you’ve got some sort of warrant then I’m going to have to ask you to leave.’ He blew smoke up at the sky.
‘I’m told you inherited this place,’ said Chalmers. Nightingale shrugged but didn’t reply. ‘And the guy who left it to you blew his head off with a shotgun. Is that true?’
‘You know it’s true,’ said Nightingale. ‘It’s my property now and I want you off it.’
‘This Ainsley Gosling was your long-lost father, right?’
‘My biological father,’ said Nightingale. ‘I was adopted at birth.’
‘I wish I had a rich father to leave me a big house,’ said Chalmers.
Nightingale looked pointedly at his watch. ‘I’ve got things to do,’ he said.
‘I had a call from my opposite number in Abersoch. Seems you were at another murder scene.’
‘It was a suicide,’ said Nightingale.
‘There seem to be a lot of deaths around you these days,’ said Chalmers. ‘Your uncle and aunt. Robbie Hoyle. Barry O’Brien, who was driving the cab that ran over Hoyle. And of course good old Simon Underwood, who took a flyer through his office window while you were talking to him.’
Nightingale took a long drag on his cigarette but didn’t say anything.
‘Your mother killed herself, too, didn’t she?’
‘My parents died in a car crash years ago.’
‘You know what I mean, Nightingale. Your birth mother. Genetic mother. Rebecca Keeley. Whatever you want to call her. She slashed her wrists after you paid her a visit, didn’t she? Did you think I wouldn’t find out about that?’
‘She was a troubled woman,’ said Nightingale. ‘You can talk to the people at the home.’
‘Troubled why?’
‘She was on medication, Chalmers. She was a sick woman. Yes, I went to see her, twice, but she wasn’t able to say much. I don’t think she even knew I was there.’
‘Why did she put you up for adoption?’
Nightingale shrugged again. ‘I don’t know,’ he lied. There was no way that he was going to tell Chalmers that Keeley had been forced to give up her new-born baby to fulfil a deal that Ainsley Gosling had made with a demon from Hell.
The superintendent nodded at the hallway. ‘Are you alone in there?’
‘What do you want, Chalmers?’ said Nightingale.
‘I want you to tell me who else is in the house with you,’ said the superintendent. ‘I was wondering if maybe the lovely Miss McLean was there so that we could kill two birds with one stone.’
Nightingale frowned. ‘What are you talking about?’
‘Is Jenny McLean inside or not?’ said the superintendent. ‘I’m not pissing about here, Nightingale.’
‘Yes, she is. Why?’
‘Because we want to talk to her, and to you, about what happened in Battersea.’ He sneered at Nightingale with undisguised contempt. ‘How stupid do you think we are, Nightingale? Did you think we wouldn’t check the CCTV cameras and that we wouldn’t find out that you were in the flat when George Harrison took a flyer off his balcony?’
10
T he uniformed officer, who looked as if he was barely out of his teens, showed Nightingale into an interview room and asked him if he wanted a tea or a coffee. He asked for a coffee and sat down at the table. Chalmers and the female detective had taken Jenny along to another interview room. After ten minutes the constable reappeared with a cup of canteen coffee.
‘You didn’t spit in it, did you?’ joked Nightingale.
The constable stared at him blankly and sat down opposite him.
‘Is this going to take long because I’ll need a cigarette break soon,’ said Nightingale.
The constable shrugged but didn’t say anything. Nightingale looked at his watch but as he did so the door opened and Chalmers walked in holding a clipboard and two blank cassette tapes. Behind him was another detective, who Nightingale recognised. Dan Evans. Evans was a detective inspector in his late thirties, with prematurely greying hair and an expanding waistline that hinted at a fondness for beer.
‘It’s
Grace Burrowes
Mary Elise Monsell
Beth Goobie
Amy Witting
Deirdre Martin
Celia Vogel
Kara Jaynes
Leeanna Morgan
Kelly Favor
Stella Barcelona