[Jack Harvey Novels 01] Witch Hunt

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[Jack Harvey Novels 01] Witch Hunt Page 14

by Ian Rankin


  Another shrug. 'I just am, Mr Greenleaf. I just am.

  What you said about the summit being almost too tempting .. . there may be something in that.'

  Another knock at the door. Someone opened the door from the corridor, and someone else bore in a tray of mugs.

  'Mrs Parry said you'd likely be needing some tea,' the man announced.

  He placed the tray on the table. The tea was already in the mugs, but the tray also held a bowl of sugar, jug of milk, and plate of biscuits.

  'Thanks, Derek,' said Elder. The man smiled.

  'Didn't think you'd remember me.'

  'Of course I remember you. How're things?'

  'Not so bad.' The man lowered his voice a little and wrinkled his nose.

  'It's not the same these days though,' he said. 'Not like it was.' His partner, waiting in the corridor with his hand still on the door handle, gave an impatient cough. The man winked at Elder. 'I'll leave you to it then,' he said, closing the door after him.

  'Anyone would think you'd been retired twenty years,' Greenleaf said.

  'All the same,' said Elder, lifting one of the mugs, 'he's got a point.

  I've only been back one full day and I've noticed changes. More machines and less staff.'

  'You mean computers?' Greenleaf poured milk into his chosen mug.

  'They're a boon. All the sifting that Profiling had to do to produce the target list, it only took a few hours.'

  'The problem is that the operatives tend to speed up too, making errors or creating gaps, where patience and plodding really are necessary virtues.' Elder thought of a comparison Greenleaf could relate to. 'It's like running a murder inquiry without the door-to-door. Nothing beats actually talking to someone face-to-face. You get an inkling, don't you, whether they're telling the truth or

  not? I've seen people beat lie-detector tests, but I've never seen them get past a shrewd interrogator.'

  'I'll take your word for it,' said Greenleaf, raising the mug to his lips.

  The door burst open. This time it was Doyle. His eyes darted around excitedly, eventually alighting on the last mug of tea.

  'Great,' he said. He lifted the mug and gulped from it, not bothering with milk or sugar.

  'What is it?' said Greenleaf, recognising in Doyle the symptoms of some news. But knowing Doyle, it would take an age to extract the actual information.

  And indeed, he shook his head as he drank, until he'd finished the tea.

  He went to his chair and gathered up his papers. Only then did he pause, studying the two seated figures.

  'Come on then,' he said.

  'Where?'

  'You can stay here if you like,' Doyle said.

  'For Christ's sake, spit it out, will you?'

  Doyle's eyes twinkled. 'Say please.'

  'Please,' said Greenleaf. Somehow, Elder was managing to stay calm and silent, nibbling on a biscuit between sips of milky tea.

  Doyle seemed to consider. He even glanced over towards Elder who certainly wasn't about to say 'please'. Then he placed his papers back on the desktop and sat down again, but resting on the edge of the chair only.

  'That phone call was Folkestone. They've traced a driver who says he gave a lift to a woman.'

  Elder put his mug down on the table.

  'Really?' said Greenleaf. 'That night? What time?'

  There was a scraping sound as Dominic Elder pushed back his chair and stood up, collecting together his own

  sheaf of paper. 'Never mind questions,' he said authoritatively. 'We can ask those on the way. Come on.' And with that, he strode to the door and out of the room. Doyle grinned at Greenleaf.

  'Thought that might get him going.'

  For one stomach-churning second, Greenleaf thought Doyle had just played some monstrous practical joke. It was a hoax, there was no driver, no sighting. But then Doyle too got to his feet. 'What are you waiting for?' he called back to Greenleaf as he made for the door.

  Sitting in the police station, smoking his sixteenth cigarette, Bill Moncur was regretting ever opening his mouth. It was like his mate Pat had told him: say nowt at no time to no one. When he was a kid, there'd been a little china ornament on the mantelpiece at home. It was called The Three Wise Monkeys. They sat in a row, one seeing no evil, one hearing no evil, one speaking no evil. But one day Bill had picked the ornament up, and it had slipped out of his hand, smashing on the tiles around the fireplace. When his mother came through from the kitchen, he was standing there, hand clamped to his mouth just like the third monkey, stifling a cry.

  He thought of that ornament now, for some crazy reason. Maybe the same crazy reason he'd said 'yes' to the policeman's question.

  'Hello, sir. We're just asking drivers about a woman who might have been hitching along this way a couple of weekends back, late on Sunday the thirty-first or early Monday the first. Don't suppose you were along this way then, were you?'

  Why? Why had he opened his big mouth and said, 'Yes, I was.' Why? It was just so ... stunning. He'd never felt important like that before, included like that. He'd been stopped before by similar checkpoints, usually

  trying to find witnesses to a crash or a hit-and-run. He'd never been able to help in the past. He'd never been able to involve himself. Not until now.

  Say nowt at no time to no one.

  See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.

  'Yes, I was. I picked up a hitch-hiker, too. Young woman. Would that be her, do you think?'

  The constable had said something like, 'Just wait there, sir,' and then had retreated, off to have a word with his superior. Right then, right at that precise moment, Bill Moncur knew he'd said the wrong thing.

  He'd a load to deliver to Margate, and after that he'd to head for Whitstable and Canterbury before home. A busy schedule. Why hadn't he just shaken his head and driven on? Another van, which had been stopped in front of him, now started off again. His boss would give him hell for this. Why didn't you just keep your trap shut, Bill? His van was still revving. He could scarper while the copper was out of sight. But not even Bill Moncur was that stupid. They were looking for a young woman. Maybe she'd gone missing, been raped. Couldn't have been the woman he picked up, could it? Must be somebody else. Oh Christ, but what if it was her? What if she'd been found dead in a ditch somewhere, and here he was saying he'd given her a lift. He'd be a suspect, the sort you heard about on the news. A man is helping police with their inquiries. Well, that's what he was trying to do, but out of public-spiritedness, not because he had anything to confess or anything to be guilty about. Okay, so he skimmed a bit off his company. He might use the van for a bit of business at nights and weekends, but never anything outrageous. Not like Pat, who'd taken his van over the Channel one weekend and used it for smuggling back pom mags, videos, fags and booze. It was like one of those old mobile shops in the back of Pat's van, but he'd shifted the lot before Monday morning, and with four hundred quid clear profit in his pocket. But Jesus, if he'd been caught . . . caught using the firm's van ...

  'Hello, sir.' There were two of them standing there, the constable he'd spoken to before and now this plain-clothes man, reeking of ciggies and CID. 'My colleague tells me you may have some information for us?'

  'Yeah, that's right, but I'm a bit pushed just now, see. Deliveries to make. Maybe I could come into the station later on, like. Tomorrow morning, eh?'

  The CID man was gesturing with his arm, as if he hadn't heard a word Bill had been saying. 'You can park just over there, sir. In the lay-by, other side of the police car. We'll have a little chat then, eh? Don't want to hold up the vehicles behind.'

  So that was that. He'd shoved first gear home and started off. Even as he moved slowly forwards, he thought: I could still run for it. He shook the thought aside. He had absolutely nothing to hide. It wouldn't take him five minutes to tell them his story, and after that he could bugger off again. Maybe they'd take his name and address, maybe they'd get back to him later, but for today he'd be back on the road. Wit
h luck, he could push the speedo to 70 or 80 on some stretches, make up the time easy. Wouldn't it be funny if he got stopped for speeding?

  Sorry, officer, I was helping your colleagues with their inquiries and I sort of got behind on my deliveries.

  He pulled into the lay-by at quarter to eleven. Now, as he sat in the police station and lit his seventeenth cigarette - seventeenth of the day - it was quarter past one. They'd brought him a filled roll, egg mayonnaise, disgusting, and a packet of spring onion crisps. By dint of putting the crisps in the roll, he managed to force it all down. He thought, not for the first time: On a normal run I'd be in the Feathers by now, supping a pint and tucking in to one of that big bird Julie's home-made stews. Full of succulent carrots and little bits of onion. No gristle on the meat either. Beautiful. Egg mayonnaise and bloody crisps. Bill Moncur and his big bloody mouth.

  They'd let him call the office. That hadn't been much fun, even though the CID man had explained that everything was all right, that he wasn't in any trouble or anything, but that he'd have to stay at the station for a little while longer. The firm were sending someone else out, some relief driver (it might even be Pat). The van keys were at the desk.

  The relief would pick them up and do the run for him. The relief driver would stop at the Feathers to chat up Julie and watch the way she pulled a pint with her manicured, painted fingernails on the pump.

  How much fucking longer? he said to himself. There were four empty polystyrene cups in front of him as well as the empty crisp packet, cellophane from the roll, brimming ashtray, ciggies and lighter. He used the tip of his finger to pick up a few crumbs of crisp from the desktop, transferring them to his mouth. They'd be along in a minute to ask him if he wanted more coffee. He'd tell them then: 'I'm not waiting any fucking longer. You can't keep me here. If you want me, you know where to look. I'm in the phone book.'

  That's what he'd say. This time. This time he'd really say it, and not just think it. Bonny girl they'd sent in last time to ask about the coffee, mind. Took his mind off it for a moment, so that he forgot to ask in the end. No, not ask, demand. It was his right to walk out of there whenever he felt like it. He'd only been in a police station twice in his life. Once when he was thirteen, and they found him staggering pissed out of his head along the

  main road. They took him back to the station, put him into a cell, stood him up, and kneed him in the nuts until he threw up. Then they left him for an hour before kicking him out. Could hardly walk straight for days after that ... which was ironic, as Pat said, since they'd picked him up in the first place for not walking straight.

  That was once. The second time, they raided a pub during a brawl, and though he'd taken hardly any part in it he was dragged down to the station with the rest of them. But the barman, Milo, had put in a word for him, so they'd let him go with a caution.

  That was twice. Hardly premier league, was it, hardly major crime? Were they holding him so they could look him up in their records? Maybe they were seeing if he had any priors for rape or murder or abduction or anything. Well, in that case he'd walk when they'd finished checking.

  How long could it take?

  Of course, he did have something to hide. For a start, if it got back to his boss that he was out in the van on a Sunday night . .. well, bosses tended to have inquiring minds in that direction. But his boss wouldn't find out, not unless the police said anything. He could always tell them he was in his car rather than the van anyway .. . but no, it didn't do to lie when the truth wouldn't hurt. If they caught him lying, they might wonder what else he was hiding. No, he'd tell them.

  He was using the van to help out a friend. And indeed this was the truth.

  His neighbour Chas played keyboards in a sort of country and western band. They'd been playing a Sunday night gig at a pub in Folkestone, and he'd been acting as Road Manager, which meant picking up the PA from Margate and taking it back to Folkestone. It was all a fuck-up in the first place, that's why he'd had the drive to do. The band's own PA had blown half a dozen fuses or something, and a friend of Chas's who had a residency in

  Margate had said the band could borrow his band's gear on the proviso that they brought it back the same night.

  Stupid, but the gear was good stuff, a few thousand quid's worth, and the guy didn't want it out of his sight overnight. So, for fifty quid and a few drinks, Bill had driven to Margate, picked up the gear, brought it to Folkestone, sat through the gig, then hauled it back to Margate again before returning to Folkestone, absolutely knackered. It was a lot of work for fifty quid, but then Chas was a mate, and besides, Bill liked being a Road Manager. He'd have liked to play in a band himself had he been what you would call musical. Musical he was not. He'd tried auditioning as a vocalist once - not in Chas's band, in another local outfit - but the ciggies had shot his voice to hell. Like the band's leader said, his timing and pace were superb, and he'd plenty of emotion, but he just couldn't 'hold a tune'. Whatever that meant.

  The door opened and in walked the same CID man who'd spoken to him in the lay-by.

  'Well about bloody time,' said Bill. 'Listen, I can't hang around here any longer, and I'm—'

  They kept filing into the room, three of them as well as the CID man.

  The room, which had been so empty before, now seemed overfull.

  'These gentlemen have driven down from London to see you, Mr Moncur,'

  said the CID.

  'Bit pokey in here, innit?' said one of the men. He looked to Bill Moncur like an old boxer, semi-pro. The speaker turned to the CID man. 'Haven't you got an office we could use?'

  'Well . . .' The CID man thought about it. 'There's the Chiefs office.

  He's not around this afternoon.'

  'That'll do us then.'

  The other two Londoners were silent. They seemed happy enough to let their colleague do the talking. They all trooped out of the interview room and along to a more spacious, airier office.

  Extra chairs were carried in, and the CID man left, closing the door behind him. The oldest of the three Londoners, craggy-faced and grim-looking, had taken the chair already behind the desk, a big comfortable leather affair. Moncur was sitting in the other chair already in place on the other side of the desk. He kept looking to Craggy Face, who seemed like the boss, but he still wasn't speaking. The one who'd done all the speaking, and who now remained standing, started things off.

  'We're Special Branch officers, Mr Moncur. I'm Inspector Doyle, and this' - with a nod to the third man, who had taken a seat against the wall - 'is Inspector Greenleaf. We're particularly interested in what you told Detective Sergeant Hines. Could you go through your story again for us?'

  'You mean I've been kept in here waiting for you lot to arrive from London? You could have asked me over the phone.'

  'We could have, but we didn't.' This Doyle was a short-fuse merchant, Moncur could see that. 'The sooner we have your story, the sooner you'll be out of here. It's not as if you're in any trouble . ..'

  'Tell that to my gaffer.'

  'If you want me to, I will.'

  The third Londoner, Greenleaf, had picked up a briefcase from the floor and rested it on his knees. He now brought out a twin cassette-deck, an old-fashioned and unwieldy-looking thing. The other one was speaking again.

  'Do you mind if we record this interview? We'll have it transcribed, and you can check it for mistakes. It's just a record so we don't have to bother you again if we forget something.

  Okay?'

  'Whatever.' He didn't like it though. The man with the briefcase was plugging in the deck. Positioning it on the desk. Checking that it worked.

  Testing, testing: just like Chas at a sound-check. Only this was very different from a sound-check.

  'You were out on a run in your van, Mr Moncur?' asked Doyle, almost catching him off-guard. The interview had started already.

  'That's right. Sunday night it was. Last day of May.'

  'And what exactly were you doing?'

  'I wa
s helping a mate. He plays in a band. Well, their PA had broken down and I had to fetch another from Margate, see. Only, after the show, the guy who owned the PA wanted it delivered back to him. So off I went to Margate again.'

  'Were you alone in the van, Mr Moncur?'

  'At the beginning I was. Nobody else in the band could be bothered to—'

  'But you weren't alone for long?'

  'No, I picked up a hitch-hiker.'

  'What time was this?'

  'Late. The dance the band were playing at didn't finish till after one.

  Then we had a few drinks . ..' He caught himself. 'I stuck to orange juice, mind. I don't drink and drive, can't afford to. It's my livelihood, see, and I don't—'

  'So it was after one?'

  'After two more like. After the gig, we'd to load the van, then we had a drink . .. yes, after two.'

  'Late for someone to be hitching, eh?'

  'That's just what I told her. I don't normally pick up hitch-hikers, no matter what time of day it is. But a woman out on her own at that time of night .. . well,

  that's just plain bloody stupid. To be honest, at first I thought maybe it was a trap.'

  'A trap?'

  'Yeah, I stop the van for her, then her boyfriend and a few others appear from nowhere and hoist whatever I'm carrying. It's happened to a mate of mine,'

  'But it didn't happen to you?'

  'No.'

  'Tell me about the woman, Mr Moncur. What sort of—'

  But now the man behind the desk, the one who hadn't been introduced, now he spoke. 'Before that, perhaps Mr Moncur could show us on a map?'

  A map was produced and spread out on the top of the desk. Moncur studied it, trying to trace his route.

  'I was never much good at geography,' he explained as his finger traced first this contour line, then that.

  'These are the roads here, Mr Moncur,' said the man behind the desk, running his finger along them.

  Moncur attempted a chuckle. 'I'd never make it as a long-distance driver, eh?' Nobody smiled. 'Well, anyway, it was just there.' A pen was produced, a dot marked on the map.

  'How far is that from the coast?' asked Doyle.

 

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