H
ALF AN HOUR LATER, TULLOCH PULLED UP OUTSIDE THE row of run-down terraced houses in Shepherd's Bush where Emma lived. Other than a terse âWhat part of “Stay in the car” was difficult to understand, Flint?' she'd barely said a word to me since she'd arrived at the pool. It was pretty clear I was with her now so she could keep an eye on me, not because of anything useful I might have to contribute.
The flickering blue lights of two patrol cars had been waiting for us, their occupants watching the front and rear of the house until we could get here. As the car engine died, I saw Joesbury making his way towards us from where he'd parked down the street. Tulloch turned to me and opened her mouth.
âI had a text message saying “Help me” and I heard screams,' I said. âWhat would you have done?'
âI'd have done what I was bloody well told,' she replied, her eyes darting from me to Joesbury.
Well, I could hardly call a DI a liar to her face. âWe're the police,' I said. âWe're supposed to help people.'
Tulloch's eyes narrowed. She reached for the door handle. âDo I need to say the words?' she asked me.
âConsider me glued to the seat.'
As she got out of the car and went to join Joesbury, I pressed the button that would open the passenger window. She hadn't said I couldn't listen. She and Joesbury walked up the short path to the door.
In the tiny front garden dustbins overflowed with rubbish. An animal, probably a fox, had broken into one of the bin liners. The whole area stank of rotting food.
Joesbury banged hard on the door, making it shake in its frame. Then he bent down and pushed open the letterbox.
âPolice!' he called. âOpen this door.'
Joesbury banged again, then stepped back and looked up at the house. âDon't have a good feeling about that,' he said, indicating the camera he'd arranged to be positioned above Emma's front door. Sometime since it had been installed, someone had hurled a brick at it.
âSomeone's coming,' said Tulloch as we heard noises inside the house, the rustle of paper, a clanging and a soft cursing sound. Then the door opened inwards. Tulloch stepped forward and held up her warrant card as a thin, unhealthy-looking boy of about twenty stuttered that he didn't know where Emma Boston was, he had nothing to do with Emma Boston, his own flat was below hers, he hadn't been in earlier that day when it had happened and it had all been some serious shit, man.
âShut up and step aside,' said Tulloch. âMark, see he doesn't go anywhere.'
After a brief argument with Joesbury about who was going to go in first, Tulloch led the way along the corridor and up the stairs. The boy followed, then Joesbury, then one of the uniformed constables. The other stayed at the front door.
We waited. I saw a light go on in a first-floor window. The uniformed constable had a short conversation with someone on his radio. I was itching to get out of the car. Knew Tulloch would tear me apart if I did.
Emma Boston had been obnoxious and opinionated and in a position to make life pretty uncomfortable for me. But I'd actually quite liked her. I really didn't want to think about what Tulloch and Joesbury might have found in the room upstairs.
Noises on the stairs. I saw Joesbury's jeans-clad legs, then both he and Tulloch came into view. In the dim hall lights I scanned both faces. They looked tense, puzzled, not shocked.
âIs she there?' I asked, realizing I'd got out of the car.
âPlace has been broken into,' said Joesbury. âTrashed about a bit. No sign of Emma.'
âAbout ten o'clock this morning, according to her downstairs neighbour,' said Tulloch. âHe heard crashing about but didn't bother investigating. He didn't see anything. Says he didn't hear anyone calling for help either.'
âShe doesn't live alone,' I said. âAny sign of her boyfriend?'
Tulloch shook her head, just as the uniformed officer who'd accompanied them inside appeared, with one hand on the boy's shoulder. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw movement and turned.
âOh thank God,' I said, stepping forward.
Not three metres away, in the light of a streetlamp, stood Emma Boston, her burned scar livid against her pale face, looking pissed off but very much alive.
âY
OU'VE HAD HOW MANY TEXT MESSAGES FROM EMMA Boston today?' Tulloch asked me.
âSix,' I repeated. âThe first late this morning and then at two-hourly intervals. With a break for lunch.'
Emma, in another interview room at the station, had already confirmed that her flat had been broken into early that day and her phone taken. The text messages I'd been getting all day could not have been from her and, so far, I was managing not to think about the full implications of that.
Emma had also identified the sunglasses and the shoe I'd found at Forest Hill as hers. When asked why she hadn't reported the break-in she'd given us a withering look. Clearly yet another Londoner who didn't have much confidence in the Met's ability to investigate burglaries.
âDid you reply to any of her texts?' asked Joesbury. I explained about my brief, polite responses.
âThe sixth being the one you got shortly before half past nine this evening?' asked Tulloch. âThe one that came in just after we all left?'
âThat's right,' I said. âThat was the one asking me to meet Emma at Forest Hill.'
âIf Boston's telling the truth, someone broke into her flat and stole her phone just to get access to you,' said Joesbury. I ignored him. I really could have done without him in the room. I needed my wits
about me and, somehow, they never seemed to be when he was around.
âI tried to phone her after the one asking me to go to Forest Hill,' I told Tulloch. âShe didn't answer, just sent another message, asking me to come. I called it into control and then I went.'
Tulloch nodded. âAnd then shortly after you got there, you received the last one? The one saying
Help me
?'
âWhoever sent that had seen you arrive,' said Joesbury. âDid you notice anyone in the street? See anything unusual?'
âNothing,' I said to Tulloch. âIt all looked completely normal. Until I saw the sunglasses on the fire escape. And the broken window at the top.'
âWhen I saw you, you said you'd heard someone screaming,' said Joesbury. âWhen was this?'
I took a breath and gave myself a second. âIt was when I was at the top of the fire escape,' I said to the tabletop. âI heard what I thought was screaming, coming from inside.'
âInarticulate screaming or words?' asked Joesbury.
I shook my head. âJust screaming, I think. I don't remember any words.'
âMan or woman?' he asked.
Oh, could the guy not go get a cup of coffee? Another deep breath. âI'm not sure, it only lasted a second. Female, I think.'
âHow old? Child, adult, elderly?'
If I did much more deep breathing I'd be hyperventilating.âI don't know,' I said. âIt might not even have come from the building. It could have been kids near by. I was scared and I wasn't thinking straight.'
âWhen I found you, you weren't scared, you were petrified,' said Joesbury. âWhy would you be that frightened if you'd just heard kids?'
I turned round so quickly I almost toppled the chair. âWell, shit, let me think,' I said, speaking directly to Joesbury for the first time since we'd entered the room. âEight days ago a woman was stabbed to death. She died in my arms. Maybe I'm still a bit twitchy.'
Joesbury was just thrilled to have broken my cool. âPast catching up on you, Flint?' he said, leaning back in his chair as I glowered at him. âAny of your old friends been in touch?' He turned to Tulloch.
âDid you know your new pet was cautioned for possession when she was a teenager?'
âYes, I did actually,' said Tulloch, as I looked at her in surprise and Joesbury frowned. âAnd don't tell me you haven't come across that before.'
Tulloch's support gave me that extra bit of courage I needed. To go too far. âWhy are you even here, Joesbury?' I said. âYou're not part of this investigation.'
His eyes narrowed. âWell, you're certainly not,' he replied. âAnd yet you keep finding yourself in the thick of it. I have to wonder why that is. And another thing I'm wondering, Flint, is where you were before ten thirty this morning, which is the time I've been told you arrived for work.'
âMarkâ'
âAt home,' I said, interrupting Tulloch. âI needed to see my landlord about something. I had permission from the sergeant to come in late.'
âSo your landlord can confirm this?' Joesbury wanted to know.
âHe phoned to rearrange,' I said. âWhat is this about?'
âOK, you two â¦'
I turned to Tulloch. âI want him out of here,' I said, as her eyebrows shot into her hair. âI want him out of here or I want a solicitor.'
Joesbury was smiling at me now. And it wasn't his usual grin, this one was mean. âSomething to hide, Flint?' he smirked.
âFuck you.'
âMarkâ'
âOK, OK. I'll catch you ladies later.' He pushed himself up from his chair and sauntered out. The door closed and I dropped my head on to my hands. Tulloch didn't speak. After a second I heard her stand up and cross the room. A moment later a box of tissues had been pushed in front of me. I hadn't even realized I was crying.
âBull in a china shop doesn't really cover it,' she said. âBut he has a point. Someone does seem fixated on you. We have to ask why.'
I took off my glasses and wiped my eyes. What the hell had got into me? I never cried. Tulloch got up again and brought me a glass of water from a tray on the side table. As she held the glass out, the
sleeve of her shirt fell back and I caught a glimpse of a scar on her right wrist. It was about two inches long, running across the inside of her wrist, pale and ugly against her café-au-lait skin.
What had she said in the cathedral last night? Scars run deep? I hadn't taken her literally. As I took the glass, she pulled her hand away and tugged the shirt cuff back into place. I drank most of the water, blew my nose and then polished and replaced my specs.
âIt's what the Ripper did,' I said, when I trusted myself to speak. âHe picked people out â people in the police, the press, even the local vigilante committees. He picked them out and he sent them messages. He played with them. Our guy's just following the historical pattern.'
There was a knock on the door.
â'Scuse me, Boss.' It was DS Anderson. âSOCs are closing up Forest Hill. They'll go back first thing, but nothing else to report for now. Entry through the fire escape, as we thought. No sign of how he got out. Boston's mobile and the other personal effects have gone to Forensics. There are traces of fingerprints, but it will take a while to sort them all out.'
âWhat about the body part?' asked Tulloch, looking exhausted, and I realized the last thing she needed was Joesbury and me going at each other like a cock-fight.
âGone to the mortuary at St Thomas's,' Anderson replied, his eyes flicking from me to Tulloch. âThey'll have someone look at it first thing in the morning. Let us know when we can go over.'
âThanks,' said Tulloch.
âCould easily be a prank, you know, Boss,' said Anderson. âLots of medical students in this city. Could just be someone winding us up, sending us on a wild goose chase over to Mandela Way, then leaving behind a little present from anatomy class for Flint and me to find.'
âLet's hope so,' she agreed. âHow's the missing-persons search?'
âWe're running the check for women aged sixteen to sixty reported missing in London over the last week,' said Anderson. âNothing so far.'
âThanks, Neil. I'll be down in a second.'
Anderson gave me one last puzzled glance and left the room.
âSomething you need to know, Lacey,' said Tulloch, as I looked up. She'd taken Joesbury's chair. âMark persuaded the police doctor
to sign him off fit for active duty and I've had him seconded on to the team for the next few weeks.'
Oh great.
âOur killer overstepped the line tonight,' she went on. âCutting out women's organs and leaving them lying around the place is a step too far in my book. I intend to catch him now.'
I waited. I could tell from the look on her face that she had more to say.
âBut I'm not one of these macho types who think they can do it by themselves,' she said. âI need Mark. I think perhaps I might need you too. And it would really help if the two of youâ'
âI know.' I didn't give her chance to finish. I was feeling pretty ashamed of myself by this time. âOf course. I'm sorry.'
Â
âWhat will happen to Emma and her boyfriend?' I asked, as Tulloch and I made our way downstairs.
âI'll give them the option of staying here for the night,' said Tulloch. âIf they've got somewhere else to go they can leave, but the flat is out of bounds until our people have finished with it.'
âEmma's going to run the story first thing in the morning,' I said.
âAt the moment, she doesn't have a story,' replied Tulloch. âShe doesn't know where we found her phone or what else was there. I've told her there'll be an announcement in the next couple of days and that I'll give her fifteen minutes alone with me afterwards. As long as she continues to keep you out of the papers.'
âThanks,' I said. We'd arrived at the incident room. Way after midnight, it was still full. Joesbury was in there, talking quietly to DS Anderson. As we walked in everyone looked up.
Tulloch raised her voice. âOK, we're assuming there is another victim out there until we get confirmation the body part is either from an animal or a fake,' she said to the room at large. âNow, here is the problem. When Flint arrived at Forest Hill earlier this evening she heard a woman's scream. She's pretty certain it came from inside the building, so we might be forgiven for assuming it was the voice of our victim.'
âSeems fair enough,' agreed Anderson.
âSo what happened to her?' asked Tulloch. âI mean the 95 per cent of her that isn't currently in the mortuary at St Thomas's?'
âIt can't have been the victim,' I said. âThere just wasn't time. It could only have been five, maybe ten minutes from when I heard the screaming to when we found the phone and the dummy in the pool. It just wouldn't be possible to kill someone, cut out major organs, pop one of them in a plastic bag and then leave the building with a body over your shoulder. Sorry to be glib, it just wouldn't.'
âYou wouldn't think so, would you?' agreed Tulloch, before turning to Anderson. âSOCs found nothing else down there?'
He shook his head. âNothing so far.'
âI was wrong then,' I said. âIt must have come from outside the pool.'
âWe've got uniform still searching the surrounding area,' said Anderson. âThe body could have been dumped near by.'
âThere still wouldn't be time,' I said. âWherever the voice came from, there still wouldn't be time for him to do â what he did â and leave. The screaming can't have been connected to what we found.'
âBlood-curdling screams within a fifty-yard radius of a body part is stretching coincidence for me,' said Joesbury. âCould you have heard a recording?'
I nodded. I hadn't thought of that.
âYou think the killer recorded the victim's screams and then played them back when he knew Lacey would hear them?' asked Anderson.
âSomeone wanted her in that building,' said Joesbury. âHe practically pinned up arrow signs.'
Tulloch gave me one last dirty look. I still wasn't forgiven for going into the pool alone. âOK everyone, if you're not doing something essential and urgent, I want you home,' she called out. âThere'll be a team briefing in the morning, depending upon what time we're needed at the mortuary.'
Around us, people started to leave. Tulloch turned to me.
âYour car is still at Forest Hill, isn't it?'
âThat's right,' I said, wondering if perhaps Stenning would offer to drive me over. I really didn't fancy getting a cab.
âI'm going to have it brought back in,' said Tulloch. âJust in case whoever lured you into the pool building decided to touch it when you were inside.'
Great. I was losing my car for the second time in just over a week.
Tulloch raised her voice again. âI need someone to take DC Flint home and check her flat out,' she said.
âI'll do it,' said Joesbury, getting up off the desk he'd been leaning against. âI have to drive past her place anyway,' he added. âAnd besides, I think Flint and I need to bury the hatchet.'