Angel soon found the country road behind the farm at Skiptonthorpe. He saw the police car with two policemen inside at the side of the road. He drove up and parked behind it.
And he certainly did need his wellies. The rain had now ceased but it had been a very heavy downpour.
He clocked the gap between some bushes where the Mercedes had been driven ten yards off the road onto the edge of a ploughed field, dumped and ignited. A lager can, several newspapers and magazines had been dumped close by and were now drenched and part trodden into the mud.
There was a smell of burning rubber and petrol.
He could see that the car’s rear window and windscreen had been smashed, most of the upholstery and carpeting burned out, and all the internal surfaces and controls were black, but the metal parts, the wheels and the tyres were intact.
He squelched precariously at a careful distance of about twenty feet from the car looking down at the sodden earth.
Two policemen came up to him wearing high-visibility yellow coats and flat hats.
‘Good evening, sir. Good evening, sir.’
Angel looked up from the muddy field, his lips tightened back against his teeth. ‘Look at all those footprints. You’ve had a bigger crowd here than there was at Reggie Kray’s funeral!’
The two policeman exchanged glances but said nothing.
‘I want you to mark out this area with DO NOT CROSS LINE tape, at a minimum of fifteen feet from the car and this break in the bushes. I want to preserve every track in the mud from around the car and up to the road.’
‘Right, sir.’
‘When you’ve done that, I shall want some illumination. It’ll be dark in a few hours. I expect to be here all night. I shall want one of you to go to the stores and get a lighting kit and generator.’
They dashed off and opened the boot of their car.
Angel dug his hand into his pocket, pulled out his mobile and tapped in a number. ‘Is that the National Crime and Operations Faculty? I want to call on your specialist to advise on motor vehicle tracks, please. It’s very urgent.’
It was 2100 hours and the section of the field and the break in the bushes had been marked out with DO NOT CROSS tape attached to stakes in the ground. The road was full of activity and thronged with police vehicles. Angel had requested more uniform to secure the site and manage the few interested members of the public occasionally rubbernecking as they passed. SOCO had arrived and also an HGV with low loader to transport the car away. Angel was with a DI Ince and a photographer from the NCOF who were working on pads on their knees making plaster casts and taking measurements with a steel tape.
It was going to be a busy night.
‘Two coffees, Ahmed. Smartish.’
‘Right, sir,’ he said and went out of the office.
Angel looked up Gawber, rubbed his scratchy chin, sniffed and said, ‘They’ve ditched the only lead we had, Ron. We had the number, colour and make of their car. Now I have no idea where they are and we have absolutely nothing to go on!’
‘You brought the NCOF in, sir?’
‘Aye. I’m clutching at straws, Ron. I’m hoping they can, maybe, save the day by reading something from the tyre tracks. There were some pretty sharp outlines in the mud.’
‘Yes. And they’ve turned nothing up?’
Angel’s miserable face told him that they had not. ‘It’s early days.’
‘Has SOCO brought the Merc back here, sir?’
‘No. It’s been taken to Wetherby. I wanted the boys in the lab to go over it. They might turn up something. There’s also a lager can and some papers and magazines that were littering up the scene. They might help. Don Taylor’s working on them now.’
Ahmed came in with two beakers on a tin tray. They reached out and helped themselves.
‘Ta, lad,’ Angel said. ‘Now, nip down to SOCO and ask DS Taylor if he’s anywhere with that lager can and those papers I brought in.’
Ahmed nodded and went out.
The phone rang. Angel picked up the receiver. It was Harker.
‘There’s something in the post. I want you up here,’ he growled. There was a loud click and the line went dead.
Angel pulled a face as if he needed a tooth pulling. He turned to Gawber. ‘It’s the super. I’ve got to go.’
He trudged up the corridor and knocked on the door.
‘Come in,’ Harker bawled. He was sitting at his desk, head down reading.
Angel closed the door.
Eventually Harker looked up, stared at him, blinked, scratched his head and said, ‘You look a right mess. I thought it was Bill Oddie dressed up for a funeral.’
‘I have been up all night, sir. I haven’t been home yet.’
‘Yes. I heard. It was only a car fire, wasn’t it? Did they really need you there to turn the hose on,’ he said sarcastically.
‘It’s the Glazer gang’s Mercedes,’ Angel replied strongly. ‘They’ve obviously changed over vehicles there. I am trying to find out what they’ve changed to, and where they are now.’
‘I know. I know, but it’s nowt to do with you, lad. I haven’t authorized it. It’s not your case.’
‘It might be, sir. Could be Glazer, or one of his gang, who murdered Harry Harrison.’
‘I thought that that was down to Spencer.’
Angel licked his lips. ‘It could still be him. I’m waiting for some forensic from SOCO. That should settle it.’
Harker sniffed.
‘Come on, lad, admit it,’ he said expansively. ‘Admit it. You’re in the dark, aren’t you? You’re just fishing. Harrison was well known among the crooked fraternity. It could be anyone of a thousand villains who might have heard of the big money he’d got hold off.’
‘No, sir. I’m not fishing,’ Angel replied resolutely. ‘There’s a reasonable bet it’s Glazer or Spencer.’
Harker shook his small, grotesque, gargoyle-like, misshapen head.
‘Well, press on with it, then. Time is money. I know you have a personal reason for trying to get Eddie Glazer back behind bars. I know he gave your pride a proper singeing, but don’t let that cloud your judgement,’ he said waving a sheet of paper he was holding. ‘But I didn’t call you in to talk about your pride. It’s about this.’
‘What is it,’ Angel said, holding out his hand.
Harker didn’t pass it to him. ‘It’s a bill from a Mrs Reid for damage to a door and door jamb, lifting of floorboards, scratching of paintwork … it goes on. Four hundred pounds. Four hundred pounds! It’s hardly a legitimate charge against this department. Who’s going to pay for that?’
‘That would be damage the Glazers did, searching Harrison’s flat. It would be down to them!’
‘Can’t charge it to them,’ Harker snapped. ‘They’re not here. We don’t know where they are. You just said so. You let them get away. They just slipped through your fingers.’
Angel’s eyes flashed. ‘They were heavily armed.’
‘So were you.’
‘You know the situation, it made attack on our part impossible. It would have been against standing orders. There could have been a bloodbath.’
‘I only know what you tell me in your reports, which I know are sometimes heavily edited.’
Angel’s jaw tightened. He pursed his lips. He breathed in and out a couple of times. This argument was going nowhere; he refused to let Harker wind him up any further. ‘If you don’t want me for anything else, sir, I’d like to go home and get tidied up.’
‘Yes. You’d better. Got to maintain standards.’
Angel turned to go. He opened the door.
‘What about this four hundred pounds?’ Harker fumed, his face as red as a judge’s robe. ‘I can’t put an expense through like that. It’s down to you, you know.’
Angel sighed.
‘Why don’t you knock it off the two million I found under the floorboards, sir?’ he said and he closed the door.
Ahmed saw the imposing figure whiz past the window panel in the CID office door. He caught up with him and followed him into his office. He was carrying two EVIDENCE envelopes and an A4 paper file.
‘What’ve you got, lad?’ Angel boomed.
‘From DI Taylor, sir. He found a fingerprint on the lager can; it’s of a prisoner on the run, Eric Oxenhope, otherwise known as “Ox”.’
Angel’s eyebrows shot up. He took the file, opened it and began reading it aloud. ‘28 years of age. Last known address 266 Gosforth Road, Whitley Bay; 12 previous convictions for … oh … erm … yes.’ His voice dropped as his interest waned. He turned to the next page in the file and read: ‘ “Oxenhope’s prints were also all over newspaper. Also one other first finger and thumb from right hand of person unknown, thought to be female. Put on file. Handwritten number in pen in margin of page 2, might be helpful.” ’ Angel dropped the file grabbed the thinner EVIDENCE envelope, opened it and pulled out a well thumbed, dried out newspaper in a cloud of aluminium powder. He turned to page 2. Sure enough in the margin was a six digit number. It was written in large handwriting with a blue felt pen.
‘ “603670”, Ahmed. Does that number mean anything to you?’
‘No, sir. Is it a phone number?’
‘It could be. Find out what it is, lad. I’m going home. Be back in an hour or so. Ring me if anything urgent comes in.’
It was 10.22 a.m.
After a shower, a shave, a clean shirt, two cups of tea and two slices of fresh toast and butter, Angel was as pleased with life as a man guilty of murder, being awarded an ASBO.
He got in his car and returned to the station.
As he opened the office door, the sun was shining in through the window. The shadow formed a hopscotch pattern on the parquet floor. The room smelled of microwaved dust and fingerprint ink. He realized how hot it was. He opened the window and part closed the Venetian blinds. He took off his jacket and put it on a coat-hanger on the side of the stationery cupboard.
The phone rang. He leaned over the desk and picked up the receiver. It was Taylor. He sounded pleased about something.
‘I have examined the clothes and personal effects of Simon Spencer, sir, and have taken various specimens and examined them, but found nothing to link him with Harry Harrison.’
Angel was deflated.
‘Oh?’ he said, wrinkling his nose. ‘Right, Don.’
‘But I have found tiny spots of blood on both the left and right shoes of a pair of trainers taken from the farmhouse,’ he added brightly. ‘And I have managed to isolate a sample of the blood and can confirm that it is from the dead man, Harry Harrison. I don’t know who the owner of the shoes is, but they are size 10, and they were found at the right hand side of the hearth in the kitchen.’
Angel’s face brightened. ‘Ah. Right, Don. Thank you. So that definitely puts Spencer out of the frame. The murderer of Harrison is the owner of that pair of trainers.’
‘That’s it, sir, exactly, and my money’s on Eddie Glazer.’
Angel smiled, thanked him again and replaced the phone. He rubbed his chin a moment and then picked up the phone and tapped in a number.
Ahmed answered.
‘Is DS Gawber there?
‘No, sir.’
‘Put a call out for him, and then come on in here.’
‘Right, sir.’
A minute later a smiling Ahmed came into Angel’s office. ‘I must have missed you coming in, sir. I think I have found an answer to that number.’
‘Right, lad. Good. What is it?’
‘The telephone company say that that number is almost certainly a Bromersley subscriber because it doesn’t fit any other exchange in South Yorkshire.’
‘Right, Ahmed,’ he said. ‘Well done. Now go to the officer on the front desk and ask for a charge sheet for a Simon Spencer at present in Bromersley General and address unknown. The charge is fraud. I might find a few other charges to add onto it, but that’ll do to hold him, when the hospital discharges him.’
Ahmed made for the door.
‘And see if you can find Ron Gawber on your travels,’ he added as he reached out for the phone.
‘Right, sir.’ The door closed.
Angel tapped in 9 for a dialling tone for an outside line, then 141 so that the station number wouldn’t be given out, then the six-digit number. He sat back in the chair and rubbed his chin. He had no idea who might be answering. He had no idea whom he was calling, but he had been through this exercise a thousand times in this business.
The phone was soon answered. A pleasant-sounding woman’s voice said, ‘Webster’s Holiday Caravans. Can I help you.’
Angel frowned. ‘Can I speak to Harry, please?’ he said.
There was a short pause and then she said hesitantly, ‘Did you say Harry?’
‘Yes, please.’
He licked his lips as he wondered what she was thinking.
There was another pause.
‘I think you must have got the wrong number. There’s nobody here of that name, now, sir.’
Angel smiled: he wasn’t a bit surprised.
‘We did have a Harry Shaw working for us, but he left two years ago,’ she added.
‘No. That wasn’t the name,’ Angel said. ‘But anyway, I was thinking about a caravan holiday,’ he lied.
‘You need to speak to our Mr Webster. He’s busy with a customer. Can I get him to call you back?’
‘Is that Graham Webster?’
‘No. It’s Mortimer, actually.’
‘Oh? Mortimer Webster, of course. No. I’ll ring back later on today. Or I might call in. What’s the exact address again, Miss?’
‘Goat Peg Lane, off Kingsway. We are at the end. You’ll see a lot of caravans on your right hand side. Sheltered on three sides with trees. It’s a lovely site. You can’t miss us.’
‘Right. Thank you. Goodbye.’
He replaced the phone slowly and thoughtfully.
There was a knock at the door. It was Gawber.
‘Come in, Ron. Right on cue.’
He updated him. He told him about the number in the newspaper and said that the gang might be connected with Webster’s caravans.
‘But it may have nothing to do with it, sir. That number might be the combination number of a railway station security locker, or some other locker, or a bank account, or just about anything.’
Angel wasn’t pleased. He knew that what Gawber had said was perfectly valid. But he was desperate. Clutching at straws.
‘Just because it was obvious, doesn’t make it wrong.’
‘No, sir,’ Gawber said. ‘Of course not.’
Angel stood up and reached for his jacket. ‘Well, it’s a lovely sunny day. Do you fancy looking over a caravan? We could take afternoon tea out in the country.’
Gawber frowned. This wasn’t the Angel he knew.
Angel drove the BMW along Kingsway and down the narrow, twisted track called Goat Peg Lane. The lane was in need of resurfacing, so he had to approach slowly. They soon passed a neat and simple sign that read: ‘Webster’s Caravans.’
‘Been down here before, sir?’ Gawber said.
‘No. I hope we can turn round at the end. Don’t relish reversing back all this way.’
The lane twisted and turned and eventually opened out revealing a long, white-painted, breeze-block building with a big sign announcing that they had arrived at a three-star caravan site big enough for 120 caravans and that it was owned by a Mortimer Webster. Beyond it, they could see trees, which appeared on three sides and sheltered an area where there were forty pitched towing caravans. Spaces for more caravans led away, as far as the eye could see. There were a dozen or so motor-caravans grouped together at the back. Some of the towing caravans had small canvas tents erected around their doorways, while some had cars parked next to them and people enjoying the sun in deckchairs or sunbathing on the grass. All the vehicles were in neat rows, facing south. In spaces where there were no caravans, small weather-protected posts in the ground with sockets for electricity to be supplied to the vans could be seen standing in the manicured turf. In addition, there were several cars and caravans travelling slowly on the service roads between the pitches. They were clearly arriving, or leaving the site for other pastures.
Summer was in full swing in Bromersley.
A sign said, ‘All visitors please report to reception.’
The sound of an internal combustion engine driving a lawnmower spoiled the quiet of the summer’s day.
Angel didn’t drive through the entrance. He stopped the car behind the long building and switched off the engine. Gawber and Angel got out of the car, walked through the open gate, stepped up onto a veranda and through the low doorway into the reception office.
A young woman was sitting at a desk behind a high counter. She pushed back her chair and came up to greet them.
‘Good afternoon, gentlemen. Can I help you?’
Angel gave her a smile. ‘We want to see Mr Webster, miss, if you please.’
The insistent drone of the lawnmower engine became louder as it came closer to the office.
‘Mr Webster is cutting the grass. But I think he’s coming in now.’
The engine died.
‘Yes, he is,’ she said. ‘Please wait here. He won’t be a moment.’
She returned to her desk.
Angel nodded and said, ‘Thank you, miss.’
Seconds later, a middle-aged man in khaki shorts, hat and T-shirt came in to the office. He was wiping his forehead with a handkerchief. He looked at the two policemen and said, ‘Are you waiting to see me?’
‘Mr Webster?’
‘Mortimer Webster at your service, gentlemen,’ he said loudly. ‘Sorry if you’ve had to wait. Got to keep the damned turf down. A bit of rain and a bit of sun and it grows like fury this time of the year, you know.’
Angel winced. He put up a hand and wagged his first finger at him to invite him to come closer; when he did, Angel leaned over the counter and whispered, ‘I’d like to talk to you on a matter of great confidentiality. Can we go somewhere quiet?’
Webster’s eyebrows shot up. He looked round like a nervous kitten. ‘Oh yes.’
Angel frowned. He put his first finger vertically across his lips, from his septum to his chin. Then he took out his wallet and showed it to Webster, who read it carefully, nodded then without a word pointed to a door. They went through the door into a small room that served as an office.
‘We are looking for a gang of crooks. At least two of them are on the run from prison, and one of them is wanted for murder.’
Webster looked shocked. ‘This is a respectable site, Inspector. I don’t accept any riff-raff.’
‘I am sure you don’t intend to, but a caravan site might prove to be a good hiding place for them. I’d like to take a look round the site and see if I can see them without them recognizing me first.’
‘Of course, you must. But how are you going to manage that, Inspector?’
Angel rubbed his chin. There was a problem.
Ten minutes later, having removed his tie and jacket, opened his shirt collar and turned up his suit trousers, Angel donned Webster’s big khaki hat and sunglasses, climbed onto the high seat of the lawnmower and began driving it up and down the grass pitches of the caravan site.
Gawber returned to the car and waited patiently, keeping the entrance under observation in case Glazer’s mob moved on or off the site.
Angel spent forty minutes on top of the mower, cutting the grass, traversing the site so that he could see every single vehicle without arousing suspicion. He worked his way up to the far end of the site where Webster had an area allocated for extra large caravans or RVs, Recreational Vehicles, as Americans called them.
And there they were. The Glazer gang – all five of them – next to a big American chromium-plated monster.
Angel’s pulse raced. He had to steady his shaking hands on the mower’s handlebar. He drove as close to them as he could. They hardly spared him a glance. Eddie, Tony and Kenny were seated on deckchairs at a round table with a big red umbrella over it. Eddie was reading a newspaper. Tony and Kenny were chatting. Oona Glazer was stretched out nearby on a towel on the grass sunbathing, while Kenny was sitting on the motor-caravan step, smoking a cigarette. Within arms length of each of them was a wine holder with a bottle of Bollinger nestled in it.
Angel turned the mower round and pointed it at Webster’s office. He had a chill in his heart and determination in his belly.