Witness the Dead

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Witness the Dead Page 29

by Robertson, Craig


  Narey sighed and scratched at her head. ‘Okay, I get that. It’s just . . . I want to nail this bastard. We should have done it before last night. We must do it before tonight.’

  ‘What a good idea. Okay, so what have you got? You were hinting at something back at the scene.’

  ‘It’s just a half-arsed theory and it’s going to sound stupid if it’s wrong. Let me go chase it. I won’t give it too long and I’ll be back in not much more than an hour.’

  Addison held her gaze for a bit, deliberating whether to ask the obvious question but deciding to give her her head.

  ‘Okay, go. Get Toshney and take him with you.’

  ‘Oh for fu— Why are you so intent on me having to take that halfwit everywhere with me?’

  Addison grinned. ‘He’s Lacey to your Cagney.’

  ‘Aye, very funny. Count that as Strike One.’

  ‘Whatever. Anyway, having that annoying prick with you should ensure you don’t piss around too long on whatever this wild-goose chase is.’

  ‘And what are you going to do? Sir.’

  ‘Some old-fashioned police work. Maxwell’s been working her way through the 1972 files, looking for any link to the recent killings. Tony’s Uncle Danny has copies, too. Rico Giannandrea’s been doing the same with the names that Teven got from Atto’s case files of rapes down south. We’re going to cross-check those, knock on doors and even – God bless the Tories – get bobbies on the beat asking stupid bloody questions. Find me as soon as you’re done, okay?’

  ‘Will do. You got a plan for sealing off the Eastern? It’s a big place.’

  ‘I’m going to get Shirley on the case. I hear he went mental when he heard about this one this morning. He’s with the chief constable and that’s why he isn’t down here. There’s going to be outright panic as soon as this hits the papers.’

  ‘There is. And that’s probably the only bit of good news we’ve got going for us. A bit of panic is probably the only thing that’s going to keep girls indoors and out of harm’s way.’

  ‘And us. This guy won’t be able to kill anyone because I intend to have him locked up.’

  Chapter 44

  Later

  Winter closed the car door behind him, the wind almost whipping it out of his hand, and girded his loins for yet another visit inside Blackridge. Both times he’d sat down with Atto, he’d felt a layer of resistance being stripped away from him and he wasn’t sure how many more of these chats he could handle. It wasn’t just Atto’s apparent ability to see inside Winter’s head that was bothering him: it was also the extent that Atto was revealing himself, every disclosure darker than the one before.

  A gale blew across the exposed terrain of the prison car park, causing puddles to scurry east and all noise to be eaten up. Winter couldn’t hear his own footsteps on the tarmac and he seemed to be taking one pace sideways for each one he took forward. The flags in front of the gatehouse looked fit to rip from their poles and rain was coming at him horizontally.

  It was because of the wind that he couldn’t hear the words coming from the two figures standing in front of the gatehouse, being buffeted by the gale, their voices stolen as soon as they gave them up. When he lifted his chin from its protected position huddled against his chest, he could see them looking at him enquiringly. They said something to each other, obvious only by the opening and closing of their mouths, and then the taller of the two, a slight grey-haired woman in her sixties, tried to call out to him again. The sound didn’t get within yards of him and the woman tried again, anxiety written all over her face.

  Winter pushed his way through the invisible barrier until he was under the eaves of the gatehouse and standing next to the women. Behind them and through the glass door, he could see Denny Kelbie and the Blackridge governor Tom Walton waiting impatiently for him. The tail of an already spoken sentence drifted weakly to him on the wind.

  ‘. . . for asking, but we need to know. We don’t mean to bother you.’

  The accent was English, south coast somewhere, and the voice was so fragile that it would have faced a losing battle against even a gentle breeze. The woman’s face was lined and old before her time, her eyes wet and nervous.

  The other woman was of a similar vintage, dark-hair flecked grey with time and a stocky build that looked capable of withstanding the best efforts of the wind to shift her, yet beaten and vulnerable for all that. She stood at the shoulder of her companion looking out for her and seemingly set to pounce if Winter didn’t agree to whatever it was that he hadn’t heard.

  ‘Sorry? I couldn’t hear you.’

  The woman’s face fell slightly at the realisation she was going to have to go through it all again.

  ‘Oh. Sorry. I didn’t . . . Are you Mr Winter?’

  He immediately felt himself go on the defensive. Who the hell were these women and how could they know who he was?

  ‘Um yes, I am. How did you . . .?’

  The woman brightened, a tired smile lighting up her face and forcing the rigid lines to make an uncommon upward turn.

  ‘Oh. Good. We’ve been waiting for you. We drove through the night to get here. This is really important. We need your help, Mr Winter.’

  ‘How do you know who I am? And how can I . . .? Sorry I don’t understand and I’m in a bit of a hurry.’

  The woman, took half a step towards him so that she didn’t have to shout to be heard.

  ‘You’re going to see him, aren’t you? Atto. You’re visiting Archibald Atto. We can’t say who told us you were coming to see him today but we know you are.’

  Winter felt ambushed. The idea had been that no one, not press or public, was supposed to know about this.

  ‘I can’t really say. Look I’m sorry but I have to—’

  The smaller woman took a step forward. She was no more than five foot two but something about the certainty of her manner intimidated Winter enough that he thought she was going to have a swing at him. She got close enough that she was within inches and he could smell cigarettes and perfume on her. She spoke for the first time, her Midlands accent stronger and cracklier than the other woman’s southern tones, vulnerability masked by the rumble of a smoker’s croak.

  ‘We’re . . . I’m Eleanor Holt. This is Marjorie Shillington. Archibald Atto murdered our daughters.’

  The taller woman nodded almost apologetically, confirming that she was who her friend said she was. She edged forward till she was shoulder to shoulder with the other, both looking up hopefully at Winter for a response.

  ‘I don’t . . . I’m not sure what to say. I’m sorry about . . . I need to go. I’m expected inside.’

  ‘To meet him.’

  He hesitated. ‘Yes.’

  ‘We need your help, Mr Winter. Both of us. And others. Far too many others. Atto knows where . . .’ The woman’s face fell, her eyes dropping to the ground, where she must have found the courage to finish her sentence. ‘. . . where our girls are. And we need to know.’

  Shit. This day was bad enough without this. The women were right next to him now, years of hurt etched on their faces. He felt cornered, pressurised, trapped. He had to run.

  He moved towards the door but Eleanor Holt instinctively moved with him, barring his path with her stout frame. Marjorie Shillington moved swiftly alongside her, finding her frail voice again.

  ‘We need you to talk to him, Mr Winter. This is our first chance in years. He sometimes talks when he thinks he can get in the papers. Please. You need to get him to talk. To tell us. To tell us where they are.’

  Winter sidestepped the women. He hadn’t signed up for this. It was way too much for him to deal with. He reached for the door handle but Mrs Holt had another gambit up her sleeve.

  ‘I’ve got cancer, Mr Winter. Lung cancer. My own fault for smoking all these years, but cancer all the same. I might live six years; I might live six months. The doctors don’t know and sometimes I think they’re just making it up. Guessing, you know. I need to know . . . I need to
know about my Melanie. I’ve not got the time to wait.’

  Winter swallowed back the bile of imposed guilt that surged in his throat. He nodded, shrugged and shook his head in one unintelligible movement that even he didn’t understand. He pulled the door wide and with a final, apologetic look, seeing hot tears run down both their cheeks, he stepped inside the prison and left them to the mercy of the wind.

  The moments that he sat alone at his side of the wooden table, the governor, Walton, silent against the far wall, waiting for Atto’s arrival were possibly the worst. Four bare walls and not a chink of daylight. It was oppressive and claustrophobic and reminiscent of a six-foot-deep hole in the ground. The worst thing, however, was anticipating the look on Atto’s face when he sauntered into the room with the prison guard at his back. Would he be taciturn or angry, dismissive or taunting? Bad or unhelpful as all of those moods could be, the one that Winter least wanted to see was the one that he got on his last visit: Atto being pleased to see him.

  He jumped at the sound of the now familiar hiss that meant the door was about to begin its slow slide to the right. He knew that Atto had already taken the first of the few paces that would bring him to the table, even though there was no discernible sound of anyone walking on the cushioned flooring. In a heartbeat, Atto’s head appeared through the door and Winter shrank inside at the light that went on in the killer’s dark eyes at the sight of him sitting there. Having a multiple murderer being elated at your visit was something guaranteed to mess with your head.

  ‘How are you today, Anthony?’ Atto began pleasantly as he slid into the chair opposite. ‘I hope the traffic wasn’t too bad on the way through from Glasgow. I hear it’s very wet and windy out there.’

  The banality of having everyday conversation with the killer freaked Winter out more than discussing murders and psychopaths. He couldn’t and wouldn’t do small talk. He couldn’t and wouldn’t stop thinking about the body he’d photographed just a few hours before. Maybe that was why Atto picked up on it almost immediately.

  ‘He’s killed again, hasn’t he?’

  There was a skin-crawling edge of excitement in the man’s voice as he asked the question. From anyone else it might have been just morbid curiosity, but from Atto there was something verging on pride. The question was laced with hope.

  In the time it took Winter to decide whether to confirm it or not, the hesitancy was its own answer.

  ‘A chip off the old block, right enough. Who did he kill and where?’

  The exhilaration in Atto’s voice was palpable. He was gorging on the news and it sickened Winter, making him determined not to feed him further.

  ‘I don’t know who it was. Or where.’

  ‘I don’t believe you. Don’t lie to me, Anthony. You’ve seen the body, haven’t you? Photographed it?’

  ‘That’s not what we’re here to talk about.’

  Atto sneered. ‘Oh, but it’s exactly what we’re here to talk about. Murder. What he did to those girls and why. It’s all about why men kill, Anthony. Remember?’

  ‘Have you had any more contact from him?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Nothing at all?’

  ‘That’s what “no” means in this case. No. Did you photograph the body?’

  Winter had nowhere else to go. ‘Yes I did.’

  Atto brightened again, a nauseating smirk playing on his lips. ‘How did she die?’

  ‘She was strangled and her head battered against a memorial headstone.’

  ‘Another cemetery? Tut-tut. The boys in blue should surely have had that covered. Was she raped?’

  ‘That’s not something you need to know.’

  ‘So she was. Was she good-looking?’

  Winter wasn’t giving him this. He wouldn’t. He needed to shift the conversation, wrestle back even a tiny measure of control.

  ‘Tell me about Melanie Holt and Louise Shillington.’

  Atto looked at him oddly, clearly thrown by the sudden mention of the two names. His eyes narrowed in suspicion. ‘Why?’

  Not for the first time, Winter resented Atto’s ability to second-guess his questions. ‘No reason,’ he lied. ‘Other than the fact that you murdered them.’

  A hint of an insufferably smug smile tugged at the corner of Atto’s mouth. ‘Did I?’

  ‘You know you did. You already told the police that.’

  ‘Maybe I did. I can’t really remember.’

  ‘I think you can. Can you remember where the bodies are buried?’

  ‘Maybe. Maybe you should ask me.’

  ‘Why, will you tell me?’

  ‘I might. And I might tell you exactly what I did to them.’

  Winter sat and looked at him, knowing Atto was playing another of his games and determined not to indulge him. Whatever Atto wanted him to do or say, he’d do the opposite. All he had to do was work out what that was.

  ‘You can tell me that when you’re ready. Do you ever think about either of those girls?’

  Atto paused, searching Winter’s face for clues as to where he was going and whether he wanted to be led there. ‘Sometimes,’ he whispered eventually.

  ‘Do you ever think about their parents? How they must be feeling after all this time?’

  Atto leaned forward. ‘You want to know the truth, Anthony?’

  Winter nodded.

  ‘I don’t think about the parents. Ever. How can I possibly know what they feel? And why would I care?’

  ‘Their children were murdered. You killed them.’

  ‘So you keep saying. But why would that mean that I thought about their mammies and daddies? You’re thinking that I’ve got feelings. That I’m the same as everyone else. I’m not.’

  ‘You’re a parent yourself.’

  Atto’s brows knotted in confusion. ‘Not really. There was some sort of biochemical accident but that was all. That doesn’t make me a parent. Not one that anyone would want. I don’t even know who the mother was.’

  ‘What if someone harmed your child?’

  One of his shrill chuckles popped from the side of Atto’s mouth and his head bobbed forward fitfully. ‘Anthony, I’d say that he’s the one that’s doing the harming. Wouldn’t you?’

  ‘Yeah, I would. He’s left another set of parents without a child.’

  Atto sighed. ‘You’ve been talking to the parents, haven’t you? The Shillingtons and the Holts. Those people just won’t let it go.’

  ‘Can you blame them? They don’t even know where their daughters are buried.’

  ‘I don’t know if I can blame them or not. Let me tell you about Melanie and what I did to her.’

  ‘I don’t want to know.’

  ‘But I want to tell you. And maybe I’ll tell you where she’s buried.’

  Winter said nothing but felt his heart sink into his stomach.

  ‘She was nineteen. A sweet, pretty thing. She lived near me and I saw her walking most days. Lovely long blonde hair halfway to her waist. I watched her for ages before I did anything. Watched and waited. Sometimes she smiled when she saw me. She liked me, you see. I could tell. And I liked her. A lot. I wanted to have her, Anthony. I wanted to enjoy her.’

  The sound of his own name from Atto’s lips made Winter want to throw up. If Atto sensed it, it did nothing to discourage him.

  ‘Her parents were careless. Letting her walk around, never knowing where she was or who she might be seeing. They didn’t deserve to have her, looking after her the way they did. She had lovely lips; that was one of the things I liked most about her. Full lips. Very . . . kissable. I had to have her, Anthony. Had to. And had no reason not to.’

  ‘How about the fact that it was wrong?’

  ‘Wrong? It wasn’t wrong for me. It was what I wanted to do.’

  ‘It’s not what she wanted. It was wrong. Legally and morally.’

  ‘Those weren’t my morals and I can’t be responsible for anyone else’s. And don’t be so sure that she didn’t want it, Anthony. The simple truth i
s that women are an inferior species and they secretly want us to be in charge of them. She wanted it. I took her because I wanted her too and to me there was nothing wrong with it. And she tasted sweet. So sweet. She felt good. It all did.’

  ‘It felt good? How could—’

  ‘Oh it did, Anthony. You have to have done it to know. It’s like owning someone. Completely. I took her to a little place I knew where we wouldn’t be disturbed. We had sex. And, as I came inside her, I put my hands on her sweet neck and tightened. The power of that is something you have to experience to truly understand. Being inside someone as they cross over from life to death. Have you ever wondered what that’s like?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘No? You’re wishing that you’d photographed her, aren’t you, Anthony?’

  ‘No. I’m not.’

  ‘Not even a little bit? After she was found. Strangled. Her neck broken. Her eyes staring. Her mouth wide open. Can you picture her? You can, can’t you?’

  ‘Only because I’ve seen your son’s victims.’

  ‘There you go. That’s the gift he’s given you.’

  ‘The police will catch him. And he’ll be locked up for the rest of his life. Just like you.’

  ‘Maybe. But I doubt that he’s just like me. He’s copying me. Anyone could do that, whether they come from my seed or not. I do it because that’s who I am. He does it because that’s who he wants to be. If the neuroscientists are right, then my paralimbic system is wired wrong. I find that more believable than having some kind of rogue gene that can be passed on.’

  The self-satisfied prick was grating on Winter’s nerves. Claiming the moral high ground among murderers.

  ‘I’m not so sure. The chances of there being no genetic link between two cowardly murdering rapists who happen to be father and son is a bit slim, don’t you think?’ Atto’s eyes flashed rage but Winter continued. ‘You know your Shakespeare?’

  ‘I was an English teacher. Of course I know my Shakespeare.’

  ‘Then you’ll remember the line from The Merchant of Venice. The sins of—’

 

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