On the blackboard I had written two words:
Bradford Vice.
‘Any idea on where the tip came from?’ asked Mike Hillman.
I shook my head: Obviously someone inside, but the deal was no names.’
‘It’s bound to come out,’ Murphy shrugged.
I nodded: ‘Not much we can do about that.’
‘Be nice for whoever it is when it does,’ smiled Murphy.
‘So who we got?’ asked Hillman.
‘The statement implies a number of senior officers
‘Fuck,’ tutted Murphy.
‘But,’ I continued. ‘Only one officer is actually named, this Detective Inspector.’
I stood up and wrote two more words on the board: Eric Hall.
I wake in the War Room, in the night, on my knees -
I put the stuff away and switch off the computer, the cassette recorder, the heater and the light.
I go back inside and upstairs -
Joan is asleep.
I switch on the radio and undress and get into bed next to her -
I stare up at the ceiling, listening to the country music, trying to stay awake, but -
Yrotcaf Htaed, in blood and above the door.
The moon was shining through the skylight, and I was gazing at the little girl lying in the bath. Thin and pathetic, in a shroud-like garment, lips crooked into a faint and dreadful smile, her hands pressed tightly over her heart. And all around us, people were singing hymns, people with no face, no features, machines -
Yrotcaf Htaed, in blood and swastikas above the door.
And I turned and walked away and everything outside was white and also without feature, without feature except for the parked police car, except for the police car and the white gulls and the black ravens, the white gulls and black ravens circling overhead screaming, circling overhead screaming -
Helen Marshall and the girl screaming:
‘Sti rip sll iwl lik Hunter!’
– and then there was a shot.
denly and e said just good timing you can put it down to fate and off we set transmission five from the office of the dead found on monday the twenty eighth of november nineteen seventy seven in southern cemetery manchester elizabeth mcqueen dead a week or more from brain damage caused by blows to the head from a hammer or an axe with a number of postmortem lacerations being in total eighteen stab wounds to the breasts and chest the stomach and vagina stomach ripped open intestines pulled out knife wounds from her left shoulder to her right knee and there were six further wounds to her right side some of the gashes were eight inches deep an unsuccessful attempt had been made to sever her head body was then attacked by the vermin of the field alas a handbag was not recovered vinyl leather look believed to be dark brown nine inches long seven inches high three inches wide with two carrying handles and one shoulder made of the same material zip fastener and wrap over strap which fastens with a clasp on the side of the bag on which there are two external pockets it contained approximately fifteen pounds in bank of england notes items of cosmetics and a few pieces of yellow tissue paper alas the children in bed missing mummy the children wake missing mummy the children eat cornflakes for breakfast missing mummy the children get dressed missing mummy the children go to school missing mummy the children play with their friends in the cold missing mummy the children eat spam for lunch missing mummy the children listen to the teacher read a story about a spider missing mummy the children buy a texan on their way home from school missing mummy the children eat beans for tea missing mummy the children have a bath missing mummy the children watch starsky and hutch missing mummy the children fight missing mummy the children cry missing mummy the children sleep missing mummy the children dream missing mummy the children dream terrible dreams of missing mummy with no head moving along no differently from all the rest mummy holds her severed head up by its hair swinging it in one hand just like a lantern and it looks at them and says alas from the office of the dead out of the terrible depths have e cried unto thee lord hear my voice o lord let thine ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications if thou lord should mark iniquities o lord who should stand but there is forgiveness with thee and e have stood by thee according to thy law my soul has waited on thy word my soul has hoped in thee o lord from the morning watch unto the evening there is hope in the lord for with the lord there is mercy and with him is redemption and he shall redeem me from all my iniquities give me eternal rest o lord and let perpetual light shine upon me lord our father have mercy Christ have mercy on e who was known in the reno and the nile as mad lizzie but am now known only as the spaghetti lady two kerbies waiting but e had to go and choose him did e not with his nice smile and clean clothes that would not frighten anybody we drove up to the southern cemetery because it is dead quiet here e laughed and he smiled and said e bet it is and e lead him into the darkness where he hit me with the hammer and e fell to the ground and e was moaning and he hit me again and again eleven times then he left me alone until one week later he comes again drags me out of the bushes strips me of everything e am wearing even my boots stabs me in my breasts and chest and with a knife he cuts me open from my knee to shoulder with a piece of broken pane
Chapter 11
Half past seven -
Sunday 21 December 1980:
Bradford Road, Batley, halfway between Leeds and Bradford.
I park by a woollen factory that has 229 as an address and cross the road -
I walk past an estate agents, cross another smaller road leading up to the Batley Grammar School, and there it is, between the Chop Suey and a chemist -
Number 230, Bradford Road, Batley, West Yorks:
RD News.
I walk past the newsagents, cross the road by the red bus shelter with no glass left, and stand on the other side of the road, taking a good look:
One door, big window full of Christmas adverts and gas heaters downstairs -
One window, curtains drawn upstairs.
I cross back over and go inside the shop -
There’s a tall Indian or Pakistani putting the papers out in front of the counter.
He turns and he nods when he hears me come in -
I look at the piles of Sunday papers, the shelves of sweets and boxes of chocolates, the gas canisters and heaters, the cans of pet food and processed meat, the birthday and the Christmas cards, the beer and the spirits, the cigarettes behind the counter covered with more sweets.
I go through the top shelf -
Penthouse, Playboy, Escort, Razzle, Fiesta etc.
‘You got Spunk?’ I ask.
‘You what?’ says the Indian or Pakistani.
‘Magazine called Spunk?’
‘Never heard of it mate,’ he says.
‘Mucky mag, it is.’
‘Never heard of it,’ he says again, but he’s stopped what he’s doing and is moving back behind the counter.
I pick up a Sunday Mirror that promises photographs from Laureen Bell’s funeral -
I hand him the right money and ask him: ‘You own this place do you?’
‘You what?’ he says, putting the coins in the till.
‘Just asking if this is yours?’ I say, looking round.
‘Why?’
‘Just asking that’s all.’
‘We rent it actually, if you must know.’
‘And the upstairs, you rent that as well?’
He’s pissed off is the Indian or Pakistani and he lets me know: ‘What’s it to you?’