He shrugged.
‘Were they practical, businesslike? Did Lisa talk or just listen?’
‘They were short, that’s all.’ He closed his eyes. ‘One of them, she was upset, like.’
Now
you tell us, numbnuts. ‘You didn’t think this was significant?’
He gave a quick shrug.
‘Upset about what?’
‘Just saying stuff like, “I’m sick of you interfering, my life’s none of your business, I don’t want to see you any more” – that sort of thing.’
‘Thank you. Anything else?’
He shook his head.
‘And did Lisa talk to you about the call afterwards?’
‘No.’
It wasn’t much, but it was all she could get from him. Rachel couldn’t tell whether it was her fault, something lacking in her technique, maybe his resentment at her running him to ground, or whether Kasim was simply the unobservant prat he claimed to be.
25
JANET FOUND RACHEL
in the canteen while she was waiting for Sean to finish instructing his solicitor. ‘I should tell him we’ve been talking to Benny,’ Janet said, ‘and he might as well put his hands up and confess to everything. The guy leaks like a sieve.’
Sean Broughton had been badly shaken by the raid. For the first time he seemed to grasp that the police were seriously considering him as a suspect. He was agitated before they started. Janet wondered if there was any withdrawal going on, though she knew that Sean, once arrested and detained at the police station, would have been taken through the medical questionnaire and any drug dependency discussed. The custody sergeant would have determined that he was competent to answer questions.
‘Sean, the last time we spoke, you told me that you had removed Lisa’s phone from the flat and disposed of it, along with clothing she had brought from town, behind the shops on the parade on Garrigan Street. We now know that was not the case. How do you account for that?’
‘Dunno,’ he said uneasily.
‘What did you do with the phone?’
He didn’t say anything.
‘Sean?’
‘Wiped it clean, then sold it,’ he said quietly.
‘Who to?’ Janet said.
‘Bloke called Des Rattigan.’
‘When?’
‘Tuesday,’ he said.
‘What time?’
He opened his mouth as if to complain about the string of questions, then thought better of it. ‘Seven-ish.’ All his answers tallying with what they had established already.
‘Can you tell me why you sold the phone?’
‘For the money.’
‘There may have been information on that phone of use to the investigation into Lisa’s murder. Information you deleted,’ she said.
‘There wasn’t,’ he said.
‘I don’t know, do I, Sean? Because you destroyed it. And I have to ask myself whether that was because you had something to hide.’
‘No, I don’t, I didn’t,’ he said urgently, his dark eyes gleaming.
‘You also told me that you removed several bags containing clothes from the flat, but we now have evidence to show those items were never in the flat.’
He swallowed.
‘Can you explain to me why you made that up?’
‘It’s just – you kept going on about the shopping, I just said it.’
‘Are you now admitting that there was no shopping?’
‘Yes,’ he said.
‘We know Lisa had stolen some clothing in town. Do you have any idea what she intended to do with that clothing?’
‘No,’ he said thickly, but with little conviction.
‘If I told you we have reason to believe Lisa traded those items for Class A drugs, namely heroin, what would you say?’
He was still for a moment, though his eyes were jittery, darting here and there. ‘I don’t know nothing about that,’ he said. He was scared. Frightened of dobbing in Kasim, of any repercussions? Or of the prospect of a murder charge?
‘You have told me on several occasions that you went to the flat on Fairland Avenue at half past three to meet Lisa and that when you got there she was dead?’
‘Yes,’ he said.
‘You also told me that you covered Lisa with a duvet and rang the police – correct?’
‘Yes.’
‘But that call was not logged until five past four. Which would have given you time to take anything you wanted to from the flat and return home. It would have given you time to change your clothes and return to the flat and then to call the police.’
The import of what she was saying provoked a strong response. ‘No way,’ he said. ‘Listen, I took the phone, that’s all.’
And the cross and chain? Janet shook her head slowly, as though she didn’t believe a word of it.
He ran on: ‘All right, I took the gear an’ all, the drugs. I couldn’t leave it there. I needed it, yeah?’ The desperation of an addict. ‘I never hurt her, I never touched her.’
Janet went on, as if ignoring his admission: ‘We are currently searching your premises. If you are concealing anything from us, we will find it.’
Sean sat back, arms folded tight.
‘What would you say to me if I told you that Lisa got home at just after one o’clock on Monday?’
He frowned. ‘You’re lying,’ he said uncertainly.
‘We have an independent witness who saw her arrive home.’
‘She said half three.’
‘So you keep telling me,’ Janet said. ‘But that doesn’t fit with what our eyewitness saw. And they would have no reason to make it up. Would Lisa have lied to you, Sean?’
‘No,’ he said, shuffling in his seat, but doubt rang clear beneath his rebuttal.
‘Or are you lying to us?’
‘I’m not,’ he said.
‘First you tell me that you did not take anything from the flat. Then you tell me you took a phone and some shopping and discarded it. When that proves to be untrue, you change your story again. Seems to me that you’ve been lying to us all along. Perhaps you’re lying about finding Lisa dead as well.’
‘I’m not, I swear,’ he said quickly, his hands trembling.
‘Why would Lisa not tell you the correct time of her arrival home? Was she sleeping with anyone else?’
‘No way!’ he retorted.
‘You see, I can’t understand why she would put you off. And we know she had sex not long before her death. And if that wasn’t you …’
‘It wasn’t.’ He was boxing himself into a corner. Whichever way he jumped caused problems.
‘Did you find out she had slept with someone else?’
‘No.’
‘Did you argue? Things got violent?’
‘No, I didn’t. She was dead, just like I told you.’
When Janet showed Sean Broughton the photograph of the cross and chain he began to weep. Janet thought they had him then. The moment when the strain of maintaining all the lies, of repeating a story concocted to hide his guilt, became too much to bear.
There was usually a physical response before the words came. Not always tears; sometimes it was slumping in the chair, a letting go of posture, of muscle tension, other times head in hands or head flung back, throat exposed. Surrender.
‘We found this item, this cross and chain, at your house, in your room. Can you tell me how it got there?’
His face had flushed, his mouth began to work, then he was crying. Janet let him cry. Waited until he quietened. Knew he would be forced to fill the silence. ‘I took it.’
‘Where from?’
‘From the flat.’
‘From Lisa?’ Janet said.
‘No, it was in the kitchen.’ Still trying to distance himself from the body, the violence.
‘Whereabouts?’
‘Just on the floor, in the kitchen.’ He sniffed, his nose blocked.
‘Was it broken?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘OK,’ Janet said. ‘I want you to tell me exactly what order you did things in from the moment you stepped into the flat.’
He wiped at his face, but more tears kept leaking from his eyes. Janet almost felt sorry for him. They’d pulled together a little of his background in the days since the murder. Father in and out of prison for theft and burglary until he contracted hepatitis B and died as a result of complications. Mother suffering from early onset dementia in a care home in Wigan. No known siblings. Sean had left Wigan for the bright lights of Manchester as a sixteen-year-old. Probably because his father’s sister was here, Benny’s mum. She didn’t want anything to do with him – her new fella not interested in connections that pre-dated him, including Benny – so Sean ended up sharing Benny’s place and ducking and diving for a living. Watching his hopes for a fresh start disappear down the drain like so much dirty water. His universe contracting to Lisa and drugs. Heroin seducing him with that unbelievable high that made everything seem fabulous, beautiful. Then the comedown. And the longing. The grip of the drugs on him, savage.
‘I came in and called out …’ Distraught still, his words breaking up. ‘There was no answer.’
‘You were expecting Lisa to have something for you, after her trip?’
He closed his eyelids. ‘Yes, some smack.’
‘Heroin?’
He nodded. ‘I went into the living room—’
‘Not the bedroom?’ Janet interrupted.
‘I could see she wasn’t in there, like. The door was open.’
‘Go on.’
‘She was just lying there, you know …’ He’d said it before but obviously didn’t like the word in his mouth.
‘Describe her to me.’
He took a big breath and wiped at his nose. ‘I told you.’
‘I know, but we need to hear it all again, Sean, because a lot of what you’ve told us keeps changing.’
‘Not this,’ he said on a sob.
‘What did you see?’
He huffed again and then spoke: ‘She was lying there by the sofa and there was blood on her and her eyes were stuck, not moving.’
‘Did you touch her?’
‘No. I went and got the duvet.’
‘Before that, what was Lisa wearing?’
‘Her Chinese dressing gown,’ he said.
‘Any underwear?’
‘No.’ His voice cracked.
‘Would she usually wear that by itself?’
‘No.’ His mouth stretched with emotion.
‘Carry on,’ Janet said.
‘I brung the duvet and put it on her,’ he said.
‘How? Did you kneel?’
‘No, I just dropped it down, like.’
‘And you didn’t touch her?’
‘I told you,’ he shouted, ‘I never touched her! How many more t— For fuck’s sake.’
‘What then?’ Janet remained calm.
‘The smack was on the floor, under the table. I picked it up. And her phone.’
‘What did you do after you picked up the phone?’
‘I went in the kitchen.’
If this is true, Janet felt like shaking him, what were you thinking of? The person closest to you in the whole world, the girl that presumably you claim to love, lies dead in a slick of her own blood, and your second thought after covering her up is to nick everything that isn’t nailed down
. ‘Why the kitchen?’
He hesitated. ‘I don’t know, really, to see … I don’t know. The light was on … and I went in and saw her cross on the floor and picked it up and then went back home.’
‘Did you see a knife?’
‘No.’
‘And the cross and chain, what were you going to do with them?’
‘See if I could sell ’em.’ Not even a keepsake. That was sad
. ‘Lisa said it was gold. They pay more for gold now, like,’ he added. A man with his eye on the markets. There was shame in the way he said it and the cast of his eyes. Not your proudest moment. Janet felt he understood how low he had stooped, how low his addiction had brought him. But if all the other stuff was flannel and he
had
stabbed her before stealing from her, then those thefts paled into insignificance.
‘What did you do at home?’
‘I put everything in my room and I had a hit,’ he said.
‘You took heroin?’ Janet said.
‘Just a bit,’ he said. ‘I knew I had to ring the police, but I was freaking. Then I went back to the flat, like I said.’
‘Did you go into the living room?’
‘I couldn’t see her again,’ he shuddered.
‘Who would want to do that to Lisa?’ Janet said, thinking to herself that throughout the whole process he had never asked that question, or offered an opinion, unlike Denise.
‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘It doesn’t make no sense. They didn’t take anything, not even the brown an’ … look, I loved her, right, but she could be a right bitch when she got going. But she hadn’t crossed anyone, nothing like that.’
Oh, what a eulogy. ‘She’d crossed you,’ Janet pointed out.
‘I didn’t know that, I swear.’ He shook his head.
‘Why didn’t you tell us about stealing the heroin and the cross?’
‘I didn’t want to go to prison,’ he said simply.