Read Blind to the Bones Online
Authors: Stephen Booth
âSo the Oxleys slip through the cracks while you argue among yourselves.'
âI wouldn't put it quite like that.'
âI would.'
âAs you like. But there are procedures to be followed, and rules to be observed. We can't just go trampling on someone else's territory without being confident of our position. There could be legal repercussions. We have to be very careful, otherwise the company's interests could be compromised.'
âThere's another terrace of houses down there, isn't there?'
âYes, Trafalgar Terrace. They're void properties.'
âVoid? That's a good word for it. I'd call them derelict. They look like a health hazard to me.'
âThey're earmarked for action in the near future,' said Venables stiffly.
âSo neither the Oxleys nor anyone else has tenancy of the empty houses?'
âNo. I told you, they're void. Why?'
âWe may wish to search Trafalgar Terrace. Do we have your permission for that, sir?'
âOf course. But you'll have to be quick.'
âWhy? Is there something you're not telling me, sir?'
âOur contractors will be moving in very soon to start work.'
âYou're repairing the houses?'
âDemolishing them,' said Venables.
Cooper stared at him. It was an obvious thing to do, really. In fact, it should have been done a long time ago. But it seemed like another sign of that impermanence that Tracy Udall had put her finger on. It was another bit of Withens about to disappear.
âHow did you come to rent all the houses in Waterloo Terrace to members of the Oxley family?' said Cooper.
âI know it looks a little unusual. If the properties were to fall vacant now, I don't think it would happen again. The company would be looking to increase the rents substantially, for a start. But at the time it was thought there was no demand for rented properties in Withens. So the company decided to leave the old policy in place â the policy that tenancies could be passed on to members of the same family. It's a very old principle, designed to ensure a worker's family wasn't turned out on to the street if the man himself was killed during his employment. The early proprietors were concerned about their employees' welfare. They were almost philanthropists.'
âCompared to the present owners, you mean?'
âI couldn't possibly comment.'
âProperty values have changed in Withens in recent years, I suppose?'
âThere's still a shortage of demand for rental properties. But the company has been approached by a private developer interested in purchasing the entire row of houses.'
âYou mean the company is going to sell Waterloo Terrace?'
âIt makes sound commercial sense.'
âBut new owners would have to take on the sitting tenants, wouldn't they?'
âOf course. The tenants have rights that are protected by law.'
Cooper studied Venables. So often he found himself trying to hear the words that people weren't saying, because that's where the true meaning lay. But there was more than one communication gap involved in the Withens case. In fact, there were as many communication gaps as there were combinations of people trying to communicate with each other. The result was a Babel in his head.
âNew landlords would mean big changes for the Oxleys, wouldn't they, Mr Venables?' he said.
âWell, undoubtedly,' said Venables, with a smile. âUndoubtedly.'
âAnd do you know what the new owners plan for Waterloo Terrace?'
âOh yes, I know.'
âDemolition?'
âI imagine that would be the preferred option.'
âBut they can't demolish the houses with sitting tenants, can they?'
âOf course not. As I said, they're protected.'
âSo the Oxleys would need to be got out of Waterloo Terrace in some way.'
âTo make it worthwhile for the developers, yes. But I'm not suggesting there's any kind of conspiracy to intimidate them and get them out. That would be unethical.'
âNot to mention illegal.'
âQuite.'
âIt seems to me that no one is making much effort to keep the Oxleys in their homes, either.'
Venables shrugged again. Cooper was starting to get irritated by the shrug. Of all the complacent gestures that people were capable of, the shrug was the second most annoying, after the smirk.
âWe believe they've done some unauthorized structural alterations. That will probably be the clincher,' said Venables. âThey're their own worst enemies, I'm afraid.'
âI know. But that doesn't mean they don't deserve to have any friends.'
âOh? And are you intending to fill that role? A friend of the Oxleys? I know that police work is different these days from what it used to be. But is that really your job?'
Cooper gritted his teeth. Of course it wasn't his job. He didn't need Venables to tell him that. He had Diane Fry to do it for him.
âIf I were you, I'd choose my friends more carefully,' said Venables.
And then he smirked.
D
C Gavin Murfin looked mournfully at the remains of a vanilla slice on his desk. Its enticing yellow smile had disintegrated into a few dusty flakes of pastry before his eyes.
âNo signs of a previous diary,' he said. âNo likely looking randy art lecturers. That Stark girl laughed at me when I tried her with some names. She has a colourful turn of phrase, for a lass.'
âIt doesn't matter, Gavin,' said Diane Fry.
âDoesn't matter?'
âNot now.'
âI spent hours on that.'
âIf Emma Renshaw arrived back in Withens, the person we're looking for is a lot closer to home than Birmingham Art School.'
âRight,' said Murfin. âYou're right.'
He considered it for a moment. âTell you what,' he said, âthe day Emma went missing ⦠Do we know Howard Renshaw's
exact
movements that day?'
B
en Cooper was remembering the man from the Sunday-morning crowd at Somerfield's supermarket. Last Sunday, he had been trying to tell some story about distraction burglaries in the Southwoods area, and Cooper hadn't been taking much notice. It had sounded pretty small-scale stuff, which someone else would be dealing with, thank goodness. But perhaps he should have listened more carefully. Hadn't the old man mentioned an incident involving genuine antiques? âThey must have driven right past my window to get to Southwoods Grange.'
And what else had he been saying? Cooper thought about Golden Delicious apples and pineapple chunks for a few seconds before he got it. Car registration numbers.
O
n Friday afternoon there was a totally different crowd in the supermarket. And many of the staff were different, too. Cooper introduced himself at the duty manager's office and got permission to speak to the checkout assistants and the bag packers, the trolley collectors and the woman at the cigarette counter. One of the older staff on the checkouts thought she remembered the man with the walking stick, but had no idea of his name. She said he was a customer who always paid cash.
âAnd he always comes in on Sunday, I think,' she said.
âYes, he does.'
âLike you, in fact.'
âYes, that's right.'
âYou're the frozen meals for one and the Boddington's six-packs, aren't you?'
âYes.'
âI never knew you were police.'
Cooper moved on. All he had achieved was to let the checkout assistant know more about him than she did about the man with the walking stick.
This afternoon, the supermarket's frozen meat section looked unnervingly like the postmortem room at a giant morgue, with frozen body parts stacked in freezers, neatly packaged and labelled. Fortunately, these weren't human parts, but bits hacked off cows and sheep and pigs. He could understand why people became vegetarians. Perhaps the trick was not to look closely â to see only the price label on the plastic packages and the âbest before' date, not the reality of the meat and bones underneath.
Outside, he tried to remember which way the man went when he left the supermarket. Often, he walked with Cooper to his car and talked to him while he loaded up his shopping. Then Cooper would say goodbye, get in his car and drive towards the exit. Had he ever noticed which way the man with the stick went?
He had a brief recollection of being held up at the lights by traffic one morning and seeing the man waiting at the pedestrian crossing with his shopping bag on wheels to cross to the corner of Eyre Street. From there, he would have only a short walk to the bus stops in front of the town hall, where there were services running to all the areas on the eastern and northern sides of Edendale. It was no help at all.
B
ack in the office at West Street, Cooper found the rest of the DCs already busy on the phones. He sat down at his desk opposite Gavin Murfin, whose head was bent over some notes in his pocket book that he was trying to transcribe on to a pile of forms. Murfin looked up, shook his head at Cooper in an exaggerated way and sucked his breath through his teeth.
âLate, Mr Cooper? You'll be in trouble. It's a good job Miss is in a meeting.'
âThere was just something I had to do.'
âThere's plenty to do here,' said Murfin.
Cooper kept quiet. Friday afternoon wasn't a time when he should have been in Somerfield's looking for old men with walking sticks.
But hold on. He shouldn't even be thinking about Friday afternoon. He should be thinking about Sunday morning â that was when the old man did his shopping. In Edendale, the bus companies ran limited services on Sunday. In fact, some routes didn't operate at all. The man with the walking stick left Somerfield's at the same time every Sunday morning, about 10.30 a.m. He walked slowly, too. So, allowing him fifteen minutes to get to the town hall, he couldn't be expecting to get a bus home before 10.45.
Cooper looked around the office. There must be a bus timetable somewhere.
He went to the shelves that contained their reference library. They also contained a lot of other stuff that nobody knew what to do with, including a stack of urgent memos from county headquarters that was about a foot high and threatening to topple over. But Cooper eventually found what he was looking for.
âRoute 19. The 10.53 bus to Southwoods,' he said aloud.
Gavin Murfin paused in his transcribing. âA bus to where?'
âSouthwoods.'
âSouthwoods? Ah.'
âDo you know it?'
âOf course I know it. There's a decent chippy up there, near the community centre.'
As usual, Cooper found his attention turned off when Murfin got on to the subject of food.
âWould the 10.53 on Sunday morning be a busy route, I wonder?' he said. âAnd would it usually be the same driver on duty?'
âSunday morning? No, that's no good at all,' said Murfin.
âWhy not?'
âThe chippy isn't open on a Sunday.'
âGavin, will you get on with your notes and leave me be?'
Cooper got up and crossed the room to get his coat. Murfin watched him until he was nearly out of the door.
âWhat I can't understand, Ben,' he said, âis why you're going to Southwoods on the bus, anyway.'
I
t took only a couple of phone calls to the bus depot in Baslow to establish that the driver he wanted was currently operating the Route 19 service between Edendale Town Hall and Southwoods Estate. Cooper managed to obtain the times when the bus stopped for a few minutes at the terminus outside the town hall, and he was waiting there when the vehicle pulled in and discharged its passengers.
The bus driver looked at his warrant card. âYou're looking for an old chap with a walking stick and shopping bag? Yes, I know him. I have to help him on board sometimes. He has some days that are better than others, if you know what I mean.'
âThat's wonderful. And where does he get off?'
âCorner of Wembley Avenue, near the Unitarian church.'
âDoes he live on Wembley Avenue?'
âWell, I couldn't be sure of that. But he heads in that direction. He might be visiting somebody, for all I know.'
âVisiting?'
âWell, a girlfriend or something. Or his mother.
I
don't know.'
Cooper stared at him. âHis mother. Yes.'
âI didn't mean his mother,' said the driver. âHe's getting on a bit. His mother will most likely have passed on.'
âHave you ever noticed how far up Wembley Avenue he goes?'
âNo. He's not too nippy on his pins, so he's hardly got up the street when I pull away. There are two more stops between there and the terminus.'