âCrime is.' He smiled faintly at her bemused expression. âMy father wrote crime novels. Still writes them, though his type is rather out of fashion now. No serial killers or pathologists in them.'
âI think my grandfather was in the police.'
âHe was. He made chief constable, like me.'
âI never knew him â he'd died long before I was born.'
Watts nodded.
âDoes your father live round here?' Kate asked.
âWhy do you ask?'
âI was just wondering if he might want to get involved with this â I was going to get a crime writer â and a father and son working on the case together . . .'
He shook his head and took another sip of his wine.
âHe lives in London, but we wouldn't work well together. Even supposing he were interested â which I know he wouldn't be.'
âI've got all these files that were thought lost or destroyed. I've photocopied a set. Please say you'll help.'
He stood and walked to the window, looked out at the back of the Elizabethan house across the courtyard.
âAren't they police property?'
âApparently the police aren't interested in them.'
âDrop the documents off and I'll have a look. I'm making no promises, though.'
âThe photocopies are in my car â shall I get them now?'
I watched Kate Simpson drive off, then hefted the box of photocopied documents back into the bungalow. Sarah was standing in my bedroom doorway.
âI didn't realize you were going to invite her in.' There was irritation in her tone. âI felt weird skulking in your bedroom'
âSorry â I recognized her. A family friend. Kind of. It was strange seeing her again.'
I looked down at the box I was holding.
âCould you hear what we were talking about?'
âThose files â somebody phoned me about them the other day.'
âYou're the one who wasn't interested?'
âIt was a misunderstanding.'
She indicated her half-empty wine glass.
âDo you think she noticed the presence of a third glass?'
I shrugged.
âShe's a radio journalist, not Sherlock Holmes. Bright, though.'
I put the box down.
âDo you want to help with this?'
âI think that's what I was supposed to do when the call came through to me. I was out of line responding as I did.' She shrugged. âMy first cold case. Sure. As if I haven't enough else on my plate.'
There was a tension between us and we both knew why. We'd enjoyed our night together all those months ago. And not just the sex. We'd enjoyed talking, joking. It had been hard to leave it at that one night. For both of us, I suspected.
And now, here she'd been, hiding in my bedroom. We were alone and my circumstances had changed. Except that I was hoping Molly and I could find a way to get back together.
I suddenly got embarrassed, wondering if I'd left dirty clothes lying around. I put the box on my desk and turned back to her. She'd resumed her seat on the sofa.
âBut what about Finch?' I said. âIf he has been murdered, then he must have been involved in some kind of set-up. What do you know about him?'
âOnly that he was an asshole.'
âDid he have a girlfriend? A close friend we should talk to?'
Gilchrist shrugged.
âI don't know and we can't talk to them anyway. I'm not on this case.'
âI need to talk to Munro, see where he's got to in his investigation.'
âI wasn't impressed by his officers when they interviewed me.'
âHe's a good man,' I said.
She looked at the floor.
âI thought at first that night in Milldean was shades of Operation Rambo.'
I must have looked puzzled.
âBefore your time, sir . . . Bob. It was part of a high-profile drugs operation. Seven officers smashed their way into a listed cottage and ransacked it. Overturned furniture, emptied cupboards, poured the contents of bathroom and kitchen cabinets into sinks and baths.'
âLooking for drugs.'
âYes, but unfortunately we'd got the wrong house.'
I groaned.
âWe've done it before?'
âDozens of times, I'm sure. On that occasion we should have been battering our way into the house next door. ACC Macklin handled the house-owner's claim for compensation. He decided the man was taking the piss, the amount of compensation he was asking for. Ten grand, I think. Replacement front door in a listed building, damage to antique furniture in the house. The distress caused: the raid had taken place in broad daylight in full view of passers-by and neighbours. The local press described it as a successful drug raid. The man lost his job.
âMacklin offered two grand. The man went to court. He spent ten grand on legal fees then came up against an unsympathetic judge. He warned him to settle or risk paying police costs as well. Macklin reduced his offer to five hundred pounds.'
I shook my head.
âNo wonder we get a bad press for being arrogant and out of touch.'
Sarah spread her hands.
âLook, there's something I'm not happy about,' she said. âThat night in Milldean.'
âThe thing in the man's hand?'
âNobody is interested. Command has gone to shit since you resigned. All the senior people are desperately trying to cover their backs, so nobody is doing any proper managing or policing. The crime rate is rising . . .'
She was getting heated.
âWhat was in his hand? A weapon?'
âI thought it might be when I first saw him. But I don't think so.'
âWhat, then?'
âI think it was a mobile phone.'
âAnd it never made it to the evidence box?'
âI think either Finch or one of those blokes from Haywards Heath took it. Which was odd, but I thought it would be entered into evidence. It wasn't.'
âDid you ask them about it?'
âYes. Except for Finch. I didn't get a chance to talk to him. The Haywards Heath men denied removing anything.'
âBut you're sure it was a phone.' I sat back. âAnd you're thinking that the man was in communication with someone outside.'
âNot just anyone outside. A policeman, perhaps.'
âWhy would you think that?'
âJust a feeling. And, if nothing else, there was a trigger-happy colleague on the outside.'
âWhy couldn't he be in touch with whoever sounded that car horn?'
âYes â what was that about? An associate of the people in the house?'
âCould it have been random?'
She shook her head and crossed her legs. I couldn't help glancing. She noticed but continued:
âThe timing was too neat. It was a warning.' She paused and tilted her head. âBut I wonder who the warning was intended for? There's no one I can talk to about it. If it was a set-up, I don't know who I can trust. I've been waiting for the investigation but, as you know, it hasn't really happened. I need to get more information.'
I walked behind the desk then looked back at her.
âAre you saying that we didn't raid the wrong house by mistake? That some person or persons unknown made sure we raided that particular house and that those people were the intended victims?'
âWhoever was behind it wanted those people dead and he used the police to do it.'
âI don't buy it. Everyone in the armed response unit was in on it?'
âNot everybody â just a couple â including Finch.'
âBut Foster was running the show â if what you suggest is true, he must have been in on it too. Why the suicide?'
âIf it was.'
âYou think someone has been going round knocking off the people who know exactly what happened that night?'
She nodded.
âYou think Edwards is dead, too?'
âOr in hiding. And the same goes for the nark.'
âHe's not been found yet?'
She shook her head.
âWhere can we take this?' I said, coming round the desk. I moved over to her. I sensed her shrink back.
âWe need to talk to the Haywards Heath men but I don't see how we can.'
âI've got this friend â Jimmy Tingley. He can do it. He's very good.'
âYou've mentioned him before.'
She looked at her watch and abruptly stood.
âOK, then. I'd better go.'
âI'll call you when he's got back to me,' I said.
âI'll call you if I can find out anything more at work,' she said, her hand already on the door knob.
âDo,' I said, before she fled from me.
Gilchrist felt like a teenager leaving like that. Watts confused her. She was determined there wouldn't be a repeat of their one-night stand but she was drawn to him.
On a whim she decided to drive back into Brighton via the Milldean estate. She parked outside the pub and looked down the street to the house that had been the scene of the massacre. It seemed both an age ago and a matter of hours since she'd been crouching in the back garden.
She locked her car and went into the pub. A few heads turned as she entered but she ignored them. She approached the bar at the same time as a slender, unassuming man of middle height. He gestured for her to go first.
âIt's OK,' she said, âI haven't decided what I want yet.'
The barman was burly with a big beer gut and forearms like hams.
âAnother rum and peppermint, please,' the slender man said.
The barman looked him up and down.
âSure you're in the right pub, love? This isn't Kemp Town.'
âA double.'
âBig boy,' the barman said with a grotesque pout.
There were two unshaven men standing at the bar. They sniggered. The man smiled but didn't say anything. The barman made the drink and plopped the glass down heavily on the bar. The liquid shivered but didn't spill. The man placed the exact amount of money on the bar, turned and went to sit by the window.
Gilchrist ordered a glass of wine, ignored the leering men and went to sit a few yards from the man. She wasn't quite sure what she was doing here but she knew it was the local for at least one of the crime families.
A stocky, crop-headed man in his forties came in with a posse of four noisy youngsters. They all scoped the room.
âAll right, Mr Cuthbert,' the barman said. The crop-headed man nodded and got into a huddle over the bar with him. The man who'd ordered the rum and peppermint went back up to the bar and put his glass down.
âAnother double when you have a minute.'
The man called Cuthbert glanced over. The barman straightened up.
âThink you've had enough, don't you, mate?'
âI think I'll take one more.'
âYou live here?' Cuthbert said, staring straight ahead of him.
âNear enough to walk.'
âI was wondering why you'd come in here.' He swept his arm out to take in the room. âIt's a pub for locals. Everybody knows everybody. That's the way we like it.'
The man nodded.
âThat was a double, mind, not a single.'
The barman had stepped back and was standing in front of the rack of spirits and glasses. He flicked a look at Cuthbert.
âAs I was explaining,' Cuthbert said, still not looking at the man, âeverybody knows everybody. We're like a family here.'
âBut this is a public house, not a club. And I am the public.'
He pushed the glass across the bar.
âYou can use the same glass.'
Cuthbert finally turned and as he did so the youngsters gathered in a loose semicircle around the mild-mannered man.
Shit. Gilchrist didn't want to flash her warrant card in here, but if this turned out the way it looked like it was going to turn out, she would have to intervene. And probably get a good kicking in the process. She recognized Cuthbert's name. He was a major Brighton villain. She cursed herself for coming in here, cursed the man for ordering such a ludicrous drink in a rough pub.
âAre you dim?' Cuthbert said, taking a step forward. âWe don't want you here. I don't know what you're looking for but, believe me, you ain't going to find it here.'
âI just want my drink for the road.'
Cuthbert looked at the barman and gave a quick nod.
âOn the house,' he said.
âYou're either the landlord or a leader of the community,' the man said. âDid I hear your name is Cuthbert?'
âNot that it's any of your fucking business but, yes, it's Cuthbert.'
âI'm Jimmy Tingley.' Tingley stuck out his hand. âAnd I've already heard all the jokes about my name.'
Gilchrist sat back in her chair. Jimmy Tingley. The man Bob Watts had mentioned. The way Watts had built Tingley up she was expecting Arnold Schwarzenegger, not this unassuming individual.
Cuthbert looked at Tingley's hand, then at Tingley. Didn't offer his own hand.
âYou're one of the big three on the estate,' Tingley said, withdrawing his hand.
âI am?'
âYou are.'
Tingley looked at the youths, who had stepped in closer.
âIt would be great to talk to you privately.'
âAbout?'
âWhat goes on here.'
âAnd why would you be interested.'
Tingley moved closer.
âI need your help.'
Cuthbert tilted his head.