's quicker sometimes.'
âYou have a four-wheel-drive Mitsubishi pick-up?'
âThat's right.'
âBut even so, I would have thought it was pretty tough on your tyres and suspension.'
âPerhaps that's cheaper than ripping up my chassis on a pile of roof slates.'
âPerhaps. But you're taking a big risk of getting stuck.'
Dearden shrugged.
âDo you know Neil Granger, Mr Dearden?' said Cooper.
âYes, I do. He's one of the Oxleys. Related, anyway. One day, somebody ought to look into just how closely some of those Oxleys are related. They're a bit too reluctant to share their gene pool, if you ask me.'
âDid you ever see Neil Granger on the old quarry track when you drove over that way, Mr Dearden?'
âI don't believe so. Well, no, I'm sure I didn't.'
âAnybody hanging around the air shaft?'
âI saw a couple of the Oxley lads trying to climb it once,' said Dearden.
âOh? When was this?'
âA few weeks ago. God knows what they were up to. It's not as if they could steal anything. Even if they got down into the tunnel, they wouldn't be able to get out again.'
âNo. Did you say anything to them?'
âNot likely. I'd only have got a mouthful of abuse.'
âWhich of the Oxleys did you see?'
âThat I'm not sure about. They're much of a muchness, unless you actually see them standing next to each other. And every one of them should be in jail, in my opinion. Not that you want my opinion. The police have made that clear enough. The laws of the outside world will never come near the Oxleys.'
I
n the lay-by on the A628, Ben Cooper could see that a cordon had been taped off around a light blue Volkswagen Beetle. He recognized Liz Petty pulling on her white suit, getting ready to approach the vehicle.
âThey've asked me to do the car, to avoid cross-contamination,' said Petty. âSo let's hope that Locard's Principle is working in our favour today. Every contact leaves a trace. If the perpetrator travelled in this vehicle with the victim, he'll have left traces of himself for us to find, and carried others away with him. It's quite an old vehicle, which is good, because there are more likely to be distinctive traces on the seats and the floor.'
âIt's been standing here overnight at least,' said Cooper.
âYes, I noticed the spider's web. It's been spun from the hawthorn shrub to the wing mirror.'
âThe doctor says the body's been lying up there over twenty-four hours.'
âDon't come any closer,' said Petty, reminding Cooper of Lucas Oxley and his dog.
âWhy?'
âBe really careful of where you tread. There look to be some interesting traces on the ground here. Anyone getting into or out of this vehicle will most likely have got something on the soles of their shoes. Or anyone using another vehicle, for that matter.'
Cooper studied the surface of the lay-by. âAll I can see are chocolate wrappers, sweet papers and the remains of a burger and fries.'
âExactly.'
âWhy don't people use the litter bins?' said Cooper.
âIn this case,' said Petty, âwe might be grateful that they didn't.'
âI see.'
âThe interior of the car could be what matters most, though. By the way, there's a box of some kind in the footwell at the back,' she said, peering through the car window.
âYou realize the perpetrator probably didn't arrive in this car, Liz?'
âWe can hope, can't we, Ben?'
âHe might not even have come this way. Apparently, there's a track to the air shaft from the other side of the hill, from a place called Withens.'
âNever heard of it,' said Petty.
âYou will.'
âTourist hot spot, is it?'
âHardly.'
Cooper couldn't recall seeing anything picturesque about the village where the Oxleys lived. No wonder there were never any tourists passing through, as there were in other Peak District villages.
But at least there was one good thing about Withens. It was a long way from Diane Fry.
W
ith a slam of the door, DC Gavin Murfin started the car and turned out of the West Street car park towards Edendale.
âSo how the hell do we get to this Withens place?' said Fry. âHave you any idea, Gavin?'
âWhy don't you find it on the map?' said DC Murfin. âI put a couple in the glove compartment.'
Fry found two thick, badly folded Ordnance Survey maps from the Outdoor Leisure series, covering the whole of the Peak District at two and a half inches to the mile.
âWe want Dark Peak, right?' she said.
âHey, you're learning the lingo.'
âI just try to remember that it gets dark if you go north and lighter if you go south. Can't go wrong then.'
âI suppose so.'
Before she had unfolded the map even halfway, Fry realized that it was huge. It was so big that it was almost the size of the Peak District itself. There was no way she could open it fully inside the car, not without covering the windscreen and blocking Murfin's vision. Then she discovered that the map was printed on both sides, too.
âAll right â Dark Peak West or Dark Peak East?' she said.
âWest, I think,' said Murfin.
âYou think?'
âPretty sure.'
âYou don't sound certain enough for me. You
do
know this place we're heading? It
is
in Derbyshire, isn't it?'
âJust about. But it isn't the kind of area you really know unless you live there, like.'
âWhat do you mean?' asked Fry suspiciously.
âYou'll see.'
âOh, I can hardly wait.'
âDark Peak West,' said Murfin. âI'm sure.'
âStop the car for a minute, then.'
âWhy?'
âBecause it's on the other side of the map, that's why. I need some space.'
Murfin pulled into a gateway. Fry got out and began to unfold the map on the car roof so that she could turn it over. When it was opened up, the map almost covered the roof of the Peugeot completely. She cursed steadily as the wind blowing down the valley snatched at the corners of the map and pulled sections of it from her hands, slapping them against the roof and tearing the folded edges.