Book Read Free

Bryant & May 04; Ten Second Staircase b&m-4

Page 31

by Christopher Fowler


  With the files laid out on the damp concrete floor, he tried a process May had taught him. Future stars begin as unknowns in old films, said his partner. When you go back to these early titles now, their names jump out. With cold cases, you return to see if any of the participants have since become notorious.

  A single link had been noted at the time; several of the victims had been taking night classes in the weeks preceding their deaths. The connection had been dismissed, because no two students attended the same college.

  One victim had been heading for a class in economic history on the night she died. No specific venue for the course was listed, but in the contents of the second victim’s backpack Bryant found a folded copy of the school curriculum. The class was circled in red Biro, with the name of the lecturer printed beneath it, and a small photograph.

  It would have meant nothing at the time, but now the arrangement assumed momentous significance.

  Alexander Kingsmere, MA, BSc Oxon.

  Brilliant Kingsmere looked so much like his father.

  ∨ Ten Second Staircase ∧

  41

  Psychic Trail

  Janet Ramsey turned her key in the lock and admitted herself to her Chelsea apartment. She had been expecting the PCU to prove incompetent – it was what always happened when you placed academics out in the field. Their hopeless mishandling of today’s attempt to lure out the Highwayman had achieved the desired effect. She kicked off her shoes and rang Oskar Kasavian’s mobile. It made the call traceable but was better than calling him at a government office.

  “You were right, they were even worse than you said they would be,” she told him. “The Highwayman showed up, just as I expected. He obviously sensed it was a trap and didn’t stick around, but he wanted to use the photo opportunity and made sure my man got plenty of shots. God, a blind man would have sensed the police vehicles scattered around the street. I must admit, though, it hadn’t occurred to me that the school would be in session on a Saturday. The unit staged the most extrovert undercover operation imaginable, flatfoots thumping up and down the pavement barking into walkietalkies, huge officers lurking behind tiny garden walls, quite ridiculous.”

  “I want a full report detailing their incompetence,” said Kasavian. “Your end of the deal.”

  “Don’t worry, you’ll get it.”

  “What happened to the Highwayman?”

  “He waited outside the apartment, then trotted back downstairs and out the front door, unapprehended. They managed to lose him despite the fact that the entire street had been sealed off.”

  “It doesn’t surprise me, but I don’t understand how.”

  “They hadn’t allowed for two hundred kids suddenly pouring into the street. The sudden confusion allowed him to use an escape route.”

  “Did you get a good look at him?”

  “Not really – the officers had turned off the light in the hall – but he’ll show up in the pictures. I’m not in the business of helping to identify him, Oskar. The longer he stays active without running to ground, the better it is for the paper’s campaign.”

  “You have to get the report typed up tonight,” Kasavian instructed her. “I need to work on it over the weekend.”

  “Let me take a nap first,” said Ramsey. “I’ve been on my feet all day.”

  “I thought we were going to meet up later.”

  “Are you sure you want to risk being seen with me? I thought you were taking your wife to the opera tonight. I could damage your credibility.”

  “I hardly think so, Janet. Your newspaper has no credibility, so why should it damage mine?”

  “We represent the voice of the people, darling, don’t forget that. Sometimes I wonder what I see in you. I’ll call you in a couple of hours.” She rang off and made her way to the bathroom, shucking her dress.

  The day had worked out well. She had an exclusive story and plenty of saleable images to work with. What she really needed now was another murder to keep the outrage of the public at its peak.

  ♦

  “I don’t see why we had to meet here,” May complained. He had found Bryant standing at the centre of Waterloo Bridge once more. By now the sky had become icy and inhospitable, and billowing black sheets of rain were spattering his neck.

  “I was on my way back from the Paddington lockup,” Bryant explained, pulling out a plastic bag containing several slips of waterdamaged paper. “Several of the Vampire’s victims were taught in evening classes conducted by Brilliant Kingsmere’s father. I think that’s how he came to stalk them in the first place. I ran a check on the father. He has a charge sheet: disturbing the peace, causing an affray, assaulting a police officer, and molestation of a minor, a young woman who failed to press charges. Unfortunately, there’s not much detail in the reports. There’s no answer from his current address, so you’ll have to talk to his son, Brilliant.”

  “Wait a minute, you’re telling me that one of my witnesses in the Highwayman case is actually your suspect? Do you realise what the odds are on the two cases being connected? It’s astronomically unlikely. Are you sure you haven’t made a mistake and muddled up the documentation or something?”

  “My mental faculties may be in decline, but I don’t get cases mixed up,” snapped Bryant. “You’re becoming quite unpleasant as you get older. Here, I was saving you some of this.” He pulled a leaky plastic freezer bag from his pocket and handed it to May. “Alma made a sherry trifle. I’ve had it on me all day. It’s got a bit squashed.”

  “What am I going to do with you, Arthur?” May examined his partner’s peace offering and reluctantly slipped it into his pocket. “Today’s operation was a nightmare. If you’d been there, you’d have realised that something was wrong from the outset. As unlikely as it sounds, I just don’t think clearly without you. The whole fiasco has merely given Faraday more ammunition.”

  “It wasn’t your fault, John. The unit was never designed to carry out such operations.” He stopped abruptly and looked out at the sluggish olive water blossoming beneath the bridge.

  “But what? Go on, you were going to say something. You know I messed up. What would you have done differently?”

  “It’s just that you’re looking at it from the wrong perspective. You thought you were luring him, but I think it was the other way around.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “It wasn’t a trap but an opportunity. Ramsey and the Highwayman both used you to get publicity.”

  “But why would he show up at all? Why risk being captured?”

  “Because he knew he wasn’t going to be. Such bravado requires the extreme level of calculation he adopts in everything he does. The Vampire’s bravery stemmed from the wildness of psychological aberration, but the Highwayman’s methods are more sophisticated. It happens over time. You don’t suppose the two killers could be one and the same person?”

  May looked at his partner in horror. “There’s nothing to suggest that the cases are connected other than your scraps of paper, Arthur. You can’t just follow some kind of psychic trail in your head that makes links where none exists.”

  “If you don’t think there’s a connection, go and see him. Ask Brilliant Kingsmere about his father.”

  “What can he do beyond admit that his old man taught thousands of pupils, some of whom suffered tragedies? Teachers touch so many lives, and we’re talking about a very specific London neighbourhood, so it’s hardly surprising their paths crossed. But the two cases together? How old would Kingsmere’s father be now, and why would he be running around dressed as a highwayman? It just raises more questions than it can answer. Oh, and did I mention that the idea is utterly ridiculous? The Highwayman is an incredibly strong man, tall, athletic, not someone of your age.”

  “All right, but he still has a link with the Vampire, whom we were intended to see as Robin Hood, a real-life thief and murderer changed into a mythical champion. Kingsmere’s an idealist, a reformer. He must know about the Vampire, because his
father was interviewed by police at the time. Suppose it gave him the idea for a warped kind of social experiment? Kingsmere was missing when the first Highwayman murder was committed, apparently at home with food poisoning. Was he missing from school again today?” Bryant was fired with a fresh spark of enthusiasm. “We need to get him in for questioning immediately.”

  “We can’t do that without Land’s permission, and he’s out of town until tomorrow night.”

  “Kingsmere must have his own office at the school. We could search it.”

  “I doubt there are sufficient grounds for a warrant, Arthur, and we wouldn’t get one until Monday at the earliest.”

  “Then we’ll need to break in. I can get hold of Felix.”

  “Oh, no, you promised never to use him again. Not after we paid him to break into Sharon Letts’s house.” Letts, a notorious London thief known as the Queen of Shoplifters, had stolen a fortune in gems from Harrods’s jewellery counter. It was hard to tell how much she had looted, because Felix had stolen back the diamonds for the police, only to hide several of them in a glass of water which he had drunk before anyone could stop him. After the Met boys arrested him, they planned to wait for the stones to pass through Felix’s alimentary canal, but the cat burglar managed to lock the police officers in their own squad car. Felix was later captured and sent to prison, where he discovered that Letts’s family had placed a contract on him. Thinking he would be safer in solitary confinement, he picked a fight with a small ginger Irishman in his wing, only to discover that his victim was a Real IRA terrorist, whose people promptly placed a second contract on the hapless burglar. Since then he had lived in fear of his life, running discreet small-scale operations for anyone who needed his services.

  “Lend me your phone. Nobody need ever know we hired him. Besides, he owes me a favour.”

  “Give me one good reason why I should agree to this.”

  “We’re about to lose the unit. What else is there left to lose?” Bryant fumbled about in his overcoat and produced two scraps of paper. “Look, this is a photocopy of Luke Tripp’s Highwayman drawing.” He unfolded the second piece. “And this I took from the Paddington lockup. It’s the only witness sketch we ever had of the Leicester Square Vampire. Apart from the tricorn hat and the mask, the outfits are almost identical. It looks like Kingsmere stole the idea for some mysterious purpose of his own.”

  “This is against my better judgement,” warned May, handing over his mobile. If their superiors discovered that the unit’s most senior members had hired a cat burglar to break into a suspect’s office, they would prosecute the PCU. However, having failed to make his own plan of action work, May had no choice but to trust his partner’s instincts. He had reached a stage where any action was fair if it yielded results.

  “Do it,” he told Bryant. “Get him on the phone, and God help us if we get caught.”

  ∨ Ten Second Staircase ∧

  42

  Describing Evil

  Janet Ramsey checked the temperature of her bath and laid out fresh clothes. She rarely questioned the wisdom of her actions, but the events of the last few days had given her pause for thought. She was editing a tabloid with a shrinking readership and a record number of hits lodged against it with the Press Complaints Commission. She was continuing an affair with a married man despite the fact that Oskar Kasavian was never likely to leave his wife. She had a son she had hardly seen since her ex-husband had unexpectedly been granted custody.

  And she wasn’t getting any younger.

  Tugging at the creases around her eyes in the bathroom mirror, she wondered how much longer she could maintain the balancing act. The real problem was that she no longer believed the stories she wrote. Once she had been able to convince herself that the public had a right to know about the mistakes made by those whose lives were lived in public. The Fourth Estate’s latest periodicals made hers look positively scrupulous. Everyone had jumped onto the celebrity bandwagon until there was nothing of interest left to report. It was no longer about news but bargaining power, and she doubted her publication would be able to raise the cash for many more exclusives. But Hard News had hitched its reputation to a rising star; the Highwayman could restore their falling circulation.

  A fold in the darkness through the glass of the front door caught her eye, and she turned from the mirror. The worst part about living in a ground-floor flat off the Brompton Road was having to place steel trellises across all of the windows and a London Bolt over the main entrance. She had upset plenty of people through the newspaper, but none had ever dared to turn up at her house – the press made too powerful an enemy. She never felt unsafe here, but it was still like being shut in a cage.

  The shadow cut reflections from the glass for a moment, and she realised there was definitely someone outside. You don’t go out to look, she told herself. That’s how trouble starts. She calmly walked towards the lounge. Buried far behind her commercial instincts, the small spark that had once fired her desire to investigate, to put matters right, was fanned back to flame, and she approached the lounge window, through which the front door could be seen.

  He was standing outside with his back towards the house, his hands clasped together. This time he wore a spectacular dress cape with a triangle of crimson satin lining exposed, as though he had dressed for an audience with her. He was taller than she remembered. He turned and rang the doorbell with the polite apprehension of an Internet date.

  He’s desperate to talk, she thought. He needs the air of publicity and wants to grant an exclusive interview. If I’m careful, it could be the scoop of the year. Her hand hovered above the bolt handle.

  She thought of calling the police and warning them first. There was a problem with that, though. The local cops hated her after she had approved the publication of an article exposing the sex lives of two female sergeants, both of whom were now being investigated. She thought of calling Toby, her ex-husband, then realised that he was still in Geneva on business.

  The Highwayman rang again. If she let him escape, she would lose the greatest journalistic chance of her career. He had never directly attacked a victim before, so he was likely to be unarmed. And he was waiting for her, trusting her.

  She withdrew the bolt and opened the door.

  Whenever she had commissioned features on the Highwayman, she had asked her writers to exaggerate his height and sinister presence. Now she saw there was no need to do so. The tip of his tricorn hat almost grazed the top of the doorway. He stepped into the hall, his face lost in shadows, took another pace towards her, and froze. There was an unnerving stillness about him, a dead heart of indifference that made him more dangerous than she had ever imagined a human being could be. She knew at once that his masked eyes had seen men die.

  She had an idea. Without removing her gaze from him, she slowly reached for her mobile and speed-dialled the number of the Peculiar Crimes Unit. The Highwayman remained motionless, studying her as if watching an alien species.

  DS Janice Longbright answered on the third ring, calling her by name; it had come up on her screen.

  “He’s standing right in front of me,” Ramsey murmured, daring him to move. She had rarely been granted a chance to describe evil at such close quarters, and was determined to make the most of the opportunity. “He’s taller than I expected, around six two, broadchested and rather sexy. The outfit has been modified from ordinary motorcycle leathers. The buckled knee-boots come from a Goth store called Born in Camden. He’s not wearing his gloves. The back of his left hand is badly stained with your man’s indigo dye. He has dark chin stubble, but it looks like he’s wearing make-up.” She found her old investigative powers returning as she studied him. “Brown eyes, still and rather dead, pointed chin, straight black hair, the kind of pale skin that suggests Eastern European extraction. Wait, I think the hair’s a wig.”

  “You must leave while you still can,” said Longbright urgently. “He’s far more dangerous than you realise.”

  �
�I don’t imagine he’s armed.” She tried to sound braver than she was. “I think he realises I’d give him a good kicking in a fair fight.”

  “Janet, you have to stop this and get out right now. He has every reason to hurt you.” While she spoke Longbright was trying to raise the alarm on her mobile.

  “No, he doesn’t want to hurt me.” She smiled at him confidently. “He’s hardly moved a muscle since he stepped into the room.” She moved a little closer. “There’s a strong intelligence working behind his eyes. I think we’re just going to have a little chat, as equals. Wait a minute.” There was a brief silence. “Well, I’m damned, it’s not a man at all – ”

  The handset fell to the floor with a clatter. A moment later, it was gently replaced on its base.

  ♦

  Bimsley and Mangeshkar took the young Indian DC’s Kawasaki 500 and took off, coasting around stalled traffic at Hyde Park Corner, hitting seventy in the deserted backstreets behind the Brompton Road. As they roared into the quiet cherry-tree-lined street off the King’s Road they could see that the communal door to Janet Ramsey’s apartment building was still open.

  Bimsley had no qualms about kicking in the locked front door, but Meera stopped him. “She might be behind it,” she warned, calling to Ramsey and getting no response.

  “I’ll do it gently,” Bimsley promised, but as he leaned on it, the door swung in.

  Ramsey was lying at the foot of the stairs, her cracked forehead still wet with a vivid slash of blood. Mangeshkar checked for vital signs as Bimsley reported back.

  “She’s still breathing,” said Meera. “He’s not here. But he’s messed up badly this time.”

  ∨ Ten Second Staircase ∧

 

‹ Prev