In Cold Blood
About the Author
JANE BETTANY won the Gransnet and HQ writing competition in 2019, which was for women authors over the age of forty who had written a novel with a protagonist in the same age range. In Cold Blood is her debut novel, but she has been writing short stories and articles for over twenty years, many of which have appeared in women’s magazines, newspapers and literary publications.
Jane lives in Derby and has an MA in Creative Writing. She takes daily walks in local beauty spots and enjoys visiting the delightful towns and villages of Derbyshire and its neighbouring counties.
In Cold Blood
JANE BETTANY
HQ
An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd.
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
First published in Great Britain by HQ in 2020
Copyright © Jane Bettany 2020
Jane Bettany asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.
E-book Edition © September 2020 ISBN: 9780008407643
Version: 2020-08-06
Table of Contents
Cover
About the Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Acknowledgements
Dear Reader …
Keep Reading …
About the Publisher
For Howard, with love
Chapter 1
The pantry was musty and airless and smelt faintly of curry powder and something that Amy couldn’t identify. It was a tiny space, crammed with out-of-date food, a battered collection of saucepans, and containers filled with dried fruit and breakfast cereals. She emptied the shelves doggedly, thrusting everything into a heavy-duty bin bag.
Reaching into the corner of the highest shelf, she retrieved the last items: a jar of pickled onions and some homemade blackberry jam. Strictly speaking, she should throw the contents away and wash out the jars for recycling – but sod that. She had better things to do with her time. Instead, being careful not to break the glass, Amy placed the jars in the bag and tied it with a double knot ready to take to the bin.
It was as she turned to switch off the light that she noticed the marks on the wall. Height marks. Just inside the door.
A child grew up in this house, she thought, as she traced the pencilled scratches with her fingers. An only child. One set of marks.
The first measurement appeared in the lower third of the wall, alongside a date – 15th January 1965. The marks crept higher with each passing year. The last was dated 15th January 1977 and recorded a height of 5′ 6″.
Perhaps the 15th of January was the child’s birthday, Amy thought. There must have been an annual ritual to record his or her height on the pantry wall.
She wondered why the marks had stopped in 1977. At 5′ 6″, a teenage girl would be fully grown. A boy might have gone on to gain a few more inches.
The measurements were a part of the history of the house that would soon be gone forever. When the new kitchen was installed, the pantry would be removed and replaced with tall, sliding larder cupboards. She and Paul had chosen a range of expensive, glossy units that would provide the kind of high-quality finish they hoped would sell the house.
Planning permission had been granted for a huge extension that would more than double the size of the existing kitchen. Amy’s vision was for a light-filled, open-plan living space with shiny work surfaces, top-of-the-range appliances, and a vast dining area. There would be skylights and bi-fold doors opening onto the rear garden. Once completed, the bright, airy room would be the redeeming feature of the otherwise unremarkable 1960s house they had bought at auction eight weeks earlier.
Grabbing the bin bag, Amy took one last look at the height marks before switching off the light and closing the pantry door. It was cold, so she flicked the kettle on to make a hot drink. Paul had been outside for most of the day, digging out the foundations for the extension. He would be ready for another brew.
As she waited for the water to boil, the back door opened and Paul came in, shivering. He was pale. Unsmiling.
‘What’s up?’ Amy said. ‘Has something happened?’
‘You could say that. I’ve only gone and found a fucking body.’
Amy tutted. ‘Yeah, right. Very funny, bro.’ Paul had been a wind-up merchant all his life. It was a trait he should have grown out of by now.
‘Seriously. I’m not kidding, Ames.’
‘Course you’re not. What is it? A cat? Dog? Someone’s long-dead hamster?’
‘It’s an animal, all right. Of the human variety.’
Dread tugged at Amy’s stomach muscles. ‘You’d better be joking,’ she said.
‘Come and take a look for yourself if you don’t believe me.’
She followed him outside. They skirted the partially excavated foundation trench and stood next to what would eventually be the far corner of the extension.
‘Down there.’ Paul pointed at something protruding from the soil.
Leaning in closer, Amy realised it was the upper part of a human skull; the forehead and eye sockets jutted out from the damp layer of earth at the bottom of the metre-deep trench. If it had been buried a few inches lower, Paul would never have known it was there.
‘Shit!’ She blew air through her cheeks . ‘This is awful.’
‘You can say that again. It’s going to delay everything. There’s no chance of getting the extension finished before the new year now.’
Amy wrapped her arms across her body and glared at her brother.
‘Paul! Are you for real? A body, somebody, has been lying here for God knows how long and all you’re bothered about is the extension?’
‘Come on, sis, don’t give me a hard time. Our inheritance is tied up in this house. We need to get the work finished, sell up and move on to the next project. That’ – he pointed into the trench – ‘is a bloody disaster. The delay it’ll cause is bad enough, but if word gets out, it’s going to knock thousands off the property value. No one will be interested in buying this place, with or without a swanky kitchen. Who wants to live in a house where someone’s been murdered?’
Paul’s usual flippancy had vanished, replaced by a demeanour that was uncharacteristically sombre, almost hostile. He was obviously worried.
‘Do you think that’s what happened here then?’ Amy said. ‘Murder?’
‘Of course it is. Use your nous. The body didn’t bury itself, did it?’
‘It could have been here for hundreds of years,’ she said. ‘A body buried during the civil war or something.’
‘Civil war?’ He scowled, shaking his head dismissively. ‘What are you on about, Amy? This isn’t an ancient battlefield.’
‘OK. So maybe it was buried a lot more recently. Either way, the local paper’s going to have a field day.’
Paul trailed the fingertips of his right hand along his jawline and studied the trench thoughtfully. ‘Only if they find out about it,’ he said.
‘What do you mean?’ She narrowed her eyes, staring at her brother in disbelief. ‘Of course they’ll find out.’
‘Not if we don’t report it.’
‘What?’ she said, incredulous. ‘No way!’
‘Think about it. If I hadn’t dug such a deep trench, or the body had been buried a few inches further down, we’d have been none the wiser.’
Amy lifted her hands and locked her fingers across the top of her head. ‘You’re not seriously suggesting we keep quiet about this?’
‘Why not? If I pour the concrete foundations now, this little problem will stay buried forever. No one will know but us.’
He leaned back and let the muscles in his shoulders relax. Just talking about a solution seemed to have calmed him. Paul’s proposal offered a quick fix, an easy way out – but Amy was horrified by the idea.
She spun away from the trench, groaning with exasperation. ‘Firstly,’ she said, ‘this is not a “little problem”. Whoever it is lying down there was once a living, breathing human being. Don’t you think they deserve some kind of justice, or a proper burial at least? And secondly, what if the person responsible for this is still around? They know what’s hidden here. If they get away with it, what’s to say they won’t do it again somewhere else?’
‘Bloody hell, sis.’ Paul rubbed the back of his neck and kicked irritably at a clump of soil with his work boot. ‘Why do you always have to be such a goody-two-shoes?’
Amy peered down at the skull – into the empty eye sockets from which someone had once looked out at the face of their killer. Every house has its own secret history, she thought, remembering the height marks scratched into the pantry wall. Some things are best left hidden, but this definitely isn’t one of them.
She pulled out her phone and dialled 101.
Chapter 2
Detective Inspector Isabel Blood gripped the steering wheel of her car and drove through the streets of Bainbridge as fast as the speed limit would allow. She was heading to the secondary school where her youngest daughter was a pupil. At Isabel’s age, attending a parents’ evening should have been a thing of the past, but life had ricocheted off in an unexpected direction when Ellie was born.
It was damp and starting to get dark by the time she pulled into the school car park. She’d promised to meet Nathan outside the main entrance at five o’clock and she was already five minutes late.
There was no sign of him as she ran towards the school. He must have gone inside already. Pushing through the revolving glass door, Isabel dashed down the central corridor towards Ellie’s form room. Nathan was waiting outside.
‘I didn’t think you were going to make it,’ he said.
‘Sorry. Something came up. You know what it’s like.’
‘You should have taken the afternoon off. They owe you enough hours.’
Isabel pressed her shoulder against a wooden locker and smiled. ‘It’s not always possible, as well you know.’
A door opened behind them and Ellie’s form teacher, Miss Powell, beckoned them into the classroom.
They sat down and listened as the teacher began to deliver her verdict on how their fourteen-year-old daughter was doing in her lessons.
‘Ellie is highly intelligent, self-assured, eloquent …’
Nathan was unable to contain a grin.
‘However …’
Nathan’s smile evaporated.
‘Although Ellie is extremely capable, I’m concerned about her recent behaviour. She used to be a model pupil, but she’s been acting very negatively since the beginning of term. She’s become argumentative and she wastes a lot of time messing around with her friends.’ The teacher paused to let her words sink in. There was a note of frustration in her voice as she continued. ‘She’s studying for her GCSEs now and she really needs to take her schoolwork more seriously, otherwise she’ll fall behind. So far this term, she’s handed homework in late on five separate occasions and she’s not engaging in class like she used to. More worryingly, she’s been turning up late for school in the mornings.’
‘Late?’ Isabel leaned forward, a sense of unease rippling somewhere beneath her ribs. This didn’t sound like Ellie. Not at all. She’d always been a good kid.
‘She’s been catching the school bus, hasn’t she?’ said Nathan. ‘Perhaps it’s been running late, or she missed it.’
Miss Powell was unswayed by his line of defence. ‘There have been no problems reported with the school buses. Besides, when I spoke to Ellie, she told me she’d been walking to school. That’s fine, of course, if it’s what she wants to do, but the school is a long way from where you live. If she’s going to walk, she needs to set off earlier and get here on time.’
Isabel looked at Nathan, who appeared to be as baffled as she was.
‘We had no idea she was walking to school,’ Isabel said. ‘We’ll ask her about it.’
‘Perhaps you could also find out why she’s stopped coming to the after-school book club,’ Miss Powell added.
Inexplicably, it was this final revelation that shocked Isabel the most. Ellie’s love of books was legendary. The possibility that her love affair with literature might be over prematurely saddened Isabel inordinately.
‘She still does plenty of reading at home,’ Nathan said.
Miss Powell smiled. ‘That’s reassuring to hear, but I’m worried that Ellie is losing interest in her work here, at school. I’m disappointed. She could do so much better.’
‘We’ll talk to her … find out what’s wrong. Won’t we, Nathan?’
Although Nathan nodded supportively, Isabel knew that she would be the one who would have to deliver the reprimand. As far as her husband was concerned, their youngest child could do no wrong – and nothing the teacher said would change his opinion.
Having delivered the negative elements of Ellie’s report, Miss Powell allowed herself a tight smile. ‘There is one subject in which Ellie has been excelling …’
Nathan nudged Isabel and winked.
‘Her art tutor is very impressed with the work she’s been producing.’ The teacher picked up the written report and read from it. ‘He says … Ellie is creative and talented and has a natural gift.’
‘She gets that from me,’ said Nathan.
Isabel gave him a sideways glance and focused her att ention back on the teacher.
Miss Powell put down the report and leaned back. ‘There’s an exhibition of artwork in the main hall,’ she told them. ‘Please take a look on your way out. Several of Ellie’s pieces are on show.’
Isabel had switched her phone to silent, but she felt it vibrate in her pocket. Pulling it out, she glanced down at the screen. It was her colleague Dan Fairfax, her sergeant. He knew where she was. He wouldn’t be ringing unless it was important.
‘I’m so sorry.’ Isabel stood up. ‘Technically I’m still on duty, so I need to take this.’
She answered the call on her way out of the classroom. ‘This had better be important, Dan.’
‘It is, boss. I wouldn’t disturb you otherwise. We’ve had word that a body’s been found. I thought you’d want to know.’
Nathan had followed her out into the corridor clutching a printed copy of Ellie’s report.
‘Hang on, Dan. I need to have a quick word with Nathan.’ Isabel turned to her husband. ‘There’s a body. I have to go.’
‘Can you spare a couple of minutes to look at Ellie’s artwork on your way out?’
‘I’d rather not rush it,’ she said, shame clawing at her conscience.
Nathan sighed, disappointed. Over the years, he had reluctantly accepted that sometimes her job had to take priority over family commitments. It was a regrettable reality they’d both come to terms with, but that didn’t stop Isabel feeling guilty. Occasionally, being a good copper meant being a bad parent, or a rubbish wife. Mostly, Isabel loved her job, but there were times when she hated the way it screwed with her life.
‘It’s better if I come back another time and have a proper look,’ she said, suppressing a flush of self-reproach. ‘Sorry, Nathan. I’m needed urgently.’
She planted a swift kiss on his cheek before hurrying back along the main corridor towards the exit, the phone clasped to her ear.
‘I’m on my way, Dan. Tell me where I need to be and I’ll meet you there.’
‘The property’s on Ecclesdale Drive. Number 23,’ Dan said. ‘It’s on that big, sprawling estate on the eastern side of town. Head for Winster Street and then turn left—’
‘It’s OK.’ She cut him off. ‘I know where it is.’