crime,â he said.
âMeaning what, exactly?â Hopgood asked.
âMeaning he doesnât have much use for police stations.â
Doesnât have much use for police stations? The idea of not basing things at the local nick was inconceivable to Hopgood.
âSo where exactly
will
he be conducting his investigation from?â the inspector asked.
Rutter looked across at Woodend questioningly.
âWhere would
you
guess Iâll be conductinâ my investigations from, Bob?â the chief inspector asked.
It wasnât very hard to work out the answer, Rutter thought â not when you knew Woodend as well as he did.
âYouâll probably be running it from inside the club itself, wonât you, sir?â he asked.
âSpot on,â Woodend agreed.
âBut . . . but at midday and during the evening, itâs full of teenagers,â Hopgood pointed out.
Woodend grinned. âQuite right. Anâ by some happy coincidence, those are just the times that this hostelry â which you can see for yourself is so convenient for the crime scene â is open.â
âYou canât run an murder investigation from a pub,â Hopgood said, clearly outraged.
âNot only could I, but I have done on a number of occasions, Inspector,â Woodend replied mildly. âYou can learn a hell of a sight more sittinâ in a pub â right in the middle of things â than you ever would behind the closed doors of the local cop shop.â
âBut thatâs just not the way things are done in Liverpool, sir,â Hopgood protested.
âMaybe it isnât â but itâs the way I do âem.â
Hopgood took a deep breath. âYouâre here as guests of the Liverpool Police,â he said, âand Iâm afraid that my superiors are going to insist that you observe the proper form.â
Woodend sighed, not softly as his sergeant had earlier, but with all the exasperation of a man who has obviously played this same scene through dozens of times before.
âHow many murders do you reckon weâve worked on together, Bob?â he asked Rutter.
âSix,â the sergeant replied. âStarting with the case of that young girl in Salton andââ
âForget the details,â Woodend said airily. âAnâ of those six, how many times have we caught the killer?â
âSix,â Rutter said, doing his best to hide his smile.
âSix out of six,â Woodend said musingly. âNot a bad record, all in all.â He took another sip of his pint of bitter. âAm I makinâ my point clearly enough for you, Inspector?â
Hopgood flushed. âYour methods are unorthodox, but you usually get results?â
âNearly right,â Woodend agreed. âMy methods are unorthodox, and since Iâve had this bright grammar-school lad workinâ with me, Iâve
always
got results. So you can just relax, Inspector. Leave us to do things our way, anâ weâll find your killer for you.â
Hopgood stood up. âIf youâll excuse me, sir, I have to go and make a phone call,â he said.
âIâm sure you do,â Woodend agreed. âAnâ while youâre talkinâ to your boss, tell him that if heâs not happy with the way Iâm conductinâ my inquiries, Iâm more than willinâ to catch the next train back to London. My rosesâll appreciate me gettinâ back, even if no bugger else does.â
Rutter grinned as he watched the inspector make his way hurriedly towards the pay phone in the corridor next to the toilets.
âYou donât have any roses, sir,â he pointed out.
âNo, I donât. But then again, theyâre not goinâ to send us back to London, either.â
âYouâre sure of that?â
âOh yes. They need somebody to take the blame for not cominâ up with a murderer, anâ weâre the lucky
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