From the Dead

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From the Dead Page 28

by Mark Billingham


  The search parameters remained broadly the same. They were looking for missing Caucasian males of approximately six feet in height. The age of the victim was somewhat trickier. At the time of the post-mortem, there had been no reason to suspect that the body in the car was anyone other than the man identified by Donna Langford as her husband, and therefore no reason to examine bone fragments and tissue samples for an accurate assessment of the victim’s age. So, Phil Hendricks had re-examined the samples he’d taken during the PM ten years earlier. He established conclusively that the victim had not been drugged, but the damage caused by the fire meant determining a precise age was impossible.

  ‘Between twenty and fifty years old,’ Hendricks had told Holland. ‘But even that’s just a guess, and make sure you-know-who knows that.’ *

  Thorne had to sit through twenty minutes of Far East business reports on BBC World before the main news bulletin came on.

  It was the second item.

  Thorne was shocked to see that the MP Brigstocke had mentioned was a woman – young and earnest in a nicely cut business suit. She was standing outside Scotland Yard, the iconic sign revolving slowly behind her as she outlined the aims of the campaign.

  ‘Yes, Adam Chambers is innocent in the eyes of the law,’ she said. ‘But that is not enough. He has been traumatised by the experience of being falsely accused of such a terrible crime and is finding it desperately hard to rebuild his life. Mr Chambers is as much a victim as anybody. In fact, as far as anyone has been able to prove, he is the only victim in this entire shambolic investigation.’

  Thorne was sitting on the edge of the bed, no more than a couple of feet from the small screen. ‘Bollocks,’ he said.

  ‘What do you want to see happen now?’ the interviewer asked.

  The woman half turned towards the building behind her, skilfully alternating her tone between concern and outrage. ‘At the very least, Adam Chambers is owed an official apology, but I will be lobbying hard to see an independent inquiry launched.’

  ‘Do you have a message for the parents of Andrea Keane?’

  Now the concern was even clearer in the studied nod and the lowering of the voice. ‘I have nothing but sympathy for the unfortunate parents of the missing girl. And I can assure you that Adam Chambers feels exactly the same way. But . . . on his behalf, on behalf of anyone who truly believes in justice, I’m demanding that those who sanctioned such a ridiculous and expensive prosecution be called to account.’

  ‘Can you tell us how Mr Chambers is coping?’

  In the background, Thorne could see one of the Scotland Yard security officers watching, a machine-gun slung against his hip. He leaned forward to grab a beer from the mini-bar, slammed the door shut and heard the remaining bottles tumbling inside.

  Imagined the officer taking aim and delivering a message of his own.

  THIRTY-SIX

  Thorne woke with an idea.

  He called Yvonne Kitson and asked her to dig out Langford’s file; to look through the list of his blood relatives and get dates of birth and phone numbers for any who were still alive. When Kitson called back fifteen minutes later, he scribbled down the information on a scrap of hotel notepaper.

  ‘Sorry about this Chambers thing,’ Kitson said. ‘It must feel like a kick in the teeth.’

  ‘It’ll blow over,’ Thorne said.

  Then he called Samarez.

  He gave the Guardia Civil officer the significant dates and numbers and explained what he was looking for. Samarez said he would check the phone records and get back to him later in the day.

  ‘I don’t need telling that Mackenzie is Langford,’ Thorne said, ‘and I know this probably won’t stand up in court. But until we’ve got the print evidence, it’ll have to do.’

  Samarez told him that they would not have too long to wait for the fingerprint match. ‘Candela met up with Mackenzie in a nightclub last night. She told him she had a headache and left early with Mackenzie’s champagne glass in her handbag. So, with luck . . .’

  ‘I hope she was careful.’

  ‘She is not stupid.’

  ‘Neither is Langford,’ Thorne said.

  They talked for a few minutes about how the inquiry might best be taken forward, both skirting around the fact that until there was some new information, either in Spain or from the UK, it was likely to go precisely nowhere. Samarez said that he was busy on other cases for the rest of the day, and that Fraser had called in sick. He asked Thorne what he was planning to do and Thorne said he had no idea.

  ‘You should get up to Ronda,’ Samarez said. ‘It’s really very nice.’

  ‘So I hear.’

  ‘It might do you good to relax for a few hours.’

  Coming from Samarez, the suggestion seemed less like an attempt to get Thorne out of the way than it had done from Fraser. Thorne wondered if Samarez might be right. There was nothing else that could usefully be done while they were waiting for Forensics to lift a print off the glass Candela Bernal had provided. To scan the results and send them through to London for comparison. A trip would certainly kill some time and might help take his mind off Langford for a while.

  Off Anna Carpenter and Andrea Keane.

  ‘I’ll see how I feel,’ he said.

  He left the hotel and found a café. He drank two cups of milky coffee and made short work of scrambled eggs, fried potatoes and chorizo. Then he walked down towards the commercial area of the village to collect his hire car.

  The enthusiasm in Thorne’s voice had been clear enough when he had called the previous afternoon. His voice always rose a little higher when he was fired up and he talked faster. Everything he had suggested made sense, and Holland and Kitson had gone about their task with all the dedication they could muster. But Holland could not help but feel that increased hope would only lead, in the end, to increased disappointment.

  That penalty kick he was destined to fluff had just become even more important.

  Going back as far as Thorne had requested had eventually yielded another eight candidates. Having made certain that each one was still missing, Holland and Kitson had arrived at work that morning to begin the laborious process of contacting the next of kin, making appointments, and arranging wherever possible for DNA samples to be collected. As with the list they had worked through in February, most of the stories were simple yet terrible. The reasons why these individuals might have vanished without a trace, for the holes left in other people’s lives.

  Drugs. Abuse. Mental illness.

  Or nothing at all.

  A case that fell firmly into the last category caught Holland’s eye halfway through the morning. Just for a moment or two, it made him feel as though he might have his penalty-taking boots on after all. Having talked to Brigstocke, he and Kitson decided they would not tell Thorne until they were sure there was really something to get excited about. But everyone agreed that it looked promising; that they should focus all their attention on this case.

  Find out who was in that Jag, Dave. He’s the key to all this.

  It seemed to Holland as if it had risen up from the stack of files like a card from one of Brigstocke’s magic decks.

  The car was stifling and smelled plasticky when Thorne picked it up, but once the air con had been running for ten minutes, the drive up into the hills was pleasant enough, although the concentration it demanded left little time to take in the scenery. It was a far steeper climb than the one up to Mijas, with alarming drops on his left-hand side and more than a few hairy corners. Thorne was amazed to see signs warning of snow on the road, which were not only incongruous, considering the hot weather, but made him wonder how in hell any driver managed the climb – and worse yet, the descent – in freezing conditions. Chuck in the risk of rock falls and the occasional wandering goat, he thought, and it would be astonishing if anyone made it up or down in one piece.

  It took him the best part of an hour to reach Ronda, and within a few minutes of parking the car and starting to walk tow
ards the centre of the ‘white town’, he was out of breath. He stopped and looked down from one of the bridges into the canyon on which the town was perched, carved out by the river which now divided it in two. He took a minute. The view was undeniably spectacular, and he was content to put the breathlessness down to the fact that he was several thousand feet above sea-level, rather than blaming the several pounds he could do with dropping.

  The big breakfast might have been a mistake, he thought.

  He picked up a map from a tourist information office and followed it past rows of small shops and quirky museums to the historic bullring that Fraser had mentioned. There were far fewer visitors around than there had been in Mijas, but Thorne put that down to the feria. This town had a different atmosphere, too, something almost reverential, and it was certainly quieter.

  He paid his four euros and walked through a turnstile into the empty bullring. The sandy floor sloped very gradually up towards the centre and was harder than he had expected. A couple was taking photos on the far side, and more people were moving in the stands, but despite their presence, and the late morning sun overhead, the place felt strangely cold and spooky. Resonant of a past that made Thorne uncomfortable. He found himself wondering how many animals had died there . . . and how many men. How much blood had soaked into the floor beneath his feet over two hundred and fifty years.

  Standing in the centre of the ring, looking towards a pair of scarred, white, wooden gates, it was easy to imagine the heat and the roar of a frenzied crowd. Thorne could almost taste the adrenalin, coppery in the mouths of those waiting to face the bulls. He tried to gauge the distance between the centre and the edge, asked himself if he would make it, should he ever find himself running from a charging bull. He still fancied himself as reasonably quick if he needed to be, in short bursts at any rate.

  He decided he would not even get halfway.

  He spent a few minutes walking around the bullring’s museum, taking no more than a passing interest in the old photographs and mounted bulls’ heads. He looked briefly at the antique suits of lights displayed behind glass and wondered why vintage clothes always seemed so small, before walking across to a bar on the edge of the main square.

  He waved to attract a waiter’s attention and was ignored.

  On the table, he laid out a handful of leaflets for some of the town’s other attractions. There was certainly no shortage of museums, but each exhibition seemed more gruesome, more bloodthirsty, than the last.

  A history of hunting.

  Torture during the Spanish Inquisition.

  Five hundred years of capital punishment.

  Looking at pictures of some of the exhibits, Thorne was not sure that Ronda was quite as ‘nice’ as everyone kept telling him.

  It was hotter now, and Thorne turned again to look for the waiter. The bar was busy and he cast an eye across the customers, half expecting to see the man with the newspaper he had spotted twice already. But when he heard a chair being scraped back, he spun around to see an even more familiar figure.

  Thorne could only watch as Alan Langford dropped casually into the seat opposite.

  THIRTY-SEVEN

  ‘You mind?’ Langford raised a hand, and within a few seconds a waiter was at the table. Langford looked at Thorne. ‘What do you want?’

  Thorne said nothing.

  I want to drive a glass so far into your face that it won’t matter what you call yourself, because nobody will ever recognise you again. I want to twist and push and feel the flesh shredding and I want to hear you scream. I want you to say my name, same as she did . . .

  ‘I fancy a beer,’ Langford said. ‘Not one of those poxy little ones, either.’ He ordered two beers in Spanish, then sat back to look at Thorne, shaking his head and smiling, as though they were two old friends who had fallen out over something so trivial that neither of them could even remember it properly.

  I want your blood to wash away hers.

  When the beers arrived, Langford put away half of his in one gulp, then sat back again and began methodically peeling the label from the bottle. ‘There’s nothing for you here,’ he said. ‘You need to know that.’

  Thorne reached for his own bottle. He had no desire to drink with this man, but suddenly his mouth was dry and his tongue felt sticky. He hoped the beer might steady the tremble in his legs and help him fight the urge to do exactly what he had just imagined doing.

  ‘You’re here,’ he said.

  ‘Right. I’m here minding my own business.’

  ‘And we all know what that is.’

  ‘Listen, I don’t know what you think you know, but the only thing you’re getting in Spain is sunburn. So all I’m saying is, why don’t you just toddle off home and save us all a lot of trouble?’

  Langford’s hair was greyer than it had looked in the photographs, and too much sun had left his face lined and leathery. Despite the bravado, Thorne could also see that he was anything but relaxed. The smile showed only teeth that were too big for his mouth, and too white.

  ‘For someone who’s minding his own business, you seem awfully worried,’ Thorne said.

  ‘I’m irritated.’

  ‘Well, I must be doing something right.’

  The teeth flashed again. ‘It’s a lot of trouble to go to, though, don’t you think? To come all the way out here, costing the taxpayer God knows how much, to check up on a retired businessman.’

  ‘You’re not exactly retired, though, are you? And I’m doing more than checking up.’

  Langford puffed out his cheeks, then exhaled slowly. ‘A man finds out his wife is planning to have him killed, so he thinks it might be a good idea to start again somewhere else. End of story. I can’t see the Crown Prosecution Service getting very excited about that a decade down the line, can you?’

  ‘They’re pretty keen on people who leave bodies behind.’

  ‘Well, course they are, but I wouldn’t know anything about that.’

  ‘You don’t know how a man came to be burned to a crisp in your car?’

  ‘I thought you’d caught the man who did that,’ Langford said. ‘Isn’t he in prison?’

  ‘He was,’ Thorne said. ‘Until he got carved up in his cell a few months ago.’

  ‘Dangerous places, prisons.’

  ‘Then the prison officer who colluded in his murder got hit by a car.’

  ‘Nasty.’

  ‘Very. But you wouldn’t know anything about that either, right?’

  ‘I’m a bit out of touch over here,’ Langford said. ‘Unless it’s in the sports pages . . .’

  His hand dropped to his waist, reaching idly beneath the white linen shirt to scratch. Thorne caught a glimpse of the scar Donna had mentioned, pale against the brown belly.

  ‘Retirement must get a bit boring, though, surely?’ Thorne said. ‘How much golf can you play, how many laps of your pool can you do?’

  ‘You sound jealous, mate.’

  ‘It’s perfectly understandable, that’s all I’m saying. Wanting to keep your hand in, I mean.’

  ‘I just want a nice, quiet life.’

  ‘Course you do, but sometimes things need doing to keep it nice and quiet.’

  Langford was still picking at the label from his beer bottle, rolling the pieces into balls between his fingers and dropping them into the ashtray. He shook his head and his eyes drifted away, as though he had momentarily lost the thread of the conversation.

  Four or five skinny, feral cats were sniffing around near the tables, yowling for food then fighting over any scraps thrown their way. Langford held out a hand towards one, made kissing noises in an effort to draw it towards him, then gave up. He turned back to Thorne, said, ‘Little buggers are more suspicious than you are.’ Then, ‘What were we talking about?’

  ‘Howard Cook and Paul Monahan.’

  Another shake of the head.

  ‘Names not ringing a bell, Alan?’

  ‘David.’

  ‘Well?’

  �
��Sorry,’ Langford said. ‘Are they footballers?’ He leaned back and finished his beer, snapped his fingers as if he’d just remembered exactly what they were discussing. ‘Hang on, what about that body in the car you were talking about?’ Keeping his eyes on Thorne, he held up the empty bottle to let the waiter know he wanted another beer. ‘I’m guessing you still don’t have a name for that one.’

  ‘We’re working on it.’

  ‘Best of British.’

  ‘Thanks.’

  ‘I mean it.’

  ‘You’ll be the first to know how we get on, don’t worry.’

  A couple at the next table got up to leave and Langford leaned across to grab one of their plates. He picked up the pieces of fat and gristle that had been left and tossed them one by one towards the cats. They immediately began rushing for every morsel, hissing at one another whenever they managed to grab a piece.

  ‘What about Anna Carpenter?’ Thorne asked.

  ‘What about her?’

  ‘You know her name, then?’

  Langford narrowed his eyes, as though the name were familiar but would not quite come to him. As though he had almost placed the woman, then lost her. Finally, he shook his head again, defeated. ‘No idea,’ he said. ‘She’s not that tennis player, is she?’

  I could end this now, Thorne thought. End all of this and go home. I could reach across the table and use that dirty knife.

  End it.

  This fucking stupid game.

  My fucking stupid career.

  ‘You know, I keep hearing from everyone how good you are at planning things out,’ Thorne said. ‘Weighing up the risks. Donna told me—’

  ‘You don’t want to believe anything that stupid bitch tells you.’

  ‘Well, that’s just it, because I think she’s wrong. I think they’re all giving you way too much credit, because you make plenty of mistakes. You certainly made one when you took Ellie.’

  ‘You really don’t know what you’re talking about, do you?’

  ‘I’ve seen photos of her.’

  ‘Have you?’

  ‘And you made a big mistake with the girl. With Anna Carpenter.’

 

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