Small Mercies Read online




  Small Mercies

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Annie Delamere could tell something was wrong.

  They’d spotted the sign as they were walking from the car to the footpath. It was attached to what had once been a bus stop, though Annie had no idea if any buses now passed up this way. The sign itself was pitted with rust, and read simply: ‘Buses no longer stop at Hell Bank’.

  Gary, as usual, had treated it as a joke and embarked on one of his familiar routines, wondering if the service had been discontinued because too many demons had crowded the back seats, or because customers couldn’t buy return tickets. He’d ended, inevitably, by questioning whether Hell Bank offered a savings account. Annie had had sufficient experience of Gary’s sense of humour during her years of working with Zoe to tune it all out until he’d exhausted his ideas, which generally didn’t take long.

  Zoe normally seemed to do the same. Today, though, she turned away while Gary was still speaking and strode away up the footpath towards the moorland, clearly unhappy. Gary had finally stopped talking, aware something was wrong. ‘Oh, God,’ he said. ‘Have I said the wrong thing again? It’s like walking on eggshells with Zoe sometimes.’

  ‘She’s probably just tired,’ Annie said. ‘We’ve had a tough few weeks.’ She was beginning to think it had been a mistake to come today. It had been her idea originally. Gary was supposed to be away this weekend on one of his football trips. Annie’s partner Sheena was stuck in London attending some Labour Party event. As she and Zoe were both at a loose end, Annie had suggested a joint outing to enjoy what promised to be the first decent weekend weather of the year. Then Gary’s trip had been cancelled at the last moment, and he’d decided to tag along as well. And, as always in the Peak District at the first sign of good weather, everyone else seemed to have had the same thought.

  They’d already had one run-in while parking the car. Most of the available roadside spaces had been taken, but Annie had eventually managed to squeeze the car in beside a couple of badly parked motorbikes. The two heavily-built bikers had watched her manoeuvres with evident disapproval while making no effort to position their bikes more helpfully. As she’d climbed out of the car, one of them had muttered something about ‘women drivers’.

  On another day she might have pointed out to them that she was an expert driver, who’d succeeded in parking her car in a space considerably smaller than that occupied by their two bikes. But she was feeling relatively relaxed, looking forward to nothing more than a bracing walk and afterwards a bite to eat in Bakewell. She was content just to treat them to one of her icy looks and walk on by.

  But Zoe’s behaviour had made her uncomfortable. She didn’t know if there was some issue brewing between Zoe and Gary, and she’d no desire to be an onlooker if anything should come to a head. But there wasn’t much she could do about it now, other than leave Gary to chase after his wife while she followed more slowly behind. If they had something to discuss, she was happy to leave them to it.

  Annie had been up here the previous summer with Sheena. It had been a fine clear day like today, but later in the year and several degrees warmer. The moors had seemed to bask in the heat, rich with heather, dramatic views opening up in every direction. The walk had been exhilarating, and she’d wanted to return.

  But now she remembered other aspects of that walk. At the time, they’d only added to the fascination of the place, giving an eerie extra dimension to its beauty. The open moorland was dotted with prehistoric barrows, cairns and stone formations, an epitaph to those who had once lived and died in these high spaces. Their walk had culminated in a visit to Hob Hurst’s House, an ancient barrow mound on Harland Edge. Sheena, who made a point of reading up on the places they visited, had told her it was thought to be of Bronze Age origin and that the rectangular shape of the barrow was unusual. She’d probably said much more, but Annie recalled no further details except that the name of the barrow referred to some kind of sprite or hobgoblin. Or perhaps to the devil.

  As they emerged from the trees on to the open moorland, she stopped and looked around, already able to identify the undulations that marked the sites of barrows and burial mounds. From where she was standing, the land fell away across the moorland, opening up to the Derwent Valley and the Chatsworth estate to their left. It was a glorious spring day with only a few white clouds dotting the clear blue of the surrounding sky. But a sharp breeze was blowing from the east, and she found herself shivering.

  Gary and Zoe were waiting for her at the end of the path. Zoe still looked tense, but there was no other sign of any disagreement between the couple. ‘You okay, Zoe?’ she asked.

  ‘Just a bit cold suddenly.’ Zoe was gazing around her. ‘Funny old place this, isn’t it? I’d forgotten.’

  ‘Striking views,’ Gary offered.

  ‘Definitely that.’ Annie looked back. On the path behind, she saw the two bikers, who had removed their leathers and were strolling along in sweatshirts, shorts and walking boots. She half-expected they might say something as they passed, but they were deep in conversation.

  ‘But the burial mounds,’ Zoe was saying. ‘Don’t you find them a bit – creepy?’

  Gary stared out across the moor, as if evaluating what she had said. ‘They’re only bones.’

  ‘You two just ignore me. I’m in one of my weird moods. Let’s get a breath of air, then we can go and get some lunch.’

  They continued along the path, occasionally encountering other walkers who invariably nodded an amicable greeting. It ought to be hard to be spooked on a day like this, Annie thought, with the sun shining and the whole Peak District thronged with visitors. If they’d come on a dank November day with a mist lying heavily across the moor, it might feel rather different.

  They eventually reached Hob Hurst’s House. As far as Annie could see, there was little left other than a broadly rectangular arrangements of stones, largely overgrown with bracken and heather. Gary stopped by the English Heritage sign. ‘Probably built around 1000 BC, apparently,’ he said. ‘Though some people think it might be later— What is it?’

  Annie was looking past him out to the open moorland. ‘What’s going on over there?’

  Zoe and Gary turned to follow her gaze. ‘
Where?’

  ‘There. It’s those two bikers.’

  ‘Bikers?’

  ‘What are they up to?’

  The bikers were a hundred or so yards away from them, standing among the heather, apparently engaged in a heated discussion. One of them was pulling the other’s arm as if trying to force him to look at something. The second biker gave an odd cry and dragged himself away, turning his back on whatever his companion was showing him. A moment later, he was doubled over, vomiting into the undergrowth.

  ‘I’m going to check everything’s all right,’ Annie said. She was already on her way, striding unstoppably across the moor. As she drew closer, she saw the first biker look up at her, his expression a mix of fear and disgust.

  ‘Is everything okay?’ she called.

  The sun was high in the clear sky, throwing the grassland into sharp relief. She could see something on the ground beside the bikers, an object largely hidden by the undergrowth.

  ‘I don’t think you’d better—’ the biker said. ‘We need to get some help.’ He gestured towards Gary, who had been following behind her with Zoe in his wake. ‘Maybe your friend there can help us deal with it?’

  Annie was almost tempted to laugh. From what Zoe had told her, Gary had many good qualities but providing practical support wasn’t generally one of them. ‘What is it?’

  The second biker was still dry-heaving, having apparently emptied his stomach of that morning’s breakfast.

  It was only as she drew almost level with the two bikers that she finally saw it, half concealed among the heather. The breeze was blowing towards her and there was no mistaking the stench, even in the open air.

  It was a naked human body, a white male. The undergrowth around was stained thickly with blood, now dried almost to black. The throat had been cut almost to the point of decapitation, and the torso and limbs were savagely mutilated. There was a haze of flies above the body. Her guess was that it had been here for some days.

  ‘I did try to warn you, love,’ the first biker said, in a tone that sounded inappropriately triumphant. ‘Now, perhaps you could ask your friend to help us call the police so we can get this properly dealt with.’

  Her eyes had been fixed on the body, her brain collecting as much information as possible about what she was seeing. Now, finally, she looked back at the biker. ‘He doesn’t need to. We’re already here.’ She reached into her pocket for her warrant card. ‘I’m DI Delamere and the woman over there is my colleague, DS Everett.’

  Chapter Two

  ‘Your mam was on TV again last night.’

  ‘That right? Don’t tell me they’ve finally caught up with her. Corruption? Fraud? Something like that, I’m guessing.’

  DCI Stuart Jennings regarded her for a moment. ‘You really don’t like her, do you?’

  ‘Funnily enough we get on okay when we’re together. As long as we avoid discussing virtually any subject under the sun. But at a distance – no, I really don’t like her.’

  ‘She’s always struck me as a game old bird.’

  Game old bird. As always, Annie felt that Jennings’ language was designed to rile her. But she’d decided to allow anything he said or did to wash right over her. He wasn’t worth the grief. ‘Mum’s lively enough,’ she conceded. ‘If you like that sort of thing.’ Quite what sort of thing this might be was left hanging in the air. ‘What was she on this time?’

  ‘Newsnight. The challenges of contemporary policing.’

  ‘Of course. Let me guess what she said. The service is still bloated and inefficient, and the cuts to our funding haven’t been anything like deep enough?’

  ‘Not in quite so many words.’

  ‘I’m guessing she said it in rather more words. But that’s what it would have amounted to.’

  Jennings looked uncomfortable, as if he’d strayed into a discussion he’d rather have avoided. ‘Something like that, anyway. A lot of stuff about how it was better in her day.’

  ‘She only retired five years ago. And nobody ever talks about why she retired.’ Annie knew that Jennings wouldn’t risk responding to that one. ‘Anyway, I’m old enough to remember when right-wingers were in favour of the police. Even ones as rabid as my mother.’

  They were sitting in Jennings’ office. The whole place was supposed to be open-plan, but Jennings, typically, had already managed to commandeer a room of his own. That was fine by Annie if it helped keep Jennings out of her hair. He’d transferred over here a month or so back as part of what was being referred to as the ‘regionalisation agenda’. Yet another initiative, she assumed, that would require them to do more with ever-reducing resources. Her mother would approve.

  At first she’d been suspicious of Jennings’ blunt manner, but she’d quickly realised it was at least partly an act. She hadn’t yet worked out quite how much of an act, but she was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. No doubt he was equally wary of her background. Perhaps that was why she’d been so keen to emphasise her dislike for her mother. Though it never took much to prompt that particular response.

  For the moment, she and Jennings were warily circling round each other, each trying to work out the other’s characteristics and motivations. She imagined they’d settle down soon enough, particularly once they were faced with some real work challenges. He was still finding his feet, and she was happy to help him do so.

  She glanced around the office. So far he’d left it fairly unadorned, with nothing beyond a couple of family photographs – his wife, his two children – to add a personal touch. In her experience, managers who were keen to appropriate an office of their own generally went to some lengths to mark their territory – a few carefully chosen books, a quirky souvenir from some international conference, one or two certificates or commendations. Annie found this faintly risible. She didn’t know whether Jennings agreed, or whether he just hadn’t yet got around to importing whatever junk he might possess.

  ‘Anyway,’ he said, breaking into her chain of thought, ‘I just wanted to check that everything’s under control. Any support you need from me at this stage?’

  That was a positive sign, she supposed. The new enquiry was one of the more intriguing to come their way in some months. Jennings, as Senior Investigating Officer, had seemed happy to delegate the day-to-day management of the case to her. It was perhaps intended as a test, an opportunity to see how well she could cope with the pressures of a relatively complex enquiry. She’d even wondered if she was being set up to fail. It wouldn’t have been the first time. But so far Jennings had been both supportive and unobtrusive.

  ‘It’s all going in the right direction,’ she said. ‘We had a kick-off session this morning, so things are moving. I’ve had the usual problems drumming up the necessary resources, but we’re getting there.’

  ‘If you need me to turn the thumbscrews on anyone, just let me know. This is potentially a big one.’

  ‘Tell me about it,’ she said. ‘But we’re pretty much there. If anyone who’s promised us doesn’t come across, I’ll let you know. The main difficulty is that everyone’s running on empty for staff. Especially for experienced officers.’

  ‘As long as you’ve got what you need.’

  ‘I’ll tell you if we run into any issues.’

  ‘How’s it going at the scene?’

  ‘The CSIs have nearly done. Later today, they reckon. I was planning to have a drive over once we’re done here. Get a feel for the place. Tim’s been running a tight ship, but then he always does.’ Tim Sturgeon was the designated crime scene manager who had been allocated to the case. He had a reputation for thoroughness bordering on the obsessive.

  ‘Still can’t quite believe it was you and Zoe who stumbled across the body,’ Jennings said. ‘Now that’s what I call dedication. Generating business even at the weekend.’

  ‘Pretty unpleasant business. Throat cut. Multiple incisions on the body. Some unpleasant mutilation. Almost ritualistic, the CSI thought.’

  ‘Some of th
ose CSIs have too much imagination.’

  In Annie’s experience, the opposite was generally true. Most of the CSIs she dealt with kept their imaginations firmly tamped down, focusing only on facts and evidence. That, and the blackest forms of gallows humour. ‘Maybe. But a naked body spreadeagled on a prehistoric stone cairn in the middle of the Peak District makes a change from the usual knife crime.’

  ‘As long as it keeps you happy.’

  She gazed at him for a moment, trying to work out if this was another jibe. She’d spent her career dealing with snide comments, usually muttered within her earshot but too quietly to challenge. Sometimes she thought she’d become oversensitive. At other times, as now, she wondered if she wasn’t anything like sensitive enough. ‘I’m not likely to be bored, anyway.’

  ‘I’ll let you get on then. Keep me posted.’ Jennings’ demeanour indicated that the meeting was over. She pushed herself to her feet.

  Jennings had already moved on to his next task, tapping fluently away on the keyboard at his workstation. From this angle, his raw-boned features and swept-back greying hair made him look older than his forty-odd years, she thought.

  Without looking up from his computer screen, Jennings said, ‘And if you should run into your mam any time soon, tell her from me she’s talking bollocks.’

  She hesitated, wanting to rise to the bait. Then she took a breath and allowed him a cool smile. ‘Don’t worry,’ she said. ‘I always do.’

  Chapter Three

  ‘Is that us then?’ Clive Bamford looked around the table. His tone and facial expression suggested disapproval that the assembled group was not more populous.

  His disapproval was mainly directed at Greg Wardle. Greg had been responsible for publicising the event. In fairness, he had argued for an evening meeting, but Clive had insisted they’d get more people at lunchtime. He’d had the idea they’d attract bored office workers looking to liven up their lunch hour. Now it looked more likely they’d attract anyone who wanted to get out of the rain.

  ‘Maybe give it a few more minutes, Clive?’ Greg said. ‘See if anyone else turns up.’