
Ellis stands up. ‘What a fucking way to go,’ he says.
Detective Chief Superintendent Noble lights up and exhales. ‘Silly slag,’ he hisses.
‘I’m Detective Sergeant Fraser and this is Detective Constable Ellis. We’d like to take a statement and then you can get off home.’
‘Statement.’ He pales again. ‘You don’t think I had anything…’
‘No, sir. Just a statement detailing how you came to be here and report this.’
‘I see.’
‘Let’s sit in the car.’
We walk over to the road and get in the back. Ellis sits in the front and switches off the radio.
It’s hotter than I thought it would be. I take out my notebook and pen. He reeks. The car was a bad idea.
‘Let’s start with your name and address.’
‘Derek Poole, with an e. 4 Strickland Avenue, Shadwell.’
Ellis turns round. ‘Off Wetherby Road?’
Mr Poole says, ‘Yes.’
‘That’s quite a jog,’ I say.
‘No, no. I drove here. I just jog round the park.’
‘Every day?’
‘No. Just Sundays.’
‘What time did you get here?’
He pauses and then says, ‘About sixish.’
‘Where’d you park?’
‘About a hundred yards up there,’ he says, nodding up the Roundhay Road.
He’s got secrets has Derek Poole and I’m laying odds with myself:
2-1 affair.
3-1 prostitutes.
4-1 puff.
Sex, whatever.
He’s a lonely man is Derek Poole, often bored. But this isn’t what he had in mind for today.
He’s looking at me. Ellis turns round again.
I ask, ‘Are you married?’
‘Yes, I am,’ he replies, like he’s lying.
I write down married.
He says, ‘Why?’
‘What do you mean, why?’
He shifts in his tracksuit. ‘I mean, why do you ask?’
‘Same reason I’m going to ask how old you are.’
‘I see. Just routine?’
I don’t like Derek Poole, his infidelities and his arrogance, so I say, ‘Mr Poole, there’s nothing routine about a young woman having her stomach slashed open and her skull smashed in.’
