âGood new ones like Al Sanders?' Paniatowski asked.
Helen Burroughs giggled again. âThat'd be telling!'
The phone in the hallway rang.
âDamn!' Mrs Burroughs said.
She swayed slightly as she stood up. She was not yet drunk, strictly speaking, but she was certainly working her way steadily towards it.
Mrs Burroughs had left the door open, and Paniatowski had no difficulty at all in hearing her side of the telephone conversation.
âThey've done what?' Mrs Burroughs demanded. âBut that's ridiculous. Can't they â¦? No, I bet they bloody won't.'
She slammed the phone down and stamped furiously back into the living room.
âIs something the matter?' Paniatowski asked, solicitously.
âYou could say that. One of the bloody suppliers has just turned up at the yard with a lorry load of bathroom suites.'
âAnd is there something wrong with them?'
âNothing at all. Al thinks they're just what we wanted. The problem is that some of the paperwork's not gone through yet, and the driver says I'll have to sign for them personally. He
also
says he's in a big hurry. Well, that's too bad, isn't it! He'll just have to wait â because I can't get there in less than an hour, what with having to get the kids ready and everything.'
âHow long would it take you
without
the children?' Paniatowski asked casually.
âNot long at all. Ten minutes to get there, five minutes to sign the papers and another ten minutes to get back. But that's still nearly half an hour I'd be out of the house, and I can't possibly leave the kids on their own for all that time.'
â
Don't do it, Monika!
' a voice in Paniatowski's skull urged her. â
Don't even think of doing it!
'
âI could easily look after them for half an hour, if you'd like,' she heard herself say.
âYou're sure?' Mrs Burroughs asked.
âNo trouble at all. I'll check on Emma every five minutes or so, and if Timothy gets bored, I'll play a game with him.'
âWell, that would make things a lot easier,' Mrs Burroughs conceded, already heading back into the hallway. âHelp yourself to another glass of wine when you need one.'
I have been very stupid, Paniatowski thought, as she heard the front door slam. Very, very stupid.
She could imagine herself standing in the witness box, if she was ever called to give evidence against Mrs Burroughs.
â
You told my client that you had two children of your own,
' she could hear the defence counsel saying.
âIs that correct, Sergeant Paniatowski?'
âI don'tâ'
âIs that what you told her?'
âYes.'
âAnd that you always left them in the care of your mother when you were at work?'
âYes.'
âBut none of that was true, was it?'
âNo. My mother's dead. She had a hard life, which sent her to an early grave.'
âAnd your children?'
âI don't have any. I'm barren. I can
never
have any â however desperately I might want to.'
âI see. So having established that you're a liar, let's move on. Is it a part of your function â it is written into your job description, shall we say â that you should offer to baby-sit for any woman you are in the process of interrogating?'
âNo.'
âThen why did you do it on this occasion?'
âTo be helpful? To show at least one member of the public the human face of policing?'
âI suggest you had quite another motive, Sergeant Paniatowski. I suggest you did it, purely and simply, to further both your investigation into Mrs Burroughs and your own career.'
She'd already gone that far, and there was no backing out of it. But she didn't need to go any further â she didn't
have to
make matters any worse.
â
And once you were alone with the child â the poor, innocent little boy â what did you do then?
' she heard the imaginary barrister ask her in her head.
âI â¦'
âYou interrogated him, didn't you? His mother trusted you to look after him, and you repaid that trust by treating him no better than you'd have treated a common criminal!'
The way out of
that
possible dilemma was simple enough, Paniatowski decided.
If Timothy made any move to speak to her, she would say she didn't want to talk because she had a headache. He might not like that, of course, but it was never too early to learn that part of growing up was accepting that you had to put up with
a lot
of things you didn't like.
The boy abandoned his toys, and crawled over to where she was sitting.
âDo you know my daddy?' he asked, looking up at her.
âHeadache!'
Paniatowski's internal warning system screamed.
âFor God's sake, say you've got a headache.'
âNo, I don't know him,' she said. âBut he sounds like a very nice man. Why don't you tell me all about him?'
âMummy says that he's gone to London for a while â but I know that he hasn't.'
Oh Christ, I'm going to be the first person he chooses to confide in! Paniatowski thought. I'm going to be the first one to be told that he thinks his father is dead!
But she couldn't back out now, even if she wanted to â because if the boy
had
decided to face his fears, who could guess what damage it might do to him if she refused to face them with him?
âWhere do
you
think your daddy is?' she asked gently.
âHe's in New Zealand,' the boy said firmly.
âNew Zealand?'
âThat's right. Do you know where New Zealand is?'
âNo, I don't.'
âIt's right on the other side of the world.'
âIs it? And where else is on the other side of the world?' Paniatowski wondered.
The boy considered for a moment. âWhitebridge,' he said.
âWhy do you think he's in New Zealand?'
âBecause that's what he told the lady,' the boy said, slightly scornful of her ignorance.
âWhich lady?'
âThe lady that me and my daddy â the lady that Daddy and
I
â used to go out with.'
âAnd where did you go with this lady?'
âAll kinds of places. We went to the zoo, and saw lots of different animals â monkeys and tigers and bears. And we went out on a boat in the river. The lady liked it.'
âHow do you know?'
âBecause she was always laughing.'
âAnd your daddy told her he was going to New Zealand, did he?'
âHe told her we were
all
going to New Zealand â me and Emma and Mummy.' Timothy looked suddenly troubled. âShe didn't laugh much after that.'
W
oodend had been an enthusiast of best bitter for all of his adult life, and saw no good reason to start surprising his liver now it had reached middle age. As a result of his single-minded dedication, he knew almost nothing about wine â and even less about wine companies. Thus, as he drove towards the Kensington Wine Company's regional headquarters in Bolton, he had no real idea what to expect, though he rather imagined it would be somewhat like a brewery warehouse, full of oak barrels and stacked crates of bottles.
What he actually
found
was so different to his imaginings that it quite surprised him. Kensington's office was housed in a medium-sized building in the better part of town. It clearly had no warehousing facilities of any kind, and was entered through a black plate-glass door with a very impressive coat of arms etched on it.
Sebastian Courtney-Jones, in contrast to his place of work, presented no surprises at all. He was pretty much what Woodend would have expected from Giles Thompson's description of him â mid-forties, smooth, and obviously very impressed with himself.
âI really don't know how I can help you, Chief Inspector,' he said genially, when he had invited Woodend to sit down in an office which smelled of expensive polished wood and old leather. âIt must be some years now since I've even
talked
to Judith.'
âThat's not quite true, now, is it?' Woodend asked. âAccordin' to what I've been told, you saw her no more than a few months ago, when you first moved back to the area.'
âAh, so you've heard about that, have you?' Courtney-Jones asked, slightly uncomfortably.
âPossibly you don't fully appreciate the nature of a police inquiry,' Woodend said gravely. âIt's a serious matter, and if you mislead it, you could well be charged with obstruction of justice.'
âOver one little white lie?'
âThere's no such thing as a
white
lie in the eyes of the law,' Woodend told him. âThere's lies, an' there's the truth â an' what you've just told me falls squarely into the former category, doesn't it?'
âWell, yes, I suppose that, strictly speaking, it does,' Courtney-Jones admitted. His hand hovered over the intercom on his desk. âWould you care for a drink, Chief Inspector? We've just received a shipment of a red wine from the Côte de Blaye which I'm sure you'll find rather palatable.'
âDo you know, I'd quite forgotten why I was so glad to leave London behind me,' Woodend said.
âAnd why were you?'
âBecause it was chock-full of fellers like you.'
âI beg your pardon?'
âSelf-important prats,' Woodend amplified. âSmarmy, complacent dickheads.'
âI must say that I rather object to you using that kind ofâ' Courtney-Jones began.
âTell me about the last time you spoke to Judith Maitland,' Woodend interrupted. âAn' I mean, the
last
time.'
âI did go to see her once â just for old times' sake,' Courtney-Jones said sulkily.
âYou went to see her with the explicit purpose of findin' out if you could pick up again where you left off, seven years ago,' Woodend corrected him.
âYou
are
well informed,' Courtney-Jones said.
âYes,' Woodend replied. âI am, aren't I?'
âI suppose I'd better come clean,' Courtney-Jones said.
âThat might be a good idea,' Woodend agreed.
âI found myself back in my old hunting ground, both foot-loose and fancy-free. I went to see Judith because it seemed the ideal opportunity to renew an old acquaintanceship â especially when the old acquaintance in question was so
very
good in bed.'
âYou didn't tell her you loved her? You didn't say that you now realized she was the only woman in the world for you?'
âWho told you that? Was it Judith herself?'
âIt doesn't really matter who it was. Just answer the question.'
âI may well have said something of that nature. Men will talk all kinds of rubbish when there's a good chance of them getting back into a girl's knickers, won't they?'
â
Some
men, maybe,' Woodend agreed. âSome two-legged creatures that
pass themselves off
as men. But what I really want to know is why you decided to break up with her in the first place.'
âShe suddenly had the urge to start taking things far too seriously. I simply couldn't allow that. I had my family to consider.'
âPity you didn't consider them before,' Woodend said dryly. âWhat made her want to become more serious, do you think?'
âI've absolutely no idea,' Courtney-Jones said.
But he blinked as he spoke, and Woodend knew he was lying.
âWere you aware, at the time you last saw her, that she supposedly had a lover in Dunethorpe?' the Chief Inspector asked.
âNo, I didn't even know the man existed, until I read about him in the papers,' Courtney-Jones said â and the eyes blinked again.
âDo you know what I think?' Woodend asked.
âNo,' Courtney-Jones said, squaring his shoulders and thrusting his chin out, âI have absolutely no idea at all. And, to tell you the truth, Chief Inspector, I'm not really interested.'
âI'll tell you anyway,' Woodend said. âI think you were speakin' no more than the truth when you said you'd finally realized you loved her. I think you'd have married her if she'd been willin' and â apart from the occasional fling â you'd have stayed true to her.'
âThat's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard in my life,' Courtney-Jones blustered.
But though he was trying to hold back the tears, he was fighting a losing battle.
âIt must have come as a real shock to you to find out that you had a heart after all,' Woodend pressed on relentlessly. âIt doesn't square with how you see yourself, does it? To a man like you, normal human feelings must have seemed almost like a weakness.'
A single tear rolled down Courtney-Jones' cheek, and fell on to his desk blotter.
âWe could have been so happy together,' he said. âI just
know
we could have been.'
Constable Beresford's dealings with banks had never previously extended beyond talking to the clerk behind the grille, so he had no idea of what to expect from the manager's office of the Wakefield and District Bank, into which he was now being ushered.
His first impressions were of opulence and seriousness â a large, expensive-looking wooden desk; heavy flock paper covering the walls; a sombre portrait of the bank's founder, which somehow managed to convey the impression that although he was long-dead, he was still watching you.
The manager himself had a shiny bald head and a large grey moustache. He was probably in his mid-fifties, and it was almost impossible to imagine that he had ever been any younger.