that a Sherlock Holmes story? Archie Whitcliffe would have known. Was there someone hiding in the garden that night? Or did the killer come from inside the house? Nelson would give a lot to know who Dieter Eckhart had been texting as he sat in his car outside Sea’s End House.
Does Nelson really suspect Jack Hastings, a highly respectable politician, of killing three people just to preserve his father’s reputation? On the face of it the thing is unlikely, but Nelson knows to look beyond the face of things. Buster Hastings is certainly revered in Sea’s End House and Dieter Eckhart would have had no compunction in denouncing him as a war criminal if he could find the evidence. In Hastings’ eyes, Eckhart had even corrupted his daughter. Nelson had noticed his face when Irene mentioned ‘spooning’. Jack Hastings had not been happy that his daughter was dating a German, not happy at all.
Back at the station, a grey-faced Judy is sitting at her desk. All officers have been called in to work. Whitcliffe, horrified at the autopsy report on Archie, is throwing everything at the case.
‘How are you feeling?’ asks Nelson.
‘Like death.’
‘Well, there’s a lot of it about. Good night last night?’’
‘Brilliant. I can’t remember anything after midnight.’
‘Did Ruth enjoy herself?’
‘Ruth? I think she left early. Tatjana stayed the night at my place though. She was up at eight for a run. The woman’s a marvel.’
‘Any luck on Dieter Eckhart’s next of kin?’ says Nelson.
‘Yes.’ Judy looks at him sideways. ‘I rang his university. Apparently he’s got a wife and two children.’
CHAPTER 19
‘So he was married all along?’ says Ruth.
‘Apparently so,’ says Nelson, who is finding it hard to drag his eyes away from Kate. ‘His wife’s due in England tomorrow. She’s going to fly his body back home.’
‘Did Clara know? That he was married, I mean?’
‘I don’t know,’ says Nelson, who is building a tower of red and yellow bricks. Kate watches him narrowly.
Clara Hastings had been in that morning to make her statement. Nelson had asked Judy to drop Eckhart’s wife casually into the conversation. Clara hadn’t flickered. Towards the end of the session, though, she had grown tearful.
‘It must be so hard for you,’ Judy had said sympathetically. She is good at this sort of thing.
‘I’m just thinking about his kids,’ Clara had sniffed.
So she had known about the children.
Nelson adds another brick and then knocks over the tower. Kate laughs delightedly. She loves destruction. Ruth is beginning to regret letting Nelson come at a time when Kate would be in the house. It makes her uneasy to see them together. Whilst, on one hand, she wants Nelson to love his daughter (and, by extension, her?), she knows that the more attached Nelson gets, the more complicated their situation becomes.
‘What did the post mortem say?’ she asks, to bring him back to earth.
‘Eckhart was stabbed with a sharp metal object. They think it was scissors.’
‘Scissors?’
‘Heavy-duty scissors. The sort used for dressmaking or cutting back plants. They were honed to a point apparently.’
‘Honed. So someone had planned this? It wasn’t spur of the moment?’
‘No,’ says Nelson soberly. ‘Someone sharpened those scissors and waited.’
‘Have you any idea who?’
‘I’ve got lots of ideas,’ says Nelson. ‘Each more ridiculous than the last.’
‘Do you think the same person killed Archie Whitcliffe and Dieter Eckhart?’ Nelson has told her about the autopsy report on Archie. Death by asphyxiation was the verdict, probably with a pillow.
‘Yes I do,’ says Nelson, still looking at Kate as she thoughtfully sucks the building bricks. ‘The method was different but I’m convinced the link was the murder of the six Germans. Someone is prepared to kill to stop that story getting out. There’s Hugh Anselm too, the old chap in the stairlift. I’m sure he was murdered too.’
‘It’s so far-fetched though,’ complains Ruth. ‘Like something out a murder mystery.’
‘Archie Whitcliffe was a big fan of murder mysteries,’ says Nelson. ‘Left a pile of them to his carer.’
‘Really?’ Ruth looks interested. ‘What sort of books?’
‘Nothing special. I hoped they might be worth something. She hasn’t got two pennies to rub together, the carer, but they were just a load of old paperbacks. Second hand, most of them.’
‘Do you have the list of the titles?’
‘Somewhere. Why are you interested?’
‘I don’t know. Just an idea.’
Nelson gets Judy to fax through the list of titles (Ruth is almost the last person in the world still to have a fax machine). Ruth reads through the names while Nelson plays peek-a-boo with Kate. Ruth wishes Clough could see him.
‘Was there anything else?’ she asks. ‘Just the list?’
‘Oh, there was some nonsense about which order to read them in. I can’t remember it now. Ask Judy.’ And he disappears behind the cushion again.
‘This is it,’ says Judy. Ruth can hear her rustling paper. ‘He says, read them in this order: 3,2,2,2,2,3,1,2. Crazy, isn’t it?’
‘Maybe,’ says Ruth, sitting down to look at the list again. Nelson, who is crouching on the floor beside Kate, looks up at her.
‘What is it, Ruth?’
‘I don’t know. I just thought… wasn’t this the bloke who liked crosswords?’
‘That was Hugh Anselm.’
‘But maybe Archie did too.’
‘Maybe. He did watch that programme,
‘Mmm.’ Ruth occasionally watches it herself but she’s not going to let Nelson know that.
‘Do you think he’s left us a clue then?’ says Nelson smiling.
‘It’s possible,’ says Ruth, turning back to the fax paper to avoid looking at Nelson pretending to be a bear.
Ruth always over-complicates everything, thinks Nelson, as he drives back towards King’s Lynn and home. It comes of being an academic. Mind you, when he first met her, he had needed her professional expertise. He’d called her in to look at the Iron Age body but he’d also asked her about some weird letters that had been sent to him, letters full of allusions to mythology, ritual and sacrifice. Ruth had done great work, looking up all the references and working out what the nutter was trying to say. But maybe that has left her unable to take anything at face value. Sometimes a list of books is just a list of books. That’s what he says to his team. ‘Don’t make things too complicated. Nine times out of ten police work is about simple stuff. It was a car number-plate that caught the Yorkshire Ripper, tax evasion that caught Al Capone. Never skimp on routine procedure.’ Mind you, he can’t see Cloughie and co being tempted to be too intellectual.
Katie’s a grand little kid though. He’d forgotten how much fun they are at that age. Michelle always used to tell