devils whoâve drawn the short straw.â
Rutter frowned. âSo youâre not really as confident as you sounded a few minutes ago?â
âWell, of course Iâm not sure,â Woodend replied. âDetectionâs hardly a science at the best of times. Itâs not like workinâ in a laboratory, when the only thing the rats are interested in is food, anâ thereâs only two or three ways they can get it. Murderersâ minds are much more complicated than that. So Iâm never confident Iâm goinâ to get a result. Anâ when I say that, Iâm talkinâ about a result in the straightforward cases â which this one obviously isnât. But one thing I am sure of â weâll have more chance doinâ it my way than if we behaved like the good little bobbies Inspector Hopgood wants us to be.â
âSo what line do you think we should be taking?â
âI wonât know until Iâve had a root around anâ stirred things up a bit,â Woodend admitted, âbut if youâre askinâ me to put my money on anythinâ, Iâd say we should start by lookinâ for a motive.â
Inspector Hopgood returned, still looking flushed. âIâve spoken to my Chief Super, sir,â he said, âand he says the last thing he wants to do is inhibit your investigation.â
âIâm pleased to hear it,â Woodend said. âNow would you like to tell me what strings are attached?â
âNo strings, sir,â the inspector replied unconvincingly. âBut the boss did mention in passing that he would appreciate it if youâd keep him up to date with developments.â
âA very reasonable request,â Woodend said easily. âTell him to rest assured that as soon as they
are
any developments to be reported, heâll be the first to know about them.â He checked his watch. âThe club should be just about closinâ now. Time for us to make a move.â
âYouâre going back to the Cellar?â Hopgood asked.
âI am if my sergeant made the phone call I asked him to make. Did you, Sergeant?â
âYes, sir,â Rutter replied, deadpan.
Hopgood was slowly piecing things together. The quiet conversation the sergeant and the chief inspector had had in the doorway of the Grapes before Woodend went off to the club. The fact that Rutter had excused himself, saying he wanted a pee, and had been gone for nearly five minutes.
This wasnât how it was supposed to be at all! If anybody was to keep anything from anybody else, it should be him keeping vital facts from Woodend and Rutter, so he could conduct his own investigation. Yet despite the fact that the Scotland Yard men had been in Liverpool for only a couple of hours, they were already blind-siding him.
âSo you made the call, Sergeant, but you didnât think to tell Inspector Hopgood about it?â Woodend asked innocently.
âMust have slipped my mind, sir,â Rutter confessed.
Woodend shook his head. âThese young lads we have to work with,â he said to Hopgood. âTheyâve no idea how to a proper job, have they? I blame it on the army. You used to go in a boy anâ come out a man, but they seem to handle the conscripts with kid gloves these days.â
Hopgood wasnât fooled for a second â but then he suspected that Woodend hadnât wanted him to be.
âWould you like to tell me about the phone call
now
, sir?â he asked through gritted teeth.
âOh aye. That list you gave us down at the Chandlerâs Arms is already provinâ very useful. I asked the sergeant to phone the Seagullsâ manager at work, anâ tell him to round up his lads anâ meet us in the club as soon as it was closed for the afternoon. Did you succeed in that mission, Sergeant?â
âYes, sir.â
âSo thatâs what weâre doinâ, Inspector. Weâre
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