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‘I’m interested in what you were doing late at night,’ said Cooper. ‘I hear you were outside into the early hours of the morning. Is that right? Even in November?’

‘We’re a hardy bunch in Manchester.’ Everett laughed. ‘You ought to see the kids out clubbing in Deansgate, dressed as if they’re going to the beach with six inches of snow on the ground.’

‘Were you out every night?’

Everett reached for a cigarette case in his pocket, looked at Cooper and pushed it back.

‘Pretty much,’ he said.

‘Did you and your friends happen to go up as far as the castle?’

‘Castle? Oh, up there on the mounds? No, it was too much of a climb for us when … I mean, in the dark. We liked it down by the river, just sitting in the dark watching the stars. You don’t see the stars much in the city.’

‘Do you know anybody in this area?’

‘No. Why would we?’

Everett was starting to look a bit more confident now. He’d decided that Cooper wasn’t going to do anything about the drugs paraphernalia or call in the sniffer dog.

‘Anyway,’ he said, ‘there are other people out at night around here. You might want to wonder what they’re up to, rather than persecuting people who are just having a good time.’

‘What people?’

‘We saw them going up there one night,’ said Everett. ‘To the castle.’

‘How many of them?’

‘At least two. There were two cars, so it must have been at least a couple of people. Now, you can bet they were up to no good.’

‘What night was this?’ asked Cooper.

‘Er, I couldn’t say exactly. It was a few days ago.’

‘Could it have been last Thursday?’

‘Yes, I suppose it could have been.’

‘You saw at least two people going up? But how many coming down?’

Everett looked blank. ‘It was probably too late for us by then.’

‘Oh, I see,’ said Cooper. ‘Too late for you to remember anything.’

25

Diane Fry had found herself in Taddington, without really knowing where she was. She’d followed Luke Irvine’s advice and taken the Flagg road. It was the sort of back road she would normally avoid, but it seemed to have worked.

Several officers were already in Taddington at the Redfearns’ house and knocking on doors. A family liaison officer was in the house with George Redfearn’s daughter, waiting for the wife to arrive. DC Becky Hurst and DC Gavin Murfin were both here too. They looked unsure what do when they saw Fry arrive.

‘Anything useful so far?’ she said.

Murfin shrugged and grunted. But Hurst seemed to make a different decision.

‘The daughter has no idea what her father might have been doing or who he was meeting,’ she said. ‘But there’s a lady across the road worth speaking to. The house with the blue door. She has an interesting bit of information. Gavin has spoken to her already.’

‘Thank you, Becky.’

Fry walked across the road. The neighbour was agog with curiosity at all the activity. Some people got impatient when they were asked to repeat a story they’d already told, but this lady was only too eager.

‘Yes, we had a man round here asking questions,’ she said. ‘He was a property enquiry agent.’

‘What’s one of those?’ asked Fry.

‘He said he was making enquiries on behalf of a prospective house purchaser. He wanted to know what the neighbourhood was like, whether it was quiet, how many children there were living in the area. That sort of thing.’

‘Did he ask questions about your neighbours?’

She looked a bit embarrassed. ‘Well, I’m not sure he asked questions about them exactly, but I suppose I might have ended up telling him a few things. There’s always a bit of gossip in a village like this.’

‘About the Redfearns, for example.’

‘I didn’t give away any secrets,’ she protested. ‘I only told him things that everyone around here knows.’

‘Of course. Did you happen to get a name for this man?’

‘I’m not daft. I asked him for his identity.’ She put a hand to her mouth. ‘Oh, he left me a business card. I forgot to tell the other police officer that.’

‘Can I see it, please?’

‘Give me a minute and I’ll find it for you. It’s around here somewhere.’

‘Thank you.’

But she didn’t go straight away to look for the card.

‘Did I do something wrong?’ she asked.

‘Not so far,’ said Fry. ‘But you might be more careful about who you talk to in future.’

When she’d seen the card, Fry called Ben Cooper. She guessed he would still be at Pilsbury trying to sniff out a lead of his own.

‘There’s a job I’d like you to do,’ she said. ‘I think you’d be the best person for it.’

It was one of the most remote farmsteads in the area. Even the narrow back road over the eastern slope of the moor seemed like the back of beyond. Cooper had reached a point on the road where he could see nothing in any direction except vast expanses of exposed moorland and lots more hills in the distance to the north.

And this was the spot where he had to turn off. He found a cattle grid and a muddy entrance to a track, which wandered away over the brow of the moor, apparently leading nowhere. He wouldn’t have known it was the right place, except for a small sign on the fence. Bagshaw Farm.

‘What was this man’s name?’ Cooper had asked Fry.

‘Daniel Grady. Do you know him?’

‘Why on earth should I?’

‘Well, you always seem to know everyone.’

‘Not this one.’

Cooper followed the potholed track between swathes of rough grazing land, where clumps of coarse grass battled with heather and whinberry for survival in a harsh environment. One patch of ground seemed to have been levelled and seeded for some purpose – possibly for use by hang-gliders, given the air currents funnelling in from Axe Edge.

As he crested the rise the track took a wide swing to the left and a view opened out into the valley and across to the Staffordshire hills. Suddenly, right in front of him, he saw the Dragon’s Back, appearing much closer than he’d expected. But still he seemed to be heading nowhere. A scatter of stones on a prominent mound could have been the remains of a wall, an old farm building, or something much more ancient and mysterious.

And there, below him on the western slope, was Bagshaw Farm itself. Two houses surrounded by a sprawling cluster of barns, sheds and outbuildings. The track took another couple of swings before it skirted along a wall past more fertile looking in-bye land and reached the farm entrance.

As Cooper turned in he was surprised by the number of vehicles parked in the yard and in front of one of the biggest sheds. They were mostly pick-up trucks and Land Rovers, but there were a few muddy saloon cars too, parked up between trailers and farm equipment.

He’d seen this sort of thing before – an unnatural amount of activity at an isolated farm like this was sometimes a warning sign. Who knew what kind of activities went on here, where no one would see them? It could be something perfectly innocent, of course. But it would be worthwhile keeping his eyes and ears open while he was at Bagshaw Farm.

He found Daniel Grady in an office in the newer of the two houses. He pretty much matched the description that Fry had obtained from the Redfearns’ neighbour in Taddington. There was nothing outstanding about him. He was average height, with medium brown hair cut short, but not too short. Aged in his mid-thirties, perhaps forty or so – it was difficult to tell. Dressed in an unremarkable suit, he was clean shaven, with a hint of a stoop and a very courteous manner. He could have been purpose-designed for the job of asking questions without attracting suspicion.

Cooper glanced around the office. It was lined with shelves full of colour-coded box files. Two filing cabinets stood behind the door, and Grady had squeezed in a desk with a laptop and printer. More equipment was in the corner. Cooper spotted a desktop scanner and a digital camera with a long lens.