Ruling Passion

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Authors: Reginald Hill
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Pascoe.
    'So while I've been sleeping, you've been helping them hunt down Colin?' she uttered vituperatively. 'And now they've pumped you dry, they  want to see if I can put them on to any other  scents!'
    'For a would-be novelist you do mix your metaphors,' said Pascoe coldly.
    'Please, please,' said Backhouse soothingly. 'Let's keep things calm. Miss Soper, if it's any  consolation to you - though, as an intelligent  and no doubt public-spirited woman, I don't see why it should be - Sergeant Pascoe has been most  uncooperative, even antagonistic, with regard  to our search for Mr Hopkins. In fact, I had  to intervene to prevent him from physically  assaulting one man who talked critically of your friend. Such loyalty, I hasten to add, I do not find touching but foolish. The circumstantial evidence  against your friend is strong. But now if it turns out to be misleading, he's got to be found. Now,  will you help?'
    Ellie nodded, her eyes on Pascoe.
    'Yes. If I can,' she said quietly.
    'Right. Tell me about Colin Hopkins then.'
    'We were all at university together,' she began.  'Colin, Rose, Timmy, Carlo. And Peter and me. We were pretty close. There were plenty of others, of  course, but we were close.'
    'You all went on holiday together,' prompted  Backhouse.
    'That's right. So we did. In Eskdale.' She smiled  at the memory. 'Life seemed fairly cut and dried  then. In the nicest way. Rose and Colin. Peter and  me. And . . .'
    'The other two men were homosexual,' said  Backhouse neutrally.
    'Yes. That's right,' said Ellie challengingly. Backhouse ignored the challenge.
    Things seem to have worked out as you anticipated,’ he said. 'But you seem uncertain?'
    'I didn't anticipate this,’ she snapped, relenting instantly. 'Sorry. No, after we all finished, it was  only Colin and Rose who stuck together. They got  married about a year later. I don't think they'd  have bothered, but Colin had joined a publishing house and they thought it was worthwhile  observing the conventions till he got stinking rich. Timmy was a linguist and got a job in the Common  Market HQ in Brussels. Carlo went to work for  some firm in Glasgow. I finished my research.'
    'Research?' interrupted Backhouse.
    'That's right. I was a graduate research student.  I just condescended to mingle with the children. I'm a couple of years older than the others,' she  added defiantly.
    Backhouse studied her slim figure, held the gaze  of the grey eyes set in the finely-sculpted head with  its close-cut jet black hair.
    'You carry your burden of years very well,' he  murmured.
    'Thanks.' She smiled, the first time he had seen her do so. 'I got an assistant lectureship in the Midlands. And Peter, of course, put on the helmet  of salvation and became a policeman. I think the only time we all met together again was at Colin and Rose's wedding.'
    'Not Timmy,’ interjected Pascoe. 'He couldn't  make it.'
    'That's right. He couldn't. Well, we all kept intermittently in touch and saw something of each  other. Except Peter. Within a couple of years or so  he'd fallen almost completely from sight.'
    'I was very busy. Besides being poorly paid with  very limited vacation periods,' said Pascoe.
    'A policeman's lot,' said Backhouse.
    'Of course, he got a bit of a complex too. Felt  that he would be a bit of a nuisance, perhaps even a butt, in the liberal academic and cultural circles  his friends inhabited,' said Ellie mockingly. But her  tone was light.
    'But you saw the others?'
    'Sometimes. A couple of years ago, Timmy returned from the Continent. I think Carlo had  already been working in London for six months  or so. They took a flat together. Colin meanwhile  had been going from strength to strength and had  become the darling of his bosses to such an extent  that he got them persuaded a few months ago to  give him a year's sabbatical so that he could write  his book which would make everybody's fortune.  Brookside Cottage was

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