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Blengdale's yard was fairly central, situated on the west bank of the old canal which ran its deep straight line alongside the shallow curving river. In the flooding which followed the great thaw of 1963 the two waterways had joined up, but the banks of both had been strengthened since then and a new line of trees planted on the isthmus between so that a nature-lover strolling through the park on the east bank of the river was hardly aware of the monuments to industry only a couple of hundred yards away.

Not that they too lacked their lovers. Beauty was in the gut of the beholder, thought Pascoe, and though the old wharves, warehouses and barges couldn't give him the kick that he derived from a single stunted tree on a naked fellside, yet there was something in these relics of industrial capitalism which caught at the heart. Perhaps it was pride in the illimitable energies of mankind, and despair at their direction.

Blengdale's yard had originally been nothing more than that – an open space between a mill and a warehouse with its own canal frontage and a kind of Dutch barn to protect the stored timber from the worst of the weather. Economy and antiquity had brought about the closure of the mill in the early sixties and it had lain derelict till Godfrey Blengdale had breathed new life into the family timber business and diversified into ready-to-assemble whitewood furniture. He had bought the mill for a song (so they said) and (so they said again) sold what remained of the old-fashioned looms and other machinery to a variety of industrial museums for rather more than he had paid for the building. Now, where generations of women had laboured for very little in an atmosphere full of fluff and fibre, men moved at half the pace for half the time at fifty times the wage, and the air was full of wood-dust and complaints.

The nearest Pascoe had been to the yard before was some years earlier when Blengdale had celebrated something (his first ulcer, perhaps) by holding a party there. The bar had been on a barge strung from bow to stern with Chinese lanterns, and a dance band had played among the stacks of timber while the guests gyrated on the wharf. Pascoe had travelled slowly by in a police boat and felt the disdainful superiority of the guardian to the guarded.

This time he approached by road and the first thing he noticed was Dalziel's car parked outside on a double yellow line. Pascoe squeezed in behind him and entered the building, stepping into an atmosphere heavy with noise and sawdust. He presumed there was order here but his first impression was of utter chaos. He approached a man who seemed to be in some perturbation of spirit about the relative lengths of two pieces of wood he was carrying.

'Mr Blengdale? Right over there. Up the stairs. Them's his offices.'

'Them' were a line of windows at first-floor level in the high-ceilinged building. There were figures within, but he couldn't identify anyone at this distance. As he moved away he heard the man with the planks mutter, 'Centi-fucking-metres! I told him, centi-fucking-metres!'

He was almost at the foot of the stairs which ran up the wall to the first-floor level when he spotted Charlie Heppelwhite. He was running lengths of wood over a circular saw with a speed and precision which obviously derived from long practice. To Pascoe's untutored eye it seemed that the proximity of spinning blades and soft flesh should demand rather more than one hundred per cent concentration, but in Charlie's case automatic expertise was obviously enough, for the man's mind was so far from his surroundings that Pascoe had to shout his name twice before he became aware of his presence.

'Oh, it's you,' he said stupidly like a man waking from a bad dream to a worse reality.

'Everything all right?' said Pascoe.

'Why shouldn't it be?' asked Charlie, beginning to recover his poise a little. 'What do you want now, Mr Pascoe?'

'Nothing. Nothing. Just passing through,' said

Pascoe, realizing how unconvincing it must sound.'Clint here? I don't see him.'

'He's out in the yard. Do you want to talk to him again?' asked Heppelwhite.

'No. Not just now. It's your boss I'm after. See you later,' said Pascoe.

As he climbed the steep and worn stairs to the office, he thought with regret how impossible it was not to sound threatening when you talked to people who were involved, no matter how innocently, with police business. The staircase was enclosed by a single handrail. At the top he glanced down. Charlie Heppelwhite was looking up at him but when their gazes met, he quickly turned away and resumed his work.

These offices had been built in the good old-fashioned tradition by the overseer who quite literally oversaw the work. From here you got a task-master's-eye view of what was going on. In the first office he came to, a dark-eyed typist, who looked about ten years younger than the machine she was beating, regarded him with little interest.

'I've come to see Mr Blengdale,' said Pascoe.

'He's in there,' said the weary child.

'He's not engaged, I hope,' said Pascoe.

'Through there,' said the girl as if to an idiot.

'I mean, is there anyone with him?' persisted Pascoe.

'Yeah,' said the girl. And returned to her work.

Pascoe smiled to himself. It made a change to meet a secretary who didn't read the kind of women’s magazine which preached that the only acceptable alternative to mothering your family was mothering your boss.

He opened the door.

'Oh God!' said Blengdale. 'Here's another of 'em!'

He was sitting at a desk piled so high with paper that Pascoe felt a pang of sympathy for a fellow sufferer.

Standing in front of him as though being interviewed by a headmaster was his wife. She wore a light blue suit with a skirt long enough to be fashionable but not long enough to be trendy. A small square of blue silk sat elegantly on her sculpted locks (like a gay judge passing the death sentence, thought Pascoe gruesomely) and she wore a pair of chamois leather gloves, also in blue, which needed no label to declare they were made (probably) in Italy and had cost (certainly) fifty pounds.

Behind her in a suit so shiny that his nails scarred the glaze as they scratched his left buttock was Dalziel.

'Good. You've got here, Inspector,' he said as if Pascoe were the first person in the world he expected to see.

He advanced on Pascoe and forced him into a corner.

'I'm getting nowhere with this bugger,' he muttered. 'Say something about Haggard.'

'What?' whispered Pascoe.

'Anything. Come on, lad!'

'Alice Andover caught her sister beating Haggard,' he murmured.

'Louder, for Christ's sake!' said Dalziel. 'His name, louder.'

'Haggard,' said Pascoe. 'She saw Haggard being whipped.'

Dalziel nodded vigorously, turned his head and shot a baleful glance at Blengdale who was observing them angrily.

'I mayn't be able to trip the bugger, but by God! I'll scare him,' muttered Dalziel.

'Superintendent!' said Blengdale. 'I'm a busy man. I'm always a busy man. This morning I'm so busy, I don't think I'll catch up with myself for a month!'

'Business troubles?' said Dalziel with that spurious sympathy which Pascoe so admired. 'Cash flow problems? Hard times, hard times.'

'No. For Christ's sake, don't go saying things like that. That's how rumours start,' said Blengdale in alarm. 'Truth is, business is too good. It's meeting the demand that's my problem. I'm up to my eyes, and what happens? You turn up, Gwen turns up, your sidekick turns up. The only one who doesn't turn up's my bloody foreman and he's the only one who can be any good to me!'

'Brian Burkill, you mean?' said Dalziel.

'Aye. Of course, you'll know him. No word. Just doesn't appear. Trouble at home, that'll be his excuse. Show me someone who doesn't have trouble at home! I've got trouble at home, but I've got to come in!'

'Not to worry,' said Dalziel, looking out of the big window down into the work floor. 'One of your worries is over. There's Burkill now.'