Coffin and the Paper Man. Gwendoline Butler

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between the shops in the North Ferry Road and Elder Street.

      Anna Mary Kinver, one of the new poor, descended from a long line of the old poor, had lived with her father, new poor/old poor nicely mixed up, in a house in Elder Street. He was there now, waiting for her to come home. She was never going to come.

      A policewoman knocked on the door of No. 13. She too had known Anna Mary Kinver, having been in the top class of the large comprehensive when Anna Mary had arrived, a skinny eleven-year-old, to be educated into believing that there was a rich world outside into which, if she learnt French, German, mathematics and how to use a computer, she could be inserted. Thus she was rich, then poor, almost at once afterwards.

      Still rich in hope and expectations on the day she died, but poor in any practical delivery of what she wanted, and only able to afford a pair of silver slippers from Mr Azzopardi’s Bazaar rather than from Maud Frizon in Bond Street. She knew about Maud Frizon though, and had stared in the window at her pretty shoes.

      The policewoman hated the task she had been given. It was monstrous, horrible, and sad. But it was her job and she was going to do it.

      She did not mention death as she first spoke to Fred Kinver, she just spoke of a bad accident and the hospital. She would get round to the rest of the message as she drove him to where he must go.

      If he hadn’t guessed. People did guess.

      The exact circumstances of Anna’s death had been passed on to the WPC by her sergeant, but these she would not transmit. He’d find out soon enough.

      She meditated for a moment on the fact that he would have to identify the body. Oh dear. Fred Kinver was not going to be able to bear doing that, but he would have to. He had the look of one of those who would turn aside from a dead rabbit. She was not unlike that herself, but after several professional visits to the police mortuary she had learnt the knack of not seeing more than you must.

      Of course, for him that would be difficult.

      Fred Kinver sat beside her in the police car, having a pretty shrewd idea of what lay before him. He had that sick feeling in the pit of his stomach that assured him that the worst had happened.

      ‘The wife’s out,’ he said. ‘Hasn’t got back from her work. She has an evening job. I shall have to tell her later.’

      ‘We’ll do that for you, Mr Kinver.’

      ‘Better do it myself.’

      We’ll see, thought the WPC. See how you feel.

      Fred Kinver had worked in the biscuit factory in Deen Street till it moved to Slough, somehow managing to let Mr Kinver float away from it. Then he had worked in a small bakery until that was swallowed up by a supermarket. He had gone free from that too, although several other employees had been taken on. To encourage the fresh-bread-baking smell over the wrapped bread counter, the cynics said. Since then he had done odd jobs around the new local theatre, the Theatre Workshop founded by Mrs Lætitia Bingham, where his wife worked for one of the actresses as dresser cum handywoman.

      Anna Mary had been studying computer programming at the local Sixth Form College with a grant from the City firm which had promised her a job on completion. The grant was a good one, more than her father earned in a year, so that he called her one of the rich. But the Crash of ‘87 with the doldrums that followed had obliged the firm to declare redundancies. Anna Mary lost her grant and her offer of a job. So she was one of the new poor before truly she had ever been one of the new rich, it had all been hopes and dreams. But at her age, she said, it didn’t matter, and she loved dancing at discos where she had any number of friends.

      WPC Flo Rusher, Flurry to her friends, drove carefully towards the newly built police headquarters, taking back streets like Pavlov Street and Down Road and Peterloo Circus, to avoid the traffic. Nice area, she thought, live around here if I could.

      ‘Nearly there.’

      ‘Remember what this was like in the old days?’ asked Fred Kinver as if it mattered to him.

      ‘Not really.’ She swerved expertly round an illegally parked Porsche. She knew Mr Kinver although he didn’t seem to know her. Broken Biscuits, they’d called him. Anna Mary had always had a bag of broken biscuits in her pocket.

      ‘Slums. Packed little houses. Full of people and mice. But friendly. Look at it now. Too bloody rich to speak to the world.’

      She looked at his thin hands twisting restlessly in his lap. This is going to be one of the really bad ones, she thought.

      Fred Kinver suddenly sat up alertly. ‘Wait a minute, this isn’t the way to the hospital.’

      How to tell him that his daughter had died as the ambulance men touched her, and would therefore have been DOA and hence not taken to the hospital but to the police mortuary? Or for all Flurry knew, she might still be in situ in Rope Walk, being measured and photographed.

      ‘Not just at the moment, Mr Kinver,’ she said soothingly. ‘Our DI wants a word with you first.’

      Suddenly aware of what lay ahead of him, Fred Kinver began to scream.

      In one of his rare moments of leisure, John Coffin had speculated that the so-called Second City of London together with his new Force had been invented to annoy him. His patch was ripe with murders and crimes of violence, rich in sophisticated villainy. Had been for centuries, they had nothing to learn.

      Two days after the murder of Anna Mary, on May 27, in the course of one of his unscheduled and unannounced forays of inspection around his new headquarters he had seen the report on Anna Mary.

      Not one of our better jobs, he thought, but routine for round here. The thought did not cheer him up. He had gone through a lot since he took up his new command. Too much, perhaps.

      To his surprise, however, he had no more grey hairs and was no thinner now than two years ago when he had been appointed. Perhaps his expression was more cautious.

      ‘You look so canny these days, John,’ his half-sister Letty Bingham had said only that morning, Saturday, May 27. She had called from New York where she was visiting her husband. Or so Coffin supposed; his name was never mentioned and possibly had long since been banished. It was not a subject he was going to raise with his sister, especially on the telephone, where he was always frugal. But time and distance made no difference to Letty when telephoning, she would call as readily from the States as from across London and talk as long in the small hours as at noon.

      ‘That’s because I’m always watching my rear.’

      ‘As good soldiers do. And you’re a good soldier, John.’

      ‘Think so? And a good politician too, I hope, because I have to be that as well.’

      They shared the same mother but had different fathers and had experienced vastly different upbringings. Letty, offspring of a GI father, had been educated in English schools and an American university. She was a lawyer, and had been married twice. Coffin wondered about the state of this second marriage to a property magnate of some wealth, but, granted they never seem to be in the same continent together, it seemed to be holding.

      Letty had a daughter, and both of them shared another half-brother called William who was a Writer to the Signet in Edinburgh.

      After years of

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