Daisy in Chains

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Daisy in Chains Page 21

by Sharon Bolton


  She mimes the hammer blow again, bringing her imaginary weapon down hard on Broon’s head. Hardly has it made contact before she moves on, arm swinging back again, smiting down on Odi.

  Pete can’t help flinching.

  ‘And now I step back, I put my hammer down and pick up my knife. I take hold of his hair in my left hand, I’m right-handed, by the way, and with my right, I slash deep into his throat. My first slash is pretty deep, would almost certainly have killed him, but even so I slash again, and again, making sure. When I’m confident I can leave him, I move on to my next victim.’

  She sidesteps left, taking up position at Odi’s head.

  ‘Is it just me?’ Latimer mumbles.

  Pete steps back, away from the intercom microphone. ‘No, she always does this. Totally freaked us out at first. Apparently she directs the pantomime every year at her children’s primary school.’

  ‘Fuck me, bet that’s something to see.’

  ‘The female victim was almost certainly conscious at this stage.’ Mukerji hasn’t finished. ‘Dizzy, in pain, weak, but knowing she’s under threat. She wasn’t found where she was sleeping, was she?’

  Pete thinks back to the scene that met him just before dawn. Broon hadn’t moved, was still tucked up in his sleeping bag. Odi, on the other hand, wasn’t by his side.

  ‘We think she managed to crawl away a couple of feet before she had the same treatment as Broon,’ Pete says.

  ‘This victim is active.’ Mukerji takes two slow deliberate steps away from the gurney, her eyes fixed on something only she can see. ‘While her partner is being killed, she is dragging herself away, but I go after her.’

  ‘Should have brought popcorn,’ Latimer mutters.

  ‘I catch her, take her hair in one hand and bring down the knife.’ Mukerji mimes as she talks. ‘Two slashes and it’s over. I can steal away.’

  She backs up, leaving imaginary Odi on the ground, sidestepping around real Odi on the gurney. ‘No defence wounds. No sign of a struggle, other than her failed attempt to escape. Nothing under the fingernails. My job is done. It could hardly have gone more smoothly. I slip away, into the night.’

  Latimer clears his throat. ‘Thank you, Dr Mukerji, that was very—’

  ‘Helpful,’ interrupts Pete.

  Chapter 58

  HMP Isle of Wight – Parkhurst

  Clissold Rd

  Newport

  Dearest,

  When we choose to practise medicine, we accept that death will follow us around like a needy, timid puppy, forever at our heels, never quite coming close.

  In the last few years, death came very close to me. I was responsible for the deaths of Jessie Tout, Chloe Wood, Myrtle Reid and probably Zoe Sykes too. They didn’t die by my hand (he adds quickly in case this letter is seen by the wrong eyes!) but they are my responsibility all the same.

  I’m saddened by the news of Odi and Broon’s murders. I did not spill hot blood on the cold stone of Wells Market Square, but the blame lies with me.

  They were two of life’s innocents, a little too childlike to thrive in a world that has consequences and compulsions that would forever have been beyond their grasp. Odi and Broon were out of their depth, and they drowned that cold December night, in their own blood.

  This cannot go on. You, my clever one, must see to that. It is time for the truth to be heard.

  Hamish

  PROPERTY OF AVON AND SOMERSET POLICE. Ref: 544/45.2 Hamish Wolfe.

  Chapter 59

  THE ARTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREE in the interview room is looking the worse for wear. Someone has been pulling the nylon threads so that now, with two more days to go, it has the look of a tree blighted by serious disease or nuclear winter.

  Pete sits, as he’s been told to do, as he’s been doing for nearly fifteen minutes, and tells himself that he will wait two minutes longer and that is it. He has things to be getting on with. He reaches out for the Christmas tree and starts plucking it of nylon needles.

  The door opens and Latimer, back from showing Maggie to her car, comes in. ‘Wouldn’t tell me where she’s going. Don’t suppose she mentioned it to you?’

  Pete shakes his head. He has no idea what Maggie is up to. When she’d finished giving her statement – as one of the last people to see Broon and Odi alive, she’d naturally been one of the first they had to speak to – he’d offered to put a car outside her house for the day. She’d told him it would be a waste of time. She wasn’t going to be there.

  ‘Pete, I need to ask you this.’ Latimer leans back against the door. ‘Did you speak to those two characters, Odi and Broon, about the Wolfe investigation? In the last couple of days?’

  Pete looks down at the carpet tiles. ‘Who says I did?’

  ‘Maggie Rose does. She’s been talking to people in the square, market traders, street cleaners. You were seen talking to the two of them last Thursday.’

  Pete sighs. ‘Maggie herself told me about a possible sighting of someone going into Rill Cavern not long after the last victim disappeared. Odi and Broon were the witnesses in question. I had no choice but to follow it up.’

  ‘And?’

  He looks up. ‘Waste of time. Broon was inebriated, Odi was denying she knew anything. I gave up after five minutes and, to answer your next question, I didn’t tell Maggie about it at the time. In spite of what she likes to pretend, she and I are not working together and I don’t owe her any information.’

  Latimer gives an understanding nod. Then, ‘Pete, I’m going to ask you to give her a wide berth for a week or two, maybe longer.’

  ‘Come again?’ Pete gets to his feet, still holding on to the tree.

  ‘I know you’ve been getting a bit chummy with her, and I wasn’t happy in the first place, not since there’s been a chance of her taking on Wolfe’s case, but after what happened last night, it really can’t be a good idea for one of the lead detectives on a murder case to be cosying up to—’

  ‘To what, exactly?’

  ‘She thinks there’s a connection between the Wolfe case and what happened last night. She thinks her taking an interest in that couple of walkabouts could be what got them killed and, frankly, I think she has a point. Who else would want to hurt them?’

  Pete looks at his nails. They need cleaning. One of the tree’s needles might do the trick.

  ‘OK, well, if there’s nothing else.’ Latimer turns and puts his hand on the door.

  ‘Actually, there is. I don’t agree that the murder last night is connected to Hamish Wolfe, but if you’re right and I’m wrong, there’s one thing you’re all forgetting. If Odi and Broon were killed for what they knew, whoever killed them will know they talked to Maggie hours before they died. She could be next. We need to keep an eye on her.’

  Latimer nods. ‘I’ll see what I can do. Course, we’ll have to find her first. Are you sure she didn’t say where she was going?’

  Chapter 60

  THERE IS DOUBT about whether the plane will take off, more about whether it will be able to land. The cold spell gripping the UK seems to tighten its hold the further north she flies. Maggie spends almost the entire eighty-five minute flight staring out at a frozen, grey ocean of cloud. More than once, she wishes the plane need never have to land, that she can continue flying north, into the vast white emptiness with its promise of oblivion, but sooner than she feels ready for, a tightness in her ears tells her the plane has begun its descent.

  Hamish Wolfe, who is now in a position to give her instructions, wants her to find Daisy. He wants her to track down a woman who disappeared years ago and who may not even be alive any more and he wants this, not because it will help his case, particularly. It won’t. He wants it because he and Daisy have unfinished business. For some reason, even though his entire future is on the line, he is fixating on a woman who hasn’t been in his life for nearly twenty years.

  Thirty minutes late, the plane touches down on to tarmac slick with de-icing fluid before taxiing to the gate.
r />   She can do it. Probably. She has before, more than once. The trick is to approach the problem in the right way, to ask the right questions, and the first question isn’t: how would you find someone who has disappeared? It is: how would you disappear?

  The Maggie Rose step-by-step guide to disappearing:

  Step one: physically remove yourself. Move away from the place you are known, from where you have friends, family, a history. Choose a new home at random, this is most important, somewhere no one will think to look for you. Move there and keep your head down, because you never know who is looking.

  Aberdeen, the most northerly of important British cities, is snowbound, but the road from the airport has been cleared. The city centre, when Maggie catches glimpses of it, looks like a silver city from childhood dreams, as the famous mica crystals of the granite buildings gleam in the clear, northern light. She has never been to Aberdeen before, never been this far north. She reaches the ring road and heads towards a residential district on the city’s southern edge. It is already late afternoon and the light is fading.

  Step two: choose a new name and change it by deed poll. The good news is that this is easier, and much less official, than you might imagine. Most people envisage a court appearance, solicitors, the signing of a formal document, inclusion on an official register, with both new name and old viewable by anyone so inclined. Whilst the change can be done with this level of formality, most people simply don’t bother.

  The reality is that only around one name change in two hundred is ‘enrolled’ and thus available to searches and inspections. Most people make their own deed polls, comprising very simple forms, completed and signed by them, witnessed by two adults. Once in possession of a ‘deed poll’, official documents, such as driving licences and passports, can then be changed to your chosen new name. Of course, the Passport Office, the DVLA, the administrators of any other official documents will keep records of your old name, and if requested to do so by a court, would almost certainly reveal these details. But lay people searching for the ‘old you’ will first of all have to know the new name you are going by. And they won’t.

  Maggie pulls up in a street of large, grey-stone Edwardian houses. Number 20 is two houses away on the opposite side of the road and flat 6 is probably on the first floor. She isn’t in the least bit surprised when nobody answers the doorbell. She gets back into the car.

  Step three: change your job, if you can. This is particularly important for people working in the professions, which nearly all maintain registers of those entitled to practise. A professional body will allow for a change of name, but will keep records of that name change. Anyone staying in the same profession will be traceable through their professional body, even if they choose to work overseas.

  Starting the engine again, Maggie drives around the corner and parks near to a row of shops. McDonald’s always has free Wi-Fi.

  Step four: change your appearance. It’s a small world, wherever in it you choose to move. Changing your hairstyle and colour, swapping spectacles for contact lenses, dressing differently, can all reduce the chances of an unexpected recognition.

  On her second cup of McDonald’s coffee, Maggie has finally finished her search. She checks the car can be left in its current parking spot and sets off walking.

  The first place she stops at is a dead end. So is the second, and the third. The fourth is bigger, smarter, decorated in retro-Regency style with elaborate, white-painted wooden furniture and pink tasselled lampshades. The reception desk has a stencilled portrait of Audrey Hepburn, her cigarette holder held gingerly between highly manicured nails. Each nail is a different colour and pattern. This salon offers very sophisticated manicures.

  Step five: keep a low profile. Especially avoid activity that will attract the attention of the media. Staying away from social media is probably a good idea too. Remember, it’s a small world.

  ‘Good afternoon, that is great hair.’ The woman behind the counter is young with polished red lips and shiny black hair cut short. The very sharpness of her is at odds with the soft, feminine lines of the rest of the salon. ‘How can I help you?’

  ‘I’d like to book an appointment for next Saturday.’

  The woman opens up a screen on her desktop computer and Maggie edges around the desk so that she can see the names that appear. Becca, Sophie, Rikki, Ashlyn. Others too. The salon employs a lot of people. All women. She sees the name she is looking for. Finally.

  ‘Eleven fifteen OK?’

  ‘That would be fine. Can I have a card in case I need to change anything?’

  Step six: you have an Achilles’ heel and you mustn’t forget it. Your National Insurance number. Consisting of two prefix letters, six digits and one suffix letter, a National Insurance number is allocated at birth to every UK citizen and mailed to them shortly before their sixteenth birthday.

  NI numbers are changed in only the most exceptional circumstances, which means your old name and your new will always be linked by your NI number.

  Take heart, though. The existence of the link is one thing, being able to access it quite another. No ordinary citizen has the right to request the NI number of another. If you’re hiding from an abusive husband, for example, he cannot request that HM Revenue and Customs reveal your new identity. The police might have more success, but only in exceptional circumstances after gaining a court order. So, unless you’re wanted in connection with a serious criminal offence, it is highly unlikely that a court order would be given.

  The bottom line is, if you work legally, in the UK, you can always be traced, but not easily, and not without good reason.

  So, that’s how you disappear. Finding the disappeared? Well, that follows on naturally.

  Back in the car, now parked outside the salon, Maggie waits. Using her phone, and claiming a forgotten meeting, she cancels all four manicure appointments that she has just made.

  Finding the disappeared depends upon how successfully they’ve adhered to the six-step plan. Where do most of them fall? At the first hurdle, of course. Finding the disappeared depends upon their failure to adhere to step one.

  Five o’clock comes and goes, two of the employees exit the salon and walk hurriedly off to nearby bus stops or parked cars. The clock ticks round to five thirty and one more young woman leaves. Six o’clock, half past six. A tall, well-built woman with dark, shiny hair and a prominent nose leaves the building. She is wearing an emerald green coat and shiny black boots. Her make-up is perfect, but a little too heavy, as though it, too, must play a part in keeping out the northern chill. She walks with confidence, looks smart and well kept, but Aberdeen employers pay well.

  The failure of step one. Most people, when forced to choose a new place to live, simply cannot do so at random. Try it. Imagine you have to leave, suddenly, without explanation or planning. Think of where you might go. You’ll almost certainly zero in on a place of significance: the home of a friend or relative, the town where your mother was born, the seaside resort you stayed in as a child. We are homing animals. We flock to the familiar, and almost everyone who disappears deliberately, and who doesn’t have the professional help of a witness protection programme, will be traceable through their location. Of course, some will be easier to find than others.

  The dark-haired woman’s face is pinched against the cold as she strides off down the street. Maggie leaves her car and crosses the road. She walks towards the young woman, who won’t know her, will have no reason to be alarmed, and only at the very last moment does she sidestep to bring them both on to a collision course. The woman, whose eyes have been down on the pavement, looks up. Those eyes are not hostile at first, certainly not scared. Just puzzled.

  ‘Hello, Zoe,’ says Maggie.

  Now she looks scared.

  Chapter 61

  ‘AND NOBODY’S RECOGNIZED HER? Seriously? Her face was all over the news for weeks.’ Hamish pushes his chair back and gets to his feet. In the small private interview room he seems taller than ever.r />
  ‘She’s lost a lot of weight,’ Maggie says. ‘Grown her hair, darkened it. She looks quite a lot like her older sister, Stacey, now. And you need to sit down, or the next time someone looks through the window, you’ll be cuffed again. If they don’t terminate the interview.’

  He glances round at the door and rubs his wrist.

  ‘Zoe is a very different young woman now,’ Maggie says. ‘I liked her.’

  Hamish is still standing. ‘Was it mutual?’

  ‘Both she and Stacey were pretty hostile at first. Wanting to know who’d sent me, what I was going to do.’

  He folds his arms and leans back against the door. ‘And what are you going to do?’

  It is the first time he has properly challenged her. ‘I’m going to think about it,’ she says. ‘Talk to you about it. I told them I’m working on your case. That you’re my priority, not them, or the police hunt for Zoe. Now, come and sit down, calmly, or I will bring this to a close and in future we go back to meeting in the hall during normal visiting hours.’

  He takes a step towards her. ‘So what’s the story? Why did she run? Abusive boyfriend?’

  ‘Abusive mother.’ Maggie thinks back to Brenda’s controlling behaviour, the jumpy youngest daughter. The unmistakable signs of OCD in the house. This woman, though, wouldn’t be happy with controlling her house. She’d need to control her daughters too. ‘All three girls suffered, but Zoe always got the brunt of it.’

  Hamish leans on the table towards her. ‘They didn’t think of something less extreme, like, I don’t know, reporting her to the authorities?’

  She gives him a second. ‘They didn’t want to see her in prison. She’s their mum.’

  He nods, reluctantly. As a doctor, he’ll have come across abuse of all forms. And the thousands of excuses the victims make for their abusers. Mum’s a bit of a bully. Mum has a bit of a temper. She doesn’t mean it, she just doesn’t always think. She doesn’t know her own strength.

 

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