Thorne also knew that Boyle was right to be pessimistic. Wherever he was, as things stood, Alan Langford did not have a great deal to be worried about.
‘I’ll keep squeezing,’ Boyle said. ‘All I can do.’
‘We’ll find something.’
‘The thing is, even if I could pin something on Cook, and even if he put Grover firmly in the frame for the Monahan murder, I don’t think you’d get your man. Not directly, anyway.’
Thorne found it hard to argue with what Andy Boyle was suggesting. What had Donna said about her ex-husband considering all eventualities? Alan Langford was not stupid, and by getting Monahan out of the way so efficiently he had already proved just how careful he was. He would certainly not be dealing personally with the likes of Jeremy Grover and Howard Cook.
There had to be a middle man.
Thorne’s mobile buzzed on his desk. He picked it up, saw the caller ID and told Boyle he’d check back with him tomorrow. ‘Sorry about that whippet comment, by the way,’ he said.
‘Don’t worry. If it weren’t for the fact that I’ve actually got one, I might have clocked you.’
‘That’s all right then.’
‘I’m joking, you twat.’
Thorne hung up and answered his mobile. ‘About bloody time, Kodak.’ His nickname for Dennis Bethell. ‘I was on the verge of sending a few friendly vice-squad types round to kick your door in.’
‘Yeah, sorry, only I didn’t want to get back to you until I had something on these photos, you know?’
Irritated as he was, Thorne smiled at the familiar high-pitched squeak, the voice so at odds with the man’s appearance.
‘Let’s have it, then.’
‘Best if we meet up, don’t you reckon? So we can sort out the cash and what have you.’
‘I’ve not got time to piss about.’
‘Tonight’s good for me.’
‘I’ll have to owe it you.’
‘I’m a bit strapped, if I’m honest, Mr Thorne.’
Thorne sighed and rolled his eyes at Kitson. ‘Right, when and where?’
FOURTEEN
Anna could not say that she had ever seen Frank Anderson roaring drunk. She guessed that he had a tolerance borne of many years’ practice and could put away a fair amount without it becoming obvious, but she was often aware that there was drink on him. She could smell it, the sweetness not quite hidden by the gum or extra-strong mints, could see the flush in his face after one too many glasses of red at lunchtime. The songs sung under his breath and the slight tremor in his hands.
The singing aside, her mum had been much the same.
It had been apparent an hour before, when Frank had returned from a three-hour lunch meeting with a prospective client, that a good deal had been drunk. Anna was not surprised, but did not know whether his ebullience was down to the booze or to landing the job. Frank preferred to conduct such interviews in the swanky bar across the road, and though Anna could understand his reluctance to let clients see the unimpressive office, she often wondered if the prodigious consumption of alcohol might be even more off-putting, might cost him more in the long run than he would ever earn.
She had never bothered voicing her concerns.
Since four o’clock, while Anna had been stuffing tacky A5 adverts into envelopes – ‘F.A. Investigations: Peace of Mind Needn’t Cost the Earth!’ – Frank had been hunched over his computer or making calls. He had chased a couple of late payments, trying and failing to sound fierce, then phoned half a dozen competitors, posing as a prospective client and arranging time-consuming meetings at distant locations.
‘Anything that gives us a bit of a leg up,’ he’d told Anna when she’d first caught him doing it.
She looked at her watch and saw that it was almost quarter-past five. ‘Can I get off now, Frank?’
He looked up, glanced at his own watch and shrugged. ‘You’ve had a fair amount of time off lately . . .’
‘I’ve been ill—’
‘What about this morning?’
‘That was a family thing. I told you.’
‘I don’t think I’m being unfair asking you to make it up.’
Anna had not told Frank about Donna; about her meetings with and alongside Tom Thorne. He would not have been pleased to discover she had taken on a client behind his back. Actually, if she were being honest with herself, she could not be sure how he would react, but she was certain he would at least insist that she hand over the majority of the fee.
She stared back at him across the small office, thinking, Sod that!
‘A lot of time off.’
‘It’s not like you’ve been run off your feet,’ Anna said.
Frank nodded slowly, went back to his computer. Anna slotted two more flyers into envelopes. The Association of British Investigators logo was reproduced on the bottom. F.A. Investigations was not a member of the ABI, and any client would only need to visit the association’s website to discover that, but Frank was unconcerned. Few ever bothered, he had assured Anna, and besides, maintaining a punter’s confidence was more important than complete honesty.
Frank was happy to play fast and loose with the concept of transparency where business was concerned. Anna had known him to take money for jobs he had no intention or was incapable of carrying out properly. She remembered a distraught widow who had probably read one too many crime novels and was convinced that her husband’s death in a car crash had not been accidental. Frank took the consultation fee and two weeks’ expenses, sat on his backside for a fortnight, then reported back that, after extensive investigation, there had been nothing suspicious about the man’s tragic death. Of course, he was unable to supply a shred of documentary evidence to support this assertion, but he assured the woman that, as no law appeared to have been broken, it would have been ‘unethical’ and ‘against ABI policy’ to provide details of his research.
Such obfuscation, or what Frank called ‘blinding them with science’, usually did the trick.
‘Nothing you’re not telling me, is there, love?’
‘Like what?’
‘I don’t know. Just that we spend our time sniffing around for other people’s dirty secrets, so we shouldn’t have any of our own, should we?’
‘You’re bonkers, Frank.’
Three more flyers, three more envelopes.
‘Who’s Donna?’
‘Sorry?’
‘Someone called Donna phoned for you yesterday.’
Anna tried to make sense of it. Donna normally used the mobile number, had been told to, and had called Anna on it the day before to tell her about the latest photograph. She must have rung the office beforehand by mistake. ‘I don’t know who that could be.’
‘Didn’t sound like one of your mates,’ Frank said. ‘Sounded . . . older.’
Anna shook her head, as if struggling to recall the name. Perhaps Frank was a better detective than she took him for. She shrugged. ‘Well, she’ll call back if it’s important.’
‘So, this new client sounds promising,’ Frank said.
‘Really?’ Anna had become used to tangential jumps in conversation. She put it down to the drink. Something else she recognised.
‘It’s a matrimonial job, so you might need to dig out the slinky frock again.’ He was grinning now, enthusiastic. ‘Thinking about it, you should maybe get another outfit or two, go to town a bit. This is a growth area, I’m telling you.’
Another honey trap.
Anna felt sweat begin to prickle on her neck and chest. ‘Come on, Frank.’
He held up a black-and-white photo. A head shot. The man’s face was ordinary, unmemorable. ‘At least this one’s not some lardy old bugger, so you know, not too bad.’
‘I don’t care what they look like.’
‘Fair enough, but I thought you were a bit fussier than that.’
‘Piss off, Frank.’
He laid the photo down and raised his hands in mock-surrender. ‘All right, love, steady on.’ He turned
back to the computer screen, muttered, ‘Time of the month, is it?’
Anna reached for more envelopes and watched the second hand crawling around the dial of her watch. Wondered how easily she could unplug the keyboard from her computer and throw it at him, whether he would have time to get his fat, red head out of the way. Wondered how much longer Donna would continue to pay her now that the police were involved and making a far better job of the case than she was.
Wondered if ‘Time of the month, is it?’ was the kind of thing that Tom Thorne would say.
In jeans and a thin sweatshirt, Donna Langford stood shivering outside the back door of the flat, staring out at the cheaply paved postage-stamp that passed for a garden, the outline of trees beyond and a scattering of stars against the blackness above.
The house in which she had lived ten years before had come with a garden that she could not see the end of. There had been ponds and statues that were lit up at night and a paddock for Ellie’s pony. There had been parties in marquees. Donna closed her eyes for a few seconds, willing away those memories that had come to feel like images from a film she had seen once upon a time.
The story of somebody else’s life.
She had always hated those stupid statues anyway and the sky was bigger now than it had ever been at Holloway or Peterborough and Donna wondered if this was where she had always been destined to end up. In this life, somewhere between luxury and lock-up. It seemed a fair enough result, given all the stupid decisions she had made in her life.
She was certain now that, with the exception of Ellie and Kate, most of her decisions had been terrible ones. None more so than when she had decided that she and her daughter would be better off with her husband dead. When she had emptied her savings account and sought out Paul Monahan.
‘This is a turn-up for the books, I’ll say that.’ The man she was asking to commit murder for her had stood up and asked her if she wanted a drink. He had hesitated, smiled. Said, ‘I don’t know what to call you.’
‘I don’t much care,’ she had said. ‘And I’ll have a large gin and tonic.’
Donna could still remember the exact date when she had walked into that bar; an anonymous hotel a mile or so from Gatwick Airport. It was just a week after the bash at which she had first been casually introduced to Paul Monahan, along with another dozen or so of her husband’s more dubious friends and acquaintances. A party from which she had later been dragged after Alan had put away a few too many drinks. After a joke she had not laughed at hard enough and a look or two in what he had decided was the wrong direction.
He had screamed at her across the roof of the Jag. Called her an ungrateful whore. He had smashed a vase when they got home and when that was not satisfying enough he had pushed his way into the bathroom and broken three of her fingers.
She had known exactly what Monahan was, even as she had watched him chit-chatting and putting away the canapés, and his was the number she had searched for frantically on her husband’s mobile phone the following morning as he showered; that she had dialled a few days later with one of her undamaged fingers.
‘This is a seriously big deal, love. You sure you’ve thought this through?’
They had moved to a small table in the corner of the bar. Away from prying eyes and a noisy group of businessmen on the lash. Monahan had nursed his Guinness like he was on any ordinary night out and had turned on the blarney; leaning close and flirting with her, safe in the knowledge that she would not go running to her husband. As though it might enable him to bump up his price when they got to talking about the money.
Cheeky bastard . . .
‘I’ve thought about it.’
‘OK, only you don’t want to be going down this road on the spur of the moment, you know what I mean?’
‘I don’t need advice.’
‘You can’t undo it. That’s all I’m saying.’
‘I’ve told you.’
‘It’s not like taking back one of your fancy pairs of shoes—’
‘I just need to know if you’ll do it.’
‘I’ll do anything if there’s enough money involved,’ Monahan had said. ‘Only, considering what you’re asking, I wouldn’t go trying to pay me with your old man’s credit card . . .’
She had walked out of the bar thirty minutes later thrilled and terrified in equal measure, and though she never met with Paul Monahan again, it would be five months before the Irishman finally got the job done.
Or pretended to . . .
Four times Donna gave the go-ahead and four times she lost her nerve and called to cancel the contract, telling Monahan that he could keep the down payment. She had almost decided to forget the whole thing, convinced herself that she must have been out of her mind even to consider doing it. Then, one day, Alan lost out on some business deal or other, came home scowling and pressed her hand between a pair of heated hair straighteners.
She had called Monahan that evening and told him to get on with it.
‘Don . . . ?’
She turned to see Kate standing in the doorway, brandishing a mug of tea that Donna guessed would be stone cold by now. Donna said sorry, that she would only be another minute or two, but she was still thinking about Monahan, twinkly-eyed and full of himself.
This is a seriously big deal, love.
Later, she had become convinced that it was Monahan himself who had called Alan. Had probably called him as soon as she had walked out of the bar. Got himself paid twice.
She turned and walked back inside, imagining the cocky so-and-so now, sewn up and stiff in a freezer drawer. She smiled and thought: I’m not the only one who didn’t think it through properly. But the smile evaporated as she thought about her daughter. Her only consolation was that, whatever else her ex-husband might be capable of, at least he would never hurt Ellie. Would he? Surely just taking her would be enough . . .
She felt Kate move up close behind her, her lover’s hands rubbing the tops of her arms. But it was no longer the chill in the air that was making Donna shiver. It was everything she knew about the man she had believed to be dead. The man Paul Monahan was supposed to have killed.
She glanced down at a ten-year-old scar on her hand.
Thought that a few photographs might only be the start of it.
FIFTEEN
Thorne drove into the West End just before six, waiting for ten minutes on the north side of the Marylebone Road to avoid the congestion charge. He parked on Golden Square and walked towards Soho. It was considerably milder than it had been earlier in the day – hardly balmy, but bearable – and the working women in the strip-lit doorways of the Brewer Street bars were showing a little more flesh than of late.
Considering the other risks they ran every day, a few goose pimples were neither here nor there.
Gary Brand called back as Thorne was walking, said he’d managed to dig up a few names from Alan Langford’s past who had probably been in Spain at one time or another. It was all a bit vague, he admitted, apologising, but the best he could come up with at such short notice. Thorne thanked him anyway and scribbled down the names, his mobile wedged between chin and shoulder.
‘So, Spain still favourite, is it?’
‘With a bit of luck I’ll know a lot more in a few minutes,’ Thorne said.
He had already arrived at one of several shops in the area popular with both bargain hunters and dirty old men. It sold cut-price books and CDs on the ground floor, with adult entertainment – magazines, DVDs and a small selection of sex toys – a few steps away in the basement.
Thorne stopped at a set of shelves just inside the door. He looked at the back cover of a thriller that he thought might be good for his next holiday – whenever the hell that might be – and leafed through a coffee-table history of the Grand Ole Opry that was a steal at £6.99. Then, ignoring the knowing look from the woman on the till, he jogged down the stairs to where the volumes on display boasted a few more pictures, and Dennis Bethell would almost certainly be browsing.
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He was not hard to spot.
Pumped up and powerful, six feet four, bleached blond hair and diamonds in both ears, Bethell would have stood out among an average crowd at White Hart Lane. There were only half a dozen punters in the basement. Five men and a woman.
‘One of yours, Kodak?’ Thorne nodded down at the magazine in the photographer’s hands.
Bethell continued to turn the pages. He was wearing tight jeans and an even tighter T-shirt beneath a silver Puffa jacket. ‘I do hope you’re kidding, Mr Thorne. My stuff ’s way classier than this. I mean, look at how this cowboy’s lit this rubbish . . .’
Thorne studied the explicit double-page spread that Bethell was helpfully holding only inches from his face, aware of the eyes on both of them; the heads that had turned, same as they always did whenever Dennis Bethell’s voice was heard for the first time.
‘I’m not sure that anyone really gives a toss,’ Thorne said. He nodded towards the customer closest to them, a man in a brown suit who looked like Central Casting’s most in-demand ‘seedy accountant’. ‘You think he cares about the lighting or the composition?’
‘I know what you’re saying, but you’ve got to have some pride in what you’re doing, surely?’
Thorne said he supposed so, struck as ever by the contradictions in the man before him: the bouncer’s torso and the helium voice; the genuine passion for his craft and the seeming lack of care or concern for those who took their clothes off for his camera. On a more basic level, Thorne had never figured out Bethell’s own sexual leanings, coming to the conclusion that he probably didn’t much care either way.
Man, woman, fish, whatever. None of the images conjured up was particularly pleasant.
To Bethell’s right, the only woman in the place was looking at the back of a magazine sealed in plastic. Bethell caught Thorne’s look, leaned in close and lowered his voice. ‘You’d be surprised, Mr Thorne. A lot of women go for this stuff these days.’
Thorne pointed to the magazine that Bethell was still holding. ‘Not that stuff, surely?’
From the Dead Page 12