bridge. She wasnât falling over herself to do so, she could smell blood and maybe cordite, and the vomit of the youngest PC, who could be forgiven for being sick, since it was his first death by shotgun. She searched in her pocket for a Polo mint. It sometimes helped.
âTim Wishart? Should I know him?â Mayo asked, joining her.
âHe married Sam Nashâs daughter.â
â The Sam Nash?â
âU-huh. Heâs with her now. Wishartâs father was Freddie Wishart. The England cricketer,â she added, before realizing that such an explanation was probably unnecessary to a Yorkshireman.
âGood God.â Mayo searched his memory. âDidnât he blow his brains out, too?â
âYes. Only ...â
âOnly what?â
âOnly T-L thinks he didnât ... the son, I mean. Heâs pretty sure someone else shot him.â
The Super let out his breath between his teeth.
Someone had attempted to make it look like suicide, only not very successfully. Someone knew enough about the manner of suicides to have propped the twelve-bore shotgun between the victimâs knees, to have crooked his finger around the trigger, but the pathologist had been of the opinion that it was an amateur attempt. For one thing, the spread of the pellets as they entered the face suggested the gun had been fired from more than armâs length. Would-be suicides made sure by putting the barrel under their chin, or even in their mouth. This was only a preliminary hypothesis, heâd been quick to add, which would need to be confirmed by the autopsy, and backed up by the ballistic report, but T-L wasnât a man to make wild guesses, only educated surmises based on long experience. He was more often right than wrong, but he was human, and therefore fallible. However, he was also an expert and a respected authority, at the top of his profession, and he didnât expect them to doubt him for a minute.
âHow longâs he been dead?â Mayo asked, looking around. Apart from the chimneys of a farmhouse faintly visible some distance away across the river, presumably the Fairmile dwelling, there was no other habitation in sight.
âNot long â possibly not more than an hour.â
âNobody heard anything?â
âThe house has been empty most of the day. The family â thereâs his wife, and a boy and a girl in their teens â had all been out separately, but arrived home more or less at the same time, within the last hour. It was his daughter, young Amy, who found him. She was upstairs changing, and happened to look out of the window.â
âStrewth. Any thoughts so far, Abigail?â
âIt seems he was in trouble financially, according to some letters in his pocket.â She thought back to her earlier conversation with Ellie, to Ellieâs oblique, but what she now saw as loaded, references. âI have the impression his marriage wasnât any too happy, either,â she said cautiously. To say so felt dangerously like gossiping about her friends, but thatâs how it was as a police officer. It was one of the reasons why you became cautious about making personal relationships, you didnât have any choice, when it came to the crunch. âItâs only hearsay, but I believe the source was reliable. Iâve met his wife a few times, she runs that business near the market, called Millerâs Wife, with someone else I know, a woman called Ellie Redvers.â She hesitated. âTo be honest, Ellieâs my source. I donât know, but I suspect sheâs been having an affair with Wishart.â It wasnât a pleasant thought, but if it was so, it might well have precipitated this situation. She made up her mind and took a deep breath. âIf my knowing herâs any problem ââ
Mayo raised an eyebrow. âHow well do you know her?â
âWe havenât known each other long enough to have got
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