Square.
‘No. Processed at Bethnal Green, released under caution. No further action. I can get the papers up from the Met?’
‘Right little Rosa Luxembourg our Tilly,’ said Shaw, shaking his head. But the details were hardly relevant. That was another piece of advice he’d taken to heart from his father: that one of the tricks with a big inquiry was to limit its extent, to take rational decisions, and to resist the temptation to follow every avenue. In the end too many investigations suffocated under their own weight.
‘OK Paul, good work. We’re pretty much stymied now until we get the DNA results — that’s going to be Monday. There’s not a lot we can do for now, and there’s no money for overtime, and certainly none for double time on Sunday. But I’ve got funding for one duty officer, so I’d like you to man the incident room just in case. That suit you?’
‘Sure.’
‘Any thoughts?’
Twine took a lungful of air and thought about what to say. It was a skill Valentine admired in others because he pretty much said what he thought without hesitation.
‘Well, given the blank on the door-to-door its odds on whoever was with Osbourne when she died came in via the woods,’ said Twine. ‘Tom found some pine needles on the bedroom floor too; it’s all in the initial forensics report which is up on the secure website. Each of The Circle’s gardens has got a back gate. The woods lead off up into the hills then down to some old estate — there’s a tumbledown wall once you get to the boundary. We’ve had a search team do the first hundred yard apron. There’s plenty of paths. Too dry for prints. So if someone came to see the victim from the woods, and left by the woods, they’d just disappear. If you want to take a good look up there Marianne Osbourne’s brother-in-law — at No. 6 — is your man.’
‘Aidan Robinson?’ asked Shaw.
‘Yeah. He played here as a kid; he’s always lived in the house. Grew up here. Knows every inch of the place — reckons himself as a bit of a countryman. He’s at home with the sister now looking after Tilly. Plus, he says he saw someone, someone suspicious, out the back about a fortnight ago. ‘Bout noon. He works on a poultry farm up the road but comes home for lunch. Not much of a description: medium height, build. Maybe fair. Says he watched him for ten minutes standing on the edge of the woods, looking down on the houses.’
‘Right,’ said Shaw. ‘First, we need an incident room we can breathe in.’
He led the way fifty yards over the green to the English Heritage ruin. The information board announced:
WARRENER’S LODGE
A metal sign hung on the kissing-gate, saying, simply: ENTRY FREE.
Shaw went in, through the overgrown plot and then under the arch, and Valentine and Twine followed. They stood together, looking up at tiny patches of purple-blue sky, seen through the branches of the cedar. Twine stopped at the door, examining the intricate stone-carved lintel. The air was deliciously cool, the heat kept back by the three-foot wide stonewalls and the multiple layered roofs provided by the cedar. It was a stone larder.
Shaw walked to what was left of a staircase and climbed three steps to touch a metal grill which barred the way up. He turned on the step and surveyed the interior of the lodge. The grass had been recently cut so the space was neat, contained, in deep shadow. ‘This’ll do us,’ he said. ‘Paul, ring St James’ — we just need to run the mobile unit to the gate, then a cable in for the computers and the kettle. We can’t work in that sauna. Drag the desks and chairs in. OK, let’s jump to it.’
DC Campbell appeared at the Norman archway. ‘Sir. Tom’s up at the house — he’s ready to let the team go. Wants a word first — just routine. Nothing spectacular.’ She thought about that, anxious to make clear that she hadn’t made the judgement. ‘His words,’ she added.
‘I’m on my way,’ said Shaw. ‘And Fiona, can you pop into the sister’s house? I need to speak to the husband, Aidan Robinson.’ Shaw checked his watch. ‘I’ll be with him in half an hour. Fix it, please.’
Shaw checked dispositions with Twine: the team could knock off, back on site at six thirty Monday. In the meantime everyone was on call. Shaw would get any news from the lab via Tom Hadden. They’d have Chris Roundhay’s result first, probably within twenty-four hours. If it was positive then they’d have to call everyone into St James’ for a briefing; pick up Roundhay, get him charged — maybe a holding count, not murder. But Shaw said he thought that was a long shot. He thought Roundhay had told the truth. If the result on Roundhay was negative they’d wait for the full mass screening report, which would probably land Monday morning. Any earlier Shaw would contact Twine, then they’d work out the next move.
Valentine watched his superior officer walk away towards the victim’s house. Apparently, Valentine had been dismissed too — just another part of the team. He had a grudging admiration for Shaw’s abilities as a copper, but he thought now, and not for the first time, that a quick booster module in man management wouldn’t be a total waste of time. He was as keen to know what Tom Hadden had to say as Shaw was, and as the unit’s lynchpin DS it would have been pretty efficient for him to be included in the briefing. Besides, he was reluctant to face the rest of the weekend alone. He enjoyed his own company, but only by choice.
Shaw found Hadden in Marianne Osbourne’s bedroom. With the body gone the room had lost its tension. It was like a room in a museum, thought Shaw. English interiors: 1970–2000. Again Shaw was struck by the innate sadness of the house, especially this room. Perhaps, he thought, it was the view that did it: the distant sunflowers, their faces closed now, the pine woods, dark and still. All that beauty, and freedom, outside, but the windows painted shut. ‘Are all the windows stuck shut?’ he asked, fighting the urge to walk over and force the frame.
‘Yeah. She had hay fever, allergies. Husband says that’s how she dealt with it. Wouldn’t have worked, but there you are. We’re all creatures of habit.’ Hadden had fled London and a career at the Home Office to escape a messy failed marriage. He had a capacity to forgive the faults of others.
‘Did she have a desk anywhere?’ asked Shaw. Hadden was on his knees, lifting fibres from the carpet.
‘Dressing table doubled-up. We’re running through the computer memory now down at The Ark. Fiona’s given us some keyword targets to track on the cyanide but there’s nothing yet. And we’ve done the obvious,’ he added.
‘And?’ asked Shaw, letting his eye roll quickly over the empty bed, stripped down to the mattress.
‘Nothing yet. We’ve collected emails off the East Hills survivors as they came through the Ark — work, home, the lot. No matches with anything on her hard drive or in her email account. Most of the traffic is with a mail-order cosmetics company in Lincoln.’
‘Fingerprints?’
Hadden sat back on his haunches. He closed his eyes — a tic — which indicated he was thinking carefully about the reply. ‘Family mostly — a few we can’t identify but we’re still on to the daughter’s friends. She’s next door by the way with the aunt — dad went to work this morning, slept all afternoon.’
‘
‘That’s how it takes some people, Peter. He’ll probably carry on for a month, a year, even two. Then one day he’ll wake up and he won’t know how to tie his laces up. Then he’ll find himself sitting on the beach, but he won’t