Part 17 (2/2)
Mayhem on wheels.
It seemed the only person not actively crying was Jonas Holly, and Marvel thought that might well be because the young constable was in shock. He had been called by Lynne Twitchett, and met Marvel and Reynolds at the door. He had taken them through his preservation of the scene in a low, careful voice. He had made sure everyone stayed in their rooms as far as was possible with confused old folk, and had asked Rupert Cooke to call all his relief staff in to help organize things in case the home had to be evacuated to allow the investigation to continue.
He had ensured that there were no other casualties in the first- or second-floor bedrooms and had kept people from moving about the house unnecessarily. He had taken off his boots. 'I thought they might be able to get prints off the carpets.' He shrugged sadly.
Jonas Holly had done a good job. Dully Marvel recognized that he'd done a similarly good job in most respects at the scene of Margaret Priddy's murder, for which he'd received no credit. Ah well, life wasn't fair.
The young constable had written everything in his notebook and kept referring to it for much longer than seemed necessary - kept staring at the pages as if he'd lost his place. At one point Marvel had become impatient and nearly s.n.a.t.c.hed the notebook from him, but then he'd seen the man's Adam's apple working in his throat, and he'd given him the extra time he'd apparently needed to be able to speak without his voice breaking into a million pieces.
He felt close himself. Close to tears. He had never cried on a job - never even felt his bottom lip wobble in time to the grief around him.
But this ...
This was ...
Just.
Tragic.
The old people, helpless in their beds, their spectacles and teeth on their nightstands.
He remembered Lionel Chard, peering at the TV.
Countdown.
Big ears.
He wanted to punch a hole in Gary Liss's face with his bare hands. The nurse had disappeared. Never come down from wreaking havoc on the first floor. It all made sense now. It always did when it was far too late. No doubt when they caught Liss he would have some ridiculous reason why he had not returned to the kitchen after going upstairs in response to an alarm. Tell them that he'd found the bodies and lost his mind, or pursued the killer across the moors at great personal risk, or checked on Violet Eaves and then remembered he'd left the gas on at home ... Madmen were only clever in the movies; in real life they were mostly just mad - and it was usually only the inability of the sane to recognize the depth of that madness which allowed them to prosper even temporarily. Sometimes Marvel felt that being psychotic would be a great a.s.set to a homicide detective; that possibly the Force should leave room for manoeuvre in its recruitment criteria.
'We should've arrested the b.a.s.t.a.r.d.'
'We couldn't have held him for long, sir,' Reynolds said. It wasn't his style to make Marvel feel better about things, but that was the truth.
'I don't f.u.c.king care. The sonofab.i.t.c.h as good as said he'd killed Margaret Priddy, and we should have taken him in right there and then and made his life h.e.l.l for forty-eight hours. Maybe we wouldn't be standing here now. Maybe these three would still be alive.'
Reynolds said nothing, because he felt the same gnawing guilt that they had dismissed Gary Liss as merely a straight-talker, when now it looked as if he were more than that. A lot lot more than that. more than that.
He'd have to be a psychopath.
Yes, he would.
Marvel felt sick at the memory. They had left Gary Liss here. That meant they had left these poor people in the care of a serial killer. It was a miracle there were only three bodies, when you looked at it like that. Although he felt so far from a miracle right now that it would have taken Jesus Christ himself to come up the swirly stair carpet at Sunset Lodge and raise the victims from the dead before he'd be convinced of one.
'Should we call Gulliver, sir?' said Reynolds.
Kate Gulliver was a forensic psychologist based in Bristol and one of Marvel's least favourite people, right up there with Jos Reeves. He felt the little p.r.i.c.k of anger at the implication that Reynolds thought he was out of his depth. Immediately after that, he realized that he was was out of his depth - or at least wading there fast. And refusing to consult Gulliver at this point would look territorial and negligent. out of his depth - or at least wading there fast. And refusing to consult Gulliver at this point would look territorial and negligent.
'You call her.' He nodded to Reynolds. He knew Reynolds would love that - and be good at it. Kate Gulliver was his kind of person - the young, bright, First-Cla.s.s-Honours kind.
He was busy enough here.
He wished he could clear the entire home properly, but transporting twenty-two elderly and frail residents was easier said than done. When he'd suggested it, Rupert Cooke - who was wearing paisley pyjamas under his mackintosh, like someone from an episode of Poirot Poirot - had started to list what they'd need to take with them. Medications, walking sticks, Zimmer frames, wheelchairs, warm clothing, changes of underwear ... When he'd got to incontinence pads, Marvel had put up a hand to stop him and had asked for them all to be moved into the garden room until the CSIs could examine the first floor and establish points of entry and exit. - had started to list what they'd need to take with them. Medications, walking sticks, Zimmer frames, wheelchairs, warm clothing, changes of underwear ... When he'd got to incontinence pads, Marvel had put up a hand to stop him and had asked for them all to be moved into the garden room until the CSIs could examine the first floor and establish points of entry and exit.
He asked Rupert Cooke for the use of his office and got Reynolds to clear the desk so he had somewhere to put his elbows.
Grey said they had not yet found the murder weapon but confirmed that as soon as it was light they'd be moving outside the house to the grounds and the graveyard and starting on a grid until reinforcements arrived. Marvel told him to take Singh to Liss's home in the meantime - just in case their man was stupid after all.
Then Dave Pollard lumbered in and said a local agency reporter had picked up the story from a loose-lipped control-room officer, and had already called him three times on her way to s.h.i.+pcott. She had said something about getting there 'before the circus starts'. Which Pollard 'thought' might might mean they were about to be besieged by the press. Marvel mentally rolled his eyes at Pollard's lack of imagination and had second thoughts about putting him in charge now that this thing looked like going national, but was too busy to start redeploying staff at this stage. mean they were about to be besieged by the press. Marvel mentally rolled his eyes at Pollard's lack of imagination and had second thoughts about putting him in charge now that this thing looked like going national, but was too busy to start redeploying staff at this stage.
At 6am he called Elizabeth Rice to check on the Marshes. He didn't want to start going after Liss if she told him both men had sneaked out in the night and come home covered in blood. He really hoped they had; everything would be so much easier. He held while she checked that they were still in bed. She said she had last checked on them at midnight and had personally locked the front and back doors and all the downstairs windows, and had kept the keys with her at all times.
'Why, sir?' she asked.
He told her there'd been three murders at Sunset Lodge, then the doorbell rang and Marvel heard the CSIs identifying themselves at the entrance. They had a huge job ahead of them.
'Shall I come up to help, sir?' said Rice hopefully.
Marvel thought of Reynolds's tipping-point theory. If it was true then n.o.body was off the hook quite yet.
'No,' he told her. 'You stay there.'
Downstairs, Jonas was sitting white-faced and dark-eyed in a chair with an undrunk cup of tea on his knee.
Around him the vast black windows of the garden room reflected the scene in all directions, making it seem that hundreds of people were standing around whispering, bending over each other; crying in relay in a c.o.c.ktail party of mourning.
'You take sugar?' said Marvel.
Jonas raised his eyes slowly to Marvel's. 'What?'
'Do you take sugar?'
Jonas looked dully at his cup and shook his head. Marvel picked the sugar bowl off a nearby tea trolley, put two heaped spoonfuls into Jonas's tea and stirred it briskly, slopping it into the saucer.
'Drink up,' he said.
Jonas did, wincing at the sweetness. Marvel pulled the piano stool away from the piano and sat down facing him.
'You know Gary Liss?'
'Not well, but yeah, I know him. He lives here, so I know him.'
'Tell me about him.'
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