âHow much?' Ramsden said again.
âHow much what?'
âHow much they drop you?'
âI told you, nothing.'
âListen, you miserable little scrote, don't fuck me around. How fuckin' much?'
âCouple of hundred, that's all.'
âAnd the rest.'
âNo, no, straight up.'
âYeah?'
âYes.'
âCome cheap, then, don't you? 'Less you knew them, of course. Make more sense that. Old mates pulling a favour. That how it was?'
âNo. No, I swear.' Sweat pouring off him like rain.
âYou did know them, though.'
âNo.'
âNo?'
âNever seen 'em before. Not till that night. I told you. Never.'
âYou're lying.'
âNo.'
âWe'll see.'
âI told you, my oath.'
âYour what?'
âMy oath. My word.'
Ramsden grated out a laugh. âYour fucking word! Not worth a fiddler's fart and any self-respecting silk who gets you on the stand'll have the lies stripped off you so fast you'll be up there shivering with one hand hanging on to your scrawny balls and the other covering your arse.' He laughed again, pushed back his chair. âYou're going down, you miserable little dipshit, down for a long time, unless you give me something I can use. You understand? We understood?'
âYes. I mean, no. I dunno. I dunno if I can.'
âPentonville. Brixton. The Scrubs. Aiding and abetting, that'd be the least of it. Accessory to murder, I'd say. Depends. 'Less, of course, you recognise the shit you're in. Give us a reason for putting in a word. Show us how good you are, remembering faces, naming names.'
Head bowed, the security officer closed his eyes. Sweat dripped from the end of his nose. His voice was a whisper, little more. âI'll do what I can.'
âSay again?'
âI'll do what I can.'
Ramsden allowed himself a smile. It wasn't to last for long.
Four sessions: faces on the computer, folders of well-handled 6 x 4s, try as he might the man failed to pick out a single face, a single name. He was lying, of course, just as the CCTV operator was lying, but what could they do? The threatened possibility of a jail sentence against the embedded certainty that if he grassed sooner or later someone would use a blade on him, likely even cut his throat, in the nick or out.
In her office later, Karen read the anger, the frustration on Ramsden's face.
âBastard!' he said, slamming a fist down on to her desk. âChickenshit bastard!'
âIt'll come. You know it will. Sooner or later, it'll come.'
Not soon enough for Burcher. True to his word, he had made more officers available, civilian support staff, too, but for that he expected results. Homicide, he had said, holding back just a little on the irony, your field of expertise. There'd been an urgent message just that morning: the Detective Chief Superintendent would appreciate a progress report ASAP. So far she hadn't returned the call.
When the phone rang, she thought it was possibly Burcher himself, snotty and impatient, demanding action, answers.
Counting towards ten, she picked up on six.
âWe were going to have a catch-up?' Alex Williams' voice, pleasant, even.
âYes.'
âHow about this evening? Short notice, I know, but if we keep leaving it â¦'
âNo, this evening's fine.'
âYou remember how to get here?'
âI think so.'
âAround seven, then? Seven thirty? See you then.'
âA date?' Ramsden said, eyebrow raised, having heard just one side of the conversation. âAll right for some.'
37
It was dark by the time she arrived, had been dark for a good couple of hours. The house was quintessential South London suburban: generous bay windows, white paint, red brick; an attic room with a steeply angled roof. Shrubs in pots in the small front garden; a bare bed with the earth set hard from where it had last been turned. A child's scooter resting against the green recycling bin.
Please! No Junk Mail!
stickered to the letter flap in the front door.
Karen rang the bell.
The door opened to a small child wearing Miffy pyjamas; startled eyes, curly hair: Alex stood behind her, denim shirt hanging loose over blue jeans, bare feet, glass of wine in her hand.
This is what I've been missing, Karen thought. For that brief moment, it mattered.
âYou found us again then. No trouble?'
âNo trouble.'
âThis is Amy. Say hello, Amy.'
Amy did no such thing.
âHello, Amy,' Karen said, leaning towards her, and Amy wriggled away.
Alex laughed. âCome on in.'
What had been two good-sized rooms had been knocked through to make a large space that was filled, nevertheless, with soft-cushioned settees, easy chairs, a dining table of scrubbed pine, more chairs, magazines, comics, a flat-screen television, children's toys. Paintings vied with bookshelves for space on the walls; one section crowded with children's drawings, brightly coloured, starting to curl.
Amy had retreated behind one of the settees and was clutching a one-eyed bear. Another girl, older, sat cross-legged on the floor, reading a book. A boy of eight or nine lay on his tummy, watching a programme about seals on TV, the sound turned down to a whisper.
âI think they were all in bed, last time you were here,' Alex said. âSo, that's Ben, that's Beth, and Amy you've already met.'
Self-conscious, Karen said, âHi,' and was predictably ignored.
âAnd I'm Roger.' Alex's husband was wearing a long butcher's apron, flour on his hands, flip-flops on his feet. âWe did meet before, though I don't expect you to remember. And I won't shake hands or you'll get this all over you. Dumplings. For the casserole. Lamb, I hope that's okay.'
A smile and a nod of the head and he disappeared back to the kitchen.
âJust sling some of that stuff off there and have a seat,' Alex said. âLet me get you some wine. The kids will be in bed any time soon and we can eat. After that we'll talk. White or red?'
It was past nine. Between them they'd cleared the table and loaded the dishwasher, then Roger had excused himself to go upstairs and wade through his emails. Alex had stuck some Chopin on the stereo and opened another bottle of red.
âStansted,' Alex said, âall the crap that goes with it. They're hanging you out to dry on this, you realise?'
âPretty much.'
âThey'll let you and your team keep ferreting around, kicking up as much dust and trouble as you can. Hoping you'll shake something down into the net. Anything useful that looks as if it might bear fruit, they'll have it for their own, work it whichever way they can. Whatever's deemed expedient. And if you come up short, fail to get a result, well, nobody else but you to blame.'
âWhat else could I do? Tell Burcher to take a hike?'
âNot exactly.'
âAnd besides âWarren, Charlie and Alex, wasn't that what he said? Intent on the bigger picture. All three of you. Or isn't that true?'
Alex shifted position, folding one leg beneath her. âNo, it's true. As far as it goes. But, you know, SIS, we can be proactive in the gathering of intelligence, but basically we're there to support. What's the rubric? Something about helping prevent harm and enforcing legislation against organised criminal networks at National Intelligence Model levels 2 and 3.'
Smiling, she drank some wine.
âThey use us, sweetie, like we're all using you. I just wanted to be sure you knew.'
Karen sighed and settled back into the comfort of her chair; she'd eaten too much â too much casserole, too much crumble. Her bed was the other side of London and she had an early start next day. Nonetheless, when Alex reached the bottle in her direction, she nodded and held out her glass.
âLet me ask you something,' Karen said.
âGo ahead.'
âValentyn Horak, one of the victims at Stansted, he was subject to a surveillance operation before, yes?'
Alex nodded.
âPlaced under arrest, charged â presumably with the go-ahead of the CPS.'
Alex nodded again.
âEverything's fine almost up to the trial and then, out of the blue, someone at the CPS decides, after looking through the evidence again, oh, no, sorry, this isn't going to stick, and recommends no further action be taken.'
âYes. At least, that's what I understand.'
âAnd you don't think that's a bit funny?'
âFunny, no. Lazy, maybe. Slipshod, possibly. And whether that's down to the officers involved in the arrest, or the CPS barrister, I don't know. Most likely a combination of the two. But, Karen, you know, it happens. More often than we'd like. More often than it should.' She sipped some more wine. âWater under the proverbial bridge.'
âYou don't think it might have been a matter of money changing hands?'
Alex looked at her appraisingly. âWhose hand did you have in mind?'
âTake your pick.'
âIt's possible, I suppose, but â¦' She shook her head a trifle wearily. âCorruption, it's there, certainly. Fact of life. Just turn on the news.'
âBut in this case?'
âIf there's anything more than the usual vague suspicions, I haven't heard.' Alex pushed herself to her feet. âLet's go into the garden. I need a cigarette.'
Who was it who said in London you could never see stars? There they were, peppering the purple darkness above their heads; the night clear and cold, intimations of a frost.
Alex's lighter flared.
âSure you won't join me?'
âSure.'
âI always thought you smoked.'
âI did.'
âWhen did you give up?'
âWhich time?'
Alex laughed. The tip of her cigarette bobbed like a firefly in the dark.
âIt's nice out here.'
âYes.'
âQuiet.'
âYes.'
They stood there, silent, absorbing the small sounds around them. Other people's lives. Lights were showing, muted, at the rear of several other houses, but not many. Alex's husband and children were inside sleeping. The other side of the city seemed far away.
Karen shuddered involuntarily, as if someone had stepped over her grave.
âYou okay?'
âYes. Yes, fine. Just thinking.'
âWhat about?'
âWhatever it is I'm missing.'
âAre you missing something?'
Karen looked into Alex's face before answering. A long moment, wondering. âProbably. Yes, maybe.' A small laugh, shake of the head. âI don't know.'
Alex touched the back of her hand to the smooth skin, slightly chilled, of Karen's arm. âBest go back inside.'
Dropping her cigarette, she ground it out on the path.
In the kitchen, Alex made coffee while they waited for a cab and Karen asked about Roger's job â she could never remember exactly what it was â the kids, how the two eldest were getting on at school. In less than the promised fifteen minutes, the driver was at the door.
âAnton Kosach,' Alex said, as they stepped into the hall. âThe guy Charlie Frost was interested in. You've not turned up anything that involves him, I suppose?'
Karen stopped. âKosach, no. Why d'you ask?'
âOh, no special reason. Just thought you might have run across the name, at least, that's all.'
Karen shook her head. âIf I had, I'd've reported back. You'd've heard.'
âYes, of course.'
The cab was in the middle of the road, indicators clicking on and off.
Alex squeezed her hand, brushed her cheek. âKeep in touch.'
Karen gave the driver her address and settled back. Her head had started to swim and it wasn't just the wine.
38
Karen woke to the low thrum of music from the flat above; rolled over slowly, groaned, raised herself gingerly up on to one elbow, reached out and illuminated the small bedside clock. 6.03. What the hell was going on? For weeks on end it was as if no one was there, not even the faintest of footsteps criss-crossing above her head, and now, suddenly, it was whatever sad DJ had pulled the early breakfast show on Kiss or Choice, kicking things off with a chunk of dubstep reggae her neighbours seemed to be playing at full volume.
When she sat up something akin to a squash ball caromed, side to side and front to back, inside her head. Wincing, she closed her eyes and levered her legs slowly round, and as her feet touched the floor, the music stopped.
Thank you very much.
Gingerly, she made her way to the bathroom, peed, splashed water in her face, pressed two paracetamol out of their foil and swallowed them down. The last time she'd had a hangover to equal this had been Carla's birthday the previous September, the night Carla had insisted on treating them to her impression of Christina Aguilera at full shriek and she herself had come close to copping off with a startlingly beautiful black man who claimed to have played for Leyton Orient.
Now, as then, she should never have had that last glass of wine. Although, at Alex's, she hadn't realised she was drinking much at all.
Pulling back the curtains, she gazed out into the empty street, the convoy of parked cars. A cyclist in reflective gear, front light pulsing, swished past and out of sight.
Karen leaned slowly forward and rested her forehead against the welcoming glass.
She was in the kitchen, making coffee, trying to decide whether or not she wanted toast, when her mobile trilled to life.
That bloody phone!
Tim Costello's voice. A shooting outside the twenty-four-hour Tesco at Woodford. Close on four in the morning. Sixteen-year-old using the ATM. Bullet wounds to the side, shoulder, backs of the legs. Taken to Whipps Cross. Still touch and go.
âThe ATM, a robbery?'
âEither that or drug related. Local Drug Squad've had half an eye on him. Lot of manoeuvring going on, apparently. Usual squabble over territory.'