'How'd it happen?' Sowden asked as they walked along together.

'Don't rightly know,' said the officer vaguely. 'He was riding a bike.'

'That,' said Sowden judiciously, 'is surely a circumstance rather than a cause. How was the breathalyser test?'

It was none of his business, of course, and had the policeman merely indicated this, he would probably have felt it was no more than his own bit of pomposity deserved and let the matter drop. But when the constable said evasively, 'I'm not sure,' Sowden said sharply, 'You did breathalyse them? Or rather him? The driver? That was him there, in the waiting-room, I take it?'

The constable's silence acquiesced.

'And you don't know if he's been breathalysed? Good lord, if even a dying man could smell the whisky, surely you didn't miss it? I could still smell the stuff in the waiting-room! And what's he doing there anyway? Shouldn't he be down at the station, helping with inquiries?'

'Not up to me, sir,' said the constable, stung to reply.

Sowden was prevented from any further probing by the intervention of the ward clerk who drew him aside and murmured. 'There's a police inspector to see you, Doctor. It's about Mr Deeks.'

Waiting in his office was a middle-aged man with bushy eyebrows and a kind of weary affability, like a country parson at the end of a long church fete.

'Headingley,' he said, offering his hand. 'Detective-Inspector. It's about Deeks. Dead, I gather?'

'Yes. Died in the ambulance.'

'Ah. His daughter's here too, is that right?'

'Yes, but you can't see her. She's in shock. I've admitted her for the night. She'll have been sedated by now.'

'Oh. I see,' said Headingley, looking towards the frosted panel in the door against which the police constable’s hat could be seen silhouetted. 'Is that one of our lads out there?'

'Oh yes,' said Sowden. 'But nothing to do with Deeks. A road accident. A cyclist was killed. In fact, if you've got a moment, you might have a word with your constable. He seems a bit vague about whether the driver was breathalysed or not. And the fellow's actually here, in the waiting-room, stinking of Scotch!'



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