Philip Brennan 01 - The Surrogate

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Philip Brennan 01 - The Surrogate Page 30

by Carver, Tania


  No response.

  ‘Four years ago you were picked up and cautioned for kerb-crawling, is that correct?’

  Eades looked up. He frowned. ‘What?’

  Phil started the sentence again. Eades cut him off. ‘What’s that got to do with . . . with . . .’

  ‘So that’s correct? You were kerb-crawling? Looking to buy sex?’

  He put his head down, sighed. Humiliation piling on top of guilt. ‘Yes,’ he said, his voice a broken thing, ‘yes, I was.’

  ‘Just the once, or more often?’ said Anni. ‘Was this a regular thing?’

  Eades looked up, eyes away from Anni. ‘Does it matter?’ He tried to hide his embarrassment, worked it up as anger instead. ‘How does this have any bearing on . . . on my wife? Is this relevant? Is this part of the inquiry?’

  ‘Yes it is, Mr Eades,’ said Phil, keeping his voice steady but authoritative. ‘We wouldn’t ask if it wasn’t.’ He said nothing more, waiting for an answer.

  Eventually, Eades, seeing that they weren’t going away until they got an answer, sighed. ‘I used prostitutes . . . a bit.’

  ‘A bit?’ said Anni.

  ‘A fair bit. All right, quite a lot.Yes, I paid for sex. Happy now?’

  Phil took a photo out of his jacket pocket, handed it to Eades. ‘Do you recognise this woman?’

  Eades looked at the photo. Susie Evans’ face was smiling up at him. He frowned. ‘She looks . . . familiar. A bit.’

  ‘Have you had sex with her?’ asked Anni. ‘Was she one of the women you picked up?’

  He kept looking at the photo. Eventually shook his head. ‘No. I don’t think so. Not really my type. But she does look familiar.’ He handed the photo back.

  ‘She was murdered a couple of months ago,’ said Phil, repocketing the photo.

  Eades’ head jerked up, eyes wide. ‘And . . . and you think . . . the same person did it?’

  ‘It’s a possibility we’re looking into,’ Anni said.

  ‘We’re exploring all avenues,’ said Phil.

  Anni took a photo out of her jacket, handed it to Eades. ‘What about her?’

  Eades looked at it, and there was no disguising the fact that he knew her. He sighed as he looked at her face.

  Phil picked up on it straight away. ‘You know her?’

  ‘Has she been killed too?’ It sounded like genuine concern in his voice.

  Phil ignored the question. ‘Do you know her?’

  Eades looked again at the photo. ‘Yes.Yes, I remember her very well.’

  ‘You met more than once?’ said Phil.

  ‘Yes. Regularly. We met . . . she had a flat we went back to. I didn’t pick her up on the street. Sometimes in a hotel. Yes . . .’ He drifted off at the memory.

  ‘And would you say you developed a relationship with her?’ said Anni.

  ‘Well, I think so. We were together for . . . we used to see each other for quite a while.’

  ‘And you talked about . . . what, exactly?’ said Phil.

  ‘Oh, all sorts. Life, my family. Everything.’

  ‘So why did it end?’ asked Anni.

  ‘I met Erin,’ he said.

  Anni folded her arms. ‘And you didn’t have to pay for it any more.’

  ‘That’s right.’ Eades looked up, realised what he had just said. ‘I didn’t mean it like that . . .’

  ‘That’s all right, Mr Eades,’ said Phil. He held his hand out for the photo.

  Eades seemed reluctant to hand it over. He sighed, looked at it once more. ‘Oh, Sophie,’ he said.

  Phil and Anni exchanged glances. They made to leave.

  Graeme Eades stood up.

  ‘Please,’ he said, looking unsteady on his feet. ‘Please. Find my baby. My girl.’ He looked up. ‘It was a girl, you know . . .’ Then away again. ‘And she’s the last part of . . .’ He couldn’t bring himself to say his wife’s name.

  He crumpled to the bed, curled up and sobbed.

  They left him to his grief.

  Outside, Phil shook his head, as if to dislodge Graeme Eades’ voice, the image of him lying there.

  ‘We have to find her,’ said Phil. ‘And fast.’

  They drove back to the station.

  Clayton stood outside in the car park. It was freezing, wind whipping his jacket back, promising ice and snow. He didn’t notice. He had his phone to his ear.

  ‘Come on,’ he said, ‘pick up . . .’

  It switched over to answerphone. ‘Hi, this is Sophie. Leave a message and I’ll get back to you really, really soon.’ Her voice dropped, low and teasing, on the last three words, holding the promise of fun and sex. It worked. Clayton knew that.

  ‘Listen, Sophie, it’s me, Clayton. I need to see you. Now. It’s important. I don’t know where you are, but go back to the flat, I’ll meet you there.’ He ended the call. Sighed.

  Fuck . . .

  He put his phone away. Thought. Took it out again. He would try his flat. Maybe she was there already. In the shower or something. He dialled, waited. Heard his own voice on the answerphone.

  He started to leave a message.

  ‘Sophie? It’s Clayton. If you’re there, pick up.’ A long pause. Then a sigh. ‘Okay. Look, I’m coming back to the flat now. I really need to talk to you. Now. I’ve left a message on your mobile. If you’re there, wait.’ Another sigh. ‘This is so fucked. I’ve . . . we’ve got to . . .’ Another sigh. ‘No. I can’t say on the phone. We have to talk it through. We have to sort it.’ The message ended.

  Across the room, sitting on one of Clayton’s dark leather armchairs, Sophie Gale took another drag on her cigarette, held it, let out a long plume of smoke.

  The red light on the answerphone flashed. She didn’t move. Just put the cigarette to her lips once more, took down another mouthful of smoke, slowly exhaled.

  Waited.

  63

  Phil was pushing the Audi as fast as he could without breaking the speed limit down the Avenue of Remembrance on the way back to the centre of Colchester. Beside him, Anni was feeling troubled.

  ‘Boss,’ she said, with evident trepidation.

  ‘Yeah?’ he said, not taking his eyes off the road.

  ‘I think there’s something I should have told you.’

  He risked a glance at her. Her head was angled away from him but he could clearly see the tension in her neck. ‘Go on.’

  The engine seemed to roar in the silence between them. Eventually Anni spoke. ‘It’s about Clayton.’

  Phil waited.

  ‘He’s . . .’ She sighed. ‘I saw him. The other night. When I was staking out Brotherton’s house.’

  Phil looked at her, frowning. He said nothing, waiting for her to continue.

  ‘He was . . . he brought Sophie Gale back home. In his car.’

  Phil took his eyes fully off the road. ‘He did what?’

  ‘And . . .’ She had to keep going. There was no turning back now. ‘And she gave him a blow job. In the car.’

  Anni turned her face away to the window once more. She could feel Phil’s eyes on her, burning into her intensely. The road taking care of itself.

  ‘Why didn’t you tell me?’ His voice quiet, controlled.

  Anni knew that wasn’t a good sign. ‘I . . . I didn’t know if it was my place, boss. I just thought he was being a dick. I confronted him with it.’

  ‘And what did he say?’

  ‘He said he would tell you. Sit down and tell you everything. ’

  ‘Everything? What’s everything?’

  Anni sighed, shook her head. ‘About . . . Clayton used to work vice. He knew Sophie from back then. Was one of the team she used to be an informant for.’

  ‘Why the fuck didn’t he tell me?’ His voice seemed all the louder in contrast to its previous quiet and control. His hand left the steering wheel, began massaging his chest. Anni noticed he seemed to be having problems with his breathing.

  ‘You okay, boss?’

  He ignored her question. ‘Wh
y didn’t he tell me?’

  ‘I don’t know. He said he was going to. But he didn’t. But it made me look into her background. That’s when I came up with the whole prostitute thing.’

  ‘Which he wasn’t going to say anything about.’

  ‘I . . . I don’t know. Boss.’

  Phil sighed and kept sighing, his breath coming in short, ragged gasps.

  ‘Boss . . .’

  ‘Christ . . .’ His hand clenched harder at his chest. Anni began to worry that he might be having a heart attack.

  ‘Shouldn’t . . . shouldn’t you pull over?’

  Phil gave an angry shake of his head. ‘Call him. Phone him now. I want to know what the hell he’s playing at.’

  Anni took out her mobile, speed-dialled Clayton. She waited. Looked at Phil. ‘Answerphone.’

  ‘Bastard . . . leave a message. Tell him I want to see him back at the station. Now.’

  Anni did so, hung up.

  ‘He was in the office when we left,’ said Phil in between gasps. ‘Call them. See if he’s there. No, call Marina. Ask her.’

  Anni did what she was told, spoke to Marina, listened to the reply. Rang off.

  ‘He’s gone. Left just after we did.’

  Phil seemed to be breathing through clenched teeth. ‘Did . . . did she say why?’

  ‘She said he went to talk to Millhouse just after I did. Then left in a hurry.’

  ‘And you were asking Millhouse about Sophie Gale.’

  ‘Yeah.’ Realisation hit her. ‘Oh God . . .’

  ‘You know the way to his place?’ said Phil.

  Anni nodded.

  ‘Direct me. Now.’

  Phil put the siren on.

  64

  ‘Oh God, oh God . . .’

  Marina stood in the toilet cubicle, the door locked. She didn’t care if anyone heard her or not.

  After Anni’s phone call she had started to feel unwell. She couldn’t describe what it was exactly, just a pain in her lower stomach. Sharp, stabbing. She knew that wasn’t right. She hurried off to the toilets, locked herself in. And had her worst fears confirmed.

  Blood. She was bleeding.

  ‘Oh God . . . the baby . . .’

  The baby. All the conflict she had been undergoing disappeared in an instant. There was something wrong with the baby. She had to get it sorted. She clutched her stomach as another wave of pain rippled through her. She gasped, rode it out. Then reached for her phone. Speed-dialled her GP. Hoped he could see her straight away.

  Her call was answered, an emergency appointment booked. She made a note of the time, closed her phone. Case or no case, this was important. She hadn’t realised just how important until this moment.

  She flushed the toilet, just in case anyone was listening outside, rearranged herself, went off to the doctor’s.

  ‘Sophie?’

  Clayton rushed into his flat, left his keys on the side table in the hallway, ran into the living room, looked round. He saw her over by the window. She was sitting in an armchair, unmoving. The blinds were drawn behind her. He let out a sigh of relief.

  ‘Thank Christ, I thought somethin’ had happened to you.’

  ‘I’m fine,’ she said, without moving.

  Her voice sounded strange, remote. Not at all like he was used to. But he didn’t have time to think about that. He had too much to tell her.

  ‘Listen,’ he said, crossing the room, sitting on the arm of the chair, ‘they’ve found a connection. Between you and Graeme Eades, the husband of the last victim. From when you used to . . . when you were workin’.’

  She said nothing. Clayton frowned. He had expected a bigger reaction than that. He pressed on.

  ‘They want to talk to you, yeah? So we’ve got to think of the best way to do this. How it looks like I’m gettin’ in contact with you and you’re comin’ in, yeah? To chat. How we goin’ to do that, then?’

  Sophie said nothing. Just continued to stare straight ahead.

  Clayton began to get exasperated. ‘Sophie . . .’ He stood up quickly as if the arm of the chair was too hot to sit on any longer, paced the floor until he stopped in front of her. ‘Have you been listenin’? Sophie, we’re in trouble.’

  She moved her head to the side, inclined her eyes upwards to him. ‘You’re in trouble, Clayton.’

  ‘What? We both are! We’ve got to, got to . . .’ He put his hands to his head, screwed his eyes up tight, beat his fists against his temples. Opened his eyes again, looked at her. ‘We’ve got to sort this. Now.’

  Sophie said nothing for a while. Just as Clayton was beginning to think she hadn’t heard, she sighed. There was no sense of resignation in the sigh, just a weary acceptance of a tedious situation. She kept her eyes on him.

  ‘I suppose it had to happen sometime. Sooner or later.’

  ‘Yeah, it did.’ He stopped. Was she talking about the same thing? ‘What had to happen?’

  She stood up, moved towards him. Pressed her body right against his as she spoke. ‘There’s no point in pretending any more. I should say it’s been fun. But I’d be lying.’ She put her hand on his chest, started moving it slowly in circles. ‘And we’ve had too many lies, haven’t we?’

  ‘What . . . what you talkin’ about?’ He stared at her, seemingly hypnotised by her touch.

  ‘A chain is only as strong as its weakest link. I learned that working in a scrap metal yard. Same with a police investigation. And that’s you, Clayton.’

  He was totally confused now. ‘Wh-what?’

  ‘Finding you were on the team was a bonus. Something I could work with. And when it all went wrong with Ryan, moving in with you seemed the perfect thing to do. Keep an eye on you, keep them away from me. But now it seems like that won’t work out.You’re off the team. And they’ve found out about Graeme Eades and me.’

  ‘So? We can sort it. We just need to get our story straight . . .’

  She gave him a sad smile. ‘No, Clayton. I think it’s got beyond that. We’ve all got to make sacrifices now.’

  ‘What you talkin’ about?’

  ‘Family, Clayton. Family. Family ties. Stronger than anything. ’ There was sadness behind her words.

  She was still stroking him, pressing her body against him. He didn’t understand her words but he enjoyed the feeling. Despite everything, he found himself getting an erection.

  ‘So I’ve got to go now.’

  ‘No, listen—’

  ‘Sorry, Clayton.You are the weakest link. Goodbye.’

  He didn’t feel the blade at first. Not the first blow. Or the second. But by the third he was feeling it. The pain had caught up with the shock by then. Sophie moved away. He looked down.

  She had stabbed him in the stomach. Hard, fast. His shirt front was covered in blood. No longer required to make its way to his heart, it was pumping out of him in gushing torrents.

  ‘No, no . . .’

  He put his hands on his stomach, tried in desperation to catch the blood in his fingers. Couldn’t. It just ran straight through.

  ‘Oh God, oh God . . .’

  He stumbled round, not knowing what to do, his panic increasing the rate his blood pumped out at. He looked to Sophie for help. But she had put on her coat, grabbed her holdall, which had been at the side of the armchair. She wasn’t even looking at him.

  ‘Help . . . help me . . .’

  His voice, like the rest of him, was becoming weaker.

  She ignored him, walked towards the door.

  Something clicked inside him. He mustn’t let her get away. He had to stop her. Call an ambulance, call for assistance. He fumbled inside his jacket for his mobile, his fingers slippery with blood. Eventually he got it out, punched in 999. No use. He had turned it off on the way to the flat.

  ‘Oh God . . .’

  He tried to thumb it on. Waited for it to power up, to find his network.

  ‘Come on, please . . . come on . . .’

  Dancing black stars were moving into the edges of
his vision. He tried to blink them away. But every time he blinked, they just seemed to increase in number. He looked round the room, tried to focus. He was aware of Sophie reaching the door.

 

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