The eyes above the thin smile grew colder. ‘I can assure you that Darren is a valued member of my team, Detective Constable Henderson. The day after his accident, he was in here at nine. That shows dedication.’ She folded her arms. ‘What’s he supposed to have done?’
I gave her the stare.
She shook her head. ‘He’s been employee-of-the-month three times. And that’s hospital-wide, not just my department. He’s conscientious, hardworking, and really invested in our processes and procedures.’
Alice tugged the sleeves of her stripy top down over her fingertips. ‘He was in an accident?’
‘Hit and run, on a zebra crossing, no less. But he was still here, Friday morning, bang on time.’ She clapped her hands together, once. Hard and sharp. ‘Now, would anyone like a cup of tea?’
As soon as she was gone, Alice leaned over to me, voice low. ‘Do we really think Darren Wilkinson is the Inside Man?’
‘Why are you whispering?’
A pink bloom appeared on her cheeks. ‘I mean I know he works at the hospital, so he might have access to drugs, and he’d be able to find out about surgical procedures – he can probably watch them doing operations if he likes – and all the victims were nurses, and if he’s working in the HR Department he’s got access to their personnel records not to mention who Jessica McFee was being a midwife for, but…’ Creases appeared between Alice’s eyebrows. ‘Oh, I see. When you lay it out like that…’
‘And he just happens to be going out with one of the victims? Bit of a coincidence.’
‘Well, maybe—’
‘According to the Police National Computer, he’s twenty-seven. That makes him nineteen the first time Tim was around. Doesn’t exactly fit the profile, does it?’
The hands on the clock crept around to twenty-five past.
Alice wrapped one arm around herself, twiddled with her hair. ‘If he’s been assaulting Jessica McFee, that means he’s got control issues – both internal and external – Jessica’s his property, when she doesn’t do what she’s told that hurts him, it’s disrespectful… He has no choice, he’s got to punish her, I mean it’s not his fault is it, he’s helping her be a better person, does she really want to keep screwing up like that, she should be thanking him. She’s lucky to have him.’
Alice stuck her knees together, heels angled out on the scuffed carpet tiles. ‘It’s always the same though, isn’t it, women just don’t get it, they need a firm hand to lead them in the right direction. They like that: they like a man who can take charge, they need to be shown who’s boss, like his dad showed his mum…’ Alice blinked a couple of times, then stared up at the ceiling tiles. The frown was back. ‘But the abduction, the cutting, the dolls – impregnating them – yes, that’s a control thing, but Tim does it because he’s impotent, powerless in his day-to-day relationships.’
I took out my phone and read the text from Cooper again:
PNC on Darren Wilkinson (27) – 14 Fyne Lane, no convictions, warning for vandalism when 11, just applied for combined shotgun/firearms licence.
He could sing for his gun licence. No way that was going through now.
‘Ash?’ Alice brought her heels together, squeaking the rubbery soles against one another. ‘We didn’t check with Claire Young’s flatmates: what if Darren’s her boyfriend too? What if he romantically targets his victims, before abducting them?’
Shrug. ‘Possible.’
She slumped back in her seat and let her arms hang over the edge, stripy sleeves swinging back and forth. ‘But by physically dominating Jessica, by beating her, he’s actively demonstrating his power…’
I shut down Cooper’s text and called Sabir.
‘Oh, Christ, what now? I’m working on it, OK? Keep your knickers on, this stuff takes time!’
‘Does the name Darren Wilkinson ring any bells?’
Pause. ‘Who the hell is Darren Wilkinson?’
‘I need to know if he comes up in the HOLMES data for the original Inside Man enquiry.’
‘OK…’ There was a long, wet sigh. ‘Pick one.’
‘One what?’
‘All the stuff you’ve thrown at me – pick something, and that’s the thing that gets dumped to do this instead.’
‘Sabir, I—’
‘No. Youse lot seem to think I’m sitting on a fifty-man team down here, but there’s just me, get it? Me, on me tod, getting buried under all your Jock shite.’ What sounded like static boomed from the earpiece, then settled down into crunching – a mouthful of crisps? ‘So pick one.’
‘Don’t be such a drama queen. It’s—’
The door opened and the HR manager was back, a plastic beverage carrier in one hand with three plastic cups steaming away in the holes.
‘Sabir, just do it. I’ll call you back.’ I hung up as she placed the carrier on the little coffee table.
Alice pulled on a smile, eyes wide and bright. ‘How does Darren get on with his female team mates? Is he popular?’
The HR manager frowned for a moment. ‘I’d say yes: he is. He’s personable, well groomed, always brings cakes when it’s someone’s birthday.’
‘So not … you know: making off-colour jokes, invading personal space, maybe even a bit intimidating?’
‘Darren?’ Her cheeks twitched, then a little laugh slipped out. Followed by a cough. ‘He joined my team six years ago. He was only twenty-one. I have personally trained him. He’s not some sort of misogynistic neanderthal.’
‘Hmm…’ Alice went back to twiddling with her hair, one heel tapping against the carpet.
The plastic cup was scalding hot as I picked it out of the holder. ‘What about attendance? Any absences over the last three weeks?’
‘Not even after his accident – which, by the way, your colleagues have done nothing about. Darren is a model employee. And—’
There was a knock and a battered face appeared at the door. One eye was swollen shut, the skin dark and mottled with bruising that reached from the tip of his chin all the way up to his forehead on one side. A line of pink Elastoplast crossed the bridge of his nose. He was on crutches, using one of them to ease the door open. Crumpled white shirt, pale-blue tie. His right trouser leg was cut short, showing off a fibreglass cast covered in marker-pen signatures.
Whatever hit him, it must have been a damn sight bigger than a Mini.
His voice was soft and hissing, as if he was missing a few teeth, but the Dundee accent still came through like a foghorn. ‘You wanted to see me, Sarah?’
She turned in her seat and nodded. ‘Ah, Darren, perfect timing. I was just telling these officers what a valued member of… Darren, are you OK?’
His one good eye had gone wide at the word ‘officers’, mouth hanging open, exposing four or five ragged scarlet holes where teeth should have been. He backed away.
‘Darren?’
He glanced up and down the corridor, as if planning on hobbling for it. Then sagged against his crutches. Closed his eyes and swore.
34
Darren blinked across the table at me. ‘I…’ He picked at the lining of the cast on his left arm. ‘It’s not like that.’ A sniff. ‘Wasn’t like that.’
Twenty to five, and we were still stuck here, the clock’s minute hand sweeping ever closer to Paul Manson’s appointment.
Alice leaned forwards, elbows on her knees. ‘It’s perfectly understandable. You’re only looking out for her, aren’t you? She does all these stupid things and you’re the one who has to clean up the mess. She needs to learn, doesn’t she? Needs to do what she’s told, when she’s told.’
He kept his head down.
The HR Manager, Sarah, narrowed her eyes. ‘I’m not comfortable with this line of questioning. Darren has already told you that he didn’t assault Jessica McFee. I don’t see why you’re fixating on this.’ Playing the lawyer.
Alice placed both hands, palm up, on the table. ‘And if she steps out of line, it’s only
understandable you should give her a slap every now and then. For her own good? It works with dogs, doesn’t it? Why should women be any different?’
‘I can assure you that not only did Darren excel in our gender-parity training, he’s one of the hospital’s Equality Champions. This is completely inappropriate and—’
‘Come on then, Darren,’ I picked up my walking stick and poked him in the chest with the rubber end, ‘tell me about this hit-and-run.’
He shrank back into his seat. ‘It was dark. I was crossing the road and a car came out of nowhere and hit me. Didn’t see it.’
Another poke. ‘Where?’
Pick. Pick. Pick. ‘Just down from the chipper on Oxford Street.’
‘When?’
Nothing.
So I poked him again. ‘When – did – it – happen?’
‘Ow! … I don’t know.’
‘Please stop poking him.’
No chance. ‘I checked the Police National Computer – there’s no record of you being run over on Oxford Street, or anywhere else. What, you decided it wasn’t worth reporting? Accidents will happen?’
He kept his eyes down. ‘Didn’t think there was any point. You know. Cos I didn’t see the car or anything…’
‘Right.’ One more poke for luck. ‘You got flattened by a car. Your leg’s broken, arm too. You look like you’ve spent an hour being a trampoline for skinheads, and you didn’t think it was worth reporting?’
‘Detective Constable Henderson, if Darren says—’
‘You see, Darren, you told your boss here you were hit on a zebra crossing, but there’s no zebra crossing on Oxford, is there?’ This time I aimed the rubber tip at his ribs and he winced. Recoiled in his seat. Wrapped a hand around the impact spot. So I did it again, going for the other side instead. Same result. ‘The only person in a hit-and-run who doesn’t go to the police is the driver. Take off your shirt.’
Sarah stiffened. ‘All right, I think we’ve been patient enough. That’s completely—’
‘There wasn’t any car, was there? Take off the damn shirt.’
She stood. ‘I’m going to have to ask you to leave. If you want to conduct some sort of strip-search, you can do it under caution at the station. Until then— What are you doing?’
I lunged across the coffee table, grabbed two handfuls of his shirt and yanked. The buttons pinged off like tiny bullets, the tails wrenched out of his trousers. His tie dangled over the purple, scarlet, and yellow mess of his chest. Bruises covered both sides – not in a hard line like you’d get from a car bonnet, or a bumper but haphazard and patchwork. And right in the middle of his stomach was the perfect negative image of a bootprint.
‘Strange tyres on that car. Looks more like a size nine than a Dunlop radial.’
Sarah jabbed a finger at me. ‘I’ll be making a formal complaint to your superiors. How dare you subject a member of my staff to this humiliating—’
‘Oh, grow up. He wasn’t in a hit-and-run, someone beat the living hell out of him.’ I put my stick down. ‘Why did you lie, Darren? Who’s got you so scared they can do that to you and you don’t even report it?’
He bit his bottom lip, the one good eye glistening in the light. ‘Nothing happened…’
‘Really?’ I rapped my cane on the coffee table and he flinched. ‘Is that why you’re after a shotgun licence? Bit of revenge?’
She pulled out her phone. ‘I’m calling security. You’re both—’
‘No!’ Darren grabbed her arm. ‘Please. No. I… I don’t want to make a fuss. Please?’
She stared at him for a moment. ‘Are you certain this is what you want?’
He lowered his eyes and went back to picking at his cast. ‘Can I get a glass of water, or something?’
Sarah placed a hand on his shoulder. ‘Of course you can.’ She scowled at me. ‘And no more questions.’
Darren Wilkinson licked his lips and blinked as the door clicked shut behind her. Then gave a little shuddering sigh. ‘I … never meant to hurt her.’
Alice patted him on the arm. ‘You need to—’
‘It was…’ He cleared his throat. Stared at the coffee table again. ‘Sorry, you first.’
‘No: what were you going to say?’
‘Jessica… She wasn’t like…’ Another sigh. ‘She wanted me to hit her.’ He dug his thumbnail into the lining of the cast, gouging out a tuft of white. ‘I don’t mean “she was asking for it” in a misogynistic way, I mean literally. She literally asked me to hit her. I just wanted to be like normal couples, holding hands, walks in the park, but…’ He puffed out his cheeks. Hacked out another tuft.
I stared at him. ‘Aye, right.’
Silence.
‘It’s OK, Darren. What happened?’
‘The first time, I thought she wanted me to spank her. You know, just a bit of fun? And I know it enforces gender stereotyping and patriarchal dominance, but she told me not to be so bloody wet. She didn’t want spanked, she wanted me to hit her.’
‘And did you?’
His eye came up, wide. ‘No! Of course I didn’t. I don’t believe in the physical subjugation of women or any of that outmoded sexist crap… But she wouldn’t let up, she kept badgering me and then she was hitting me and screaming in my face…’ Darren turned away. ‘And I did it. I slapped her, I didn’t mean to, it just… And that was it – she was…’ A cough. ‘You know.’
Alice tapped her fingertips on the coffee table. ‘She became sexually aroused.’
‘Sometimes I think she … confused violence with love. Like they were the same thing. And that’s how it went. She … needed it to feel wanted and valued and I…’ He bared his gap-filled teeth. ‘I hated myself.’
There were thousands of excuses – things abusers told themselves to justify pounding the crap out of their other halves – but that was a new one.
While he was scrubbing the tears from his bruised face, I pulled out my phone and flicked through to the photo that Jessica’s flatmate, Liz Thornton, had sent me. Held it out to Darren. ‘Do you recognize this man?’
He blinked at it a couple of times, then sniffed. ‘He’s the pervert who went through their bins, isn’t he? I chased him once. Jessica and me were going down to the car park – it was someone’s leaving do that night – and he was fiddling with the mailboxes. You know, like he was picking the locks or something? So I shouted and he ran and I chased him.’
‘Did you see his face?’
Darren shook his head. ‘It was dark. He ran off into the woods and there was no way I was going to follow him in there and end up getting knifed or something.’
I put the phone away again. ‘So who beat you up?’
‘I can’t…’ Deep breath. ‘I fell down the stairs.’
‘And somehow managed to stamp on your own stomach on the way down?’ I leaned back. Stared at him until he dropped his gaze and went back to digging the lining out of his cast. ‘You get beaten up on Thursday night. And on Friday you text Jessica McFee and tell her you never want to see her again.’
Pretty obvious really.
He kept his head down.
‘It was her dad, wasn’t it? Wee Free McFee didn’t like some godless Dundonian rutting away on top of his daughter.’
Darren’s head snapped up, one good eye wide open. ‘No! It was nothing like that he never touched me it was an accident. I’m not pressing charges!’
‘I’m sorry…’ Alice fiddled with her keys in the darkness between our stolen Jag and the scabby Renault parked next to it. Tried the button on the fob again. ‘It was working earlier…’
‘Give.’ I held out my hand and she passed the keys over.
The multi-storey smelled of rotting weeds, laced with a dirty ammonia tang. A puddle stretched most of the way across the concrete floor – ankle-deep by the lifts – empty plastic bottles and crisp packets marking high-tide with a dirty flotsam line. At least it was reasonably dry over here
by the far wall. Even if the stairs had been used as a urinal.
Alice wrinkled her nose. ‘Maybe it needs a new battery, or we could—’
‘Or we could just do this.’ I stuck the key in the lock.
‘Ooh, I forgot about that…’
Kids today.
The boot creaked as I opened it. Nothing in there but a tartan blanket and a dog-eared ‘COLLINS ROAD ATLAS OF SCOTLAND’ twenty years out of date. I pulled out the blanket and dumped it on the back seat.
‘Ash, I’m sorry, I didn’t think it’d take that long and—’
‘Nothing we can do about it now.’
The stuff we’d bought at B&Q clanged and thumped as I dumped it into the boot, leaving the tarpaulin till last, spreading it out over everything else. Making a little waterproof pouch.
‘Maybe, if we hurry, the traffic won’t be too bad? Ash?’
I clunked the boot shut.
‘Ash?’
‘Maybe.’ I limped around to the passenger side and eased myself into the seat. According to the dashboard clock it was nearly quarter past five. Should have got out of there when we had the chance.
The Jaguar’s windscreen wipers squealed back across the glass, smearing the rain into scarlet arcs, catching the tail-light glow of the queue of traffic crawling across Dundas Bridge. Streetlights made orbs of sickly yellow. The sky tumour-dark.
On the other end of the phone, Chief Superintendent Ness went silent for a bit. Then, ‘I see… And are we supposed to prosecute him for domestic abuse?’
The car crept forward another couple of feet.
‘Jacobson said it was up to you. Darren’s got an alibi for when Claire Young went missing, and Alice says he doesn’t fit the profile. So, probably not the Inside Man.’
Alice’s voice was barely audible over the engine’s rumble. ‘Ask her about the letter.’
‘What about the letter? What did you tell Wee Free?’
A sooking hiss came from the earpiece. ‘Mr McFee has been informed that we’ve received another letter from someone purporting to be the Inside Man. I wanted to persuade the News and Post not to run it, but Dr Docherty thinks if Tim doesn’t see his letter in print he’s going to think we’re not taking him seriously. Jessica McFee’s in enough danger as it is.’
A Song for the Dying Page 29