thoughtful drag on his cigarette. âThereâs one thing I donât understand, Harry.â
âAnâ whatâs that, Mr Sharpe?â
âBefore today, youâve never voluntarily entered a police station in your life. Why the sudden change of heart?â
âI . . . I think it was the birth of my grandson that did it.â
âIs that supposed to make sense to me?â
âProbably not. You see, Mr Sharpe, heâs a beautiful little kid. He reminds me of his mother at his age.â
âVery touching, Iâm sure,â Sharpe said with a sneer.
âI never saw much of our Bessie when she was growinâ up, like, because I was always doinâ time. Anâ if I go down again with my record, itâll be for a ten stretch.â
âAt least a ten stretch,â Sharpe agreed. âAt the
very
least. Get to the point, Harry.â
âI donât want to lose out on my grandson like I lost out on my daughter. I want to take him fishinâ. I want to see his eyes light up when I give him his Christmas presents.â
âDo you know, Iâm almost in tears.â
âSo Iâve got to stay out of trouble, havenât I, Mr Sharpe? More than that â Iâve got to be a model citizen. Thatâs why Iâm here. Because Iâm doinâ my duty â just like a model citizen should.â
Sharpe nodded. âA model citizen,â he repeated. âSo youâve not committed any new crimes recently?â
âNo. I swear I havenât. Not since little Wilf was born.â
âYou havenât done any shoplifting?â
âNo.â
âYou havenât received any stolen property?â
âNo.â
âHow about burglaries?â
âI told you, Iâââ
âDo you know that row of big houses not far from St Maryâs Church?â Sharpe interrupted.
âIâve seenâem,â Brunskill said defensively.
âMust be lots of rich pickings for a burglar in places like them.â
âMaybe there is, butâââ
âOn the night of the murder, one of those houses was broken into. We donât have any suspects for the crime at the moment, but now we know that you were in the vicinity at the time, well . . .â
Sharpe let his words trail off into nothingness. Brunskill, he noted, was sweating.
âI havenât heard of no burglaries in any of them houses, Mr Sharpe,â Brunskill said.
The DCI nodded. âThatâs because none has been officially reported â yet! But one
could be
reported, Harry, if you get my meaning. You
do
get my meaning, donât you?â
Brunskill bowed his head. âYes, I get your meaninâ, Mr Sharpe,â he mumbled.
âSo let me ask you again,â Sharpe said. âWhere exactly were you at eight twenty on the night of the murder of Frederick Dodds?â
âI . . . I was at home.â
âYouâre sure of that?â
âI didnât leave the house all day.â
Sharpe smiled. âThatâs just what I thought youâd say, Harry,â he told the other man.
The deep groan of a tugâs hooter wrenched Sharpe out of his recollections and deposited him squarely in the middle of his present cold reality.
It was thirty years since that interview with scruffy little Harry Brunskill, he reminded himself â long enough for the past to fade almost to invisibility, for words spoken and actions taken to be all but forgotten. In truth, he had thought that was just what
had
happened. And then heâd got that warning phone call from Chief Constable Henry Marlowe, and had felt all the certainties heâd built his life and career on begin to slip away.
The woman had been
guilty
, despite the fact that some of the evidence might have seemed to suggest otherwise. Any policeman who had been assigned to the case would have come to that conclusion. And even if there was a slight,
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