‘It’s Ben,’ he said quietly.

A white hand was visible briefly as it clutched for a sleeve and the edge of a skirt to pull them closer for concealment. The fingers withdrew again into the darkness like a crab retreating into its shell. The whimpering stopped.

‘It was the devil,’ said a small voice from deep in the pile of clothes. ‘The devil made me do it.’

The mingled odours of stale scent, sweat and excrement and urine made Cooper feel he was about to be sick. He swallowed and forced himself to keep his voice steady.

‘ The devil’ s gone away.’

The hand slowly reappeared, and Cooper clasped it in his fingers, shocked by its icy coldness.

‘You can come out now, Mum,’ he said. ‘The devil’s gone away.’

‘Ben?’ said Fry.

‘Yes?’ He jerked back to attention. He looked to Fry as if he had been asleep and dreaming. Or maybe going through a familiar nightmare.

o

‘Why did you ask about Harry Dickinson during the briefing this morning?’

o

She was curious why he had drawn attention to himself at the wrong time, when self-interest had clearly indicated that it was

100

a time to keep quiet and keep his head down for a while. But ohu cuuldn’t ask him that outright.

‘The person who finds the body is always a possible suspect,’ he said.

‘Oh really? But I thought Dickinson only found the trainer. It was you who actually found the body.’

‘Yes. but you know what I mean.’

‘ ^

‘Anyway, Dickinson is seventy-eight years old. An awkward old sod, I’ll give you that. But a definite pipe-and- slippers man. He hardly looked strong enough to unzip his own fly, let alone commit a violent assault on a healthy fifteen-year-old girl.’ ‘I’m not sure you’re right there, Diane.’ ‘Oh? What are you basing your suspicion on?’ ‘Nothing really. Just a feeling I had when I was there, in the cottage. A feeling about that family.’ ‘A feeling? Oh yeah, right, Ben.’ ‘I know what you’re going to say.’

J o o J

‘You do? Is that another feeling? Tell you what, do me a favour — while we’re together as a team, don’t involve me in

o ‘

any of your feelings. I prefer the facts.’

They lapsed into silence again for the rest of the drive. Fry mentally dismissed Ben Cooper’s talk of feelings. She didn’t believe he could know the facts about relationships in families. He was what she thought of as the social worker type of police officer — the sort who thought there were no villains in the

o

world, only victims, that people who did anything wrong must necessarily be sick and in need of help. Not only that, but he was obviously well-settled, popular, uncomplicated, with dozens of friends and relatives around him, smothering him with comfort and support until his view of the real world was distorted by affection.

She didn’t think he could possibly know what it was like to have evil in the family.

101

Vye Close was in the centre of the little council estate at the northern end of Moorhay. The houses were built of the same grey-white stone as the rest of the village, with slate roofs and unfenced grassed areas that were more roadside verge than garden. At one side stood a row of old people’s bungalows, separated from the family houses by a low fence that didn’t deter the children from playing on the grass under the windows of the old people.

There were no more than thirty houses on the estate, and in many other places, even in Edendale, it wouldn’t have been considered a street, let alone an estate. It had been built on the top field of one of Moorhay’s dairy farms. When the area had been allocated for housing on the council’s local plan, the increased value of the land had proved too much of a temptation for the farmer at a time when agriculture was in increasing financial difficulties. The result was that every house backed on to pastureland or had a view across rolling slopes to the farm itself. Some of the residents of the estate worked in the small factory units on the outskirts of Edendale, or in the dairy ten miles away. Many didn’t work at all. Rural housing might have been provided, but not rural employment.

Outside number 12, Wye Close stood an unmarked police Vauxhall. The car, or one like it, had been there since Monday evening, waiting for the return home of Lee Sherratt. The local children, at a loose end during the day because the schools were still on holiday, had invented a new game this morning. They were acting out the part of burglars, robbers and murderers, lurking suspiciously in the street, then pretending to see the police car suddenly and running away round the corner, screaming. The detective constable on surveillance duty was getting rapidly fed up of it. The baking heat inside the car was already enough to make him tired and irritable. The cheeky kids could be the last straw.

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A green Ford entered the estate and pulled up at number t elve. When UCi 1 ailby got out and glowered across the road, the children seemed genuinely frightened for once, perhaps intimidated by his size and the grey suit he wore. They retreated behind the fence of the old people’s homes and watched to see what he would do. First he crossed to speak to the detective in the Vauxhall. who sat up straight and shook his head. Then he strode

‘ r O

to the door of number twelve and banged on the knocker.

‘Oh, it’s you lot again,’ said the big woman who came to the door. She was wearing sandals and frayed blue jeans and a billowing pink garment that could only have come from a maternity-wear shop. Her hair had been pinned up but was falling back down across a chubby neck, and she smelled of cigarette smoke. Tailby put her age in the late thirties, fortv

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