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Asking for the Moon: A Collection of Dalziel and Pascoe Stories. Reginald HillЧитать онлайн книгу.

Asking for the Moon: A Collection of Dalziel and Pascoe Stories - Reginald  Hill


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and I’m looking forward to telling you about yours, lad, thought Dalziel savagely.

      He said, ‘Not much more to tell. Spent so much time serving time, it soon worked out he were the only conscript left in Her Majesty’s Army. Last bloody National Service Man. The Wyfies were almost proud of him!’

      ‘The Wyfies?’

      ‘The West Yorkshire Fusiliers.’

      ‘Good Lord, I think they were the lot my great-grandfather served in.’

      ‘You one of them army bastards? I might have known,’ snarled Trotter.

      ‘Hold on,’ protested Pascoe. ‘He got killed in the Great War, that’s all the army connection I’ve got.’

      ‘What the hell were he doing in the Wyfies?’ demanded Dalziel accusingly. ‘Got lost when he went to sign on, did he?’

      ‘No, sir, I’m sorry to say he was a Yorkshireman. But we try to keep it quiet,’ retorted Pascoe.

      This near blasphemous insubordination momentarily caused Dalziel to forget the shotgun, but as he leaned forward to administer a just rebuke, Trotter screwed it in another quarter inch. This time Dalziel let out a gasp of pain as he subsided. And as his wrath faded, the thought came into his mind that probably both the insolence and the insouciance came from the same source. The boy was scared out of his tiny mind.

      He found the thought quite comforting. Last thing a man up shit creek needs is a red-blooded hero willing to use his dick as a paddle.

      And Pascoe thought: sitting there like Heckmondwyke’s answer to Buddha, is he really as unfazed as he looks? Or is his brain so atrophied, he’s simply incapable of appreciating the situation? What the blazes has he done to make this madman hate him so much? One thing’s for certain: whatever it was, this isn’t the time to bring it up!

      Dalziel said, ‘Likely you’re wondering, constable, how come after so many years of going steady, me and Tankie finally fell out.’

      Oh God, thought Pascoe. Completely brain dead!

      ‘No, sir,’ he said brightly. ‘I wasn’t wondering that.’

      ‘And you call yourself a detective! Motive, lad, that’s the key. Once you’ve got a hold on that, the rest’ll not be long in coming, as the bishop said to the actress.’

      ‘Stop here,’ said Trotter.

      The lane had widened into a small overgrown paddock in front of a cottage which was more Gothic than picturesque. True, round the door there were roses rambling and honeysuckles suckling, but they looked more carnivorous than vegetarian, as if their ambition were to devour the house, which indeed slumped sideways like a stricken deer, only supported by a roofless barn on the left-hand side.

      ‘Blow the horn!’ ordered Trotter.

      Pascoe blew the horn.

      The cottage door opened and a woman came out, rubbing floured hands on a flowered apron. It was a scene so rustically domestic that Pascoe thought: it’s a wind-up. Wield and the rest of the CID boys are waiting inside with a birthday cake for Fat Andy. But he didn’t really believe it, even before the woman stepped back inside and re-emerged with an under-and-over shotgun in her hands.

      ‘Out,’ ordered Trotter. ‘Shoot the boy if he tries anything.’

      The woman nodded as if she’d been told her guests took sugar in their tea.

      ‘Hello, Jude,’ said Dalziel. ‘Heard you’d gone off for a trip. Nice place you found. Bet it costs more for a week than a fortnight. This boy you may have to shoot is Detective Constable Pascoe. This here’s Judith, Tankie’s sister. Twins, would you credit it? She got the beauty, he got the brawn. What happened to the brains, God alone knows, and He’s not telling us, is he, Jude?’

      A smile touched the woman’s lips, acting like a tiny light to reveal the true beauty of her features. But her eyes confirmed her twinship. They were the same unyielding grey discs as her brother’s.

      She said, ‘Some things are beyond working out with brains, Mr Dalziel. You just swim with the tide.’

      ‘Just what I keep telling these folk with degrees,’ said Dalziel.

      ‘Inside,’ said Tankie.

      Pascoe moved in first with the woman in close attendance. Dalziel came behind, the gun barrel still drilling into his spine.

      The cottage was almost as decrepit inside as out, but some effort had been made to render it inhabitable and there was a good smell of baking coming from the kitchen.

      ‘Scones,’ said Dalziel expertly. ‘I could murder a home-baked scone with fresh butter and some strawberry jam.’

      Wish he’d stop harping on about killing, thought Pascoe.

      They were herded past the kitchen into a stone-flagged, windowless room which must have been built as a dairy. Whatever the state of the rest of the building, this was solid, constructed of great granite blocks thick enough to keep out any warmth from the sun. It was lit by a solitary bulb dangling from the ceiling. It contained a narrow metal-framed bed covered by a thin flock mattress. By the bed stood a rusting metal locker, open to reveal various items of clothing.

      ‘Inspection in ten minutes,’ said Trotter stepping back and slamming the door.

      Pascoe grabbed the handle and rattled it like they always did in the movies. But he’d heard the key turn in the lock, and the woodwork looked disturbingly solid.

      He turned to find Dalziel had taken his trousers off.

      ‘Sir, what are you doing?’ he asked, not certain he wished to know the answer.

      ‘Like Judith said, you just swim with the tide. Even if you’re a shark,’ said Dalziel, removing his shirt. ‘I were telling you how Tankie and me fell out, weren’t I? Simple misunderstanding. God, I’d forgotten how this stuff itched!’

      He’d taken a khaki shirt from the locker and was putting it on. As he buttoned it up, he continued talking.

      ‘Four years back Tankie were getting close to discharge. Then some silly twat of a sergeant spoke to him insensitively. Naturally Tankie nutted him. Then he helped himself to a Champ and took off home. That’s where I found him, waving an axe and demanding to know where his mam and Judith was. I told him his mam had taken badly and was down at the infirmary and I said if he gave me the axe, I’d make sure he got in to see her. He saw sense and gave me the axe and I drove him down the infirmary. Only when he got out of the car, the MPs were waiting for him. He seemed to think it were my fault. I still think I could have sorted things out and got him in to see his mam, only by the time I could make myself heard, Tankie had cracked one bugger’s head open, broken another’s arm and was marking time on a corporal’s goolies. There weren’t much scope for reasonable debate after that. They dragged him off, and a couple of hours later, his mam died. Christ, these are a bit tight. Long time since anyone thought I was thinner than I am!’

      He’d pulled on a pair of grey denim fatigue trousers and was having difficulty fastening them up. Next he squeezed his feet into one of the two pairs of boots in the bottom of the locker. The laces tied, he now began to lay all the remaining clothes on the bed and folded them into neat geometric shapes. Pascoe recalled seeing Sean Connery do this in The Hill.

      ‘You’re getting ready for a kit inspection,’ he said incredulously. ‘This is what Trotter meant when he said you were going to be the Last National Service Man.’

      ‘Glad they taught you to think at you kindergarten,’ said Dalziel. ‘Pity they didn’t teach you to think fast.’

      ‘They taught me to think logically,’ said Pascoe grimly. ‘And logic tells me we should be looking for ways of getting out of here, not wasting time going along with this madman’s fantasies.’

      ‘And that’s your very best thought, is it?’ sneered Dalziel.


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