âAbout what?'
âNothing.'
âAbout the fact that he was sleeping with the landlady of the Philosophers' Arms?'
âWell, yes.'
âAnd did you know all about the mistress whom he took to Manchester with him?'
âWhat?'
âDon't mess me about,' Paniatowski said impatiently.
âI'm not. I promise. But Mr Burroughs took a lot of his girls into town for the night. They liked it. Bright lights, big city. That sort of thing.'
âI'm not talking a single night,' Paniatowski said. âI'm talking about
a month
.'
Sanders looked blank.
âOh, come on, Freddie, boy!' Paniatowski said. âRound about seven years ago, he spent a whole month in Manchester with one of his mistresses. You
must
remember it.'
âI remember him being away for a month. It was the first time he left me in charge of the business. But I didn't know he was in Manchester, and I didn't know he was with a woman.'
âDidn't you? Well, it's not really important,' Monika Paniatowski said dismissively.
âLook, I really am trying to help you, butâ'
âI said it wasn't important. I was merely testing the range and extent of your knowledge.'
âPardon?'
âYou're not very bright, are you, Freddie? I wanted to establish just how much you
did
know, so I could decide which line of questioning it would be profitable to follow. I merely used the question of his mistresses as a tin-opener â so I could see what was in this particular can of worms.'
âYou've lost me,' Sanders confessed.
âOf course I have. I never expected anything else. So let me put it in even simpler terms â ones even you can understand. I'm not interested in his mistresses, Freddie, old son. The only person who actually concerns me is the one who battered him to death.'
âBut that
was
one of his mistresses, wasn't it?' Sanders asked.
âThat remains to be seen,' Paniatowski said. âTell me about Clive Burroughs' enemies.'
âHe didn't have any.'
âPull the other leg, why don't you? It's got bells on,' Monika Paniatowski said sceptically.
âIt's true what I'm telling you. Mr Burroughs was a salesman, through and through.'
âSo?'
âSalesmen get along with everybody. It's an instinct they develop. They can't help themselves.'
âDoesn't seem to have rubbed off on you,' Paniatowski said. âYou're sure about this, are you? He didn't have
any
enemies? Not even the husbands of his mistresses?'
âThey never found out. Mr Burroughs was very clever about keeping his affairs quiet.'
Which was pretty much what Hal Greene had said, Paniatowski thought. And Greene was living proof of it.
He
didn't know about his wife's affair with Clive Burroughs until she told him herself.
âNobody can avoid unpleasantness altogether,' she said. âClive Burroughs must have had disagreements with
somebody
.'
âCustomers got annoyed occasionally, when they didn't get exactly what they ordered, but Mr Burroughs would take them out for a pint, and it would all be forgotten.'
âAnd you don't recall anything a bit more serious, in the weeks before he died?'
âNo, I can't say that I do.'
âWhat about worries? Did he have any?'
âNone.'
Monika laughed. âCome on, Alfredo, this is your old mate, Sergeant Paniatowski, you're talking to here. Don't try to piss me about or I'll find a way to make you regret it.'
âThe business was in trouble,' Sanders admitted. âWe were finding it difficult to pay our bills. But Mr Burroughs said all our worries would soon be over â that there was a big injection of cash coming into the company. He sounded very confident about it, and I believed him.'
âAnd was his confidence justified?
Was there
a sudden injection of cash into the business?'
âWell, no,' Alfred Sanders conceded. âBut there might have been, mightn't there?'
âMight there?'
âYes, of course. Who's to say what would have happened if Mr Burroughs hadn't died when he did.'
âLet me see if I've got this straight,' Paniatowski said. âThe business was ailing?'
âYes.'
âAnd Burroughs was killed before he could do anything about it?'
âThat's right.'
âSo why does the sign over the door still say
Burroughs
' Builders' Merchant? Why isn't somebody else's name there instead?'
âBecause
Mrs
Burroughs owns the business now.'
âAnd where did
she
find the money from to keep the company afloat?'
âWhere do you think?'
âI don't know. That's why I'm asking.'
âIt came from the insurance company, of course! Mr Burroughs had a whacking great policy on his life â and it paid double if he happened to meet a violent death.'
As Paniatowski walked back to the car park, she couldn't help noticing that she had developed a bounce in her step.
Well, why not? she asked herself.
Life didn't always have to be serious. Or earnest. Or tragic. You were allowed to enjoy yourself once in a while.
And she
had
enjoyed the interview with Sanders. He was an unpleasant, self-important man who had lorded it over her when she entered the builders' merchant's, and it had been a real pleasure to make him jump through all the hoops.
But the interview had been rewarding in other ways, she thought. Up until the moment she'd spoken to Sanders, the investigation had been focused on â almost
obsessed
with â a single possible motive for Clive Burroughs' murder. He had been killed, so the thinking had gone, because someone â either Judith Maitland or a person or persons yet unknown â had hated him enough to want to see him dead.
Now, another possibility had presented itself. Alive, Clive Burroughs was in imminent danger of losing his business, and possibly his home. Dead, his widow would have enough money to save both of them. And any scruples she might have had about killing for money would surely have been mitigated by the fact that, though murder was always wrong, it was
less
wrong when the victim was a right proper bastard like Burroughs.
Yes, Paniatowski thought, she could well imagine Mrs Burroughs using that as a justification for reducing her husband's brain to a pulp.
T
he White Swan Restaurant â better known, by everyone who used it, as the Dirty Duck â was just off Whitebridge High Street, a location which would normally guarantee it a steady trade, especially during the Christmas period. But it wouldn't be doing much business on that particular day, Woodend thought, as he knocked on the side door of the restaurant â not with the High Street itself completely blocked off, and parking temporarily prohibited on all the streets that fed into it.
Woodend knew the man who answered the door, and thus also knew that though he looked as if he were in his late forties at most, he was, in fact, pushing sixty. So if Giles Thompson was anything to go by, the Chief Inspector decided, the restaurant business must be far less stressful than police-work.
The two men shook hands. âIt was good of you to spare me the time, Giles,' Woodend said.
âIf I can do or say anything to help Judith, then I'm more than willing to,' Thompson replied. âI'd crawl on my hands and knees over broken glass for that sweet girl.'
The restaurant owner led Woodend up to the office, and offered him a chair. âJudith had her wedding reception here at the Swan, you know,' he said. âShe could have catered it herself, or chosen somewhere much posher. But as far as she was concerned, it
had
to be here. She never forgets her old friends, doesn't Judith.'
âIf she had the reception here, you must have met her husband,' Woodend said.
âI did. But only briefly.'
âStill, you must have formed some kind of impression of him. How did he strike you?'
âAs a thoroughly decent sort of chap. And I can't tell you how relieved I was at the time, because I'd always felt that Judith deserved more than life had thrown at her. And now this.' He pointed in the direction of the Cotton Credit Bank. âWhoever would have thought it?'
âWhoever would have thought Judith would murder her lover?' Woodend asked provocatively.
Thompson's eyes flashed with sudden anger. âHe
wasn't
her lover, and she didn't
murder
him.'
âDo you know somethin' about the case that the bobbies investigatin' it didn't?' Woodend wondered.
âI know
Judith
,' Thompson said.
âThen tell me about her,' Woodend suggested.
âNot if you're going to twist everything I say round, just so it will fit into your preconceived theories,' Thompson said, his anger still evident.
âI said what I just did to see how you'd react,' Woodend told him. âAnd maybe I shouldn't have.'
âDamn right, you shouldn't have,' Thompson growled.
âThe truth is, I agree with you about Judith,' Woodend continued. âI don't think Burroughs was her lover, an' I don't think she killed him. But believing it is one thing, an' provin' it is quite another. To get proof, I'm goin' to need your help â so why don't you tell me what you can about her?'
âAll right,' Thompson agreed, though there was still an edge of caution to his voice. âShe was fifteen when she first came to work for me. There'd been talk of her staying on at school â maybe even of going to university â but when her dad died, her mother said that just wasn't an option any more.'
â
How
did her dad die?' Woodend wondered.
âIf you're looking for something mysterious about his death, then you're out of luck,' Thompson told him. âThe poor bugger had cancer. He was riddled with it, from what I heard. Anyway, her mother said Judy needed a job in order to be able to help out with the household expenses â and needed it quick. So that's how I met her.'
âWhat kind of work did she do?'
âThe menial sort at first â washing-up, floor cleaning, and the like â as befits somebody starting at the bottom of the ladder, with absolutely no experience of catering. But she worked so hard at the jobs I'd given her that it wasn't long before I'd promoted her to vegetable preparation. The next thing was, she asked if she could wait on the tables, and she was soon one of the best waiters I'd ever had. Which was just as well, really, because she'd never have managed to live on just a skivvy's wages after her mother left.'
âHer mother left? Where did she go?'
âTo Australia. To start a new life.'
âAnd Judith didn't want to go with her?'
âShe wasn't
invited
to go with her,' Giles Thompson said bitterly. âHer mother had remarried by then, and her new husband didn't get on with his stepdaughter. So when they talked about a new life, what they really meant was a life without Judith.'
âHow did she manage?'
âVery well, as you would have expected, if you'd known her like I did. She got her own little flat â no mansion, but it suited her well enough â and set about mastering the few aspects of the business she'd yet to learn. She was content enough. No, more than content, she was
happy
. Everything was going along swimmingly â and then she met
him
!'
âHim?'
âSebastian-bloody-Courtney-Jones. He was the regional manager of one of the big wine firms. You know the sort of man I'm talking about â sports car, blazer, regimental tie. He really had a high opinion of himself. The only problem was, Judy shared it. She went out with him for two years. She thought he was going to marry her.'
âBut that didn't happen.'
âNo, of course it bloody didn't! When push came to shove â when she demanded to know where they were going with their relationship â he told her that he couldn't wed her, because he had a wife and three kids already. Then, straight away, he put in for a transfer and got moved down south. The bastard!'
âShe took it badly?'
âShe was totally devastated. It had never occurred to her that he might be stringing her along, you see â because that's the last thing she'd ever think of doing to anybody else herself. Anyway, her work went completely to pot. She turned up late, and even when she was here, I couldn't rely on her. And she looked terrible. So in the end, I called her into the office and said she needed to get herself some professional counselling.'
âThat took some guts on your part,' Woodend said.
âWell, I certainly hadn't been looking forward to it,' Thompson admitted. âSome people hit the roof when you tell them they should see a shrink. But Judith accepted it all quite calmly. She said she thought I was right. In fact, she told me, she'd already looked into the possibility herself, and had found a place that would take her in for a course of residential treatment. Her one worry was that she wouldn't have a job to come back to.'
âAn' what did you say to that?'
âI said I was delighted she was being so sensible about it all. I told her there'd always be a job for her here, however long it took her to get herself straight. One year, two years â it made no difference to me.'
âThat was generous of you.'
âShe was worth it. But as it turned out, she didn't need that much time at all. She was back within a few months.'
âAn' how was she when she returned?'
âI'd be lying if I said she was a completely new woman. You could tell she'd been to hell and back. But at least I could see some evidence of the
old
woman â the woman Judy had been â just below the surface.'