From the corner of his eye, Tom saw Ryan Tippetts punch the air. ‘Yay,’ he shouted.
Grabbing something off the printer, he smiled and strolled over to Tom, waving the sheet of paper that Tom could see had a photo on it.
‘DCI Douglas. As always, good police work has paid off.’ His expression radiated self-satisfaction.
Tom merely nodded and waited, doubtful that Ryan had done anything on his own initiative.
‘I spent most of yesterday afternoon trying to contact the woman who took the photo of our Olivia in Anglesey.’ Ryan was nodding his head slightly and turning from side to side as if playing to the audience.
Tom thought he looked like a skinny-faced version of one of those Churchill dogs in the back of a car window.
‘And?’ Tom prompted.
‘It looks like finally I’ve hit the jackpot.’
Ryan held out a photo.
Tom and Becky looked at it, and then up at Ryan.
‘It’s not the best photo in the world, as you can see. Olivia was turning back to avoid the snap – or that’s what the woman who took it said – but you get about three quarters of her face. Enough for somebody to recognise her. So, we can use this for the press, can’t we?’
With his eyes on Ryan’s self-satisfied face, Tom held his hand out for the photo. He looked down, just to confirm what he knew already.
‘Ryan, am I right in thinking that you met Olivia Brookes about nine years ago with me, and then again two years ago with Detective Superintendent Stanley?’
‘Yeah – seem to always be in the shit don’t they, this family?’
‘Look at the photo, Ryan. Is this Olivia Brookes?’ Tom asked.
‘Well, according to the woman who took it, yes. This is the one she sent to the landlady, the one that Robert Brookes snaffled.’
Ryan was beginning to look a little puzzled, his thunder stolen in some way that as yet he didn’t appear to have grasped.
‘Is this the woman you met two years ago, DC Tippetts? Look again.’ Tom was barely keeping his anger in check.
‘Well, now you mention it, she does look a bit different – but women always make themselves up to look different, don’t they?’
Tom turned away in disgust.
‘Grab your keys, Becky. I’ve no idea who this is, but even after nine years I can tell you without a shadow of a doubt, this is not Olivia Brookes.’
23
The incident room was buzzing with theories and Becky had asked Tom to stay and brief the team while she went to see Robert. She needed confirmation that this picture was a copy of the photo Robert had taken from Mrs Evans, and she also needed to ask him if he knew who this woman was, and why she might be impersonating Olivia. More to the point, why the hell hadn’t he told them? At least she now understood why Robert hadn’t seemed more upset by his wife’s apparent infidelity. If Olivia wasn’t the one at the guest house, what did it matter who had come to visit?
Robert Brookes had been hiding too much from them, and as soon as they knew what excuses he had concocted for failing to give them all the facts, they were going to make a decision about next steps. It might be time for Mr Brookes to be formally interviewed. They hadn’t got enough to arrest him, so he’d be able to leave at any time – and Becky had no doubt that Robert Brookes would choose that option. She was going to get him, though. Whatever he’d done, he wasn’t going to get away with it.
Becky felt better than she had done for months. The stupid, ridiculous relationship with Peter Hunter had left her badly shaken, and now that she was able to see things in some sort of perspective, she recognised she was more disturbed by the fact that she had fallen into the age-old trap of the older, powerful man and the young naive girl than she was by the fact that he had dumped her. And she wasn’t that young, either. She should have known better, and was ashamed of her gullibility.
Tom had helped yesterday. He was so non-judgemental with people, probably because the sins of ordinary mortals were as nothing next to the iniquities they had to deal with in their job.
As she drove back towards Robert Brookes’ house, Becky thought about the Tom she had first met all those years ago when he had been senior investigating officer in the Hugo Fletcher case. He’d seemed sad when he’d joined their team at the Met, and she could only surmise that this was because of his recent divorce. But he was so enthusiastic, and really geed up the team. As time had passed, though, his sadness hadn’t diminished but his enthusiasm had. She’d started to notice a slight touch of cynicism in him that hadn’t been there before, and she’d never entirely understood it – although perhaps the failure to solve a high-profile case had got to him. The good news was that the old Tom seemed to be back. The former disenchantment seemed to have disappeared, and he was as passionate as ever about the job.
Why couldn’t she have fallen for Tom?
Becky snorted quietly. That would have been far too easy. Why fall for a tall, good-looking, single guy, who actually appears to care about other people, when you can have some middle-aged, married philanderer whose only interest seems to be in satisfying his own ego?
She turned the car down the narrow, tree-lined road that led to the Brookes’ house. The individual styles of each property and the way they sat within their plots of land at slightly different angles to the narrow, bendy road made this one of the more interesting suburban streets. However blissful the location, though, Becky shivered slightly at the thought of facing Robert Brookes again. She gave herself a mental shake as she pulled her car on to the drive.
Despite being told by several neighbours the day before that both the Brookes’ cars were normally kept in their large, attached brick garage, Robert’s Jag was still on the drive. She was pleased she couldn’t hear that dreadful digger today, although she could see the equipment was still outside the neighbour’s house. Perhaps they’d decided to respect the peace of a Sunday morning.
Having radioed ahead and been informed that there had been no sign of Olivia Brookes returning during the night, she opened the car door. It was so quiet. All she could hear was the twittering of birds in the trees, and the distant hum of a lawnmower. She looked up and saw the curtains were open in what she knew to be Robert and Olivia’s bedroom, so didn’t feel too guilty about raising the knocker and giving three solid thumps of metal on metal.
Becky turned her back to the door as she waited, and looked across the road at the one house that had a view past the trees and shrubs and up the drive. The lady who lived there – Mrs Preston, if she remembered correctly – had been a useful source of information yesterday, and Becky could see why. Although she was standing back from the window, the good lady seemed to be unaware that the light coming through from the patio doors at the back of her sitting room was casting a clear profile of her image against the net curtains at the front. Becky smiled to herself and turned back towards the Brookes’ front door. She banged again.
No answer.
Bugger, she thought. Perhaps he was in the shower or something. Or maybe he’d decided to ignore her.
There was a narrow path down the side of the garage to the back garden – no doubt the path Mrs Preston had taken to check on the Brookes’ cars – and Becky decided to investigate. As she passed the garage she peered in to check that Olivia’s car was still in place, and wasn’t surprised that it was exactly where she’d last seen it. Tom had made an interesting observation, though. He’d said that for a woman with three children, at least two of whom would have to be in child seats, a two-door Beetle had to be the daftest car to choose. Did that suggest that Olivia was the sort of impetuous woman who didn’t always think things through?
Round the back of the garage, Becky could see a door which she knew from a previous visit led into a utility room and then on into the kitchen. She tried the handle, but it was locked. She wandered further round to the rear of the house where huge glass doors allowed the morning sun to flood the large kitchen with light. This was Becky’s idea of a dream kitche
n – one she could cook in and eat in. There was even a comfy chair she could curl up in to read a book. As a room, it was almost a complete home in itself. But there was a sort of sterility here that she would have had to fix if it were hers. The worktops were devoid of clutter; there were no pictures on the walls – not even paintings by the children stuck on the front of the fridge with bright-coloured magnets. It was very chic, with its shiny cream units and black-granite worktop, but it seemed too bare and lifeless to be part of a home. Even the crockery in the glass-fronted wall cabinets was matching cream and black. She would want to add colour – a bright red free-standing mixer, some mad patterned salad bowls from somewhere Mediterranean, green and blue water glasses – anything to bring some life to the place.
There was nothing to see in the kitchen, though. No Robert Brookes, and no sign that he had eaten breakfast there, although Becky had to admit that if he had, he would no doubt have cleared his plates away and tidied up. It was that kind of kitchen.
She turned to look down the garden. It was enormous. The section closest to the house was laid with lawn, broken up by beautiful curved flower beds. A hedge of yew trees separated this part of the garden from the rest of the extensive plot, and Becky could just make out a climbing frame and a Wendy house beyond. Personally she’d have expected the children’s area to be closer to the house so Olivia could keep an eye on them from the kitchen window, but the garden was quite spectacular and it must be heaven in the evenings, sitting on the wide stone-flagged terrace, sipping a glass of cold wine, surrounded by all these sweet-smelling flowers.
She turned back towards the house. Now what?
Not really expecting much, she decided to try the terrace door, just in case.
To her surprise, it slid silently open and she stepped inside the kitchen, closing the door behind her. There was an ominous stillness about the place. The windows cut out all sense of life outside these four walls, and Becky suddenly felt claustrophobic – something she had never experienced before. It was as if the air had settled immobile around her, and she couldn’t breathe. She spun round and opened the glass doors as wide as she could and took a gulp of air.
‘Get a grip, Becky,’ she muttered under her breath. She turned round, half expecting to see the stationary figure of Robert Brookes framed in the doorway to the hall, gazing up at her from beneath his hooded eyelids. But there was nobody there. She breathed out and took a step further into the room.
‘Mr Brookes,’ she called out. Silence.
She ventured forwards, first into the living room, and then into the hallway. She called again. ‘Mr Brookes.’
Nothing.
She had to go upstairs. She couldn’t just stand here. For God’s sake, she was a Detective Inspector. But this house gave her the creeps.
She tried the door to the study, and was staggered to find it unlocked. Unlocked, but empty. The only sign of life was the computer’s screen saver flashing its multi-coloured images around the room.
Becky silently made her way up the stairs.
‘Mr Brookes,’ she called again. She pushed open each of the bedroom doors, and found them empty. Finally she reached the closed door at the front of the house. She knocked gently, and then more firmly, calling out yet again. ‘It’s Detective Inspector Robinson, Mr Brookes. Are you there?’
Finally, she turned the handle and pushed the door open.
With a gasp, she surveyed the wrecked room. What on earth had happened here? And where the hell was Robert?
24
Shoving supermarket bags randomly into the back of her car, Sophie Duncan realised she had been operating on autopilot. She had no idea whether she’d bought the right things or not, and had the horrible feeling that she would get home and realise she had forgotten something vital and have to come straight back again. She didn’t mind shopping for food, though. It was largely a mindless exercise as far as she was concerned – she was no kitchen goddess – and she’d arrived just as the shops had been opening, so she’d managed to escape before the Sunday hordes turned up. Whatever had happened to the day of rest?
As she turned the key in the ignition, the local radio news came on. More about Olivia Brookes and her three children. Sophie felt the now familiar twinge of unease somewhere deep inside, but brushed it away. Olivia would be okay. She had to be.
It was now eighteen months since Olivia Brookes, or Liv Hunt as she would always be to Sophie Duncan, had turned up out of the blue after more than seven years of no communication, and it had to have been one of the best days Sophie could remember for quite a while. There had been a dearth of good days around that time, and she had been struggling to cope with the idea of being out of active service for the foreseeable future. Her body felt like it belonged to a stranger. Somebody feeble, and not at all like her. She was sick of the fact that it no longer obeyed her commands, and seemed to have a mind of its own.
But the day Liv came was a red-letter day, and she had momentarily forgotten her injuries.
When the doorbell had rung, Sophie’s mum had started to struggle to her feet, but Sophie waved her hand in a flapping motion.
‘Sit down, Mum. I need to move around, or I’ll end up being desk-bound for the rest of my career.’ Ignoring the predictable, ‘And a good job too,’ that her mother muttered, Sophie had slowly and steadily made her way to the front door of her mother’s 1930s semi.
Opening the door, she had let out a shriek. ‘Liv? Liv – is it really you? Oh my God. Oh my God. Let me look at you. I’ve missed you so much.’
There were tears in Liv’s eyes as she had looked Sophie up and down and taken in the extent of her friend’s injuries, so Sophie had done her best to lighten the moment by attempting a little twirl, raising her good arm in the air and shouting, ‘Ta da!’ as she spun round on the better of her two legs, nearly falling over.
‘Oh, Soph – what happened? It said on the news that you were rescuing people from an attack on one of the dam projects when the bomb went off. Are you going to be okay?’
‘Course I am. Just a bit of damage to various bits, but as long as they can get all the parts lined up and operational again, I’ll be right as rain. Come on, Liv. Smile. I could be dead – as some of my mates already are.’ For a moment, Sophie had thought she might lose it, but she’d had years of practice at keeping a smile on her face.
‘Let’s get you sat down, and then we can open a bottle. Any excuse, eh?’ She’d dragged Liv into the sitting room, her arm around her friend’s waist. ‘Look who we’ve got here, Mum.’
‘Ooh, Liv, you’re a sight for sore eyes,’ Sophie’s mum, Margaret, had said. ‘We’ve missed you, you know. Both of us.’
Sophie had seen a flash of guilt cross her friend’s face and came to her rescue.
‘Yes, well – we’re both to blame. If I hadn’t buggered off to the other end of the earth to fight somebody else’s battles, things might have been different. Liv’s been doing the grownup stuff – getting married and having babies. I’ve been playing war games.’
It hadn’t been anything like that at all, really. When she’d left Manchester – initially for officer training at Sandhurst, and then ultimately on her first deployment – she had done everything she could to keep in touch with Liv, but within weeks of Sophie leaving the country, her friend had stopped writing. She had always assumed it was because she hadn’t been there for Liv when Dan went AWOL. She had literally been about to board a flight for Iraq at the time, though, and you can’t tell the British Army that your best friend’s upset so you’re sorry, but you can’t get on the plane.
There had been a couple of letters early on, up until the time when Liv’s parents died – and then it all went quiet. Sophie had understood that the grief must have been so intense that maybe even writing a letter was too painful, so when she heard from her mother that Liv was marrying a man called Robert she had sent a card with a long note wishing the couple all the happiness in the world. That also had seemed to fall on deaf ears.
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Sophie wasn’t one to bear a grudge, though; life, as she well knew, was way too short for that, and at least Liv was here now, although the last seven years seemed to have aged her more than Sophie would have expected. The skin looked tight around her friend’s eyes and mouth as if she didn’t smile enough, and the bright light that used to shine from Liv seemed to have been reduced to a pale glow.
‘Let me get the wine, and then we can settle down and have a good long catch up,’ Sophie had said, limping towards the door.
‘No wine for me, thanks, Sophie. I’m driving and I need to get back for the kids.’
‘Ooh – plural now. How many have you got?’
‘Three. And I have to leave to pick them up from school in about half an hour.’
‘Well, you can have a glass surely?’ she had asked, clinging on to the edge of the door for support.
‘Not really. If I turn up for the children smelling of alcohol, they’ll have social services on me before I can say, “It was just the one glass.”’
‘It can’t be that bad,’ Sophie had said. But she’d looked at Liv’s face, and somehow knew that it was. ‘Okay – cup of tea, then?’
Sophie’s mum was struggling to her feet.
‘Sit down, Sophie. I can manage to make a cup of tea, and you two have a lot of catching up to do as Liv doesn’t appear to have long.’ Sophie hoped her friend hadn’t picked up the slightly sharp note in her mum’s voice. She was obviously thinking: Why wait so long and then only come for five minutes? But it was a start.
‘So, Liv, tell me about your life, your husband, your kids – I want to know every sodding detail.’
She’d heard her mother mutter, ‘Your language, Sophie,’ as she went out of the room. The two friends had shared a smile, and it felt good.
‘No, Sophie – tell me about what happened to you. I couldn’t believe it when I saw your picture come up on the news. We don’t watch it very often, but I put it on for five minutes, and there you were. It must have been awful.’
[DCI Tom Douglas 03.0] Sleep Tight Page 12