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by Danielle Ramsay


  Satisfied, Brady watched as Travers, lost for words, tried to regain some composure.

  ‘Yes … well, I think I need some time to confer with my client…’ Travers replied, as he turned to Simmons.

  ‘Take as long as you want,’ suggested Brady. ‘He’s going nowhere.’

  He looked at Conrad and nodded. They were finished with Simmons.

  ‘Interview terminated at 10.27 am,’ he stated as he shoved his chair back and stood up.

  Brady gave Simmons one last cursory glance.

  ‘I only wish that it hadn’t taken Sophie’s murder for your sick abuse of her to be exposed. Whatever happens to you will never make up for the horrific sexual acts you did to that eleven-year-old girl,’ Brady said as he picked up one of the photos. He shoved it in front of Simmons’ face. ‘See? See that? That ripped the victim’s eleven-year-old body apart. The damage was so brutal that the scars and trauma were still painfully evident in her autopsy.’

  Simmons turned away.

  ‘Look at what you did to her, you sick son of a bitch!’ demanded Brady as he pushed the photograph into Simmons’ face. ‘I should make you choke on it, you bastard!’

  ‘DI Brady, I wish to remind you that this threatening behaviour is completely unacceptable,’ complained Travers.

  ‘Yeah?’ snarled Brady, refusing to take his eyes off Simmons. ‘So sue me!’

  ‘And you, you sick son of a bitch. I swear you’ll live to regret every act of sexual abuse you committed on her so help me God!’ threatened Brady as he scrunched up the photograph in his hand and threw it at Simmons’ rigid face.

  ‘Come on, Conrad, the air in here is turning my stomach!’ Brady said as he turned and left.

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Brady was on his third coffee as he sat in the depressing basement canteen. He couldn’t digest anything after his interview with Simmons. The Serious and Organised Crime Agency were on their way which meant that Brady would have no further dealings with him. Not that he was bothered. He just wanted the assurance that the bastard would get everything he deserved.

  He looked up at the barred windows and wondered what was going through Matthews’ head right now. Brady couldn’t figure him out; this wasn’t Matthews. Sure he may have had a hard job keeping his dick in his trousers, but shagging a fifteen-year-old girl and then murdering her? That wasn’t the Matthews Brady had known for sixteen years. Brady watched the miserable drizzle steadily trickle down the barred windows, blurring the outside world. He didn’t know why he was sat there. He just knew he needed somewhere familiar to get his head around what had happened in the past twelve hours.

  He couldn’t help going over the events that had led to Matthews’ arrest. He wished he’d stayed with the others in The Fat Ox instead of tracking down Madley. Brady accepted that he had been looking for trouble and that’swhat he’d got. But he had never expected it to turn out this way. He couldn’t shake the feeling that he had set Matthews up; that Matthews had walked into Brady’s trap. But it wasn’t like that. Not that Matthews would believe him. Brady had had no idea that he would end up finding incriminating evidence against Matthews when he searched his house. Let alone that Conrad would call Gates while he was in there. But then again, if Conrad hadn’t then maybe Brady wouldn’t be sat in the miserable police canteen on his third coffee. He’d be dead and Matthews would be long gone.

  Brady stared at the grey dusty shafts of light stabbing through the barred windows. Matthews was scared to talk; scared shitless of the consequences. Brady tried to ignore the thought that kept going through his mind. It was too horrific to even contemplate.

  He took a sip of burnt, bitter tasting coffee.

  His phone rang. He picked it up off the table and answered it.

  ‘What?’ he muttered thickly.

  ‘I heard about Jimmy,’ she explained.

  ‘Yeah?’ said Brady, not in the mood for talking.

  ‘Conrad told me,’ she added.

  ‘So?’

  ‘You look like you need someone to talk to, that’s all.’

  Brady suddenly realised that she was standing a few tables away from him.

  ‘I’m not in the mood for small talk,’ he warned.

  ‘Good, that makes two of us,’ Jenkins concluded as she walked over to him.

  She pulled out a chair and joined him.

  They sat in silence for a few minutes while Brady mulled over everything that had happened.

  ‘I need to get him to talk,’ Brady eventually stated. ‘But he thinks I set him up.’

  ‘And did you?’ Jenkins asked.

  ‘What do you think?’ replied Brady edgily.

  He wearily sighed as he ran his hand over his stubble. He hadn’t had time to shower this morning. Not that it mattered.

  ‘Shit, Amelia! Matthews thinks I was behind his arrest. That I had it planned and had arranged for an armed response team to be there, along with Gates. How the hell was I to know he was going to be at the house? He’d gone to ground for the past few days not answering my calls. And then he turns up when I least expect.’

  ‘You’re being too hard on yourself,’ Jenkins reasoned.

  ‘Am I?’ he questioned.

  Jenkins nodded.

  ‘I know it wasn’t Jimmy,’ Brady eventually said.

  She looked at him questioningly.

  ‘And … I reckon I know who did it … but …’ Brady’s voice trailed off.

  He shook his head, not wanting to believe it.

  ‘I hope to God that I’m wrong. Because if I’m not … Fuck!’ Brady hoarsely said as he stared at Jenkins. He kept going over in his head what she had said about the significance of the attack on the deceased victim’s face. And he didn’t like the answer that kept coming to mind.

  Chapter Sixty

  ‘I know,’ Brady conceded reluctantly.

  Matthews ignored him.

  ‘I know who you’re protecting.’

  ‘Keep your fucking mouth shut,’ hissed Matthews.

  ‘I can’t let you go down for something you didn’t do.’

  ‘Shut the fuck up! You don’t know what you’re saying. I did it! Me! Nobody else! You get that? I murdered her!’

  ‘You drove her back home, but what you didn’t realise was that Ellison had already rung Sophie at 12.02 am, arranging to meet her on the abandoned farm behind her house.’

  ‘Don’t do this, Jack. For fuck’s sake, don’t do this to me!’ pleaded Matthews.

  Brady did his best to ignore him but it was the hardest thing he’d ever had to do. Every word coming out of his mouth tasted bitter.

  ‘She had sex with him, followed by an argument. We have a witness who overheard that part. When Ellison had gone, she realised she couldn’t find her keys. So she rang Evie, believing she’d left them there.’

  ‘No!’

  ‘We’ve got a record of the call, Jimmy,’ Brady said quietly.

  ‘Evie brought the keys. She knew what Simmons was likeand didn’t want her best friend hurt. So she sneaked out of the house and ran down to the farmland. She knew exactly where to find Sophie,’ Brady carefully explained.

  ‘Jack … no don’t … don’t …’

  Brady ignored him. He had to, otherwise he wouldn’t be able to finish.

  ‘You see, Jimmy, the witness said that she overheard two girls arguing. I didn’t think much of it at the time but now I realise that it was Evie and Sophie. She even heard the victim shout out your name. I had presumed that was because Sophie had been ringing you in a desperate attempt to stop Ellison from hurting her. But I couldn’t have been further from the truth. Instead, Sophie was drunkenly taunting Evie with the fact that she had been at Madley’s nightclub with you and that you had driven her home. She might have been Evie’s best friend but it didn’t mean that they weren’t jealous of one another. Maybe that was the trigger, because Evie believed she was telling the truth,’ Brady said, shaking his head. ‘They’d both had too much to drink, too much to see sens
e.’

  ‘I mean it, Jack. I’ll fucking kill you if you don’t stop!’ Matthews sobbed.

  Brady paused for a moment, caught off guard by Matthews. He breathed in and forced himself to continue, ignoring the tears of desperation in Matthews’ eyes.

  ‘You were back before Evie left to find Sophie. Your car was parked in the driveway. Evie couldn’t find the keys in her bedroom so she did what Sophie had suggested when she called. She searched your car. Evie found them, but she also found the condom wrapper and put two and two together.’

  Matthews suddenly lunged for Brady.

  Conrad scrambled to his feet just in time to pull Matthews back.

  ‘Come on, Jimmy. Calm down!’ Conrad advised through gritted teeth as he did his best to restrain him.

  ‘You don’t know what you’re talking about!’ Matthews grunted.

  ‘The condom wrapper has Evie’s prints all over it. As has Sophie’s phone. Initially it would be easy to rationalise her fingerprints on the victim’s phone, as she was her best friend. You see, that’s what we did when we found Evie’s DNA at the crime scene and on the victim’s body. We eliminated her because she was the victim’s best friend and they shared clothes as teenage girls do. But that wasn’t what happened, was it?’

  Matthews struggled in vain to get to him.

  ‘Evie knew you were seeing someone, Jimmy. She didn’t know it was this Tania woman, she presumed it was Sophie. And why wouldn’t she after the evidence she found in your car? And Sophie was more than happy to mislead her, to pretend she was having an affair with you. She was viciously drunk and Ellison walking off had left her furious. So she took her vindictiveness out on Evie. And what better way of hurting Evie than by destroying the image she had of her father? The man Evie idealised? Sophie wanted what Evie had – a “normal” family life and if she couldn’t get it, she would make Evie equally miserable.’

  ‘No … you don’t know what you’re talking about,’ Matthews said shaking his head in desperation.

  ‘You weren’t there, Jimmy, not until it was too late,’ replied Brady.

  Matthews turned his sickened face away.

  Brady inwardly winced as he realised that his hunch had been right. Matthews had just shown as much. Up until that moment he had been hoping against the odds that Matthews would somehow prove to him that Evie had nothing to do with Sophie’s murder.

  Brady swallowed hard before continuing.

  ‘The witness heard Evie and Sophie’s argument over Ellison. We just assumed it was Ellison, not Evie. You see Ellison and Sophie argued about him ending their relationship. He left and Sophie then rang Evie. We know that Evie left her home to meet Sophie.’

  Matthews questioningly looked at Brady.

  ‘We have CCTV footage at that time of a girl who we presume to be Evie walking past Wellfield towards West Monkseaton. We know Sophie rang Evie at 12.51 am. It would have then taken Evie less than thirty minutes to walk from Earsdon to Potter’s Farm. Which means she would have met Sophie at roughly 1.20 am, and then … well, we know the rest, don’t we?’

  Matthews dropped his head in defeat.

  ‘When Evie couldn’t bear to hear Sophie’s taunts any longer, she attacked her, grabbing Sophie’s scarf and knotting it around her neck in a desperate, drunken attempt to silence her. Which she succeeded in doing.’

  Brady ran a shaky hand over his chin as he thought about walking out of the interview room. He had had enough. But he knew he had no choice, he had to see it through to the end. He shifted his gaze, unable to watch Matthews’ anguish.

  ‘Strangling her wasn’t enough for Evie. She wanted to destroy the very face that had laughed and taunted her with sexually explicit details of what she claimed she had done with Ellison. Evie was so riddled with jealousy that Sophie was having a relationship with the same teacher she had a huge crush on. And then there was you. Sophie presumably bragged about being in a nightclub with you and you dropping her home. The idea that not only was Sophie sleeping with her teacher, she was now seducing her dad would have been enough to send her over the edge. So she picked up the object closest to her, a heavy jagged stone, and exacted her blind rage on Sophie’s lifeless face. She hated Sophie’s face because it was her prettiness that had attracted Ellison and even you. Not Evie’s face, but hers. Everyone noticed how pretty Sophie was, didn’t they? Who could help but notice? No wonder Evie hated Sophie. And it comes as no surprise that she destroyed the very thing she hated so much.’

  Brady breathed out slowly, steeling himself.

  ‘When she finally came to her senses, she panicked,’ Brady whispered hoarsely.

  He felt the words choking him but knew he had to finish.

  ‘So, she rang you, Jimmy. Not because you were a copper. No, because you were her father and she believed you would know what to do. She didn’t have her phone on her. In the rush she’d left it at home, so without thinking she used Sophie’s phone. That’s why Sophie’s phone showed a call to your mobile just after 1.31 am.’

  He took a drink of water to get rid of the dryness in his mouth.

  ‘The jacket the victim was wearing,’ Brady said shaking his head. ‘That’s what didn’t make sense, Jimmy. You see, I talked with Ellison again this morning and when Sophie met him she wasn’t wearing a jacket. Then when I checked the security tape, again no jacket. But when she was discovered murdered she was wearing a jacket,’ Brady slowly stated. ‘Evie’s jacket,’ he added.

  He stood up wanting to stretch his leg. It had flared up again.

  ‘Evie was the one wearing the jacket. I double-checked the CCTV footage and she was definitely wearing a jacket similar to the one found on the victim. Sophie was only wearing a scarf the way girls do with just T-shirts, despite the weather. But the jacket was your idea, wasn’t it?’ Brady paused as he waited for Matthews to object.

  Matthews didn’t. Instead he mutely stared at Brady.

  ‘That’s why you left the jacket open so it could explain the blood and tissue sprayed over the victim’s T-shirt.’

  Matthews turned his head away, unable to look at Brady.

  ‘You knew that Evie would be charged with Sophie’s manslaughter, if not murder. So you decided to try and hide the evidence by leaving Evie’s jacket, which was covered in blood, on the victim. You told me that first morning that Sophie had borrowed Evie’s jacket. You said you recognised the jacket at the crime scene and your first reaction was to think that it was Evie lying there. I suppose it was the copper in you that made you decide to hide the evidence on the victim. You put the jacket on Sophie, didn’t you?’ Brady asked.

  Matthews didn’t say anything.

  ‘That’s why your own shirt got covered in blood because you handled the body, didn’t you?’

  Matthews continued to stare with mute desperation at Brady.

  ‘After the copper in you had seen to the body, you then drove Evie home. You told her not to breathe a word to anyone, not even Kate. You told her to get showered to get rid of any evidence and then you told her to wash her clothes. Didn’t you? But even you know that that wouldn’t be goodenough. You can’t get rid of blood stains that easily, Jimmy. We’ve just searched your house and found her clothes … Evie’s clothes, the ones she was wearing that night.’

  Matthews looked at Brady, surprised.

  Brady nodded.

  ‘I didn’t expect to find her clothes there either. I take it that you told her to get rid of them?’

  Matthews didn’t answer. But Brady could see from his reaction that that was exactly what he had done. Brady expected no less; Matthews was a copper after all.

  ‘She’s just a kid, Jimmy. She was no doubt still in shock and just stuck them in the washing machine. And like I said, blood stains don’t wash out that easily. They’re being forensically examined to see if they match with Sophie’s DNA. But we both know the results will be positive, don’t we?’

  Matthews raised his head and looked disconsolately at Brady.

 
‘Then you waited for the call to come in from the station that a girl’s body had been found.’

  Matthews stared at Brady. His eyes were cold and empty.

  ‘Evie wasn’t really ill on Friday morning, was she? You told her to pretend that she felt ill because you didn’t want her to suddenly crack. You wanted her to wait it out at home until the news about Sophie’s death became public.’

  ‘Why, Jack?’ muttered Matthews. ‘Why couldn’t you have just left it? She’s just a kid …’

  ‘So was Sophie. That’s what you’re forgetting here. Sophie was just a kid too. A kid that everybody used. Including you, Jimmy.’

  Chapter Sixty-One

  ‘Let him go,’ Brady told Conrad.

  Conrad did as he was told.

  Matthews collapsed into his chair and sank his head into his large trembling hands.

  ‘You don’t understand what you’ve done,’ he rasped.

  ‘I’m not letting you go down for murder when you’re not responsible.’

  ‘Don’t you realise this is all my fault? Don’t you?’

  Brady didn’t reply.

  ‘Maybe if I’d been around more, then this would never have happened …’

  Brady looked away. He didn’t have the stomach to look Matthews in the eye because he knew that at some level he was right. If Matthews had only taken more of an interest at home, then maybe none of this would ever have happened.

  ‘When I’d dropped Sophie home after Madley’s nightclub Tania rang me. Evie must have overheard the conversation but it wasn’t until later that she made the assumption that I’d been talking to Sophie. Soon after my call Sophie rang Evie to fetch her house keys from my car saying that I’d taken her to a nightclub and had dropped her home afterwards. And you were right, Evie found Sophie’s keys on the floor next to the empty condom wrapper,’ Matthews disconsolately conceded. ‘I hadn’t even realised it had been there.’

  He despairingly shook his head as he thought it over.

  ‘Evie presumed the worst. That’s the kind of shit dad I’ve been. My own daughter thinks I’m so immoral that I’d have sex with her fifteen-year-old friend.

 

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