I reached out, opened one of the kitchen drawers and took a look inside. ‘What are you doing?’ she asked.
‘Checking for ice-picks, or other sharp objects,’ I told her.
‘Oz!’ She squealed my name.
‘No, listen. Did you have any sort of a relationship with David, other than business? Were you really engaged to him?’
The blush left her cheeks; she looked down at the floor, and gnawed her lip. ‘Not any more,’ she whispered. ‘He broke it off a month ago.’
‘Did he tell you why?’
‘He was seeing someone else.’
‘Who?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘And all that carry-on on Sunday night; getting me to thump on his door. What was that about?’
‘I was hoping she’d be there, whoever she was. I wanted to cause a scene, to embarrass him.’
‘So you used me?’
‘Yes. I’m sorry.’ A spark of the new Alison flared up in her. ‘But why should I be? You used me often enough in the past.’ She had me there.
‘I taught you bloody well, then,’ I shot back at her. ‘Okay,’ I went on. ‘So David dumped you a month ago. How did you manage to conduct a business relationship after that?’
‘We didn’t. He walked out of the business as well, and he demanded half the assets.’
‘What assets? You told me the business had a cash problem.’
‘It’s still worth quite a bit, though, as a trading entity.
David had the shares valued by our auditor. He was insisting that I buy him out or that the company bought his shares in. I couldn’t afford that and neither could the business. Anyway. .’ her voice rose, and hardened; ‘. . it wasn’t fair. I would never agree to that. He never pulled his weight at work. I won most of the clients, and I serviced most of them myself.’
‘I’ll bet you did. That’s probably why he chucked you.’
She ignored my wisecrack. ‘He did ten per cent of the work yet he wanted half the value. I wasn’t going to let him away with that. I offered him one fifth of what the auditor claimed his shares were worth. He laughed at me, and told me that if I didn’t give him what he wanted he’d withdraw his personal guarantee of our overdraft, and the bank would pull the plug on everything.’
‘Oh shit,’ I heard myself bellow, just as the kitchen door opened again behind me, and Ricky Ross walked in.
‘Indeed,’ he said. ‘I’m afraid you’re cooked, dear.’
I stared at him. The offhand look had gone; now he looked very interested, and bloody pleased with himself too. ‘You son of a. .’ I hissed. ‘You might not have bugged Torrent’s place, but you’ve done your own, haven’t you?’
White teeth gleamed. ‘Once a copper, Oz, always. .’ That was as far as he got before I sank my right fist deep into his gut. The breath rushed out of him and he folded up. Alison just stood there, bewildered, staring at us, both hands pressed to her mouth.
‘Ohhh,’ Ricky groaned, then bizarrely, he smiled up at me from the floor. ‘Sorry, Oz,’ he gasped. ‘I couldn’t tell you, though; not with you having been close to the girl.’
‘Did you and Morrow cook this up?’
He pulled himself to his feet. ‘No, it was all my idea. If I’d got Ronnie involved, the tape probably wouldn’t have been admissible as evidence. Maybe yes, maybe not, but it wasn’t worth the risk.’
‘What?’ Alison screamed. We both turned to look at her. She was holding the big kitchen knife with which she had been slicing the corned beef, and pointing it straight at us. ‘You. .’ She screamed again and rushed at Ricky. He dived for his life, but slowly, as he was still feeling the effects of my punch. He might not have made it, but I grabbed her arm as she went past, and twisted it up and round behind her, compressing her wrist until her hand went numb and she dropped the blade.
‘Keep her here, Oz,’ said Ricky, breathlessly, as he picked the knife from the floor. ‘I’ll get Ronnie.’ Alison was still struggling against my grip, straining, wild-eyed, to get at him. Once, her head twisted round and down as if she was reaching for my hands, to bite them. I didn’t fancy that at all, not with the fleck of foam in one corner of her mouth.
‘You keep her here yourself,’ I suggested. ‘I’ll make the call. That seems like a better deal to me.’ He wasn’t that daft though; he was through that door like a greyhound out of a trap, leaving me wondering how long I could hang on to this mad woman and wondering whether there were any more lethal kitchen implements lying around within easy reach.
She muttered something incoherent, then snarled a bit, then gradually began to calm down. She still twisted and wrenched against me, trying to free herself, until finally she ran out of strength. I still held her tight, though, keeping her arms pinned from behind; I couldn’t be sure she wasn’t faking it and that she wouldn’t go for my throat.
‘That bastard,’ she exclaimed, the words punctuated by a great gasping sob. ‘He made love to me, and it was all a trick.’
‘Come on now,’ I said, ‘be fair. He didn’t make love to you; you shagged him. That was the way it came out earlier. And if the guy wants to plant listening devices in his own house, I suppose he’s got the right to do that. Let’s stop blaming other people here, Alison. If you hadn’t killed your bloody ex, none of this would have happened.’
‘But I didn’t kill him!’ she said. Her voice was weak now, with a wheedling, frightened tone to it.
‘What?’ I had to laugh at her. ‘After you try to fillet the two of us with that boning knife, and after the story you told me about what David was trying to do to you, you expect me to believe that?’
‘Yes,’ she whispered, ‘because it’s the truth.’ She tried to look back at me, over her shoulder. ‘I wasn’t trying to stab anyone, Oz. I was just furious; I’d forgotten I was holding the knife. Let me go, please.’
‘I can’t do that,’ I told her. ‘Ricky’s calling the police; apart from anything else, you’re on bail and we have to hand you over.’
‘Well at least stop holding me so tight; I won’t do anything silly, I promise.’
I thought about it for a bit, then finally relented. ‘Go and sit on that stool,’ I said, ‘and keep your hands where I can see them. If you try to run for it, or have another go at me, then I promise you, girlie or no girlie, I will knock you into the middle of next week.’
She nodded; I let her arms go and she did as I had told her. She looked up at me through blotchy eyes. ‘I really didn’t do it,’ she whispered. I could see that she was desperate for me to believe her, but I couldn’t.
‘Sure,’ I replied. I crossed to the kitchen door and shouted to Ricky. ‘Is that tape switched off?’
‘Yes,’ he called back. ‘Morrow’s on his way. I phoned Charlie as well; he’ll go straight to the nick. He’s not exactly speaking to me. Oh aye,’ he added. ‘The lab report’s in. That was the weapon all right.’
I closed the door and turned back to Alison. She was still on the stool, behaving herself; I guess she’d believed what I’d said about thumping her. Wise girl. ‘Now listen to me,’ I told her, ‘before the coppers get here. You should say nothing at all to them until you’ve spoken with Badenoch again.
‘Then you should come up with a story that he can use to persuade the fiscal to reduce the charge to culpable homicide, rather than murder. You went to his house to plead with him, he laughed in your face and you just lost it. The awl was there, on the hall table; you just picked it up and swung at him, blind with rage. You were in such a panic that you took it home with you, where it was found by the police.’
I paused to let her think about it. ‘That is how it happened, isn’t it?’ I asked.
Tears started to run slowly down her cheeks. She shook her head. ‘No, it isn’t. I really didn’t do it. You have to believe me, Oz.’ Again, I thought that if she was acting she was worth a BAFTA.
‘Okay. Let’s say, for the purposes of this discussion, that I do. That doesn’t matter a damn. This is what will happen. You’ll be charged with murder, on the basis of what’s on that tape, the fact that the weapon was found in your house, and the fact that you can be placed in the vicinity at the time of death.