Blood Reckoning: DI Jack Brady 4

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Blood Reckoning: DI Jack Brady 4 Page 13

by Danielle Ramsay


  Brady liked Carl. Liked his attitude. He wasn’t intimidated by anyone – including Brady. Carl may have only been in his early twenties but he had an ease about him that placed him as older than his years. He was a handsome kid. Even after the loss of his eye. Never short of female attention. Tall, physically fit, with tousled curly dark blond hair and designer stubble – throw in the fact that he was always impeccably dressed and it was fair to say he had ‘presence’. And he knew it. He was a young Madley in the making.

  ‘Coffee?’ Carl said as he walked over to the state-of-the-art stainless steel ECM Heidelberg Barista espresso coffee machine.

  ‘Rather have a scotch,’ Brady replied. He hadn’t realised how much he needed one until now. It was late. He was tired. And he was no further forward in the case.

  Molly Johansson had been no help. And Alexander De Bernier was proving not to be what he had expected. Instead, one word stood out – duplicitous. The alarm bells weren’t ringing in Brady’s head – they were screeching. Then there was the missing link – the receptionist who was on duty last night. Chantelle Robertson.

  His head was pounding. His primary concern was that whoever had killed De Bernier would strike again. In the Seventies, The Joker had waited just seven days after he killed his first victim before murdering the second one. By the end of his killing spree his cooling-off period had dropped to less than twenty-four hours. The prospect of this happening again terrified him.

  ‘Thanks,’ Brady said when Carl put the double measure in front of him. ‘Where’s the boss?’ He knew the answer but he just wanted to make sure that they were reading the same script.

  ‘Spain. Golfing holiday.’

  Brady nodded. He’d heard exactly the same from the receptionist. Not the destination, just the holiday part. But Brady needed to talk to Madley. He just needed to make sure that Madley hadn’t pissed off any business associates. It wasn’t that long ago that an undercover copper had been dumped, mutilated and bleeding out, in the Gents of the Blue Lagoon. It had transpired that Madley had made a serious enemy of some powerful people. They’d wanted him to join forces with them, or alternatively, let them buy him out. Madley had refused, not liking the ‘business’ they dealt in. Human trafficking and sex slavery to be precise. The price? A copper left for dead as a warning in his place of business, bringing with it the police.

  ‘What’s your take on what happened next door?’

  For the briefest of moments, Carl looked thrown by the question. ‘I dunno. You tell me. You’re the copper.’

  Brady stared at him, trying to glean whether he really knew anything. That was the reason he was here. Hoping that Carl would throw him some scraps of information. Anything. If there was one person who would have noticed something unusual, out of character, it was Carl.

  ‘Where were you last night?’

  Carl looked amused. ‘What? I’m a suspect now?’

  ‘I assume you’re looking after things while Madley’s away.’

  Carl shrugged. ‘Maybe.’

  Brady persisted. ‘What hours did you work yesterday?’

  ‘The graveyard shift,’ Carl answered.

  ‘Very droll. I just need to know if you saw anything. Or anyone acting suspiciously.’

  ‘I’ve already told your lot. I didn’t see anything.’

  Brady nodded. Took a mouthful of scotch. He savoured the burning in his mouth as it slid down the back of his throat. It wasn’t a single malt. It was a blend; scratchy and raw. Nonetheless, he appreciated the numbing sensation that followed the brash taste.

  He considered his options. He needed information. And he knew Carl, despite his pretence, was holding something back. The problem was that Carl could be an obstinate bastard at times.

  Two more swigs and the scotch was gone. Brady placed the glass down on the bar and looked Carl in the eye. ‘Let me level with you. A serious crime took place in the Royal. At a guess, it happened late last night or in the early hours of this morning.’ Brady lowered his voice as he continued. ‘One person checked into that room: John Smith.’

  Carl waited.

  One theory was that the victim had checked into room 212 under a pseudonym. Another was that it was his killer who had checked in. Brady was looking into both. ‘But two people were there. One left the room alive. That’s the one I’m interested in.’

  ‘I can see why,’ Carl replied.

  ‘You worked the hotel front of desk last night. Why?’

  It took Carl a moment to answer – as if he was distracted, or thinking of a reply. ‘You lot know what trouble we get down here on weekends. Our clients tend to be stag and hen parties by the coachload. They come from all over the place. Birmingham, Glasgow – you name it. And they come looking for one thing. To escape. Get drunk, get laid and then get out of Dodge. But at times they can be too much for the receptionists that work here. Sexual harassment and all that. So Mr Madley asked me to look into it.’

  Brady nodded. It was a good enough answer. Plausible even. And it matched with what he had already been told.

  ‘What about Gibbs and that wiry little runt from the East End that your boss is so fond of?’

  ‘They’re both accompanying Mr Madley.’

  Madley had assumed that the ‘heavies’ Gibbs and Weasel Face were with Madley. It matched with the flight bookings to Spain yesterday afternoon. And if he had them with him, he meant business.

  He knew Carl was lying about the front desk situation. Something else was going on. But he wasn’t here to find out what. Brady was only interested in finding De Bernier’s killer.

  ‘You know I still can’t get hold of the receptionist on duty last night?’

  Carl didn’t look too surprised.

  ‘By all accounts she took a flight to Malaga early this afternoon.’

  Carl didn’t react.

  ‘Did she mention it to you last night?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Seems odd, don’t you think? The flight was booked around midday. I wonder why she would suddenly decide to go to Spain. By all accounts, her parents had no idea. She came home, got her passport, packed a suitcase and she’s gone. No explanation. Nothing. And she’s scheduled to be back in at work for eight tomorrow morning.’

  Carl shrugged. ‘She never mentioned it to me. Maybe she’d had enough of Whitley Bay? Opted for the sunshine instead.’

  Brady waited. It was clear that Carl was not going to offer anything else on the subject. He took out a photograph of the victim. Slid it across the bar towards Carl. Watched as he picked it up.

  ‘Don’t recognise him.’

  ‘Look again.’

  Carl made a play of scrutinising the photograph of the victim, then shook his head. ‘No. Definitely didn’t see him.’

  The photograph would be on all the front pages tomorrow morning and across the news headlines, even though Brady had tried his best to stop the speculation. He’d followed Gates’ orders and kept his mouth shut. Fed the press the usual crap, that the police were busy investigating a suspicious death. That if the public had seen anything suspicious or had any relevant information to contact the police. The details of the murder had been vague, but word would get out. No matter how hard Brady tried to keep the press at a distance, they had a way of sniffing out a story. He had already had Rubenfeld, a hard-nosed hack with the Northern Echo – and Brady’s snitch when there was something in it for him – on the phone. Brady could hear him salivating at the thought of a front page story. Brady wasn’t throwing him any scraps. He couldn’t. The reason was simple: the headlines would incite public hysteria. He thought of the press cuttings he had read from the Seventies murder cases. The press had dined out on The Joker for years afterwards. He had never been caught. No resolution. No punishment meted out. Nothing. He had just disappeared.

  Until now.

  ‘Look, Carl,’ Brady paused, ‘you’ve got a choice. Give me something, then I’ll back off. Don’t, then I’ll keep coming back. And each time, I’ll bring backup
to re-interview every member of staff. Then I’ll pick apart the hotel next door, this nightclub and your boss’s offices upstairs. I know that Madley won’t be best pleased to have the police poking around. Not when all you have to do is tell me what you know.’

  It was clear from Carl’s expression that he didn’t like being threatened. Who did? But Brady had no choice. Carl knew something. He had to. Otherwise, why was Brady standing here?

  Carl nodded. His expression was cold, eyes hard as nails as he stared at Brady. ‘All right.’

  ‘Go on,’ Brady instructed.

  ‘Some girl came in after half ten. Drunk and hysterical. She had a taxi waiting for her outside.’

  ‘What did she look like?’ Brady asked, not wanting to jump to conclusions. But he already had a good idea who Carl was talking about.

  ‘Tall, thin, blonde. Good-looking, if her face wasn’t so messed up from crying. She had mascara running down her cheeks and smeared lipstick across one cheek. Not a good look. Her accent wasn’t from around here. Sounded South African.’

  Brady recognised the description: Molly Johansson.

  ‘Why had she turned up?’

  ‘Claimed her boyfriend was in the hotel. That she knew he was here. She wanted us to check our records. See what room he was in so she could “chop his cheating balls off!” Her words. Verbatim.’

  Brady resisted the urge to grab hold of Carl’s suit jacket and shout in his face that he was a fucking idiot for not mentioning it earlier. Somehow he reined it in. ‘What did you do?’

  ‘I told her to go home and sober up. That we weren’t in the business of revealing the identity of our clients. Regardless of whether they claimed to be the wife, the girlfriend or the boss. That client confidentiality matters.’

  ‘Did she do as you asked?’

  ‘What do you think? She refused to leave. Said that she’d wait for him at the hotel bar. That he would have to leave at some point. I said that we didn’t want a scene and she assured me there wouldn’t be one.’

  ‘You didn’t see her leave?’

  ‘No. The taxi left. She went and paid it. Came back in and went to the toilets. Sorted her face out and then headed for the bar. Last time I checked, she’d gone. I imagine she’d given up waiting and ordered a taxi.’

  ‘What time was it when you noticed that she had gone?’

  Carl shrugged. ‘Before midnight.’

  Brady couldn’t hide the incredulity he felt.

  ‘What?’ Carl asked.

  ‘You didn’t think that was significant in any way?’ Brady did his best to keep his voice controlled. It was proving difficult.

  ‘She was some young, drunk, girl mouthing off that her boyfriend was in one of our rooms screwing someone else. How does that figure in a murder investigation?’

  Brady shook his head. ‘For a smart bloke, you can be exceptionally fucking stupid!’

  ‘Do you know how many fights I have to sort out? Girls claiming their boyfriend’s just shagged some lass in the toilets over there?’ Carl gestured towards the Gents. ‘Loads. Take the hotel next door. People come here wanting privacy. If they want to bang someone else other than their missus, that’s their prerogative. It’s not for me or you to moralise. Life’s shit. Straight up. So if people want to fuck around, have a shag-fest right under my nose, I look the other way. Not my business. That’s what I’m paid to do. ’

  ‘Since when did you turn so cynical?’ Brady asked.

  ‘I was born that way.’

  Brady resisted the urge to tell Carl what he thought of him. There was one final question. ‘You definitely didn’t give her the room number?’

  ‘I already said no.’

  ‘Was there any point when you left the reception area?’

  Carl gave it some thought. ‘Yeah, a couple of times. I had to check on the club here. I also got Stu the chef to make me a steak sandwich. So, yeah . . .’

  ‘Chantelle Robertson was left on her own then?’

  Carl sighed, seeing where Brady was taking this.

  ‘Could she have given the room number to her?’

  ‘Bit hard if the guest was registered as “John Smith”. Chantelle’s a sweet girl but you’ve got to spell things out for her, if you get my drift.’

  ‘All right,’ Brady continued, trying to keep his voice level, ‘say Chantelle checked her boyfriend in. So she’d seen him, yeah? He’s a good-looking bloke. Or at least he was. If the girlfriend had a photo on her phone, which I’m sure she would do, and she showed it to her, then Chantelle would recognise him. I’m sure there’s not many blokes who walk in the Royal looking like him. He’d be memorable. Especially to a young woman.’

  Carl stared at Brady. ‘Like I said, Chantelle isn’t exceptionally smart.’

  ‘Thanks for the drink,’ Brady said and then turned and walked towards the front doors.

  ‘No problem.’

  ‘Carl?’ Brady said, turning back.

  ‘Yeah?’

  ‘Tell your boss I need to speak with him. It’s a matter of course, given what’s happened here. But also tell him I want Chantelle Robertson on a flight back to Newcastle ASAP.’

  Carl did not react.

  Brady left it. He turned and made his way out of the club.

  Once outside he stood for a few moments, letting the chilled spring air cool his temper down. He had bigger problems than his overwhelming desire to go back in there and lay Carl out cold. He needed Molly Johansson brought in for questioning. Three reasons: firstly, she had lied; secondly, she had a motive; thirdly and the most crucial detail of all, she could be placed at the crime scene. Or in the vicinity. It was good enough for Brady to consider her a credible suspect.

  What about The Joker? The original killer?

  Maybe she knew about the earlier murders? Read old newspaper articles. Found about his signature – the Joker card.

  But how the fuck could she know about the way he killed his victims?

  Brady thought of the crime scene. The first thing that had struck him was that there hadn’t been a struggle. The victim hadn’t put up a fight. Which meant he had willingly allowed himself to be restrained. It implied that he trusted whoever had bound his hands and legs. He knew them.

  The victim’s girlfriend was clearly upset when Brady had visited her. Angry was a more accurate description. Was it possible that she had suspected her fiancé of having an affair and had followed him last night? Could she have killed him?

  Brady attempted to silence the thoughts that hit him like pellets, disabling him.

  He wanted Molly Johansson brought in for questioning. Now.

  Brady steadied himself. It was too late to interview her tonight. He was too tired to think straight. He couldn’t risk the chance of screwing this up. He would wait until the morning. From the amount she had been knocking back, he knew that she would be in a comatose state right now and he didn’t believe she’d be going anywhere. A patrol car knocking at 6:00 a.m. to bring her in would be good enough.

  The majority of the team had already gone home, including Conrad, but a few had stayed to cover the nightshift. Just in case. For a moment Brady was undecided as to what he should do. It was nearly 1:00 a.m. He didn’t want to face Claudia, didn’t have the energy. He knew that she would have been drinking. Would still be drinking. Meaning that she wouldn’t be in a good state – mentally or physically. The beat-up old leather couch under the leaking window in his office seemed really appealing. He desperately needed a few hours’ sleep, just to get his head together. After all, DCI Gates and DI Adamson would be returning later today. He would have a lot of answering to do.

  MONDAY

  Chapter Eighteen

  Monday: 1:39 a.m.

  Brady had gone straight home. It was after one in the morning and he was mentally and physically exhausted. He needed a few hours’ sleep and then he would be back at his desk first thing.

  He opened the door, hoping that Claudia would be asleep. He was too tired to deal with anything
else right now. But she wasn’t. He could hear the mumbling of some Sky arts programme coming from the living room.

  He breathed in deeply as he mentally prepared himself.

  ‘Hey,’ he said as he walked into the living room.

  She didn’t even look up at him.

  ‘I haven’t woken you, have I?’ Brady said softly as he knelt down beside her.

  She was lying on the sofa, staring blankly at the flickering TV screen.

  ‘Claudia?’ Brady whispered as he stroked the unruly curls back off her forehead.

  It was unusually clammy.

  ‘Claudia?’ Brady asked again as he gently tilted her face towards him.

  Her dull, lacklustre eyes stared back without any recognition.

  Then he noticed something lying on the wooden floor beside her limp, outstretched arm.

  He didn’t need to pick up the small plastic bottle to know that it was empty. Alongside it was a bottle of single malt. Two-thirds gone.

  Shit! Shit! How many? How many tablets were left?

  Brady tried to remember when he had last taken some. He breathed out. Tried to stop himself panicking.

  Fucking remember!

  Then it came to him. Four. There would have only been four left. He had picked up the repeat prescription on Saturday morning and still had the bottle in his jacket pocket.

  Thank fuck . . .

  He had been careless. He hadn’t thought. Hadn’t realised she would go through his things looking for his prescription painkillers. If she had taken the full bottle . . .

  Stop it! She didn’t. She’s fine . . . But if she had . . . she would be dead.

  ‘Claudia?’ Brady asked, scared.

  Nothing. Her eyes were lifeless. Her frail body slack and limp.

  He pressed his lips against her forehead and then held her against his chest as he tried to figure out what to do. He could take her to hospital to have her stomach pumped but then she would be on suicide watch. The doctors would intervene. Check her medical history. Find out what had happened to her five months ago. Her parents would be notified. Claudia wouldn’t want that. She would hate him if this got out. It was just a desperate attempt at scaring him. That was all. He had left her for the first time in five months. What did he expect? She had panicked. Brady should have come home earlier. Or at least, he should have checked up on her.

 

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