Authors: R. D. Wingfield
"Did he say 'Feel free to look around'?" asked Frost. "Let's see how the rich pimps live." He pushed open a door which led into a large room with bay windows overlooking a lawn and a covered swimming pool. The room held the rich smells of expensive leather, wool and cigar smoke. Their feet sank ankle deep into thick-piled carpeting on which stood a five-seater settee in pale blue hide and four matching armchairs. Frost sniffed in the heady aromas. "The smell of opulence, Taff," he said, dropping down into one of the armchairs, his eyes taking in the forty-two-inch wide-screen digital TV set with surround sound, the massive corner bar, complete with beer pumps, then up to the ceiling which was painted a midnight blue and decorated with silver stars. "All it wants is a slop bucket and a spittoon;" he decided, "and it would be a proper home from home. I wonder how many dicks had to work overtime to pay for this little lot."
The door clicked open and Harry Grafton came in, a swarthy-skinned man in his mid-forties, dark hair balding, a thin black moustache and cold eyes which failed to match the oily smile. He wore a scarlet dressing-gown and could barely close his mouth over the fat cigar between his lips. The car polisher was at his side.
"Inspector Frost. An unexpected pleasure." He clicked his fingers and pointed to a cassette recorder on a side table which his sidekick switched to record. "I hope you don't mind, gentlemen. I like to have all conversations recorded, in case there is any dispute as to what has been said."
"A wise precaution, Harry," nodded Frost. "It stops me from lying my bloody head off. We want to see Mickey Harris."
Grafton pulled the cigar from his mouth and studied the glowing end. "Mickey? Why?"
"Grievous bodily harm. He beat up a torn last night."
Grafton smiled as if the idea were preposterous. "And what makes you think it was Mickey?"
"She fingered him."
Harry Grafton frowned, then clicked the smile back on. "She was mistaken, Inspector. Mickey was here all night, never went out."
Frost shook his head and tutted. "God can hear you telling these lies, Harry."
Grafton walked over to the cassette recorder and pressed the pause button. "Off the record, Inspector, I do look after a few girls. It's hard enough for them to make a living at the best of times without these young amateurs muscling in on their territory. There's not enough trade to go round, so sometimes we have to give them a little slap on the wrist and suggest they would be better opening up shop elsewhere."
"This was more than a little slap, Harry. Mickey put this seventeen-year-old kid in hospital. Broken nose, cracked ribs—she was coughing up bits of blood and teeth when I saw her. Put me right off my black pudding for breakfast."
It was Grafton's turn to do the head-shaking and tut-tutting act as he released the pause button on the recorder. "Disgraceful, Inspector. The animals who do that should be put inside—but it wasn't Mickey. As I said, he was here all night. I have witnesses."
"Who?"
"Myself and six of my employees."
"Quantity, but not quality, Harry. A rich pimp and six of his hired thugs."
"As against the evidence of a single prostitute." He smiled smugly. "I think we both know which of us the courts would believe. But to show my good faith, even though I am not involved in this in any way and just to ensure my good name should not be smirched, I will personally see that the unfortunate girl is well compensated."
"I'm sure you could buy her off, Harry, but there was another girl Mickey had a go at."
"Oh?"
"Mary Adams. Had a place in Clayton Street."
A brief flicker of recognition instantly suppressed as Grafton again studied the glowing end of the cigar and shook his head vaguely. "Name means nothing to me. When was this supposed to have taken place?"
"The night before last."
Grafton smiled. "Then again it couldn't have been Mickey. He was here all that night as well." He turned to the car polisher. "Isn't that right, Richard?"
Richard nodded his vigorous agreement. "Dead right, Mr. Grafton."
"Mickey didn't stop at slapping her wrist, Harry. He killed the poor cow."
The cigar drooped as Harry's mouth gaped open. "Killed . . . ?"
"We're talking murder, Harry, and we've got Mickey well and truly in the frame. Before we start discussing perjury and perverting the course of justice, do you still want to give him an alibi?"
Grafton's finger crashed down on the stop key of the recorder. He rewound the tape then waited while it erased before turning back to Frost. "I know nothing about any killings. I don't want anything to do with this."
"So Mickey wasn't with you the two nights in question?"
"No."
"Is he here?"
Grafton jerked his head to his sidekick. "Fetch him."
As the man sidled out, Grafton snatched the cigar from his mouth and squashed it out in an ashtray shaped like a naked, recumbent woman. Frost winced. It reminded him of the cigarette burns on the dead girl's stomach. Footsteps outside and the sidekick returned with Mickey Harris, a thickset brute of a man in his forties with a boxer's flattened nose and thick ears. He scowled at Frost before turning to Grafton. "You wanted me, Mr. Grafton?"
"The fuzz want you for questioning," snapped Wafton, underlining his instructions with a jab of his finger. "Keep your mouth shut, don't say a bleeding word, don't even pass the bloody time of day until your lawyer gets there. Right?" Without waiting for Mickey's reply, he turned on his heels and stomped out of the room.
Frost took Harris by the arm. "Come on, Mickey. We're going walkies."
Frost thumbed through his in-tray as he impatiently waited for the brief to turn up. Harris wouldn't say a dicky bird until the solicitor arrived. He tugged out a report from Forensic. They hadn't found any traces of blood on the clothes and shoes from Lewis, the boyfriend of Mary Adams, so Mickey Harris was now his one and only prime suspect and somehow he couldn't see Mickey as a strangler. But he was all he had. A groan from Morgan attracted his attention. "What's up, Taffy? You on heat again?"
"No, guv, it's this damn abscess." He rubbed his cheek and winced.
"You know what they say, Taff—abscess makes the heart grow fonder." Morgan quivered a wan smile. He didn't think that half as funny as Frost who was coughing and spluttering with laughter at his own joke.
A tap at the door and Liz Maud entered carrying a couple of case files.
"I thought you'd be away by now?" said Frost.
"I've got to clear it with Mr. Mullett first," she told him, "and he's not in yet." She dropped the files on his desk. "Could you baby-sit these for me until I get back? The only active investigation is the armed robbery."
Frost flipped the file open. "You've found the getaway car, then?"
She sat in the vacant chair. "Wesley Division found it down a back street in the town. Blood all over the floor by the driver's seat which matches blood from the mini-mart and splashes of white paint everywhere."
Frost scratched his chin. "Wesley? That's over twenty miles away."
"Yes. Wesley are checking on known villains in their Division."
"But why come all the way from Wesley to rob a tuppenny-ha'penny mini-mart in Denton? There must have been plenty of fatter targets closer to home."
She blinked. That aspect hadn't occurred to her. "Maybe the cashier was in on it and they thought it would be easy."
"You checked out the cashier?"
Liz nodded. "We found nothing on her—but that doesn't mean to say she's clean."
Bill Wells poked his head round the door. "Mickey Harris's brief has arrived, Jack." He gave Liz a curt nod. "And Mr. Mullett has just come in, Sergeant—sorry, I'm ten days premature—I meant Inspector."
Frost dropped down into the old, familiar chair which seemed to mould itself round him and watched Kirk-stone, the sleek and plump solicitor, dust his chair carefully with a handkerchief before allowing his £600 suit to touch it. Kirkstone grunted as Frost intoned the preliminaries and watched in a bored fashion as Morgan started the cassette recorder. Frost slid across a photograph of the seventeen-year-old Cherry Hall. "Recognize her, Mickey?"
Mickey gave it the briefest of glances before shaking his head. "No."
"You don't know who she is? You don't know her name?"
Mickey glanced at the lawyer, who nodded he should answer. "Correct."
"She's a prostitute who'd been plying for hire on Harry Grafton's sacred turf. Did Harry ask you to warn her off?"
Another check with the lawyer. "No."
"Come off it, Mickey. Harry told you to warn her off but you were having such fun beating up a seventeen-year-old girl, breaking her ribs, knocking out her teeth, you just couldn't stop. Is that what happened, Mickey?"
Kirkstone gave a little cough and a slimy smile. "As my client doesn't know the young lady and has never met her, there is no way he could have hit her."
"Good point," agreed Frost. "But if he didn't know her and didn't beat her up, why did he phone the hospital to ask how the poor cow was?" As Mickey opened his mouth to answer, Frost's hand came up to stop him. "Before you deny it, Mickey, you should know that the hospital tapes all calls and you came over loud and clear."
"A word with my client," said the lawyer. Frost leant back and smoked as Harris and Kirkstone huddled together murmuring inaudibly, until the lawyer indicated that Mickey was ready to answer.
"All right, Inspector. I didn't tell the truth because I was embarrassed. I was a client of hers a couple of nights ago. Someone told me she had been beaten up, so I phoned the hospital to enquire about her. I even sent her a bunch of flowers."
"An act of kindness," smirked the lawyer.
"You make me feel a swine for ever doubting you," said Frost. He took the photograph back and swapped it for one of Mary Adams. "Recognize this one, Mick?"
Mickey stared at the photograph then shot a quick glance to the lawyer who, with a barely perceptible shake of the head, told him to say no.
"No."
"Her name is Mary Adams, trade name Lolita. She operated from a flat in Clayton Street. Ever been there?"
"Never."
"When business was slack she used to go after the crumpet hunters in Denton Parade and King Street, an area on which Harry Grafton felt he had monopoly trading rights. Harry told you to warn her off, didn't he—to rough her up a bit?"
"No. And if she says I did, she's lying."
"Yes—she's lying . . . in the bleeding morgue, Mickey. You went too far this time. She's dead."
"Dead?" Mickey blinked with indignation. "That's rubbish. I never touched her. I never went near her." He turned to the lawyer for support but Kirkstone appeared to be busying himself writing copious notes on a sheet of A4 paper. Mickey was on his own with the murder charge.
"You like to phone them up after you pay them a visit, don't you, Mickey? You thought you'd phoned this girl, but she couldn't answer the phone as she was dead. You actually spoke to one of my women officers. You boasted about beating Mary up."
Mickey's head was being violently shaken from side to side. "No. It's bloody lies."
"You phoned her, Mickey. We've got you on tape." Frost was picking his words carefully in case of future legal arguments. He only had Mickey on tape for the hospital call. "Couple more photographs you might recognize." These were of the other two prostitutes, the ones who were tied and tortured. The solicitor leant over to look at them and shuddered, moving his chair slightly, distancing himself even more from his client. Mickey was staring aghast. "Oh no—you're not pinning all your bloody unsolved crimes on me. All right, I beat up the kid in hospital, but I never laid a finger on Mary Adams."
"But you phoned her, Mickey. You told her next time it would be really serious."
Mickey stared at Frost, his eyes blinking rapidly, but before he could answer, the solicitor intervened.
"If my client had killed this woman, Inspector, why would he phone her up with further threats?"
"He phoned," said Frost, "to see if she was still alive."
"No!" shouted Mickey. "I phoned to tell her about her bloody car."
"Her car?" echoed Frost, wondering what the hell this was about.
"I'd phoned a few times warning her to stay off of Harry's patch, but she took no notice. I was going in to give her a going-over but she wasn't in, so I decided to do her car in instead. I slashed the tyres and gave it a few welts with a sledge hammer. It was a warning. If that didn't work, next time it would be her; that's what I was phoning about."