by Tania Carver
‘It is in my book. What about this basic human rights thing? When did that happen?’
‘In custody.You denied him access to a solicitor.’
‘News to me. Warnock’d been called but was unavailable. You were on your way; we were just… chatting till you arrived. What was the next one?’
‘Loss of earnings.’
‘Blaming me for the credit crunch now, is he? And emotional distress.’
‘Apparently his girlfriend has left him.’
‘Good for her. Let’s hope she finds someone who doesn’t want to use her for target practice. Is that it?’
Another rustle of paper. ‘Yep. That’s everything.’
‘Right,’ said Phil, a weary smile on his face. It was all just part of the game. He sighed. ‘Well, thanks again, Linda. Always nice to talk to you.’
‘You too, Phil.’
‘I wouldn’t want to do your job.’
She gave a small laugh. ‘And I wouldn’t want to do yours. Let’s catch up sometime.’ She hung up.
‘Or let’s not,’ he said to the dead line, putting the phone down. They had once gone out on a date. One of his least successful ones. And that was saying something. She must just be saying that out of politeness, he thought.
He leaned back in his chair, stretched. That was all he needed. Brotherton making trouble. He wasn’t worried, though. He could make it go away. It was just extra hassle he didn’t need, something to divert his time and energy.
He drained the last of his coffee, threw the paper cup in the bin. He had driven Marina in to work, then gone off to get takeaway coffee from a nearby sandwich shop. That way, he thought, it wouldn’t look like they were arriving together. Phil imagined, once again, all eyes on them as they entered the building. Questioning, knowing. That was one of the reasons he had gone out again. In reality, no one paid them the slightest bit of attention. Still, he couldn’t think about that now. Not with a briefing for the whole team in less than five minutes.
He gathered up his papers, made his way to the door.
‘Ben Fenwick sends his apologies,’ said Phil, sitting down
Marina fought the urge to smile smugly.
‘Over to you.’ He gestured to Marina. She nodded, looked round. Phil, Anni, the Birdies, herself. The core members of the team. Phil was trying his best to pretend he wasn’t watching her with more than professional interest. She tried not to look at him too much.
‘Thanks,’ she said. ‘Right. We know it’s not Brotherton. If the profile didn’t help, the last murder did. I’ve had a look at Caroline Eades’ murder and tried to fit it in with the others. And there are some interesting developments. Not to say worrying ones.’
She looked down at her notes, back to the room.
‘Serial killers usually work to a routine. And yes, we’re using the phrase serial killer now. I don’t think there’s any doubt. They usually follow a pattern. Same type of victim, some method of death, same type of location. But with this killer, there have been some striking deviations. I don’t know if they’re significant; I think they may be.’
She felt a twinge of pain in her stomach, automatically pressed her hand on it. She noticed Phil watching her.
‘Right,’ she said, ‘the first time a serial killer kills – or at least the first time we hear about it; there will have been other incidents before this – they usually kill in an area of geographical significance. It could be where they live, work, where they lost their virginity, whatever. So far, we haven’t found anything significant about the first murder.’
‘But we’re still working on it,’ said Phil. ‘Every new case that comes in, we match against it.’
‘Good. But I don’t think the location is significant in this killer’s case. There’s something more important to him than that. Each murder has presented an escalation. With Lisa King, the baby was killed too. Susie Evans, the baby was beside the body. Claire Fielding, the baby was missing. Same with Caroline Eades. But the timing is also significant with the latest one.’
‘Why?’ said Anni.
‘Because serial killers don’t just enjoy killing, they enjoy having killed. They usually take a trophy or two from the scene, take it back to their lair and…’ She shrugged. ‘Well, I’ll leave that to your imagination.’
Everyone’s face registered disgust.
‘But that doesn’t seem to be the case here. Which would suggest that he’s differently motivated.’
‘Bit of an understatement,’ said Adrian.
‘Indeed. But even amongst the noble brethren of serial killers, he’s different. For most serial killers, the primary motivation is usually sexual. I don’t think that’s the case here. He wants the babies. He doesn’t care how he gets them. The women are nothing.’
She turned to the whiteboard behind her, took out a marker pen. Started making notes. ‘So this is what we’ve got. Different locations, different victims. The only thing they have in common is pregnancy.’
‘And some kind of link to Brotherton,’ said Phil.
‘All except Caroline Eades,’ said Marina.
‘At the moment,’ said Anni.
‘Too many links, though,’ said Phil, ‘and I don’t believe in that many coincidences. Maybe someone’s trying to set Brotherton up? Shift the blame? Draw our attention, misdirect us, make us look at him to avoid looking at the real killer…’ He put his hands behind his head, frowned. ‘But that would have taken a huge amount of planning.’
‘True. Next thing, escalation. Caroline Eades’ death looked improvised. He didn’t have time to restrain her properly, so he used whatever was at hand. And used it very crudely. Which leads me to believe that the baby he took from Claire Fielding is dead. He wanted this one as a replacement.’
‘You sure about that?’ asked Anni.
‘As sure as I can be, given what I saw last night.’
‘What about this baby?’ said Phil. ‘Is it alive?’
‘I’ve spoken to Nick Lines,’ said Jane Gosling. ‘And he says that judging by the health of the mother and how far gone she was, plus looking at the way the baby was cut out – and he’s getting better at that, apparently – there’s every possibility that it is.’
‘Let’s hope so,’ said Marina. ‘So let’s assume that it is. But there’s something else, as well. A question of gender. Normally, serial killers are male.’
‘This big woman thing again,’ said Adrian. ‘But we’ve got a picture, CCTV. Millhouse has got the techies working overtime on it, but it’s still not sharp enough. And we don’t want to rush it. Might get the wrong person.’
‘It could be a woman,’ said Marina. ‘Or it could be a man and a woman working together.’
‘Or a man providing for a woman,’ said Phil.
‘Exactly,’ said Marina. ‘Now, there are usually two kinds of serial killers. Psychopathic and sociopathic. The psychopaths are wild. They prey on victims, don’t care if they get caught. Sociopaths are harder to find. They can blend into society, hold down jobs, lead normal lives. Then one day something goes. And they have to feed their desires.’
‘Will they have a job?’ asked Anni.
‘They might do,’ Marina said, ‘but it won’t be anything prestigious. They won’t be head of Microsoft or anything like that. They can use a knife. Maybe slaughter animals? Farm worker? Abattoir? Something along those lines. Also the disregard for the victim. Just another piece of meat.’
She looked round at the assembled faces. She had their total attention.
‘At first I thought our killer was the first kind, a psychopath. Which, on reflection, might be better. This person lives on the edge. Single-minded. Not interested in taunting us or leaving messages. They’re doing this for a reason. They want something. The baby. They don’t see themselves getting caught because they don’t think about getting caught. They’re clever, cunning. Like an animal. This, theoretically, should make them slightly easier to catch. However…’
They waited.
> ‘If there’s two of them, one may be the psychopath, one the sociopath…’ She could feel an idea coming to her. ‘If… if there are two of them, then one, the contained one, the sociopath, could be finding the victims…’
‘And the other one ripping them up?’ said Anni.
‘It’s a theory.’
‘If that’s the case, then there’s another idea,’ said Phil.
They all looked at him.
‘Split personality. Is that viable?’
‘Could be,’ said Marina. ‘Two in one. I think that’s even scarier, actually. But the same principles apply.’
‘So how do we catch them?’ asked Phil.
‘Well, I don’t think they’re based in Colchester. I think they’re coming in to do this. The geographical profiling supports that. And because they’re all over the town, I think that means he’s targeting them another way.’
‘How?’ said Phil.
‘I don’t know,’ said Marina. ‘But I think that’s the key. Find out how he’s choosing them and we’ve got him.’ She nodded at Phil. His turn.
‘Thanks, Marina. Right. I want all the individual cases re-examined today.’ He scanned the room, making sure his words registered. ‘Similarities flagged, everything. Old reports gone over, the lot. Marina, would you help with that, please? I’d like you teamed with Anni.’
‘Sure.’
‘Good. Anything that sticks out, flag it up. We can cross-reference it against Brotherton and Caroline and Graeme Eades. Look for another match. Forensics are still going through the data from the last two crime scenes. No conclusive DNA yet, but they’ll keep looking. And there’s something else. I don’t know how significant it is.’
They waited.
‘Sophie Gale has done a runner. Brotherton’s solicitor was on the phone this morning.’ He told them about the call.
‘Good luck to her,’ said Anni.
‘Let’s keep an eye out for her, though. We should still talk to her again.’ He scanned the room once more. Despite the tiredness, he could see that they were all ready to go. ‘Get pounding those files, those streets. Good old-fashioned police work. We might have lost one baby but there’s another one out there and the clock’s ticking. Let’s get going.’
They all filed out.
As Marina got up, Phil moved in to talk to her.
‘Marina,’ said Anni, ‘come on.You’re with me.’
She looked at Phil, gave an apologetic little shrug and turned away. Phil walked out alone.
61
Clayton couldn’t concentrate. He looked round the bar, at the walls, through the windows. Anywhere but where he was supposed to be looking. Down at the report in front of him.
He was deskbound, tasked with paperwork. Unable to work the case, unable to function like the copper he wanted to be, believed himself to be. He hated it. He saw faces, clocked movements. He knew what they were doing, what they were thinking. About him. They knew. They knew.
His heart was hammering in his chest, his hands shaking. But how much did they know? If it was everything, then that was it, finito. But if wasn’t… he might have a chance. A slim one. He shouldn’t have done it. Let Sophie stay at his place. He shouldn’t have taken that blow job from her in the car the other night. Hell, if he traced it all the way back, he shouldn’t have got involved with her in the first place.
All he wanted to be was a good copper. Well respected by his peers, well liked by his colleagues. And the ladies. But he couldn’t see that happening now. Because he was weak. And being weak made him do stupid, cowardly things. Like getting involved with Sophie.
He looked round again. Phil was at his desk, attacking a pile of paperwork he had allowed to accrue. He kept his head, down, focused on his task. Didn’t catch Clayton’s eye. Millhouse was geeking away at his computer, in his own virtual world as usual. But it was Marina and Anni that he felt most scared about. Anni had pulled her chair up to Marina’s desk and was sitting alongside her, poring over reports and statements, scrutinising photos. Every once in a while Clayton would look across, find Anni staring back at him. He would look quickly away, his eyes nervous, shifty. Guilty.
She hadn’t told. He knew that. Otherwise Phil would have said something. But it was only a matter of time. She wouldn’t keep that to herself. She was as ambitious as he was, and hard-working. She wouldn’t want to be seen to collude in mistakes he had made.
They would find out where Sophie was. Because they might still need to talk to her. And when they did…
He had to get a grip, think about what to do next. Get a damage-limitation plan in operation. Clayton sighed, went back to his paperwork.
Still unable to concentrate.
Anni read the statement over once again. Geraint Cooper, Claire Fielding’s friend at school. She reached the end. Read it once more. Put it down, rubbed her eyes.
‘Nothing?’ said Marina, looking up.
‘I think it’s just… I want to see something there, find a connection so much that I’m imagining things…’
‘Take a break,’ said Marina.
Anni shook her head. ‘Not yet.’ She took a mouthful of bottled water. ‘Right. Let’s go again. Connections.’ She looked down at the list she had made in front of her. ‘Lisa King. Killed in an empty house. Had shown properties to Ryan Brotherton. Susie Evans. Prostitute. Ryan Brotherton one of her customers.’
‘And Sophie Gale,’ said Marina. ‘Where he met her.’
Anni nodded. ‘And she informed for the police. In return for certain leniencies. Right. Claire Fielding. Julie Simpson. Girlfriend of Brotherton and her best friend. Then Caroline Eades.’ She looked through the piles of paper on her desk. ‘No connection. None.’
‘Caroline Eades. Never worked?’
‘Her husband’s an area manager for a recruitment agency. She was a stay-at-home mum. No connection with any of the others.’
Marina sat back, thoughtful. Sucked one of the arms of her reading glasses. ‘What do we know about Sophie Gale?’
Anni rifled through her pile of papers, brought one out. ‘Born Gail Johnson. First known address is in New Town.
Pulled in on a raid, let go, works for us. Changes her name to Sophie Gale.’
‘Reinvents herself.’
‘Up to a point. Then appears with Ryan Brotherton.’
‘So we have to assume they’ve known each other for a number of years. And in a number of capacities.’
Anni nodded. ‘We’ll never know now. She’s gone.’
‘Won’t she turn up again?’
Anni gave a small smile. ‘Probably. One way or another. They usually do. And usually attached to a man.’
Marina got a quick mental image of Erin O’Connor then. Sitting in her little New Town house, looking like she wouldn’t be there too much longer. Erin O’Connor. Sophie Gale. Both sounded like made-up names. Manufactured girlie names. Names a man might enjoy saying, especially at certain times and in certain situations…
‘Marina? You all right?’
Marina blinked. Anni was looking at her, concerned. ‘Sorry?’
‘You’d gone for a few seconds.’
She shook her head. ‘Yes… miles away…’ She was still thinking, grasping for something…
Something Erin O’Connor had said: At least I don’t have to pay for it any more…
‘Phil and I went to talk to Graeme Eades’ girlfriend. Erin O’Connor.’
‘His alibi.’
‘Have you checked to see if she’s got a record?’
Anni sat upright. It looked like electricity had been run through her already spiky hair. ‘What kind of a record?’
‘Prostitution.’
‘I’ll check.’
‘I may be wrong,’ said Marina, thinking how disgusted the woman had looked when she had said the phrase, but wondering if that could have been an act put on for their benefit. ‘I may be doing her a great disservice, but I just get the feeling there might be a connection.’
�
��Go with your gut instincts. That’s how it works.’ Anni stood up. ‘I’ll go and check.’
She walked across the office. Marina watched her go.
So did Clayton.
Anni asked Millhouse to run a check on Erin O’Connor. While she waited, she looked round the office. Clayton was sweating like it was midsummer. And shaking like he had Parkinson’s. She hadn’t told anyone about his involvement with Sophie. Not yet. And if he didn’t give her cause to, she wouldn’t. But he didn’t know that. She bit back a smile. Good. Let him suffer.
‘Urm… yeah…’ Millhouse was staring at his screen. ‘Here… No, er… nothing…’
Eloquent as ever, thought Anni.
‘Okay,’ she said, ‘what about Graeme Eades?’
‘The victim’s husband?’
‘The very same.’
‘Right…’ He started pressing buttons, scrolling through information.
Anni waited. As patiently as she could.
‘Uh…’ said Millhouse eventually, ‘here. Yeah, here. God… wow…’
Anni bent down to see what he was looking at. And there it was.
‘Graeme Eades, picked up, cautioned,’ she said. ‘Four years ago. Was anyone picked up with him? Either buying or selling?’
‘Uh, yeah, I’ll see…’
Millhouse worked away on the screen. Anni felt excitement rising within her. She tried not to let it show. So many times in similar situations she had allowed herself to hope, only to have those hopes dashed by reality. So when Millhouse asked her to look at the screen, she tried not to harbour too much hope.
‘Here…’
She smiled. Felt her toes curling. For once, her hope hadn’t been misplaced.
‘Fantastic, Millhouse. I could kiss you.’
‘Erm…’
She smiled. She could almost see the phrase ‘does not compute’ running through his mind. She all but ran back to Marina.
Clayton watched her go. He didn’t know what it was she had discovered, but he doubted it was good news. Anni didn’t even sit back down next to Marina, just leaned over the desk and spoke hurriedly to her. Marina then got up, and in a similar hurry to Anni, rushed over to Phil’s desk.