by David Peace
1980
David Peace
“David Peace is the future of crime fiction… A fantastic talent.” – Ian Rankin
“[David Peace is] transforming the genre with passion and style.” – George Pelecanos
“Peace has single-handedly established the genre of Yorkshire Noir, and mightily satisfying it is.” – Yorkshire Post
“Peace is a manic James Joyce of the crime novel… invoking the horror of grim lives, grim crimes, and grim times.” – Sleazenation
“A tour de force of crime fiction which confirms David Peace’s reputation as one of the most important names in contemporary crime literature.” – Crime Time
“A compelling and devastating body of work that pushes Peace to the forefront of British writing.” – Time Out
“[Peace] exposes a side of life which most of us would prefer to ignore.” – Daily Mail
“A writer of immense talent and power… If northern noir is the crime fashion of the moment, Peace is its most brilliant designer.” – The Times (London)
“Peace has found his own voice-full of dazzling, intense poetry and visceral violence.” – Uncut
Third in the "Red Riding Quartet", this tale is set in 1980, when the Yorkshire Ripper murders his 13th victim. Assistant Chief Constable Hunter is drawn into a world of corruption and sleaze. When his house is burned down and his wife threatened, his quest becomes personal.
David Peace
1980
The third book in the Red Riding Quartet series, 2001
For the dead, a compass -
The living, salt.
‘Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December;
And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.’
– The Raven,
Edgar Allan Poe
Beg, Beg, Beg
The way I heard it, the nignogs just let themselves in.
Eric was sat there watching Songs of fucking Praise, back to the door, and head nigger walks up behind him, pulls his hair back, and slits him ear to ear. Then they make themselves a sandwich, take a shit, and wait for his wife to come home -
Just like that.
Part 1. Saint Cunt
echo test transmission one a citizens band broadcast of pictures at an atrocity exhibition from the shadows of the sun out of the arc of the searchlight joyce jobson in halifax on friday the twelfth of july nineteen seventy four more life in a graveyard the rain keeping them in time for a look in the royal oak one more lager and then a fish supper with donald the lift home the chat the banter the chip shop shut out of the shadows the darkness he steps five foot four inches and quite good looking slightly wavy hair dark long sideboards he would not frighten anybody and says in a yorkshire way he says the weather is letting us down again and e know e am going to be in trouble severe cuts above both eyes and lacerations on the head her skull had suffered double fractures from an iron bar or hammer and for a moment the living soul is here among the dead who are suspended and soon will die get away from here intensive care just in case she had two small slashes in the small of her back each about six to eight inches long caused by a sharp instrument the clothing had first been lifted up before the marks were made then the clothing was rearranged where is kojak now he asks himself donald is it possible that you went out of the front door of your house and ran along the gardens around the side of the row of houses and waited in the dark for your wife is it possible donald it is you who out of the shadows the darkness step and attack your wife and say in a yorkshire way you say the weather is letting us down again was that you donald you have had your differences you and joyce we know and then you ran back along the gardens and sat back down in front of kojak that was you was it not the chopper man in a yorkshire way he says the weather is letting us down again and she is going to be in trouble severe cuts above both eyes and lacerations on the head her skull had suffered double fractures from an iron bar or hammer and for a moment the living soul is here among the dead who are suspended and soon will die get away from the silences in the shops the graffiti on the walls and doors the wet beds the days off work the days off school the days in the hospital the long days in the house the weather letting us down again and again and again the newspapers and the telephone calls the headaches and the pills the doctors and the police this is what the ripper has done to my wife the invisible man who put the dog hairs on her clothes who did not ladder her tights who left her white heels unmarked but still she sits in the house and gets depressed life pointless and crying out in a yorkshire way she screams the weather is letting us down again and they will put me away they will our sex life destroyed my daughters persuaded me to go out and buy clothes but e only did it to please them and they would laugh because e would never go anywhere to wear them and e used to enjoy cooking and cleaning but now e do it just to avoid sitting and thinking of chopper man a living soul here among the dead who are suspended and soon will die get away they say e could not be near a man or even look at one without feeling funny in a yorkshire way they all say the weather is letting us down again and e know it sounds horrible but sometimes e would look at my own husband sitting there the weather letting him down again and again and again my living soul here among the dead who are suspended and soon will die and e must get away from here from what ripper has done to me weather letting us down again the telephone call the silence before in a yorkshire way he says e missed you once but e will get you next time weather is letting you down again missed you once but not the next test
Chapter 1
A shot -
I’m awake, sweating and afraid.
Downstairs the telephone is ringing, before the dawn, before the alarm.
The LED display says 5:00, my head still full of murder and lies, nuclear war:
The North after the bomb, machines the only survivors.
I get out of bed and go downstairs and take the call.
I come back upstairs and sit in the cold on the edge of the bed, Joan still pretending to be asleep.
On the radio Yoko Ono is saying:
‘This is not the end of an era. The 80s are still going to be a beautiful time, and John believed in it.’
After a few minutes I say: ‘I’ve got to go to Whitby.’
‘It was him then?’ she asks, face still away.
‘Yes,’ I say, thinking -
Everyone gets everything they want.
I drive alone from Alderley Edge across the Moors, alone between the articulated lorries crawling slowly along the M62, the weather stark and grey, the landscape empty but for telegraph poles.
At 7:00 the radio breaks the news to the rest of the world:
‘The Yorkshire Ripper has claimed his thirteenth victim, as police confirmed that Laureen Bell, aged twenty, was killed by the man responsible…’
I switch off the radio, thinking -
Murder and lies, lies and murder -
War:
It is Thursday 11 December 1980.
I arrive in Whitby at 11:00 and park in the drive of the large new bungalow, alongside three expensive cars.
There’s sleet in the sea-spray, freezing gulls wheeling overhead, the wind screaming through a thousand empty shells.
I ring the doorbell.
A tall middle-aged woman opens the door.
‘Peter Hunter,’ I say.
‘Come in.’
I step into the bungalow.
‘Can I take your coat?’
‘Thanks.’
‘This way,’ she says, leading me down the hall to the back of the house.
She knocks on a door, opens it, and gestures for me to go inside.
Three men are sat on the sofa and chairs, grey skin and red eyes, silent.
Philip Evans stands up: ‘Peter? How was the drive?’
> ‘Not so bad.’
‘What would you like to drink?’ asks his wife from the doorway.
‘Coffee would be nice.’
‘Have to be instant, I’m afraid.’
‘Prefer it,’ I say.
‘Ever the diplomat,’ laughs Evans.
‘Everyone else OK?’
The other two men nod and she closes the door behind her.
‘Let’s get the introductions out of the way and then we can get on,’ smiles Philip Evans, the Regional Inspector of Constabulary for Yorkshire and the North East.
‘Gentlemen,’ he says, ‘This is Peter Hunter, Assistant Chief Constable of the Greater Manchester force. Peter, this is Sir John Reed, the Chief Inspector of Constabulary.’
‘We’ve met before,’ I say, shaking his hand.
‘A long time ago,’ says Sir John, sitting back down on the sofa.
‘Of course,’ nods Philip Evans. ‘And this is Michael Warren, from the Home Office.’
‘Nice to meet you,’ I say, shaking the thin man’s hand.
Evans points to a big chair with wide arms: ‘Sit down, Pete.’
There is a soft knock on the door and Mrs Evans brings in a tray, setting it down on the low table between us.
‘Help yourself to milk and sugar,’ she says.
‘Thank you.’
There’s a pause, just the wind and Mrs Evans talking to a dog as she retreats back into the kitchen.
Philip Evans says: ‘We’ve got a small problem.’
I stop stirring my coffee and look up.
‘As I mentioned on the phone, there’s been another murder. A nurse, twenty years old, outside her halls of residence. Leeds again.’
I nod: ‘It was on the radio.’
‘Couldn’t even give us a day,’ sighs Evans. ‘Well anyway, enough is enough.’
Michael Warren sits forward on the sofa and places a small portable cassette recorder beside the plastic tray on the coffee table.
‘Enough is enough,’ he echoes and presses play:
A long pause, tape hiss, and then:
‘I’m Jack. I see you are still having no luck catching me. I have the greatest respect for you George, but Lord! You are no nearer catching me now than four years ago when I started. I reckon your boys are letting you down, George. They can’t be much good can they?
‘The only time they came near catching me was a few months back in Chapeltown when I was disturbed. Even then it was a uniformed copper not a detective.
‘I warned you in March that I’d strike again. Sorry it wasn’t Bradford. I did promise that but I couldn’t get there. I’m not quite sure where I’ll strike again but it will be definitely some time this year, maybe September, October, even sooner if I get the chance. I am not sure where, maybe Manchester, I like it there, there’s plenty of them knocking about. They never learn do they George? I bet you’ve warned them, but they never listen.’
Thirteen seconds of hiss, then:
‘Take her in Preston, and I did, didn’t I George? Dirty cow. Come my load up that.
‘At the rate I’m going I should be in the book of records. I think it’s eleven up to now isn’t it? Well, I’ll keep on going for quite a while yet. I can’t see myself being nicked just yet. Even if you do get near I’ll probably top myself first. Well it’s been nice chatting to you George. Yours, Jack the Ripper.
‘No use looking for fingerprints. You should know by now it’s as clean as a whistle. See you soon. Bye.
‘Hope you like the catchy tune at the end. Ha. Ha.’
Reed leans forward and switches off the cassette just as Thank You for Being a Friend starts.
‘As you know that was June last year,’ says Warren. ‘What you won’t know is that Home Secretary Whitelaw immediately approved the use of the Police National Computer to back up covert surveillance operations of vehicles in the West Yorkshire area, to use birth and school registers to cross-reference these against all males born in Wearside since 1920. He also secretly approved the release of DHSS records to trace all males who have lived or worked in Wearside in the past fifty years. So far they’ve interviewed and eliminated 200,000 people, done over 30,000 house to house searches, taken over 25,000 statements, and spent the best part of four million pounds.’
‘And most of it on bloody publicity,’ says Sir John Reed.
‘Flush out the Ripper,’ whispers Philip Evans.
Sir John snorts: ‘Some bloody plan that was. 17,000 fucking suspects.’
‘Some bloody plan,’ repeats Michael Warren, putting in another cassette tape, pressing play again:
‘Every time the phone rings I wonder if it’s him. If I get up in the middle of the night I find myself thinking about him. I feel after all this time, I feel that I really know him.’
I look across at Reed, the grey skin and red eyes.
He’s shaking his head.
‘If we do get him, we’ll probably find he’s had too long on the left breast and not enough on the right. But I don’t regard him as evil. The voice is almost sad, a man fed up with what he’s done, fed up with himself. To me he’s like a bad angel on a mistaken journey and, while I could never condone his methods, I can sympathise with his feelings.’
Warren presses stop.
‘You know who that was?’
‘George Oldman?’ I say.
Philip Evans is nodding: ‘That was Assistant Chief Constable Oldman talking to the Yorkshire Post last week.’
Warren: ‘Thank Christ they called us.’
Silence.
On the dark stair, we miss our step.
Sir John Reed says: ‘Sixteen hours a day, six – sometimes seven – days a week.’
I shrug: ‘I’m afraid I don’t know much about it.’
‘What do you know?’
‘About?’
‘About the whole bloody farce?’
‘Not much more than I’ve read in the papers.’
‘I think you’re being modest, Mr Hunter. I think you know a lot more,’ winks Reed.
I start to speak, but he raises his hand: ‘I think like most senior detectives in this country, I think you feel West Yorkshire have lost the plot, that the Ripper Tape is bollocks, that he’s laughing at us, the British Police, and that you’d like nothing more than to have a crack.’
I return his stare: ‘So is it bollocks? The tape?’
He smiles and turns to Philip Evans, nodding.
There’s a pause before Evans says: ‘There’ll be a press conference later today and Chief Constable Angus will tell them that Oldman’s out.’
I say nothing now, waiting.
‘Peter Noble’s been made Temporary Assistant Chief Constable with sole responsibility for the hunt.’
Again I say nothing, waiting.
Michael Warren coughs and leans forward: ‘Noble’s a good man.’
Nothing, just waiting.
‘But there are already calls for outside help, a fresh perspective etc., so Angus is also going to announce the formation of a brains trust, a Super Squad if you like, to advise Noble’s team,’ continues Warren.
Nothing, waiting.
‘This Super Squad will be Leonard Curtis, Deputy Chief Constable, Thames Valley; William Meyers, the National Coordinator of the Regional Crime Squads; Commander Donald Lincoln, Sir John’s Deputy; Dr Stephen Tippet from the Forensic Science Service; and yourself.’
Waiting.
Sir John Reed lights a cigarette, exhales and says: ‘So what do you think now?’
I swallow: ‘We are to advise?’
‘Yes.’
‘For how long?’
Michael Warren says: Two or three weeks.’
Reed is staring at the end of his cigarette.
I say: ‘May I speak frankly?’
‘Of course,’ says Philip Evans.
‘As a public relations exercise I think we might have some success in diffusing the undoubted criticism the Yorkshire force is going to face over the next week but, as for
any practical use we might have, I think we’ll be distinctly limited.’
The whole room is smiling, grey skins and red eyes shining.
‘Bravo,’ claps Sir John Reed.
‘We called you here today,’ says Evans, handing me a thick red ringbinder. ‘Because we would like you to head up a covert Home Office inquiry into these murders, working tinder the guise of this Super Squad. You’ll be able to handpick up to seven officers to work with you; based in Leeds, you will be reporting only to myself here in Whitby. Your brief is to review the case in its entirety, to highlight areas of concern, should any arise, to determine strategies, to pursue all avenues.’
‘And to catch the cunt,’ spits Reed.
I wait, eyes on the prize.
Philip Evans says: ‘Questions?’
Quietly: ‘Why covert?’
Evans is nodding: ‘The public is unlikely to accept two simultaneous investigations. Secondly, nor will the West Yorkshire lads. Thirdly, we don’t want to wash our dirty linen in public etc., should there be any. Morale being what it is these days.’
I look around the room.
Sir John Reed says: ‘So go on, ask?’
‘Ask what, sir?’
‘Why me? That’s what you want to know, isn’t it? That’s what I’d want to know.’
‘OK. Why me?’
Reed nods at Michael Warren.
‘Primarily your work with A10,’ says Warren. ‘And the fact that you’ve previously been involved with investigations into the West Yorkshire force.’
‘With all due respect, one investigation was over five years ago and failed to reach any conclusion, aside from making me possibly the most unpopular copper in the North. And the second one was over before it began.’
‘Eric Hall,’ Evans says to the other two.
I look down at the cup of cold instant coffee on the table before me, the light reflecting in its black surface.
‘Hunter the Cunt, they call you,’ laughs Sir John Reed.