Bloodstream (13 page)

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Authors: Luca Veste

BOOK: Bloodstream
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Greg tried looking at Hannah, but couldn’t. He had to look away, towards the shadows.

‘Greg . . . talk to me. We need to get out of here.’

The breathing wasn’t helping. She had ignored the man’s words, so maybe they didn’t mean anything. Maybe he was just a madman, someone who didn’t know what he was talking about. But Greg didn’t know. Not for sure. And he couldn’t have that.

He blocked out Hannah’s voice as it started up again. The whispers and low shouts for attention fading into the background as he breathed in and out.

The duct tape holding his right hand to the back of the chair was looser than the left. With a little effort, he could probably get it all the way out. That wasn’t what he was thinking about though.

His voice started as a whisper, but became louder as he repeated himself.

‘Tell me what you’re hiding, Hannah. Tell me. Tell me now. Tell me, now.’

Chapter Ten
 

The apartment was quieter than the previous day. Fewer people milling about now forensics had finished their work. Items had been removed, sent away to be examined further. Every computing device – of which there had been a fair few – and mobile phone would be scrutinised for more evidence.

Policing had changed greatly since Murphy had started back in the late nineties. Now, it seemed as if everyone kept their entire lives on a tablet, phone or laptop.

‘So, we think he was playing away from home?’ Rossi said, snapping on gloves and picking through the mail which had arrived that morning.

‘Looks that way,’ Murphy replied, trying to stretch out his gloves a little more to make them fit. ‘Kirkham here spoke to one of Joe’s friends. Plays on the same team as him.’

‘You mean . . .’

‘No, not that. Football team.’

Murphy motioned to Kirkham for him to carry on with what he had been telling him on the way over. The eagerness had dissipated, replaced with an almost too-professional air.

He would get there, Murphy thought. He was already making a better impression on him than most of the new batch of detective constables they had been lumbered with.

‘His name is Charlie Smith,’ Kirkham said with no preamble. ‘Hasn’t played for a while due to a knee ligament issue. Had surgery a few months back. He has known Joe for a number of years. Before the TV show. He told me he was surprised Joe had agreed to the wedding, given the way he had been recently.’

‘And how’s that?’ Rossi said, setting aside a couple of letters and dumping the obvious bills on the coffee table.

‘He’s been out with him a few times. Said he was with a different girl every night. Charlie enjoyed going out with him, said they would get into all the VIP parts of the clubs in town. Girls throwing themselves at them and Joe Hooper never turned that down. He would talk about Chloe, but it was always in a really nasty way. He called her the “Trophy Slut”. ‘


Bastardo . . .’

‘Quite. Anyway, he asked Joe about it all one night – why he was getting married to her when it was obvious he didn’t want to be with her – and didn’t really get a good response. Joe told him that he was making more from the wedding to Chloe than he would make in three years playing for whatever lower league club would take him on.’

‘Looks like it was about the money for him then,’ Rossi said, turning towards Murphy who had been half listening in.

‘Joe had offers to go to a bigger club – Reading, or some championship club – but had to turn them down to keep the relationship going. It was made clear to them that they had to stay up here. So, Charlie reckons that’s what sparked him going to clubs and meeting girls. That sort of thing.’

‘Money and not wanting to be in a relationship,’ Rossi said, narrowing her eyes at Murphy. ‘Seems like there was trouble in paradise for certain then.’

‘Looks that way,’ Murphy replied. ‘Not sure how that fits into this whole thing though. Unless we’re going with the angle that it’s someone Joe has hurt with his actions. Of course, if Chloe was more into this relationship than he was and she found out about it, there’s no telling how bad she took it.’

‘Strapped herself to a chair before killing herself? Not buying it.’

‘Exactly. This could all be just more celeb gossip and have nothing to do with their murders at all. Could be something else entirely.’

Rossi turned to Kirkham. ‘What about drugs? Did you ask about them?’

Kirkham nodded. ‘Told me they were totally clean. Joe and him just liked a drink. The FA have really clamped down on drugs testing and positive results. Neither of them wanted to get caught with anything in their system and get banned for life. Playing at that level of football, they don’t really have anything else.’

Murphy turned over an ornament, tested the base and found no give. Went to the next one. ‘Money then? Ransom gone wrong, possibly.’

‘Well, they were killed hours after being taken on the Friday,’ Rossi said, perching on the edge of the white sofa. ‘Possible something went wrong and they never got round to the ransom part. Still doesn’t explain the scene, or the collage of pictures on the wall.’

Murphy replaced the final ornament on the sideboard. ‘We need to find something, anything, here. I’m in front of the press in two hours and so far I’ve got nothing. We need to find something fast.’

They didn’t.

*     *     *

 

Murphy tried to rub some life into his eyes, failed, and settled for splashing his face with water instead. He dried off with paper towels, bringing roughness to his features anew, checked himself in the mirror a final time and left the toilets.

He hated this part.

It wasn’t that he didn’t know the media had a role to play – he knew that only too well – it was just something he’d never prepared for. When he’d imagined life in the police force – or service, as it now was – it hadn’t involved sitting in front of a load of journalists, who were all just waiting for you to say the wrong thing.

In and out. That’s what he wanted.

‘Ready?’ the press liaison officer asked as he met him at the doors leading into the press room. Murphy could remember his first name – Adrian – and that he was a scrawny git, as DCI Stephens had put it earlier. Another anonymous thirty-year-old man in an expensive suit, a hair full of products and a clean-shaven, unmarked face. They were becoming more prevalent within the station, each as interchangeable as the last.

DCI Stephens was a little behind them, talking to another anonymous guy in a suit.

‘Yeah,’ Murphy replied, giving his suit jacket one last swipe with the back of his hand. ‘Let’s get this done.’

They entered the room, DCI Stephens hurrying to catch up as Murphy held the door open for her. As Murphy walked to the front the room broke out into a cacophony of camera clicks, a few brave journos shouting out questions before being told to quiet down by their colleagues.

Keen.

Murphy had a statement prepared, a litany of bullshit words which said nothing when carefully examined. Words he’d used repeatedly, in a variety of different cases, but all of which amounted to the same thing.

We don’t know what the hell is going on.

‘Thank you,’ Adrian said, silencing the voices in the room. He gave a brief introduction explaining why they were there, but glossed over any details. Murphy waited, drumming his fingers on one knee underneath the desk. ‘I’m going to hand you over to Detective Inspector David Murphy now.’

Murphy cleared his throat, pulled the microphone a little closer and started his speech. ‘Thank you. And thank you all for attending.’ Murphy looked up, hoping he sounded genuine. ‘Yesterday morning the bodies of two people were found at an address in Anfield. They were subsequently identified as being Chloe Morrison and Joe Hooper. Both deaths are being treated as suspicious. Enquiries are ongoing and are robust and intensive at this early stage.’

Murphy gave some further platitudes, feeling the life pour out of him as he sat there, speaking whilst his mind wandered.

‘If anyone was in the area of Anfield, and noticed a vehicle parked up by abandoned houses, or anything of that sort, in the past week, please get in touch. If anyone has any information, please call either Crimestoppers or Liverpool North CID . . .’

Murphy reeled off phone numbers and websites he had given far too many times before. It was difficult not to see the pointless nature of the whole game, but he knew he was being broadcast into living rooms around the country at that point. Chloe and Joe murders were big news in a slow news week.

‘We have time for some very brief questions . . .’ Adrian had no sooner got the words out of his mouth before there was a clamour of voices wanting to be heard. Murphy gave him a glance, waiting to see if he was going to quieten them down and make them take turns. Happy to stay patient and waste a little more time doing nothing so he could get out of there.

Instead it was a voice from the other side of him which broke through. ‘Enough,’ DCI Stephens said, rising from her seat and holding her hands up for quiet. ‘One at a time. You, there.’ She pointed to someone on the front row.

‘Damien Lomax,
Sky News.
Can you tell us how they died?’

Murphy waited a second or two to see if DCI Stephens had taken over completely, before deciding it was still on him. ‘Details related to cause of death are not being released at this time.’

‘Is it true that only one of them was strangled?’

Murphy nodded his head slightly, before catching himself. ‘I cannot give you that information at this time.’

A hand shot up behind the
Sky News
guy. Murphy pointed to them and leaned forward to take a drink of water. ‘Alice from the
Liverpool Echo
. Are the public being warned to be on the lookout for anything suspicious? Can you give more details about what they should be looking for?’

‘I’d ask the public to always be willing to report anything suspicious, Alice.’ That earned a titter amongst some of the journalists in the room. Murphy remained stony-faced. ‘At this time, there is nothing in particular I want to convey to the public to be on the lookout for, but this may change in the future. However, I do want to make sure that the people of Liverpool go about their daily lives as normal. We believe there is no direct threat to anyone else at this time.’

A couple more questions were batted away with non-answers as easily as those which preceded them, earning a pat on the back from DCI Stephens once they had left the room minutes later.

‘You’re becoming a pro at this, David,’ she said, checking her phone. ‘You’ve come a long way.’

Murphy remembered the incident which had made him infamous a few years previously – a screaming match in a press conference with a particularly annoying local journalist. He hid a smile as he thought of that man’s now-dead career and even deader newspaper. ‘Easy when you know how.’

‘Good. I have to go meet the superintendent now. Everything as it was earlier?’

Murphy nodded. He had appraised her of the current situation once they had returned from Chloe and Joe’s apartment. ‘Nothing more until forensics get back to me. We had that info from Joe’s friend, which we’ll confirm. Not sure it’ll be of any use though.’

Murphy watched DCI Stephens walk away, wondering if it was ever better to be away from the front line of policing. You had the responsibility for the cases which passed through the station, but were not directly involved with them.

He wasn’t sure he could ever give up that attachment.

There had been a shift in mood whilst he was away from the office. He could sense it. Nothing tangible, just the feeling something had changed since he’d left.

Murphy made his way towards Rossi. She was sitting with her back to him, the desk phone cradled between her ear and shoulder as she wrote in her notepad.

‘Great . . . No, really, that’s a big help . . . We’ll see you soon . . . okay, bye.’

DC Harris and DC Hale were sitting and standing respectively opposite Rossi, their attention on her rather than Murphy as he waited for them to acknowledge his presence.

‘Sounds spot on,’ Rossi said once she’d dropped the phone back into its cradle. ‘Over the water, but close enough.’

‘Shit,’ Hale replied. ‘Not a one-off then?’

Murphy leaned against Rossi’s desk making her jump slightly. ‘What’s going on?’

‘Did it go okay?’ Rossi said, flipping pages back on her notebook.

‘Yeah, yeah. Come on, what’s happened?’

‘We got a call from Wirral CID . . .’

‘Not bloody him . . .’

Rossi sat back in her chair, rocking it a little. ‘Unfortunately, yes. DS Brannon. And it wasn’t for a friendly chat.’

Murphy swore under his breath. DS Tony Brannon. The last name he wanted to hear. ‘Not angling to come back, I hope.’

‘No, nothing like that. We could be seeing more of him, though.’

‘Why?’ Murphy said, already feeling his stomach sink.

‘Because I don’t think Chloe and Joe are our first victims.’

Chapter Eleven
 

There’s always one person you can never stand working with. Having to walk the same bit of carpet as each other every day, thrown together by coincidence or a practical joke planned by a vengeful God. Someone who – either by design or accident – is the antithesis of everything you hold dear.

For Murphy, that man was DS Tony Brannon.

He had worked with Brannon in Liverpool North division for almost four years, before Brannon was quietly shifted to the other side of the River Mersey, to Wirral CID. Murphy had been asked outright near the end of Brannon’s tenure at his station whether he could work side by side with him any longer.

He’d said no.

Murphy wasn’t sure if Brannon knew of his role in his relocation. Didn’t much care, if he was honest.

‘Not much changed around here.’

Now Brannon was back.

‘It’s not been that long, Tony,’ Murphy replied, closing the door of the meeting room. ‘Only a year or so. Let’s go through this from the beginning.’

‘Happy to,’ Brannon replied, producing a bag of cheese and onion crisps. Not much had changed at all. ‘So, we found out about your case like everyone else. On TV. Spoke to some people over here I’m still in contact with and got the juicy bits.’

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