them around the house.â
âWould you like to go for a drink tonight, sir?â Meadows asked, out of nowhere.
âWe always go for a drink when weâre in the middle of an investigation,â Beresford said. âWeâve done some of our best thinking at the Drum.â
âI didnât mean that, sir,â Meadows said. She paused, as if considering exactly how to phrase what she wanted to say next. âYou do know Iâve only just been posted to the Mid Lancs Division, donât you?â
âOf course.â
âWell, Iâve got my flat set up â itâs small but itâs nice and cosy â and Iâve worked out where to go to do my shopping and where to take my dry cleaning.â
âYes?â
âSo Iâm pretty much settled in. But I still donât know anybody â socially, I mean. And so I thought it might be quite nice if you and I went out for a drink. Unless you think that might be inappropriate â what with you being my superior officer and everything.â
âNo, itâs not inappropriate,â Beresford said. âI often go out for a drink with the boss, even when weâre not working on a case.â
âYes, but the boss is older than you, isnât she?â
âAnd what do you mean by that?â
âJust that, since she is an older woman, there are not likely to be any complications, are there?â
âAnd do you see any complications in us going out together?â Beresford asked, as his heart began to beat a little bit faster.
âI donât know,â Meadows said â and this time, when she used the phrase, she really was being honest. âNeither of us can know. Weâll just have to try it and see how it turns out, wonât we. If youâre willing, that is.â
âOh, Iâm willing,â Beresford said â though he knew that he shouldnât.
SEVEN
T he tailback began about half a mile from the Piperâs Brook roundabout. Had Paniatowski wished to, she could have turned on her siren and shot along the hard shoulder. Instead, she chose to edge slowly forward with the rest of the frustrated motorists, because it gave her time to think, to examine what sheâd learned â and to ask herself if she was seeing it as she should see it, or whether she was viewing it through a lens darkened by something that had happened long ago.
At about a hundred yards from the roundabout, the two lanes shrank down to one, and she could almost hear the groans from the other drivers trapped in their own metal boxes on wheels.
Several uniformed officers were on duty, waving the vehicles through to a twisting lane marked by bollards. Paniatowski swung to the right and parked on the hard shoulder.
She was just climbing out of the MGA when one of the uniformed bobbies strode furiously towards her.
âWhatâs your problem?â he called from the distance. âAre you blind? Or are you just stupid?â
He was probably twenty-two or twenty-three, Paniatowski thought, as she watched him draw closer, and though that made him too young to possibly be the officer who had called Elaine Kershaw a pathetic dyke, he was cast from the same mould.
âYouâre new to the force, arenât you?â she asked.
âThatâs none of your bloody business, luv,â the constable said.
âYou should call me âmadamâ,â Paniatowski told him. âI am, after all, a member of the public who youâve sworn to serve.â
âYouâve got a nerve,â the constable told her. âYouâre too thick to obey simple instructions, and yet you expect me to call you . . .â
He stopped, abruptly, when he saw the warrant card Paniatowski was holding out in front of her.
âAll right,â she conceded, âdonât call me âmadamâ â call me âmaâamâ.â
The constable looked down at the
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