They were both silent as Tony Omotoso drove the marked police car slowly down Westbourne Villas, a wide street that ran south from New Church Road to the seafront. Both of them peered out at the numbers on the large detached and semi-detached Victorian properties. Every few seconds the wipers made a sudden clunk-clunk against the light drizzle, then fell silent. Ahead of them, beyond the end of the street, the restless waters of the English Channel were a dark, ominous grey.
Like their hearts.
‘Coming up on the right,’ Upperton said.
They parked the car outside a semi-detached house that looked surprisingly smart for student accommodation, then walked along the black and white tiled path to the front door, tugging on their caps. Both of them looked at the Entryphone panel with its list of names. Number 8 read: Caplan/Revere.
PC Omotoso pressed the button.
Both of them were secretly hoping there would be no answer.
There wasn’t.
He pressed the buzzer again. Give it a few more tries, then they could leave and with any luck it might become someone else’s problem.
But to his dismay there was a crackle of static, followed by a sleepy-sounding voice.
‘Hello?’
‘Susan Caplan?’ he asked.
‘Yes. Who is it?’
‘Sussex Police. May we come in, please?’
There was a silence lasting a couple of seconds but felt much longer. Then, ‘Police, did you say?’
Omotoso and Upperton shot each other a glance. They were both experienced enough to know that a knock on the door from the police was something that was rarely welcomed.
‘Yes. We’d like to speak to you, please,’ Omotoso said pleasantly but firmly.
‘Uh – yuh. Come up to the second floor, door at the top. Are you calling about my handbag?’
‘Your handbag?’ he said, thrown by the question.
Moments later there was a rasping buzz, followed by a sharp click. Omotoso pushed the door open and they went into a hallway which smelled of last night’s cooking – something involving boiled vegetables – and a faint hint of old wood and old carpet. Two bicycles leaned against the wall. There was a crude rack of pigeonhole mail boxes and several advertising leaflets for local takeaways were lying on the floor. The exterior might look smart, but the common parts inside looked tired.
They walked up the manky, threadbare stair carpet and, as they reached the top of the second flight, a door with flaking paintwork directly in front of them opened. A pretty girl, about twenty, Omotoso estimated, parcelled in a large white bath towel and barefoot, greeted them with a sleepy smile. Her shoulder-length dark hair was in need of some attention.
‘Don’t tell me you’ve found it!’ she said. ‘That would be amazing!’
Both men courteously removed their caps. As they entered the narrow hallway of the flat, there was a smell of brewing coffee and a tinge of masculine cologne in the air.
Tony Omotoso said, ‘Found what?’
‘My handbag?’ She squinted at them quizzically.
‘Handbag?’
‘Yes. The one some shit stole at Escape Two while we were dancing on Saturday night.’
It was a nice flat, he clocked, walking into the open-plan living area, but untidy and sparsely furnished, in typical student fashion. It had polished bare oak flooring, a big flat-screen television, expensive-looking hi-fi and minimalistic but tatty dark brown leather furniture. A laptop on a desk near the window overlooking the street was switched on, showing a Facebook homepage. Strewn haphazardly around the floor were a pair of trainers, a screwed-up cardigan, female panties, a single white sock, piles of paperwork, a half-empty coffee mug, several DVDs, an iPod with earphones plugged in and the remains of a Chinese takeaway.
It had been Ian Upperton who’d had to break the news last time they had done this, so they had agreed between them that today it was Omotoso’s turn. Every officer had their own way of doing it and Omotoso favoured the gentle but direct approach.
‘No, Susan, we haven’t come about your handbag – I don’t know about that, I’m afraid. We’re from the Road Policing Unit,’ he said, registering her sudden look of confusion. ‘According to the records from Brighton University, you are living with Tony Revere. Is that correct?’
She nodded, eyeing each of them with sudden suspicion.
‘I’m afraid that Tony has been involved in a road traffic accident on his bicycle.’
She stared at him, suddenly fixated.
‘I’m sorry to say, Susan, that following the injuries he received he didn’t survive.’
He fell silent deliberately. It had long been his policy to let the recipient of the message come out with the words themselves. That way, he found, it sank in better and more immediately.
‘You mean Tony’s dead?’ she said.
‘I’m very sorry, yes.’
She started reeling. PC Upperton caught her arm and guided her down, on to the large brown sofa opposite a glass coffee table. She sat there in silence for some moments, while the two officers stood awkwardly. There was never an easy way. Each time the reaction was different. Susan Caplan’s was to fall silent and then start to shake, little tremors rippling through her body.
They remained standing. She was shaking her head from side to side now. ‘Oh shit!’ she said suddenly. ‘Oh shit.’ Then she seemed to collapse in on herself, burying her face in her hands. ‘Oh shit, please tell me it’s not true.’
The two officers glanced at each other. Tony Omotoso said, ‘Do you have someone who could come round and be with you today? A girlfriend? Any member of your family you’d like us to call?’
She closed her eyes tight. ‘What happened?’
‘He was in a collision with a lorry, but we don’t have all the details.’
There was a long silence. She hugged herself and began sobbing.
‘Susan, do you have a neighbour who could come round?’ Omotoso asked.
‘No. I – I don’t – I – we – I – oh shit, shit, shit.’
‘Would you like a drink?’ Ian Upperton asked. ‘Can we make you a cup of tea or coffee?’
‘I don’t want a sodding drink, I want my Tony,’ she sobbed. ‘Please tell me what happened?’
Omotoso’s radio crackled. He turned the volume right down. There was another long silence before eventually he said, ‘We’re going to need to make sure it is Tony Revere. Would you be willing to identify the body later today? Just in case there’s been a mistake?’
‘His mother’s a control freak,’ she blurted. ‘She’s the one you’re going to have to speak to.’
‘I’ll speak to anyone you’d like me to, Susan. Do you have her number?’
‘She’s in New York – in the Hamptons. She hates my guts.’
‘Why’s that?’
‘She’ll be on the first plane over, I can tell you that.’
‘Would you prefer her to identify Tony?’
She fell silent again, sobbing. Then she said, ‘You’d better get her to do that. She’d never believe me anyway.’
18
Tooth was small. It was an issue he’d had to deal with since childhood. He used to be picked on by other kids because of his size. But not many of them had ever picked on him twice.
He was one of the tiniest babies Brooklyn obstetrician Harvey Shannon had ever delivered, although he wasn’t premature. His mother, who was so off her face with junk she hadn’t figured out she was pregnant for six months, had gone to full term. Dr Shannon wasn’t even sure that she realized she had actually given birth, and staff at the hospital told him she kept looking at the infant in bewilderment, as if trying to figure out where it had come from.
But the obstetrician was worried about a bigger problem. The boy had a central nervous system that seemed to be wired all wrong. He appeared to have no pain receptors. You could stick a needle in the tiny mite’s arm and get no reaction, while all normal babies would bawl their lungs out. There were any number of possible causes, but the most likely, he figured, was the mother’s substance abuse.