Rope Enough (The Romney and Marsh Files Book 1) (20 page)

BOOK: Rope Enough (The Romney and Marsh Files Book 1)
9.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

*

 

‘Her description of the rape was odd, particularly when you compare it to the description that Claire Stamp gave us,’ said Marsh, as they sat in Romney’s office. ‘Stamp said it was over quickly. Goddard made it sound like he was making love to her. He took his time and was trying to get her in the mood. And the way that it finished. It just doesn’t sound like the same man.’

‘I know what you mean,’ said Romney. ‘But in the petrol station he would have been aware that anyone could turn up and spoil his fun. It was his first one, as well. Maybe he’s refining his methods, giving himself more of an opportunity to live out his fantasies to the fullest. He’s taken a hell of a risk this time.’

‘Perhaps his confidence is growing,’ said Marsh.

‘I’m sure it will be.’

‘He’ll strike again, won’t he?’

‘You can bet your pension on it. Get a list together of all the contacts in Claire Stamp’s phone book. Every man whose name had cropped up in the investigation. Give Jane Goddard the rest of today, then go and see her with the list. See if she recognises any of them. I’m not sure he’ll be that stupid, but after the risk he took with his fun and games, he might.’

 

*

 

Last thing that evening, Romney received a visitor from forensics. Marsh found the woman wandering around the CID squad room. She tapped on Romney’s door and entered. ‘Diane Hodge from forensics would like to see you, sir, if you’ve got a minute. She seems rather perturbed about something, not her usual bubbly self.’

Romney held his sergeant’s gaze for a few moments trying to work out what she was getting at. ‘All right, show her in. You can come in, too.’

Miss Hodge’s face fairly lit up, noticed Marsh, as she set eyes on Romney, quashing any doubts regarding her woman’s intuition where Hodge’s feelings for her boss were concerned. She briefly wondered whether she should mention the woman’s obvious crush to the DI, as he was apparently oblivious to her adoring looks, but scotched the idea just as quickly. It was none of her business.

‘Miss Hodge, Diane,’ said Romney. ‘What can I do for you?’

She smiled at Romney’s welcome and then her features adopted a troubled look. ‘I’ve brought up the results of the samples you asked me to take from Mr Logi. I did it myself this afternoon. I know that it’s an urgent matter.’

‘Well, thanks very much,’ said Romney. He extended his hand to take the file, but she kept it clutched to her chest.

She said, ‘It’s not as straightforward as I thought it was going to be after our phone conversation about Mr Logi.’

‘Ah, yes,’ said Romney. ‘We interviewed the second victim a little while ago. She thinks that the attacker might have left traces of himself on her after all. I should have phoned you. Sorry.’

‘Oh, that’s all right,’ she said. ‘I would have done a thorough check anyway on anything that was recovered. No, it’s not that exactly. I’ve brought the file up myself, actually, because I thought it might need a little explaining.’

‘I see. Take a seat.’ She perched on the vacant seat opposite him. Romney exchanged a quick look with Marsh but got nothing out of it. ‘So, what’s the problem?’

‘Bear with me would you?’ Romney nodded. ‘We collected one sample from the petrol station: the saliva sample you suggested we look for on the top of the condom packet. Let’s call that Sample A. From the second victim we actually collected two samples. Let’s call those B and C. Sample B matched the sample that Mr Logi provided for us. If the second victim has not had sexual relations with anyone else then Sample C must be that of the rapist. And therefore must match Sample A.’ Romney saw it coming, but it didn’t make any difference. ‘Samples A and C do not match.’

A quiet hung in the air while this information was digested by the officers.

‘What possible reasons could there be for that?’ said Romney.

‘There is no mistake in the lab work,’ said Hodge. ‘I took the samples myself and did every test personally. When I saw this,’ she waved the file that she still held on to, ‘I double-checked everything.’

‘Jane Goddard could have had sex with her husband recently or someone else,’ said Marsh.

Hodge said, ‘That’s one of the possibilities. Another one is that the top of the condom packet we recovered from the garage was nothing to do with the rape there. And there is, of course, one more possibility.’

‘Which is?’ said Romney.

‘That the man who raped Jane Goddard is not the same man who raped Claire Stamp.’

 

***

 

 

 

10

 

‘It has to be the same man,’ said Romney. ‘It’s bordering on impossible for there to be two rapists operating with the same extraordinary MO, the same props and within a few days and a few miles of each other.

‘I agree,’ said Superintendent Falkner. ‘So that must mean that, if there is no doubt about the reliability of the samples taken, either this Goddard woman was shagging someone else or that the sample from the garage isn’t from the rapist.’

‘DS Marsh is going to see her this morning. That’s one of the things on her list to find out.’

‘Keep me informed. How’s everything else?’

‘Sir?’

‘You look tired, Tom. Burning the candle at both ends?’ Romney fidgeted uncomfortably. ‘Little bird told me you’ve got yourself a pretty young filly. None of my business of course, but I wouldn’t want your private life getting in the way of business. Not when business is how it is. Make myself clear?’

‘Perfectly, sir.’ Romney knew his super well enough to know that he was a straight talking man – that the comment was not intended to be taken as anything other than the good advice of a senior officer protective of his staff and his station’s reputation. He was doing his job. Romney didn’t resent him for it.

‘Good,’ said Falkner. ‘How do you find old Crow?’

‘I like him. I respect his methods and his thinking.’

‘He’s a good copper. Old school. I used to work with him, you know? Long time ago.’ Falkner’s memories scudded across his features. ‘I trust you on this, Tom, but if you need a second opinion, don’t be proud. Know what I mean?’

‘Yes, sir. I’ll bear it in mind.’

Walking back to his office, Romney reflected that that was the second time in forty-eight hours Falkner had expressed his support for him. He found it disconcerting.

The superintendent was right about one thing: he was tired. The previous evening – wining, dining and making love to Julie Carpenter – had seen him fall into his own bed after two in the morning. The late nights and early mornings were bound to take its toll on him. He didn’t realise that it was showing. But even so, even with the high profile aspect of the case that he was leading, it was worth every minute for him in her company. She had rekindled some long dormant emotion within him that was now consuming him with the intensity of his feelings. His ego was in something of its zenith.

Romney kept these feelings from the new woman in his life. He didn’t want to go frightening her off. Despite the time and intimate nature of much of it they were spending together, he was unsure of exactly how she viewed their relationship. He didn’t even know if she would consider it a relationship or simply a casual dalliance. Until the day that things became clearer he would enjoy it for whatever it was and, if the opportunity should present itself for some sort of permanency to be announced, he would certainly consider it.

Partly because he didn’t want to – couldn’t – believe that the shred of evidence taken from the garage back room floor wasn’t pertinent to the rape case, Romney had held off from exploring other possibilities for how it came to be there on that night. It was, at the moment, the only evidence the police had that would convict a suspect. If it weren’t evidence at all, they would have nothing. With all the demoralisation that went with it, they would have less than nothing. He hoped that Marsh would discover that Goddard would have another explanation for the second sample of body fluid lifted from her.

 

*

 

Marsh returned from her meeting with Jane Goddard late morning. Romney could read from her face that he shouldn’t expect good news.

‘There was no one on the list of contacts for Claire Stamp that meant anything to her,’ she said.

‘That’s not such a surprise. And the other matter?’

‘She was adamant that there was no one else who it could have been – not even her husband.’

‘You made her understand the importance and confidence of her honesty?’

‘Yes, sir. She understood. I’m sure that she was telling me the truth.’

Romney scowled. ‘Shit. Well that screws up what we already had or thought we had.’

‘It does and it doesn’t, sir.’

‘Go on.’

‘Well, all we had before was a sample of the rapist’s body fluid. We’ve still got that. It’s just a different sample.’

‘I suppose you’re right. But then I want to know how the top of that condom packet came to be lying around on the floor near a rape scene. It’s too much of a coincidence. I don’t like coincidences, Sergeant. Start by organising the taking of samples from everyone who works there. Claire Stamp’s DNA will need eliminating too.’

 

*

 

That afternoon was the scheduled funeral of Claire Stamp. Superintendent Falkner had suggested to Romney that it would be good public relations for the force to be represented. With Marsh involved in rounding up the petrol station employees for the taking of samples, he decided that he would take the responsibility alone.

Claire Stamp was to be buried at the town’s overflow cemetery behind Connaught Park. As Romney made his way there, he wondered what sort of a turnout there would be. With her mother dead and a sister that lived counties away, he could cut a lonely figure. One person he didn’t expect to see there was Avery.

A cold winter’s drizzle was falling as he pulled into the car park of the municipal burial ground. Apart from the hearse there were two other vehicles. He spied a small group of mourners huddled around an excavation across the field of the dead. From his distance and in their black regalia they put him in mind of a cluster of crows gathered around carrion. With a heavy sigh, he stepped out of the warmth of his vehicle into the chilly dismal afternoon. Thankfully, he’d remembered an umbrella and, protected from the wet at least, he picked his way across the soggy paths of turf that separated the varied and various memorials to the dead.

Unsurprisingly, Romney found funerals the most depressing of society’s rituals, even those that he had attended on glorious summer days when the deceased had enjoyed a good innings or where death had been a blessing that had ended great suffering in life.

Trudging across the sodden earth he tried to make out the identities of the mourners. Avery was the first to come into focus. Paradoxically, his diminutive figure made him stand out. Believing as he did that this man had probably had two hands in the death of Claire Stamp, Romney found his attendance repugnant. Was his presence an attack of remorse, or guilt, or was he simply there to see her off?

There were only two other people, apart from the vicar, at the graveside who were clearly not part of the undertaker’s staff. One was a woman who, when Romney came close enough to make out her facial features, bore a resemblance to the deceased and Romney found himself believing he must be looking at Claire Stamp’s sister. She took Romney in with a long cold look before returning her attention to the casket and the words of the man of the cloth who stood ministering over the proceedings and getting a good soaking into the bargain.

The third figure who stood, head bowed, had his back to Romney. He too had no umbrella. As he stood taking his drenching, Romney found himself realising that there was something familiar in the way he held himself, or rather, slouched.

When the minister had finished and the coffin had been lowered down into the hole in the ground those who were there in a professional capacity went about their business, while the three that represented the life that the corpse had left behind paid their independent last respects and without speaking to one another began to make their lonely ways back towards the exit.

Avery treated Romney to a challenging glare as he departed, daring him to say something. Romney was surprised to see the third figure, who had had his back to him, was Carl Park. The youth seemed equally shocked to turn and find Romney staring at him. He no longer wore the bandaging around his head. He’d made an obvious effort with his clothing not to disgrace the occasion.

As the lad came within earshot, Romney said hello. Park nodded and mumbled something incoherent.

Romney tried a smile. ‘Didn’t expect to see you here.’

‘She was all right,’ said Park. ‘I feel bad about what happened to her.’

Romney had some sympathy for the youth. ‘Need a lift back into town?’

Park shook his head briefly and raindrops flew in all directions from his long unkempt hair. ‘No, thanks,’ he said and walked off.

Romney turned back to find the woman – the sole mourner left – almost in front of him. She wore what Romney would later remember as an aggressive expression.

Other books

Las Montañas Blancas by John Christopher
Four Just Men by Edgar Wallace
Smolder by Mellie George
Mary Anne Saves the Day by Ann M. Martin
Fish Stick Fridays by Rhys Ford