The eleventh floor:
I knock on the door of the room that was my office, that was my office up until yesterday afternoon.
‘Come.’
I open the door.
Ronald Angus is sitting in the chair that was my chair, the chair behind the desk that was my desk, the desk in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon at 14:35:00.
‘Sit down,’ says Angus, nodding at the empty chair next to Chief Superintendent Jobson -
I sit down.
Angus leans across the desk, the desk that was my desk, and he hands me a piece of paper -
I take it from him and I read:
‘That’s it?’ I ask.
‘Yes.’
‘No names, no times, no dates, no places?’
‘It’s not an allegation, nor a complaint.’
‘So what is it?’
‘It is information received that needs to be investigated.’
‘So let me help; tell me the names of these people with whom I’m supposed to have associated?’
‘I can’t.’
‘Well then, tell me what kind of obligations I’m supposed to have placed myself under?’
‘I cannot.’
I’m smiling -
Despite myself I am smiling -
Smiling at Ronald Angus, the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire, the West Yorkshire force that forty-eight hours before I was investigating, smiling at him sat there in the chair that was my chair, the chair behind the desk that was my desk, the desk in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon.
‘Mr Hunter,’ he says. ‘I know how this looks, so I know what you’re thinking. But I can assure you my own reputation for fairness and integrity is as much on the line here as your own.’
I can’t help myself: ‘Is that supposed to make me feel better or worse, sir?’
Angus has had enough: ‘Mr Hunter, to be blunt: I don’t care how you feel.’
Silence -
In the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon, silence -
Silence until Maurice Jobson says: ‘Peter, we’re going to have to ask you to provide us with full details of your bank account and any credit cards and savings accounts you might have had in the last six years.’
‘Why?’
Jobson shakes his head: ‘I can’t tell you, you know that.’
‘No, I don’t know that.’
‘OK, well I’m telling you now.’
‘OK, Maurice,’ I smile. ‘I’ll tell you something shall I? I am under no legal obligation whatsoever to provide you with that information.’
‘No, you’re not,’ interrupts Angus. ‘But if you don’t oblige us, I’ll just get a judge to make you.’
‘Then you’d be wasting even more of your time than you already are.’
‘And why would that be?’
‘I can’t give you it.’
‘Can’t or won’t?’ smiles Angus.
‘Can’t.’
‘Why not?’ asks Jobson.
‘The fire.’
Angus sits back in his chair and sighs: ‘Convenient.’
‘What?’ I say, voice raised: ‘You what?’
Jobson’s holding onto my arm, pulling me back down into the chair in front of the desk, the chair in front of the desk that was my desk, the desk in the room that was my room, the room that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon, Jobson telling me: ‘Take it easy, now. Take it easy.’
‘What about your passport?’ asks Angus.
‘What about it?’
‘Lose that as well?’
I tell him: ‘We lost everything.’
‘That’s a pity.’
‘Why?’ I ask. ‘Going to take that as well were you?’
‘Yes.’
‘Fucking hell,’ I say, shaking my head.
Again silence -
Again silence in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon -
Again silence until Angus says: ‘Two o’clock. Monday.’
‘That’s it?’ I say.
‘Wakefield,’ he says.
‘What?’
‘Two o’clock. Monday. Wakefield.’
‘You’re joking? You’re supposed to come here. It’s procedure.’
‘Mr Hunter,’ sighs Mr Angus. ‘We want this thing over and done with as much as you do. But you also know more than most the pressure we’re under over there, so if you want us to get a move on with this we’d be grateful if you wouldn’t mind coming over to Wakefield on Monday.’
I nod and stand up.
‘Good day Mr Hunter,’ he says.
‘One thing,’ I say -
He looks up.
‘Disciplinary Regulations demand that information be given to an accused officer in sufficient detail for him to be able to defend himself, and that the full name and address of the person making the complaint must also be provided to him.’
Angus nods and says: ‘I know.’
‘OK,’ I say. ‘Then I look forward to receiving that information from you at two o’clock on Monday in Wakefield.’
Angus is looking at me, staring at me, staring at me stood there.
More silence -
More silence in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon -
More silence until the phone starts ringing -
Angus picks it up: ‘Chief Constable Angus speaking.’
He’s listening, still looking at me.
‘Yes he is,’ he says into the phone, eyes never leaving mine -
Mine never leaving his.
‘Just a moment,’ he says and puts his hand over the mouthpiece -
‘It’s for you,’ he says. ‘Won’t give his name, but says it’s an emergency.’
Never leaving his.
Ronald Angus leans forward and hands me the phone, the phone that was my phone until yesterday afternoon -
I take the phone from him and lean across the desk, the desk that was my desk, and I press the flashing red button: ‘This is Peter Hunter.’