Authors: Michael Robotham
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Police Procedural, #London (England), #Human Trafficking, #Amsterdam (Netherlands)
I can’t. I won’t. He adds something else. “I
did
like being married to you.”
Timewise it was even shorter than Britney Spears’s first wedding, but I don’t tel him that.
Nobody answers the door at Donavon’s house. The curtains are drawn and his motorbike isn’t parked outside. A neighbor suggests we try the markets in Whitechapel Road.
Donavon has a weekend stal there.
Parking behind the Royal London Hospital, we fol ow the insurrection of noise, color and movement. Dozens of stal s spil out from the pavement. Everything is for sale—Belgian chocolates from Poland, Greek feta from Yorkshire, Gucci handbags from China and Rolex watches draped inside trench coats.
Traders yel over one another.
“Fresh carnations. Two-fifty a bunch!”
“Live mussels!”
“Garden tomatoes as red as your cheeks!”
I can’t see Donavon but I recognize his stal . Draped from the metal framework there are dozens of intricate necklaces or perhaps they’re wind chimes. They twirl in the light breeze, fragmenting the remains of the sunlight. Beneath them, haphazardly displayed, are novelty radios, digital clocks and curling tongs from Korea.
Carla looks cold and bored. She’s wearing red woolen tights and a short denim skirt stretched over her growing bump.
I close the gap between us and slide my hand under her sweater, across her abdomen until I feel the warmth of her skin.
“Hey!”
I pul my hand away as if scalded. “I just wanted to be sure.”
“Sure about what?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
Carla looks at me suspiciously and then at Ruiz. A faint, fast vibration is coming off her, as though something terrible and soundless is spinning inside.
“Have you seen him?” she asks anxiously.
“Who?”
“Paul. He hasn’t been home in two days.”
“When did you last see him?”
“On Saturday. He had a phone cal and went out.”
“Did he say where?”
“No. He never leaves it this long. He always cal s me.”
Female intuition is often a myth. Some women just
think
they’re more intuitive. I know I’m letting the sisters down by saying that, but gender isn’t a factor. It’s blood. Families can tel when something is wrong. Carla’s eyes dart across the crowd as though assembling a human jigsaw puzzle.
“When are you due?” I ask.
“Christmas.”
“What can you tel me about the New Life Adoption Center?”
Her mouth seems to frame something she’s too embarrassed to admit. I wait for her.
“I don’t know what sort of mother I’m gonna make. Paul says I’l be fine. He says I learned from one of the
worst
so I won’t make the same mistakes our mum did.” Her hands are trembling. “I didn’t want an abortion. It’s not because of any religious thing. It’s just how I feel, you know. That’s why I thought about adoption.”
“You went to see Julian Shawcroft.”
“He offered to help me. He said there were scholarships, you know. I always wanted to be a makeup artist or a beautician. He said he could arrange it.”
“If you gave up the baby?”
“Yeah, wel , you can’t do both, eh? Not look after a baby and work ful -time—not without help.”
“So what did you decide?” asks the DI.
Her shoulders grow rounder. “I keep changing me mind. Paul wants me to keep it. He says he’l look after us al .” She gnaws at a reddened fingernail.
A crew-cutted teenager stops and picks up a transistor radio shaped like a Pepsi can.
“Don’t waste your money—this stuff is shite,” says Carla. The youth looks hard done by rather than grateful.
“How did you hear about the New Life Adoption Center?”
“A friend told Paul about it.”
“Who?”
Carla shrugs.
Her mauve-tinted eyelids tremble. She doesn’t have the wherewithal to lie to me. She can’t see a reason. Glancing above her head, I notice the feathers and beads.
I have seen one of these ornaments before—at Cate’s house, in the nursery. It was hanging above the new cot.
“What are they?” I ask.
Carla unhooks one from the metal frame above her and hangs it from her finger, watching me through a wooden circle crisscrossed with colored thread and hung with feathers and beads.
“This is a dream catcher,” she explains. “American Indians believe the night air is fil ed with dreams, some good and some bad. They hang a dream catcher over a child’s bed so it can catch dreams as they flow by. The good dreams know how to slip through the holes and slide down the soft feathers where they land gently on the child’s head. But the bad dreams get tangled in the web and perish when the sun comes up.”
Blowing gently, she makes the feathers bob and swirl.
Donavon didn’t go to the reunion to “make his peace” with Cate. He had seen her before. He gave her a dream catcher or she bought one from him.
“How wel did your brother know Cate Beaumont?”
Carla shrugs. “They were friends, I guess.”
“That’s not possible.”
She bridles. “I’m not lying. When Paul was in the Paras, she wrote to him. I seen the letters.”
“Letters?”
“He brought them home from Afghanistan. He kept her letters.”
I hear myself quizzing her, wanting to know the where, when and why, but she can’t answer for her brother. Trying to pin her down to specific dates and times makes her even more confused.
Ruiz intervenes and I feel a twinge of guilt at having browbeaten a pregnant woman who’s worried about her brother.
The afternoon sun is sliding below rooftops, leaving behind shadows. Stal holders are shutting up, loading wares into boxes, bags and metal trunks. Buckets of ice are tipped into the gutter. Plastic awnings are rol ed and tied.
After helping Carla load up the red Escort van, we fol ow her home. The house is stil empty. There are no messages waiting for her on the answer phone. I should be angry with Donavon, yet I feel a nagging emptiness. This doesn’t make any sense. Why would Cate write letters to someone who sexual y assaulted her? She was talking to him the night of the reunion. What were they saying?
Ruiz drops me home. Turning off the engine, we stare at the streetscape as if expecting it to suddenly change after more than a century of looking almost the same.
“You want to come in?”
“I should go.”
“I could cook.”
He looks at me.
“Or we could get takeaway.”
“Got any alcohol?”
“There’s an off-licence on the corner.”
I can hear him whistling his way up the street as I open the front door and check my answering machine. Al the messages are for Hari. His girlfriends. I should double his rent to pay the phone bil .
The doorbel rings. It should be Ruiz—only it’s not. A younger man has come to the door, dressed in a pepper-gray suit. Clean-shaven with broad shoulders and Nordic features, his rectangular glasses seem too smal for his face. Behind him are two more men, who are standing beside cars that are double-parked and blocking the street. They look official, but not like police officers.
“DC Barba, we need you to accompany us.” He makes a clicking sound with his tongue that might be a signal or a sign of nerves.
“Why? Who are you?”
He produces a badge. SOCA. The Serious Organized Crime Agency. The organization is less than a year old and the media have labeled it Britain’s answer to the FBI, with its own Act of Parliament, budget and extraordinary powers. What do they want with me?
“I’m a police officer,” I stammer.
“I know who you are.”
“Am I under arrest?”
“Important people wish to speak to you.”
I look for Ruiz. He’s hurrying down the pavement with a half bottle of Scotch tucked in his coat pocket. One of the men beside the cars tries to step in front of him. The DI feints left and drops his shoulder, propel ing him over a low brick wal into a muddy puddle. This could get ugly.
“It’s al right, sir.”
“Who are they?”
“SOCA.”
The look on his face says it al . Fear and loathing.
“You might want to pack a few things for the journey,” says the senior officer. He and Ruiz are sizing each other up like roosters in a henhouse.
I pack a sports bag with a pair of jeans, knickers and a lightweight sweater. My gun is wrapped in a cloth on top of a kitchen cabinet. I contemplate whether I should take it with me, but dismiss the idea as being too hostile. I have no idea what these people want, but I can’t risk antagonizing them.
Ruiz fol ows me to the car. A hand is placed on the back of my head as I slide into the rear seat. The brake is released suddenly and I’m thrown back against the new-smel ing leather.
“I hope we haven’t spoiled your plans for the evening, DC Barba,” says the gray-suited man.
“You know my name, can I have yours?”
“Robert Forbes.”
“You work for SOCA?”
“I work for the government.”
“Which
part
of the government?”
“The part people don’t often talk about.” He makes the clicking sound again.
The car has reached the end of Hanbury Street. Beneath a streetlight, a solitary spectator, clad in black leather, leans against a motorcycle. A helmet dangles from his right hand. A fag end burns in his fist. It’s Donavon.
Traffic meanders at an agonizingly slow pace, shuffling and pausing. I can only see the back of the driver’s head. He has a soldier’s haircut and wraparound sunglasses like Bono, who also looks ridiculous wearing sunglasses at night.
I’m trying to remember what I’ve read about SOCA. It’s an amalgam of the old National Crime Squad and National Criminal Intel igence Service, along with elements of Customs and Excise and the Immigration Service. Five thousand officers were special y chosen with the aim of targeting criminal gangs, drug smugglers and people traffickers. The boss of the new agency is a former head of MI5.
“Where are you taking me?”
“To a crime scene,” says Forbes.
“What crime? There must be some mistake.”
“You are Alisha Kaur Barba. You are twenty-nine years of age. You work for the London Metropolitan Police, most recently for the Diplomatic Protection Group. You have four brothers.
Your father is a retired train driver. Your mother takes in sewing. You went to Falcon Street Primary School and to Oaklands Secondary. You graduated from London University with a degree in sociology and topped your class at Hendon Police Training Col ege. You are an expert markswoman and former champion athlete. A year ago you were injured trying to apprehend a suspect who almost snapped your spine. You accepted a bravery medal but refused a disability pension. You seem to have recovered quite wel .”
“I set off metal detectors at airports.”
I don’t know if his knowledge is supposed to impress or intimidate me. Nothing else is said. Forbes is not going to answer my questions until he’s ready. Silence is part of the softening-up process. Ruiz taught me that.
We take the A12 through Brentwood and out of London. I don’t like the countryside at night. Even in moonlight it looks bruised and sul en like a week-old fal down the stairs.
Forbes takes several phone cal s, answering yes or no but offering nothing more apart from the clicking sound in his throat. He is married. The gold band on his wedding finger is thick and heavy. Someone at home irons his shirts and polishes his shoes. He is right-handed. He’s not carrying a gun. He knows so much about me that I want to even the scales.
We continue through Chelmsford in Essex before bypassing Colchester and turning east toward Harwich along the A120. Convoys of prime movers and semitrailers begin to build up ahead of us. I can smel the salt in the air.
A large sign above the road welcomes us to Harwich International Port. Fol owing the New Port Entrance Road through two roundabouts we come to the freight entrance. Dozens of trucks are queuing at the gates. A customs officer with a light wand and a fluorescent vest waves us through.
In the distance I see the Port of Felixstowe. Massive gantry cranes tower above the ships, lifting and lowering containers. It looks like a scene from
War of the Worlds
where alien machines have landed and are creating hatchlings for the next generation. Row after row of containers are stacked on top of one another, stretching for hundreds of yards in every direction.
Now Forbes decides to speak to me again.
“Have you ever been here before, DC Barba?”
“No.”
“Harwich is a freight and passenger port. It handles cruise ships, ferries, bulk carriers and rol -on, rol -off vessels. Thousands of vehicles pass through here every day from Denmark, Sweden, Belgium, Germany and the Hook of Hol and.”
“Why am I here?”
He motions ahead of us. The car slows. In the middle of the customs area a Scene of Crime tent has been erected. Police cars are circled like wagons around it.
Arc lights inside the tent throw shadows against the fabric wal s, revealing the outline of a truck and people moving inside, silhouetted like puppets in a Kabuki theater.
Forbes is out of the car, walking across the tarmac. The ticking of the cooling engine sounds like a clock. At that moment a side flap of the tent is pushed open. A SOCO emerges wearing overal s and white rubber gloves that peel off his hands like a second skin.
I recognize him. George Noonan, a forensic pathologist. They cal him “the Albino” because of his pale skin and snow-white hair. Dressed in white overal s, white gloves and a white hat, he looks like a fancy-dress spermatozoon.
He spends a few minutes talking to Forbes. I’m too far away to hear what they say.
Forbes turns toward me, summoning me forward. His face is set hard like the wedge of an ax.
The tent flap opens. Plastic sheets cover the ground, weighed down with silver boxes of forensic equipment and cameras. A truck is parked at the center, with its twin rear doors open.
Inside there are wooden pal ets holding boxes of oranges. Some of these have been shifted to one side to form a narrow aisle just wide enough for a person to squeeze through to the far end of the lorry.
A camera flash il uminates a cavity within the pal ets. At first I think there might be mannequins inside it, broken models or clay figurines. Then the truth reaches me. Bodies, I count five of them, are piled beneath a closed air vent. There are three men, a woman and a child. Their mouths are open. Breathless. Lifeless.