'What do you mean?'
'Come on!' snapped Dalziel. 'Don't play the thick ploughboy with me. That tube of tool-grease you've been passing off as your daughter, she took off last night. Where'd she go?'
'Mrs Greave? I don't know. She's a free agent. What's up? Didn't she give her notice?'
'It's not what she gave. It's what she took.'
Briefly Dalziel listed the missing items. Papworth, fully in control of himself now, was unimpressed.
'All that? She must have had a big bag.'
'Oh no,' said Dalziel who had also settled down. 'This lot's been going for a long while. And you never noticed?'
'I'm the outdoor man,' said Papworth. If she'd taken any trees, I'd have noticed.'
Dalziel smiled inwardly. There was nothing he loved better than a joker. In his experience of interrogation, wit was the last defence of the guilty and generally it sprang from deep uncertainties rather than the confidence it claimed to demonstrate.
'Look,' he said in a voice unctuous with reasonableness. 'Look. There's nothing for you to worry about. Don't take any notice of me if I shout a bit. It's my upbringing. I'm like you. Good solid working-class stock. I've no time for these fancy fal-da-rils. Look. This woman, Annie Greave, now we know what she's not. She's not your daughter. And we know what she is. She's a Liverpool whore. What we don't know is where she is. And it might help us to find her if you told us how you came to meet her in the first place.'
If she's a pro,' said Papworth, 'I'd have thought that were obvious.'
'True,' said Dalziel, looking pleasantly surprised as though the thought hadn't struck him. 'So you picked her up. Where was this Liverpool?'
'That's it,' said Papworth.
'I thought so. What were you doing in Liverpool? It's a good way. Not the kind of place you go for a holiday.'
Dalziel laughed as he spoke, inviting Papworth to share the absurdity of the thought.
I went there a few times with young Master Bertie,' said Papworth. The feudal phrase came awkwardly from his lips.
'Did you? As his valet?' said Dalziel, unable to restrain the sarcasm. But it appeared to pass unnoticed.
'He worked up there. Didn't have a car, so when he was going back after a stay at Lake House, I'd sometimes drive him in the Rover and bring it back the next day.'
'And spend the night screwing Annie,' said Dalziel with a wink.
'And spend the night screwing Annie,' said Dalziel with a wink.
'That's it.'
'And you got to enjoy this so much that when the chance came to install her here in Lake House, you thought, why not? But for decency's sake, and to save the bother of testimonials, you said she was your daughter?'
'Right again,' said Papworth. 'You needn't have woken me up, seeing you've managed to work it all out by yourself.'
'I like a nice chat,' said Dalziel genially. 'So. Let me see. Bertie was how long in Liverpool? Just over a year, I think. Fifteen months, say. And he came back here to start the restaurant project early this year. How often did he come home while he was away? Every weekend? Once a month? Twice a year?'
'Once a month, six weeks at the outside,' said Papworth cautiously.
'And you drove him back and screwed Mrs Greave. That'd make between eight and twelve jumps you had with her last year. Enough to give you a taste for it?'
'I didn't count,' said Papworth. 'Does it give you a thrill, these questions?'
'No. No,' said Dalziel thoughtfully. 'I was just thinking how advanced the prison service in Liverpool must be. Nowt like it in Yorkshire, I tell you, else there's some would be queuing up.'
'What do you mean?'
'I mean Annie Greave spent eight months last year in gaol, that's what I mean. And if you were getting on board each time you drove bouncing Bertie back home, then you must have real influence. Yes indeed.'
It was, of course, a lie. Criminals lied all the time and Dalziel saw no reason why this useful privilege should be reserved for them alone.
Of course, all Papworth had to do was say you must be daft! and indeed the man was looking at him with what might be honest puzzlement as he rolled another of his revolting cigarettes.
'Well?' prompted Dalziel.
The door burst open and Bertie Fielding entered.
'Hello, Pappy,' he said. 'I've been looking for you. Ah, you're here, Dalziel. That's useful. It'll save ringing up Cross.'
'We're having a private conversation,' growled Dalziel. 'Do you mind?'
In your house with your employees, you can have all the private conversations you wish,' said Bertie. He was feeling confident enough to say it as a joke rather than make it as nasty as he was capable of, observed Dalziel.
'Pappy, now the water's going down, we really ought to start cleaning up the bottom bit of the lawn. The flood's left an awful mess. I've got Hank out there earning his keep, but we need your expertise.'
'Right,' said Papworth. 'I'll come now.'
'Hold on!' said Dalziel. 'I'm not finished with you yet.'
Is this some kind of official interrogation?' enquired Bertie. 'What's it all about, Pappy?'
'He's asking me about Mrs Greave. Something about some missing stuff.'
Bertie laughed. The sight of his soft fleshiness gently shaking filled Dalziel with revulsion. At least at his age I was nothing but bone and muscle, he thought.
Is that it? Well, consider your constabulary duty done, Mr Dalziel, sir. That's what I was going to ring Sergeant Cross about. It's all been a mistake.'
'What?'
'A mistake. Look, it's a bit complicated, but what it boils down to is this. There's nothing missing.'
'What?'
'That's the long and short of it, I'm afraid. I've done a careful check this morning and in fact all the missing stuff can be accounted for. The booze has been stored elsewhere. It's silly, really.'
'And you didn't know?' demanded Dalziel.
'Not in the least. Not till this morning.'
'And who was it that altered your arrangements without letting you know? And why didn't he or she speak up last night?'
'Well, that would have been a bit difficult,' said Bertie, grinning broadly, it was my late father, God bless him. Who else?'
'So now you've tracked the drink down? And the ovens? Had he fiddled with them too?'
'Oh yes,' said Bertie. 'Security. Very distrustful man was my father.'
It was of course unanswerable. And even though Dalziel had forecast this turn of events to Balderstone that morning, he felt angrily frustrated.
'You can see for yourself if you like,' offered Bertie.
'No thanks,' said Dalziel to whom another thought had occurred. Was this why he had been steered away from the house that morning?
'So come on, Pappy,' said Bertie. 'Mr Dalziel doesn't need to question you any more. Do you, Superintendent?'
Dalziel hesitated. Now would be a dramatic time to reveal that Annie Greave was dead. If he were in charge of the case and could have followed up his revelation by getting Papworth and Bertie into a nice neutral interview room for the next couple of hours, he wouldn't have hesitated. But it wasn't up to him. In any case, as he had stated to Balderstone, his ambiguous position in this house was a positive advantage. Once launch into a full scale interrogation and he would have stepped outside the wagon ring and joined the other redskins whooping around in the darkness.
He decided to compromise.
'Don't forget,' he said to Bertie, it wasn't just a nonexistent theft we had here last night. A man got drowned.'
'What's that to do with me?' demanded Papworth.
'Depends what time you left the house last night and where you went,' said Dalziel. 'You might have seen him on the road.'
Papworth considered for a moment.
'No,' he said. 'I saw nothing. I've no time to gawp at passers-by.'
'That's a little bit vague,' said Dalziel. 'Let's see if we can help you. What time did you leave the house?'
'Latish. I'm not a man for clocks,' said Papworth.
'All right,' said Dalziel understandingly. 'Let's try the other end. Where'd you go and what time did you get there?'
'Well,' said Papworth. 'I had a wet in the village.'
'In the Green Man?' said Dalziel. 'But you were away all night, Mr Papworth. Don't the pubs around here ever close?'
'Not so you'd notice,' said Papworth, standing up and making for the door. 'I'd best be getting to work.'
Bertie stood aside to let him by, but Dalziel blocked his path.
'You're not telling me you were boozing all night,' he said incredulously.
Pappy grinned slyly.
'Not all night,' he said. 'These are long nights for a country woman if her man's away. They like a bit of company. You ought to try it, Mr Dalziel. Have another look round my room if you want to.'
He squeezed past Dalziel and went out. Bertie followed and closed the door behind him, leaving Dalziel in the fuggy room.
Dalziel wrinkled his nose in distaste as he considered what the man had said. With typical economy he found a word to cover both experiences.
'Chickenshit,' he said.
15
As Dalziel began to climb the stairs, Tillotson appeared on the landing and stood there looking down at him like a young hero ready to oppose the rising of the Creature from the Black Lagoon.
'You got him to bed?' asked Dalziel.
'Yes. He woke up a bit and started to sing.'
'That's bad. Has he got a bucket?'
'Sorry?'
'A jerry. A piss pot. Something to spew into. When they wake up and start singing it usually means they'll be honking their rings eventually.'
'You're jolly expert,' said Tillotson.
'I should be. I've bedded plenty of drunks in my time.'
'An interesting taste,' said Tillotson. 'Mrs Fielding was asking whether you were back. She's in her room and would like to see you.'
'Right,' said Dalziel. 'I won't be a moment. You going out to help tidy up?'
'What for?'
'Well, after the flood. Make the place look nice and please the customers. You ought to be protecting your investment, son. How are the builders getting on?'
'Oh, pretty well, I suppose.'
'Good. It looks as if you were right after all,' said Dalziel heartily. 'The place'll open on time.'
Tillotson shrugged.
'I suppose so,' he said and made his way downstairs looking disconsolate. What's up with him? wondered Dalziel. Another row with Louisa or is he just unhappy about all those lovely birds they won't let him shoot?