‘Not exactly. Something heavy, made of wood. We’re doing more tests, of course. We’re hopeful of getting some forensic evidence that will help us catch the person who did it.’
‘You haven’t found the … weapon, then?’
‘No.’
Fry knew that Mrs Merritt had identified the body of her husband earlier. Although Merritt had been cleaned up in the morgue, it would have been obvious what his fatal wounds were. It was impossible to conceal head injuries in the way the mortuary staff could sometimes keep damage to other parts of the body from the family.
The report in front of Fry talked about the results of the blows on Aidan Merritt’s skull. There had been brain injuries both at the site of impact, and on the opposite side of the skull due to the contrecoup effect of the brain ricocheting within the skull.
In fact there had been three blows, the pathologist said. The first two had not been immediately fatal, but they had cracked the skull and certainly concussed the victim. They had also caused the leaking of cerebrospinal fluid, cerebral contusions, lacerations to the scalp and haemorrhaging of the skin. If Merritt had survived those two injuries, he might well have been left in a coma and suffered permanent brain damage. The bruising from the floor, the glass cuts to his face and hands — they seemed almost irrelevant.
But the third blow, the one that had struck Aidan Merritt when he was already on the ground, was the one that had pulverised the right side of his brain.
‘Mrs Merritt, did your husband ever talk about David and Trisha Pearson?’ asked Fry.
She shook her head in confusion. ‘Who? Do they work at his school?’
‘No. They were two visitors to the area who went missing a couple of years ago.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Mr Merritt was interviewed at the time. The Pearsons visited the Light House shortly before they disappeared.’
‘I think I remember that,’ said Samantha, with a great effort. ‘I didn’t like him being interviewed by the police just because he was there at the pub that night. But he told me it was only routine. Isn’t that right?’
‘Yes, it is,’ said Fry.
‘Well then. I don’t understand. I don’t seem to understand anything.’
Fry watched her, judging that the moment had come when she wouldn’t get any more information. She hadn’t got very much at all from the visit. But she hoped that some day Mrs Merritt would be able to understand a little bit better.
Ben Cooper examined the buildings critically. On the night they disappeared, the Pearsons had been setting off from Castleton to walk here, to their holiday cottage, which turned out to be a two-bedroom conversion from some ancient outbuildings on Brecks Farm.
The Old Dairy, it was called. Looking at it, Cooper suspected it had been used for some less picturesque purpose than a dairy, but he supposed the name sounded better in the tourist brochures. The cottage stood well away from the farmhouse and the more modern agricultural buildings that had been erected much closer to the tarmac roadway running south towards the back road out of Peak Forest.
Whatever their purpose, the buildings that had become the Old Dairy would quickly have become awkward and inconvenient for modern farming practices. A rough track running back from the present farmyard had been maintained for the benefit of paying guests, but otherwise the situation of the cottage was quiet and undisturbed. Ideal for a peaceful holiday. Perfect if you wanted to drop out of sight for a while.
Cooper turned until his back was to the door of the cottage. The view was pretty peaceful too. It encompassed several acres of rough grazing dotted with sheep, and a backdrop of moorland, with a few other farmsteads nestled here and there in the landscape, all of them a good walk away from The Old Dairy.
And there, prominent on a rise to the north-west, was the Light House. Unlike the distant farms, its position made it seem surprisingly close. If he was a visitor to the area staying at this cottage, he would certainly have been tempted to walk to the pub in the evening. Probably every evening. Although it was uphill, the slope wasn’t too steep and didn’t look difficult to manage. No problem for anyone reasonably active, and eager for a pint or a bar meal. And there was always the reassurance that it would be mostly downhill coming back.
The Pearsons would have been familiar with the Limestone Way. They’d used it earlier in the week, according to the statements. Coming back in the dark, in the snow, they would have looked for the little circular signs with their yellow arrows identifying the route. For most of its length here, the trail ran between dry-stone walls, which would have offered some protection from drifting snow for a while. In his own mind, there was no question. That was the way he would have come.
Well, as long as he was in his senses and not too befuddled by drink. Then, there was no saying what he might have done. The Pearsons might have taken the most familiar route, but not necessarily the safest.