Выбрать главу

“That’s just the tone they use. Believe me, if there were good reasons for thinking this arrest isn’t kosher, they’d be shouting it from the rooftops, not dropping vague hints. I’ve told you; they pride themselves on getting the stuff that nobody else knows or is willing to publish. And like most of us, they like to cover their backs just in case they’ve got it wrong. Trust me, I’m a doctor…” Fiona leaned over and kissed the tender skin where earlobe joined jawline.

Kit swivelled in his chair and pulled her into his arms. Now, there was nothing half-hearted about his smile. “Thank you,” he said. “You’ve put my mind at rest.”

“Good. Does that mean we get to go out and play like normal people do on a Saturday?”

“You want to be normal? What’s brought that on?”

“I thought we could maybe give it a whirl, see what we’ve been missing all these years?”

“All right. Just this once. But only if we get to come home and be seriously abnormal later.”

“I’ll hold you to that.”

He grinned. “I can hardly wait.” Extract from Decoding of Exhibit P13⁄4599 Gznqx uqhmn xq. Ftqkh qmddq efqpe ayqna pkrad vmzqq xumee ygdpd q. Mooad puzsf aitmf udqmp.

Unbelievable. They’ve arrested somebody for Jane Elias’s murder. According to what I read, Ellas was sleeping with an Irish cop who went undercover to put away some serious drug dealers last year. And they reckon this was a revenge killing. Well, they’re right about that, at least! They’re mad, those Paddles. Gangland executioners don’t go to such elaborate lengths to take somebody out, but I suppose the upside Is that It means my targets won’t be on their guard. I was beginning to worry that I might not be able to con Kit Martin If he was on the look-out for somebody after him. Mind you, I’d expected Georgia Lester to be a bit more cautious. I’d Interfered with her fuel line so her car would break down, and I was right behind, all ready to be the knight of the road. She was standing by the side of her Jag looking helpless when I pulled up behind her. I offered to have a look at It, but she said she was going to call the AA. I whacked her when she bent down to get her mobile. Then I dragged her into the back seat. It took me about five minutes to get her back to her cottage. It’s got an outhouse down the bottom of the garden, which I’d settled on. I left her tied up and gagged there while I dumped the Jag. By the time I got back it was well dark. All the better, really. It’s the only one I’ve done that’s given me nightmares. I dream I’m suffocating under a mountain of meat and I can’t get free. And then I see her eyes. She’d come round by the time I got back. Her eyes were popping out of her head, like a horse when it gets frightened. I could see the whites all round the irises. It nearly freaked me out. I had to hit her again, which I didn’t want to do. But I couldn’t face strangling her while she was still conscious. I really don’t like the killing. I like the way I feel afterwards, that sense of power that floods through me when I think how well I’m getting my own back. I wish there was an easier way of doing it. But I’ve got to stick to the plan. I wonder how long it will take them to work it out this time?

TWENTY-EIGHT

Joanne Gibb remembered a doctor friend once talking about the abbreviations the medical profession scribble on notes. Not the ones about blood pressure and pulse rate the ones like FLK for ‘Funny Looking Kid.’ What came to mind that Monday morning was NFRH—‘Normal For Round Here.’ Working serious cases in CID produced similar effects in every dedicated officer. Pale skin, hair that was lank within an hour of showering, black smudges under the eyes, frown lines across the forehead and around the mouth, shoulders held unnaturally stiff. Yup, definitely NFRH. She scowled at herself in the mirror of the women’s toilet. It was cosmetic surgery she needed, not cosmetics.

Given how she’d aged externally in three years working for Steve Preston, she shuddered to think about the condition of her internal organs. She poked her tongue out at her reflection, noting it already had its coating of yellowish fur only an hour after the alarm clock had ended the four hours’ unconsciousness she’d managed the previous night. Too much coffee and too little sleep was giving her ulcers, she was convinced of it. The cigarettes were wrecking what remained of her aerobic fitness and she didn’t even want to think about what the drink was doing to her liver. Now her boyfriend was muttering about settling down and starting a family. Judging by the state of the rest of her, all she could expect from her reproductive system was a three-headed monkey.

Men, she decided, had it easy. They mostly managed somehow to look attractively wrecked or admirably haunted like Steve Preston, making women want to take them home and mother them. Women, on the other hand, ended up labelled dog-rough, deserted by their men for next year’s model. Well, it had been her choice, joining the Met. She could have got a job in a bank or in retail management and hung on to what looks she had for a bit longer. And been bored shitless, she reminded herself as she dragged a brush through her jaw-length brown bob. Maybe if she had her hair cut? Something a bit more lively instead of the heavy curtain that hung lifeless round a face she’d once thought of as heart-shaped.

Joanne closed her eyes and sighed. Enough of this self-pitying vanity. She should remember what was important and take her pride in that, not in what she looked like in the mirror. She stuffed her make — up back in its pouch and then into her bag. Picking up the bundle of folders that represented her weekend’s work, she managed to find a spare finger to pull the door open and headed down the corridor to brief the boss.

She found Steve Preston behind his desk with his usual mug of Earl Grey tea, the smoke from the first slim cigar of the day pooling under the low ceiling. “Morning, Joanne,” he said. He looked to her familiar scrutiny like he’d had about the same amount of sleep as her.

“Boss,” she acknowledged, dumping her files on the edge of his desk and subsiding into the chair opposite him.

“You didn’t log off till half past two this morning,” he observed.

Joanne excavated her cigarettes from her bag and lit up. “I was chasing.”

“Catch anything?”

Joanne waved her hand at the files, trailing a thin ribbon of smoke. “I concentrated on the Met, the City boys and the Home Counties. I can do a wider trawl if you think it’s worth it. You know, it would make this sort of job so much easier if we had some sort of central reporting system for serious offences she said with the tired bitterness of those who have to work against inadequate systems.”

“It’ll come,” Steve said. “Too late for our sanity, probably, but it’ll come. The Bramshill boys are playing around with the Canadian system, VICLAS. It’s supposed to be more sophisticated than anything the FBI have got, but it’s anybody’s guess when they’ll actually start using it to benefit field operations, especially the ones as far down the pecking order as this has become. So till then, we’re stuck with phone calls and faxes and calling in favours. How did you do?”

“Depressingly well. I can’t say it’s been fun to be reminded of just how many rapes and serious sexual assaults get reported in any given year. But I think I’ve dug up some interesting stuff. I’ve done a digest for you. That’s what I was doing at half past two this morning.” Joanne opened the top file and took out two sheets of paper. “There you go.”

Steve glanced at the carefully collated information. “Nice job, Joanne. Want to take me through it?”

Joanne grabbed her own copy of the digest and pulled the top file on to her lap. She took a pair of reading glasses out of the breast pocket of her shirt and perched them on her nose. “How I did it, I asked for cases that matched all five criteria that you asked about,” she began, relishing as she always did the process of report and discussion that frequently stimulated new ideas. “Then I asked them to include any other cases that matched three or more of the criteria. What I was looking for was cases where the assault took place out of doors, where a knife was involved, where the victim was a young blonde female, where there were child witnesses to some or all of the assault and where the perpetrator may have made his escape by bike.