Authors: Elena Forbes
âWhat's up?' Jamieson asked somewhere in the background.
He inhaled deeply, then exhaled, staring blindly down at the body before him, automatically
noting the cuts to her face, the bruising and swelling and obvious signs of strangulation,
wishing that she were someone else. But there was no doubt about it and it was pointless
wasting any more time. The hideous consequences started to unfurl in his mind. What
should be done, how to handle it, who to call first . . .
He pulled off his mask and rubbed his face with his hands. Even though the room was
like a fridge, he was sweating. He felt suddenly feverish and claustrophobic.
âMark? Are you OK?'
He looked up at Jamieson and shook his head. âNo. I'm not OK. I know her.'
The car braked, then swerved to the right, rousing Tartaglia out of sleep. Minderedes
leaned on the horn and muttered something unintelligible as he overtook a cyclist
who had stopped in the middle of the road. Tartaglia stretched his shoulders, yawned
and checked his watch. It was just after five in the afternoon but already dark.
The day had gone quickly enough and the events of the morning seemed a distant memory.
Gazing vaguely at the lit-up shop windows and passers-by as they sped past, he thought
again of the woman whose corpse he had helped to zip inside a body bag that morning.
Her name was Claire Donovan and her sister, Sam, had once been a detective sergeant
on his team. Working closely together for almost two years, he and Sam had become
good friends, although she had left the police a few months before to go back to
university to study for a post-graduate degree. He hadn't seen either her or Claire
since. He still felt shaken by the discovery of Claire's body in the hotel room early
that morning and had spent the intervening hours trying to block out the memories,
forget the Claire he had known, and do his job as best he could. But disturbing images
from the darkened room kept crowding into his mind and he worried about his ability
to see things objectively. Sam Donovan was also at the front of his thoughts and
he wondered how she was coping with the news.
Other than the identification of the victim, little progress had been made with the
case so far. The name Robert Herring had turned out to be an alias and the Manchester
address
entered into the reception log was equally fake. The mobile number âHerring'
had given was still switched off and untraceable and the credit card used to secure
the booking had been Claire Donovan's own. He had checked in just after seven o'clock
the previous evening and the video footage taken of him at reception showed a youngish
man of medium height and build. He was dressed in bulky winter clothing, with a thick
scarf wound around his neck and a beanie pulled down low over his brow. The little
that was visible of his face was disguised by dark-lensed aviators and a good few
days' worth of beard. He looked like a wannabe in the music or film business, not
at all out of place in a hotel like the Dillon. He wore gloves and was carrying a
large, black rucksack. CCTV footage showed him taking the back stairs up to the
room and later, just before eight-thirty, Claire Donovan entering the building and
going up to the second floor. The handbag she'd been carrying was still missing,
but her coat and the shoes she was wearing looked to be the same as those left in
the hotel room's cupboard.
Just before one in the morning, five minutes after making the call down to room service,
Herring was filmed leaving the building via the front entrance, walking down the
street in the direction of Marylebone High Street and melting into the night. By
that time, Claire Donovan was already dead. He was dressed the same as when he had
arrived at the hotel earlier, the rucksack â which must have contained Claire's things
â slung over his shoulder. The search for the knife or blade used to cut Claire's
legs had proved fruitless and it looked as though he'd taken that with him too. Tartaglia
had watched the footage over and over again, studying the man's body language and
familiarising himself with what little there was to be seen. Herring moved quickly
and purposefully, head down, as
though he knew he was being observed. He was calm,
even-paced, not a man in any hurry or panic, and Tartaglia was struck by how confident
he seemed for a man who had just committed murder. It was extraordinary. Why had
he made the call to room service? Why not leave it for housekeeping to find the body
the following day? Why had Claire booked the hotel room for Herring and what was
her connection to him? These, and myriad other mushrooming questions, remained unanswered.
Neither her sister, Sam, nor any of her work colleagues that they had so far spoken
to, knew anything about this man. Claire's phone was missing and switched off, but
hopefully her laptop might reveal some important clues.
Tartaglia had just started to doze again when the car took a sharp left and a moment
later pulled up abruptly.
âWe're here, boss,' Minderedes said as Tartaglia opened his eyes. They were outside
the small terraced house where Sam and Claire Donovan had lived, which was located
in a quiet maze of narrow streets in Hammersmith, close to the river.
âI'm just nipping over to the office for some things, then I'll be back. They called
to say they need more evidence bags. How long will you be?'
Tartaglia rubbed his eyes vigorously and reached for the door. âI dunno. Maybe five
minutes, maybe five hours. Just hurry up.' Their office in Barnes was just over Hammersmith
Bridge, on the other side of the Thames, but at that hour the traffic around Hammersmith
Broadway was particularly heavy. What should be no more than a ten-minute journey,
door-to-door, could easily turn into half an hour and Tartaglia didn't want to find
himself stranded. He was expecting a call any minute from the pathologist's office
to let him know what time Claire's autopsy was scheduled that evening and he needed
to be ready to go over there at short notice. Normally, he didn't
need ferrying around.
He had his motorbike, a Ducati 998, which in his view was infinitely better than
a car. But he had dropped it off the previous day at the garage for a service and
he would have to rely on Minderedes for the next few days.
He climbed out of the warm cocoon of the car, acknowledging Minderedes's murmured
âgive Sam my condolences and best wishes' with a nod. Minderedes and Donovan had
rarely seen eye to eye in the past, but it didn't matter any more. Wrapping his jacket
tightly around him, Tartaglia looked at the house. The curtains were roughly drawn
but he could see light through the gaps and the shadows of people moving around.
Donovan was inside, being looked after by Sharon Fuller, the family liaison officer,
as well as his boss, DCI Carolyn Steele. Two other detectives from his team, Dave
Wightman and Hannah Bird, had already started searching the house and going through
Claire Donovan's possessions, bagging up anything that looked interesting or might
possibly give a clue to the identity of the man who had killed her. Tartaglia wondered
how Donovan felt about having her home invaded at such a time, even though she knew
it had to be done.
As the tail-lights of the BMW disappeared around the corner, he pulled out his phone
and texted Steele to say that he had arrived. He crossed the road, sat down on a
low garden wall opposite the house and lit a cigarette. When he had spoken to her
half an hour earlier to tell her that he was on his way over, she had told him to
wait outside. He had spent many a happy hour at the Donovans' house and it felt odd
to be forced to loiter outside like a stranger. He had explained to Steele earlier
that day about losing his phone and about having been in the Dillon Hotel at the
time of the murder. She had made a couple of sharp comments about needing to have
an early night when on call, but otherwise seemed to have taken
what he had said
at face value. His alibi would have to be checked like anybody else's, but otherwise
it seemed there would be no repercussions. Something else must have happened, but
he was at a loss to know what it was about.
A minute or so later the front door opened and Steele came out, bundled up in a long,
belted, beige-coloured coat over her usual dark trouser suit. She must have a wardrobe
full of them, he often thought. He tossed away the remains of his cigarette and crossed
the road to meet her.
âLet's go somewhere,' she said, pulling on leather gloves and knotting a silk scarf
tightly around her neck, her voice hoarse from the tail-end of a cold. âWe need to
talk. Did you come by car?'
âNick dropped me off. He's gone back to the office to get some stuff.'
âLet's sit in mine, then.' She walked over to a silver Audi parked on the opposite
side of the street and clicked open the locks.
âWhat's up?' he asked, sliding into the passenger seat.
âI need to speak to you before you see Sam.'
âHow is she?'
Steele switched on the ignition and turned the heater up to maximum. âAs you'd expect.
I did my best to talk to her and ask if she knew anything that might help us, but
she's in a pretty bad way. The doctor's given her a sedative to calm her down, plus
pills to help her sleep tonight. She and Claire were close, weren't they?'
âUp to a point. They got on OK, but they are . . . I mean they
were . . .
very different.'
Like chalk and cheese, both physically and in terms of character, he'd always thought,
marvelling at the vagaries of genetics. Claire, the elder, had been striking, on
the tall side, with dark, wavy hair; Sam was small, prettier, with light brown hair.
While Claire had been more outwardly
confident and gregarious, he had always felt
she lacked her sister's inner core and complexity.
âStill, they shared a house together,' Steele said. âThat must count for something.
Unfortunately, she doesn't seem to know much about what her sister was up to, or
what she was doing in that hotel.'
âYou know Sam's been living in Bristol for the last couple of months.'
âThere's the phone, Facebook, email. Surely they kept in touch? You know her better
than I do. Do you think she's telling the truth?'
He looked at her, surprised. Although Steele never socialised outside work, she
had a good enough feel for Sam's character. âSam? Why wouldn't she?'
âI have to ask.'
He nodded. âI wasn't that close to Claire, but I'd say it's perfectly possible she
kept things to herself, particularly if the relationship, or whatever it was, was
something new. From what I gather, she didn't have a great track record with men
and it was a bit of a sore spot.'
âSam said she was bad at picking them. Maybe it runs in the family.'
Her tone made him look over at her again. âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
She gave him one of her tight little smiles, her pale, cat-like eyes also giving
nothing away. She would have done well in politics, he always thought. According
to the rumour mill, she was destined for higher places than running the Barnes Murder
Squads. âI'll come onto that in a minute,' she said. âThinking about practical things
first, it will be very strange for Sam to be on the outside of the investigation,
and probably very frustrating.'
âYes, I'm sure. But I shall, of course, keep her on the outside.' He wondered if
this was the purpose of the conversation. Did Steele really think that he couldn't
be trusted where Donovan was concerned?
âThere's something else.' She paused, as though choosing her words carefully. âYou
two had some sort of a falling out, didn't you?'
âNot exactly.'
âLovers' tiff ?'
âWe were never lovers. You know that.'
âWhen did you last see Sam?'
âA few months ago. What's this all about?'
She folded her arms and tilted her head to one side. âI need to know exactly what
went on between the two of you.' When he didn't answer, she added: âIf you were
just
good friends
,' she emphasised the words, âwhy haven't you seen her since she left
the Met? What exactly happened?'
Wondering who she had been listening to and where this was going, he said: âI don't
really know. We just haven't seen one another for a while. There was no row, no falling-out,
nothing at all like that.'
âSo?'
âLook, I just got the feeling that she didn't want to see me.'
âAnd you just let it go?'
âWhy is this important?'
âI need to understand. For
professional
reasons, of course.'
He looked away but could feel her eyes still on him. He didn't like discussing such
things with anybody, but he knew Steele wouldn't let it go. âI don't know. I had
the feeling that I'd done something wrong, let her down in some way, although she
never actually said so. I haven't got a clue what it was all about.' Even as he spoke,
he knew it sounded odd, but he had
never really tried to put it into words before.
Besides, it was only half the story.
âYou didn't try and find out?'
He shrugged. âI thought it would all blow over, but it didn't, then she went off
to Bristol and life went on. Does it matter?'
âYes. She can't stay here. We need to search the house thoroughly and it would be
much easier if she weren't there.'
He nodded. âI'm sure she, of all people, understands that.'
âYou'd think so, but she's not rational at the moment. When I told her she'd have
to move out temporarily, she was quite resistant and got quite upset. When I insisted
that there was no choice, she asked if she could stay with you.'