Christopher Fowler

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by Bryant; May 08 - Off the Rails (v5)


  ‘But you’re forgetting—she has an alibi. She was seen at the Buddha Bar, then half an hour later she arrived at the Karma Bar and spent the rest of the evening there, with the exception of a ten-minute break a little after midnight when she went out for a cigarette. The station’s not far from the bar, but to get there and back she’d have to be a marathon runner.’

  ‘So we have to bring in Toby Brooke.’

  ‘Do we? I’d rather keep an eye on him for a while. Can we do that?’

  ‘If he makes a run for it we’ll be blamed.’

  ‘I’ll make sure he stays put,’ Bryant promised.

  ‘I spoke to Renfield a few minutes ago. He blew his cover and was forced to have a very strange conversation with Brooke. It seems the lad started to admit his guilt about something, then ran off.’

  ‘Sounds like he’s close to confessing.’

  ‘Perhaps, but I want to do this the traditional way, with a formal interview. Go into Brooke’s background and wear him down by sheer persistence. We have to interview them all again anyway, so we’ll make it part of that process. The others shouldn’t know what we have on him. Meanwhile we take the house apart, try to establish a link between Taylor and Hillingdon.’

  ‘I’m going to leave this to you, then,’ said Bryant. ‘You’ve always said I have no understanding of the young. I remember interviewing those horrible schoolchildren who saw the Highwayman committing murder1 and I still get chills down my spine when I think of them. There’s something wrong with today’s youth; they have faces as blank as Victorian dolls and the morals of Balkan gangsters.’

  They had reached the house. May rang the ground-floor bell. A lopsided thumping sounded in the hall, and Ruby Cates opened the door. It must be tiring for her, getting about with that leg, thought Bryant.

  ‘Both of you at the same time?’ she enquired, raising an eyebrow. ‘This must be serious. You’d better come in.’

  As Bryant had joked, the group were gathered around the edges of the sitting room, although they failed to resemble any of Miss Christie’s characters. Most affected boredom, a pose adopted to mask apprehension.

  May decided to seize the bull by the horns. ‘I must inform you that Matthew Hillingdon has been found dead in a disused tunnel beneath King’s Cross,’ he began. ‘His next of kin have been notified, and—’ But suddenly everyone was talking at once. Only Toby raised his hand.

  ‘How did he die?’

  ‘We’re not at liberty to discuss the finer points of the case. But I can tell you we believe he was murdered. Furthermore, you’ll appreciate that as you were among the last to see him alive, we need to conduct certain examinations that may shed light on—’

  ‘You suspect us!’ said Rajan Sangeeta, genuinely outraged for once.

  ‘We have to explore every avenue of enquiry, and that starts with searching your rooms.’

  ‘You can’t do that without a warrant.’

  ‘Actually, we can if we suspect that there’s evidence on the premises. I’d prefer your permission to act, but it’s not a legal requirement. I’m afraid that’s just the start. I’ll need to impound all electronic communication devices, including phones, laptops, PCs and so on, so I’ll need all your passwords.’

  ‘We need them for our work,’ protested Ruby. She sounded numb.

  ‘I appreciate that, so we’ll be supplying you with alternative access to computers, and I can confirm you’ll be able to request specific study documents, which we’ll copy onto a separate hard drive exclusively for your use.’

  ‘That’s a bit over the top,’ said Theo. ‘It could throw my studies off-track.’

  ‘Christ, Matt’s dead and all you can think about is your bloody schedules?’ Toby complained.

  ‘It’s all right for you, poor boy, you’re going to fail anyway,’ Theo barked back. He turned to the detectives. ‘What can we do to get through this as quickly and painlessly as possible?’

  ‘Our forensic team will be arriving in a few minutes to begin conducting searches of your rooms,’ said May. ‘You can take what you need, provided it’s under supervision from a member of the Unit. We’ll detail all property removed from the site, and make sure it’s returned to you as soon as we can. If anyone has any concerns or objections—’

  ‘I don’t want you searching my room,’ Nikos blurted. Everyone turned to look at him.

  ‘I’m afraid you have no choice in the matter,’ May told him. ‘If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry about. There are a few further things I want to bring up. Our assistant, Detective Sergeant Longbright, will need to update each of your statements, concerning your whereabouts on Tuesday night, with further names and addresses of everyone who can confirm your location.’

  ‘Why should we help you?’ asked Theo. ‘I mean, if you already have the powers you need?’

  ‘A fair question, but I’d like to think you would want to do it for Matthew Hillingdon, to help us for his sake. We have no motive for his death. We need to find out who he was with that night. I’m sure I don’t need to warn you about obstructing the due process of what is now an official investigation. Miss Cates, I understand you and Mr Fontvieille had a falling-out—’

  ‘Have you been following us? Who the hell do you think you are?’

  ‘We’re a specialist investigatory unit under the control of the Home Office, and you are civilians. Trust me, you don’t want to fall into the hands of the Metropolitan Police. What did the two of you argue about?’

  ‘We need to borrow some money to pay the rent and electricity,’ said Ruby. ‘I asked Theo to cover the bills and he refused. I just thought he should agree to help us through a rough patch.’

  ‘It’s a matter of principle,’ said Fontvieille. ‘If we can’t manage our bills now, how can we be expected to construct and run entire social environments that might one day involve millions of pounds? Think it through, Ruby.’

  ‘Anyway, I borrowed the money from Toby,’ Ruby replied, coldly.

  ‘Ah, yes, you’re quite well off at the moment, is that right?’ May checked his notes.

  ‘An aunt died and left me some money,’ Toby muttered. The lie was so blatant that it hung in the air, a balloon of a falsehood waiting to be punctured.

  ‘Well, you can give our detective sergeant all the details on that. Mr Fontvieille, I understand you used to date Cassie Field, the manager of the Karma Bar, is that true?’

  ‘It’s common knowledge,’ replied Theo airily.

  ‘Not to me, it’s not,’ Ruby snapped back.

  ‘What does it matter? It was, like, a whole eight months ago.’

  The temperature in the room was heating fast, but in this case May knew that a confrontational atmosphere could pay off; the housemates were becoming upset and dropping their guard.

  ‘We see that two of you have had trouble with the police in the past,’ May continued. ‘Mr Fontvieille, assault; Mr Nicolau, sexual harassment, was it?’

  ‘I got into a fight outside a nightclub in Richmond,’ said Fontvieille. ‘Fairly normal behaviour for a Thames Valley boy, wouldn’t you say?’

  ‘And you, Mr Nicolau?’

  ‘He was caught upskirting,’ said Sangeeta.

  ‘A load of us were doing it at the time,’ Nicolau admitted. ‘Kind of embarrassing to think about now.’

  ‘Is this a youngsters’ term I’m not familiar with?’ asked Bryant, bewildered.

  ‘It’s the rather grubby little practise of holding a camera under a girl’s skirt in public places, when she’s on a tube escalator for instance, then posting the shot on the Internet,’ May translated.

  ‘Oh, charming.’ Bryant grimaced. ‘Is there nowhere a lady is safe these days?’

  ‘Where did they find you two?’ asked Theo. ‘You’re like something out of a display case at the Victoria & Albert Museum. Incredible. If this is going to take ages, do you mind if we order in pizzas?’

  ‘You’re not taking this very seriously, are you?’ There was a threa
d of danger in Bryant’s voice. ‘You don’t seem to appreciate that all five of you are under suspicion of conspiracy to murder. That is, an agreement between two or more persons to commit an illegal, wrongful act by sinister design, to use a rather archaic definition.’

  The overheated room exploded into fits of bad feeling and sour temper, like a series of slightly disappointing fireworks going off. There were indignant complaints and toothless threats, declarations of rights and talk of lawsuits. It was the perfect time for Longbright, Banbury and Renfield to arrive.

  Soon all doors had been flung open, all drawers emptied, cupboards cleared, computers unplugged, belongings tagged and bagged, and the fight had gone out of the five students, who watched forlornly as their lives were dissected before them. It appeared the quintet had finally realised that this was no longer a mere inconvenience, but something much darker and more devastating in its consequences.

  1. See Ten Second Staircase.

  THIRTY-SIX

  Empty-Handed

  Law-abiding citizens are hard to trace. Albert Thomas Edward Ketch had existed, of that there was no doubt, but he was unknown to the police. The DVLA had a clean driving licence on record, the borough of Islington listed the name on their electoral register, Barclays Bank had a closed account, and a former address in a St Pancras council block yielded nothing but statistical proof that Mr Fox’s father had once been alive.

  Longbright needed to put a face to the name. If Mr Fox’s father remained intangible, at least Camden registry office had a marriage licence on file, which presented her with a wife. Ketch had wedded one Patricia Catherine Burton, who had provided the registrar with an address in Wembley. She had moved the same year, presumably to live with her new husband, because the marriage certificate was posted to a different North London address. Her son, Jonas, had been delivered less than six months later at Hampstead’s Royal Free Hospital, and had received health checks for the first four years of his life at clinics in the area. After that, the trail went cold. Mrs Ketch had no bank details or credit cards. Some men still exerted power over their wives by controlling their finances.

  ‘I’m running out of ideas,’ Longbright told Renfield as they finished filling in evidence forms for the Mecklenburgh Square house. ‘I’ve got a little on the parents but nothing on the boy.’

  ‘See if he was registered as a Young Offender under the name of Jonas Ketch,’ Renfield suggested. ‘A tenth of all the kids in London commit a serious offence at least once. If something happened to Mr Fox in his childhood, he might have gone a bit AWOL and turned up on Islington’s books, or Camden’s.’

  ‘Thanks, Jack. I should have thought of that. I’m tired. I haven’t been sleeping well.’

  ‘Hardly surprising. I’m going to grab a bite. Want me to pick you up something?’

  ‘No, I’m fine. I want to get this lot sorted out.’

  ‘You can’t go off your grub and get all moody on me. Tell me you don’t fancy a sausage sandwich smothered in brown sauce.’

  ‘Strangely enough, I don’t.’

  Renfield headed off to the shops. Longbright watched from the window as he strutted along the wet street with nothing more than food on his mind. I should learn to be more like Jack, she thought, returning to her paperwork.

  ‘Ah, there you are,’ said Bryant, ambling into the room, ‘I was going to stroll back with you from Mecklenburgh Square but you’d vaporised. Those students may dress like Gap advertisements but you should have seen the inside of their fridge. Oswald Finch used to keep his cadaver drawers in a better state. Having said that, I did once leave a beetroot salad in with one of his corpses, and he mistook it for—’

  ‘Arthur, I’m not in the mood,’ said Longbright. ‘I’m sorry.’

  ‘No, I’m the one who should be sorry.’ He removed his hat and dropped into the battered armchair Longbright had installed for his visits. ‘In my usual clumsy way I was just trying to cheer you up. Unfortunately most of my conversation involves death, ancient history or mad people. No wonder I’ve never been very popular with the ladies. What did you think of our students?’

  Longbright rose and blew a newly dyed blond curl from her eye. ‘A pretty ordinary bunch: a health-freak, a geek, a jock, a wide boy and a nerd.’

  ‘I love the way you categorise; it’s all so simple for you. Think they have any secrets they’re hiding from us?’

  ‘Of course. They wouldn’t be human if they didn’t. I just think their secrets will turn out to be pretty mundane.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Oh, crushes, alliances, jealousies, money worries.’

  ‘Hatreds?’

  ‘Strong word. Dislikes, perhaps. Toby Brooke isn’t too keen on Theo Fontvieille.’

  ‘Theo needles him constantly about his background. According to John, the rich boy dated the girl from the Karma Bar, then dumped her, but he’s so thick-skinned that he takes other girls to the bar without realising that he’s upsetting her. Dear Lord, I’m sounding like a gossip columnist.’

  The idea made Longbright smile. ‘That’s okay, they’re just like any dysfunctional alternative family.’

  ‘I don’t believe it’s a conspiracy. These students wouldn’t be able to organise a tea party without getting on each other’s nerves, let alone kill someone and hide the evidence. If this was something they’d planned, they would never have left Matthew Hillingdon’s travel card in the house, where it could be found.’

  ‘Right now that and the partial print are the only pieces of incriminating evidence we have,’ Longbright reminded him glumly.

  ‘I’m convinced that the murderer is operating alone, without the knowledge of the others. That damned sticker links Taylor to the Karma Bar and Toby Brooke. I wonder how John’s getting on with him.’ Bryant watched Longbright wince as she lifted a box from the desk. ‘How’s your shoulder?’

  ‘Not so bad. It didn’t even need a stitch.’

  ‘Let Colin take over from you when he gets back. He and Dan are going to go through the impounded evidence.’

  ‘I’m fine,’ Longbright promised. ‘I’m much happier working.’

  ‘Okay, then you can carry on following the Indian chap all over town, if you wouldn’t mind. I don’t like the cut of his jib. I want all five housemates tailed over the weekend. We shouldn’t let any of them out of our sight. I’m counting down the hours until the Unit is pulled from service. I can’t see us making an arrest in time, but let’s keep watching them.’ Bryant tapped his fingers beneath his beady eyes. ‘All five, all weekend, everywhere they go.’

  Bimsley and Banbury arrived back at the warehouse, and spent the next three hours searching the hard drives of the five housemates’ laptops. They turned up little of interest. Only Ruby Cates kept her financial details on record, along with an online diary that confirmed her obsession with ‘The Rat,’ who was easily identified by his customised Porsche. Theo had a few dodgy gambling sites bookmarked, Sangeeta had too many photographs of Ruby in his photo library, Nikos had similar photos of Cassie in the bar and an awful lot of porn, Cates had posted some cryptic remarks on Facebook and Toby had worked hard at erasing details of the sites he visited. Their computer tracks seemed unusually guarded and cautious. To Dan’s suspicious mind it was proof that the students knew they were being watched, but Colin thought they were merely being security-conscious.

  All five were running extensive music libraries of bands made popular over the last few years. All five had infringed copyright laws by file-sharing movies, but that seemed to be the extent of their illegal activities.

  The iPhoto files from Matt Hillingdon’s laptop yielded some odd photographs that looked like colourful knitted versions of radio interference, so Bimsley forwarded them to Bryant’s phone, hoping that he might be able to figure out what they were—once he had managed to open them.

  At six P.M. John May returned to the Unit with bad news. He and Meera had just finished interviewing Toby Brooke. Unprompted, the student had shown
them a sheet of altered stickers that had been left lying about the house, and had admitted to handling them. Their evidence was compromised.

  It was now Friday evening, and the case had once more stuttered to a halt. Bryant was forced to admit that it was by far the most infuriating investigation he had ever undertaken.

  It was time, he decided, to take more drastic steps, starting with a visit to North London’s resident white witch.

  THIRTY-SEVEN

  Bad Air

  What more can I do?’ asked Bryant. ‘We’re back to one piece of evidence and five less-than-ideal suspects. John has banned me from using any of my more outré routes of investigation. And I have this ragbag of notions in my head that don’t seem to connect—a red dress, some strange patterns from Hillingdon’s laptop, a missing phone, the way people move on the tube …’ He paused to take a good look at his old friend Maggie Armitage. ‘What happened to you?’

  The Grade IV White Witch and leader of North London’s Coven of St James the Elder was spattered in pink paint, not a nice pink, either, but a shade that could best be described as Tired Marshmallow. ‘I was preparing a philtre for Deirdre,’ she explained, ‘because her sex life has taken a turn for the worse again. She met a Polish bus driver with a habit of calling round at three A.M., and the trouble is he’s on nights, so he’d park a bus full of passengers outside her house while he came in.’

  ‘That must have been inconvenient.’

  ‘Not really. His route goes past her house.’

  ‘I meant for her.’

  ‘Oh, yes, that was the problem. She’d wanted to meet a man with his own transport, but technically of course he doesn’t.’

  ‘Doesn’t what?’

 

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