He watched the glistening traffic from the window, rubbing his sore arm. “This isn’t a whodunit; pick the likeliest from a list of connected suspects and accuse him. The killer is a stranger, so strange to us that we can have no idea who he might be, because it isn’t about anger; it’s about the lack of it, an absence of any emotional core that might provide a motive. And I don’t know how to deal with that.”
“Then you have to find a new way of shuffling the deck, John. You’re good at that. You’ve always been an early adapter. Arthur’s too set to change his ways, but this time I think it’s down to you.”
Longbright had long been used to assembling information and leaving it before her superiors without comment; she rarely talked to either of the detectives in this manner, but now she sensed May’s need for support. He doubted himself. Perhaps he felt he could no longer rely on his partner. Arthur Bryant was venturing further into the arcane than was healthy for the unit; nobody said anything, but it was clear how the rest of them felt.
“You’re the only one who keeps us focussed on hard fact, John. Facts are all that Faraday’s interested in. We’re all relying on you to provide them.” She saw the tension rumpling his forehead. “What happened on the estate? Why were you there?”
“Luke Tripp was visiting someone. You should have seen him – he knew exactly where he was going. What was so important that he would walk through a no-go area in semi-darkness? Do me a favour: Call the residents’ liaison officer Arthur met with, and find out who uses the community centre. Get me a list of everyone who’s been there this week. Where is Arthur?”
Longbright was almost embarrassed to tell him. “He went to see someone about some rare library books. He said it was to do with the case.” The page containing May’s drunken implication in the Vampire investigation was weighing heavily on Longbright’s mind. So far, she’d had no luck tracing the two officers who had co-signed it. One had left the Met, but the other was female and had married someone in the force. It meant she was operating under her married name, and would be harder to find.
“Are you free for a moment?” Dan Banbury put his head around the door. “There’s something I think you should be aware of.”
May followed Banbury to his office and looked for a place to sit down, but found only a clear plastic inflatable ball. “Where’s your chair?” he asked.
“That’s it. Good for your posture; you soon get used to it. I bought one for Mr Bryant after he complained about his back, but he deliberately and maliciously punctured it.” Banbury rolled the ball over, and May lowered himself tentatively. “Take a look at this. I was waiting for the lab results on the boot prints to come back and ran a couple of search engines on the Highwayman.”
“My God, tell me that figure is wrong.” May found himself looking at a projection of over 12,500 separate Web sites.
“These are sites dedicated to the Highwayman in the UK alone, John. He has a motion-graphic symbol that’s been posted on some kind of shareware and distributed to everyone who’s asked for the download. There’s souvenir memorabilia up on a couple of auction sites, patently fake but selling for a fortune, and the prices are rocketing. There are several bands, the biggest of which, Stand and Deliver, is clearly being sponsored by some corporation chasing the teen demographic. Plenty of merchandise: boots, decals, T-shirts, sweatshirts, masks, jackets, gloves, heavy metal songs about vengeance and justice – most of the material originating right here in the Camden area. The speed with which this stuff has appeared is absolutely unprecedented, and it’s getting a political spin; it’s all good old-fashioned right-wing propaganda about law and order. The Highwayman is no longer just a source of prurient interest. He’s on his way to becoming a cult hero.”
“I don’t understand. He’s killed popular national celebrities; he should be despised. Look at the public outrage over the murder of Jill Dando,” said May, remembering the much-loved TV presenter who was shot on her own doorstep.
“Highwayman’s achieving fantastic popularity among teenage girls,” Banbury pointed out. “Check this.” He opened another site. “‘Why I want the Highwayman to be the father of my unborn baby.’ The girl who wrote this is fifteen years old. ‘Why the Highwayman may be good for us all. Rough Justice: Hard News is the first national newspaper to openly support the Highwayman.’ There’s much darker stuff turning up on the fan sites, pornographic stories and homemade movies about him. We’re going to have imitators on our hands.”
May threw his hands up in disgust. “What is wrong with these people?”
“I suppose you could cite underdog heroes like Bonnie and Clyde – ”
“They were grassroots thieves, robbing banks that were universally hated by the disenfranchised for foreclosing land,” said May. “The Highwayman is just a killer.”
“Think about it, though. The last decade saw the rise of celebrity culture, personality replacing altruistic ideals. This could be the start of the backlash.”
“So he replaces such ideals with romanticised images of himself?” asked May. “How does that work?”
“I guess in some twisted way he thinks he can become the anticelebrity celebrity. And it looks like he’s right. He’s committing the kind of crimes people love to read about or see at the movies, the sort of murders that hardly ever occur in real life. He’s pandering to his public.”
“That’s what Arthur said. He wants us to set a trap.” He glanced back at the Hard News headline. “I think we’ve found someone who can help us.”
∨ Ten Second Staircase ∧
33
Criminal Language
“Where’s Dorothy Huxley?” Bryant demanded of no-one in particular, sauntering into the dingy southeast Greenwich Library that smelled of fish glue, lavender polish, fungus, and cats, with just a hint of warm tramp.
He glanced at the depleted shelves and stood some books upright, checking their covers – The Papal Outrages of Boniface VIII; Lost Zoroastrian Architecture, Vol. VI: Iran; A Treatise on Catastrophe Theory Concerning Saturn and the Number Eight; The Cult of Belphegor; and Biggles and Algy: Homoerotic Subtext in Childhood Literature. No wonder nobody ever browsed here, he thought. Hard-core readers only.
Jebediah Huxley’s literary bequest appeared even more run-down than it had been on Bryant’s previous visits. Lurking in the grim shade of the rain-sodden bypass, awaiting the wrecking ball of cashkeen councillors, it remained a defiant bastion of the abstruse, the erudite, and the esoteric. The crack-spined volumes were flaking with neglect; Dorothy and her gloomy unpaid assistant Frank were unable to save more than a few books a week with their meagre resources. That they continued to do so at all was a miracle. As he peered into the shadowed shelves, Frank’s face materialised between two volumes of the Incunabulum like an unpopular Dickensian ghost.
“You nearly gave me a heart attack,” said Bryant, theatrically palpitating his waistcoat. “You haven’t got the sort of face you should be creeping about with. Kindly don’t do it.”
“I was expecting you earlier, Mr Bryant,” Frank gloomed. “You missed her.”