'Man of my age can learn a lot of things, Mr Dalziel,' said Burkill grimly. 'I'm off to see our Sandra now.'
'That'd be best. Maurice left her at Mrs Abbott's, did he?'
'Aye.'
'Sergeant Wield'll go with you. There may be some difficulty in getting out, else.'
Pascoe didn't understand this either, till the sound of approaching vehicles made him turn and a stream of police cars began to emerge from the green tunnel of the driveway.
'Now I dare say one of these gents has got a search warrant,' said Dalziel. 'Miss Latimer, perhaps as an interested party representing Homeric Films you would care to be present during this search.'
'All I want is to contact my solicitor,' said Penny.
'Contact away,' said Dalziel.
'There's no phone here,' said the woman.
'Then you'll just have to shout very loud,' answered Dalziel. 'Inspector Trumper.'
'Sir,' said Trumper who had just emerged from the leading car.
'You have the warrant? Good, get things organized, quickly as you like. Take your time on the search, though. We've got all week if we want.'
'Excuse me, Mr Dalziel,' said Burkill.
'You still here, Brian?'
'Maurice said to look behind the chimney in the main bedroom.'
'Did he now? You hear that, Inspector? I must thank Mr Arany when I see him, which should be shortly unless your men are sleeping.'
'They're not sleeping, sir,' assured Trumper.
'Good. Well, let's get to it. Sergeant Wield, before you go, give Control a shout, tell'em we need a doctor.'
'Right, sir.'
'And that's about it, I reckon,' said Dalziel. He went under the portico and stood by the door which was open once more, looking, thought Pascoe, like some nineteenth-century industrial parvenu who'd just built his first mansion.
'Just one thing more,' said Dalziel. 'I almost forgot. Inspector Crabtree.'
'Sir,' said Crabtree who had just arrived holding one side of Gerry Toms who looked to be in a bad way.
'Inspector Crabtree,' said Dalziel ponderously. 'You are suspended from your duties pending investigation of certain allegations which have been made into your conduct as a police officer. You will remain here until a senior officer from your force arrives who will accompany you to your home where a search will be made in your presence. You understand me, Inspector?'
'Yes, sir,' said Crabtree without emotion.
'Good,' said Dalziel and went into the house.
Crabtree let Toms slip to the ground and pulled a packet of cigarettes out of his pocket. Pascoe stared at him uncomprehendingly.
'Ray,' he said.
Crabtree smiled and shrugged.
'I've a complete answer to all the charges,' he said. 'It's 'go fuck yourself'. Better push off, Peter, before master gets impatient.'
'Inspector Pascoe!' bellowed Dalziel from within.
Crabtree's smile broadened.
Pascoe went into the house.
Chapter 25
Dalziel hit him across the face.
'Peter! Peter!' he said.
'Get stuffed,' choked Pascoe.
'You OK? Here, have a drink of water.'
'I'm OK, I'm OK,' said Pascoe.
'I'll get you something stronger just now. For Christ's sake, lad, you've seen worse than that, and in the flesh too.'
'I know it, I know it,' said Pascoe.
He had too. He had seen bruised and battered flesh; shot-gun wounds like spoon-holes in a bramble pie; bodies ballooned with long immersion or devoured by long decay. But these he had somehow dealt with, somehow reduced to facts, somehow eventually controlled with his intellect. But this girl dying silently on the screen in the half light of the Calli viewing-room had slipped through his defences as though they didn't exist.
'OK now?' repeated Dalziel. 'If you're going to honk, do it under the carpet. I'll get back and tell that lot in there you were caught short. Can't have them thinking you're soft. Though it might not harm. There's some as reckons the ACC's as bent as a Boxing Day turd.'
Dalziel went out.
Thanks, mouthed Pascoe after him. He meant it. He'd sat through as much of the film as he could but in the end he'd had to make for the exit. Once through, he had relaxed the effort of will which had carried him thus far and folded up into the arms of Dalziel who'd followed him out.
He rose now and went to the window. Wilkinson Square looked peaceful and well ordered in the spring dusk. If the vigilantes knew what had just been shown in the Calliope Kinema Club, they would surely have come running out to tear the place down brick by brick. At least Pascoe hoped they would. But there was no certainty. We all like it, Ray Crabtree had said. It's just a matter of degree. Well, that was just special pleading, Pascoe now recognized. But for any plea whatsoever to be possible in defence of this made a mockery of civilization.
Crabtree. He shook his head wearily, but was glad to have something else to concentrate his thoughts on. Dalziel had used him there. Sooner or later there must be a confrontation about that, but Pascoe could already map out the route via which he would be conveyed to a state of indignant impotence.
It was clear now that Crabtree and Homeric had been under investigation for some time. Normally when suspicion falls upon a police officer, action is swift and open. Fellow officers are naturally reluctant to become involved in any clandestine investigation of one of their own number. Whose turn will it be next? But when a neighbouring Task Force in the process of closing down its own local pornography industry had chanced on a trail which led to Homeric and eventually to Crabtree, it had been decided to keep things very quiet till the full extent of the business could be seen.
'Great thing about Homeric is that they admit pornography's their business,' Dalziel had said as they drove away from Hay Hall. 'Disarming, that. Please, sir, tell us if we go too far.'
'How far's too far?' Pascoe had asked.
'Not for me to say, lad,' said Dalziel grimly. 'But if there is a too far then Homeric must be going it, for we reckoned they were going all the way.'
He turned in his seat as he spoke and looked at Pascoe.
'I don't really mean we,' he said. 'Not my investigation, you understand that? I had to know, of course. But I wasn't running things.'
When Pascoe had come along with Shorter's story, Dalziel had tried to wet-blanket it. In any case it seemed too far-fetched to be possible. But once Pascoe had struck out on his own by contacting Homeric direct, Dalziel had pushed him on.
'I knew if you went to Harrogate, you'd start chatting to Crabtree. Now, the Homeric lot would be having a go at him too, asking what the hell was going on. There had to be something for him to say. Old mate P. Pascoe being a bit over-conscientious, that fitted the book nicely.'
'You could have told me,' said Pascoe sourly.
'Would you have done it?'
Pascoe considered.