âAt random?' Tingley said. âUnfortunately, with just one crime there isn't enough information to do a geographic profile based on the stations.'
âWhat's a geographic profile?' Kate said.
âA guy called Stuart Kind devised it. He accurately predicted where the Yorkshire Ripper lived by cross-indexing times of attack with locations. He figured out that this man was on a clock â he had to get home. So the later in the day the crime, the nearer to this man's home.'
Kate nodded.
âIngenious. But I have a question. Why didn't he throw everything into the sea, like he did the head? Assuming that was her head at Black Rock. And what happened to her arms and hands? OK, two questions.'
âPerhaps he worried about the tides and that all the separate parts would end up in the same place,' Gilchrist said. âThought he could get away with disposing of the head like that. And that there would be a long gap between the discovery of that and the rest of the body.'
Tingley leant forward.
âGross as it sounds, a head is relatively easy to move around â heavy though it is. But a torso you've got more of a problem â the weight for one thing. If he'd chucked it in the sea, he'd probably have to do it in the trunk and then there's the problem of floating.'
âAnd the arms and hands?' Kate said.
Tingley shrugged.
âDon't know. The arms shouldn't have posed a problem of identification unless they had some distinguishing feature like a birthmark â these days it would be a tattoo.'
âAnd the hands were because of fingerprints.'
âProbably,' Tingley said.
âThough that in itself is interesting,' Gilchrist said. âIt means either that this woman had at some point been fingerprinted, so had a criminal record, or that the killer was ignorant and assumed that just the existence of fingerprints allowed for identification.'
âIf she had been fingerprinted, could that be because she was a prostitute?' Kate said. âKilled by her pimp?'
âQuite possibly,' Gilchrist said.
Kate noticed that Watts had not contributed to the discussion but had been listening intently.
âLet's get back to the head,' he now said. âIf the head they found in the rock pool was the woman's â wrapped in newspaper like the torso in the suitcase â then it's likely he lived around here. He's not going to be travelling far with a head â what would he carry it in, for one thing?'
âA bowling bag?' Tingley said.
âUgh,' Kate said.
âA man we have in custody walked from near Hove station to the pier with his friend's head under his arm in the middle of the evening a couple of weeks ago, and nobody noticed,' Gilchrist said.
âThese days anything is possible,' Watts said, âbut in 1934 I think somebody would have noticed. No, it still suggests he was local. He's not going to make more than one trip from London to Brighton with body parts, is he? He wouldn't want to risk being remembered. And lugging a trunk with a torso and a bag with a head in it at the same time would be risky. Plus, he'd want to dispose of the head at night. He couldn't very well chuck it over the cliff edge in broad daylight.'
âCan we check tide tables?'
âHang on,' Gilchrist said. âAre we assuming that he threw the head in there? Why? Why couldn't it have just ended up there â thrown in somewhere else and the tide tugged it there.'
âOK,' Tingley said. âBut we're getting somewhere. So his trip to King's Cross â a special trip or was he going somewhere from there?'
âIf he was, he'd have to come back so, again, that's doubling the risk of being remembered,' Gilchrist said. âSupposing someone had opened the case in the meantime; staff would be on the lookout.'
âSo it was a special journey,' Watts said.
âBut the same applies to Brighton station,' Tingley said.
âWhich same?' Gilchrist leant forward in her seat.
âIf we're saying he lived down here, then wasn't there a big risk when he was leaving the trunk at Brighton station that he'd be recognized and/or remembered lugging this trunk the next time he used the station?'
âHang on â break it down,' Gilchrist said. âThis is important. If he did live in Brighton, as you're suggesting, then he ran two risks turning up at the station with a trunk. One: that he might bump into someone he knew. Who would later remember, when there was all the publicity, that he was lugging a trunk. Two: that as he lived here he might be recognized as a regular user of the station.'
âYou mean if he was a commuter?' Kate said. âDid people commute from Brighton in those days? Plus we think he had a car.'
Tingley shrugged.
âWell, all you're really saying is that he lived down here but not in Brighton. He didn't go up to London much because his business didn't take him there.'
âBut that means she was based down here,' Gilchrist said. âSo you'd think they'd be able to figure out who she was.'
âWhy was she killed?' Watts said.
Kate replied:
âThe police theory from the files we have is that she was probably the mistress of a married man who killed her because she was pregnant.'
âGood,' Tingley said. âIf she was a mistress in London that he visited regularly, then the station might be a problem.'
âUnless he drove,' Kate said.
âBut trains were quicker and more frequent then,' Tingley said.
âSo it's like not shitting on your own doorstep,' Gilchrist said.
âExactly.'
âOK,' Watts said. âAlternative scenario. He was London-based but had a second home here. He didn't come down often but when he did he drove. He brought her down here to kill her. Then maybe never came down again for a couple of years. He was nondescript anyway so no real worries about being recognized.'
Gilchrist nodded slowly.
âBut if he's London-based, then he's anonymous and we can't ever locate him. If he's down here, then at least we stand a chance.'
âYou mean by the rules of this kind of investigation?' Tingley said.
âWhat do you mean?' Kate said.
âWell â Jack the Ripper â all the theories revolve around a small number of suspects listed in the police files. So Ripperologists spend all their time trying to prove which one of them did it. But why on earth should the police have hit on the right suspects? So then you get the wild card theorists who suggest it was the Prince of Wales or the Masons or Walter Sickert. But given the fact that with a random killing or crime these days the police haven't got a clue without DNA or confessions or blind luck, then the chances are the Ripper was somebody totally different.'
Kate frowned.
âAnd you're saying that applies here?'
âNo, no, this is different. There's a surfeit of information â thousands of statements. It's like the Yorkshire Ripper and all those high-profile cases. The police have already got the guys without realizing it â they're in there among the statements. The torso murderer is somewhere in the thousands of statements the police took.'
âBut we don't have those statements,' Kate said. âThey were destroyed. We just have a few of them.'
âWhen were they destroyed?' Watts said.
âIn the 1960s on the order of the Chief Constable,' Kate said. âI assume it was some thirty-year rule.'
Watts looked at her intently for a moment.
âWhat?' she said.
âNothing,' Watts said. âAre there files anywhere else?'
âI'm going to the County Records Office tomorrow. There are files there. There is one other thing too, which isn't in the copies I gave you.'
Watts tilted his head.
âThere is a kind of handwritten diary from a policeman involved in the case. Not all of it, just fragments.'
âWhich policeman?' Gilchrist said.
âI don't know â I'm hoping the County Records will help me identify him.'
Watts still had the odd look on his face. Before Kate could press him, Tingley glanced at his phone â they'd all heard a text alert â and took Watts to one side.
During the discussion about the head and torso, Gilchrist had been thinking about Finch's body washed up at Beachy Head and Gary Parker chopping up his friend. She bought another glass of wine for her and Kate. She warmed to Kate.
âYou know who I am, right?' she asked her when they'd both taken a gulp.
âI do. Can I ask â which has caused you most problems â your involvement with the Milldean incident or your fling with your boss?'
Gilchrist stared at her for a long moment then burst out laughing.
âPlease, don't sugar-coat it â just ask me straight out.'
Kate flushed.
âSorry.'
âIt's OK. The two together are a pretty powerful combination.'
âDo you regret your fling?'
Gilchrist had asked herself the same question time and again. But now it was her turn to flush.
âIf I'm honest, I'm bitter about the consequences but don't regret the fling.'
âBut he was married.'
The moral certainty of youth, Gilchrist thought. She didn't know how old Kate was but she assumed she was younger. And she'd felt that same way once, before life kicked in.
Her mother was a feminist, had lived through the pill and the pressure on women to engage in sex for fun, whether it was fun for them or not. She belonged to that whole generation of women used by men and who ignored their own needs because most women wanted relationships, not one-night stands. Her mother couldn't understand the notion of the mistress. Couldn't understand the idea that women should have solidarity with each other but so many broke ranks to have affairs with married men, ignoring the suffering of the wives.
Gilchrist scanned the room, as she'd been doing since she first entered the hotel.
âWhat I regret is losing my anonymity,' she said. âIn many ways I hate Brighton â so much “Look at me”. But all this exhibitionism, paradoxically, goes side by side with anonymity. When the scandal broke, losing my anonymity was hateful.'
Her phone beeped and she excused herself to read the text. It was from the station. Gary Parker, the man who'd chopped up his friend, wanted to see her.
TWELVE
â
I
want to do a deal.'
Gilchrist looked at Gary Parker and tried not to show her distaste. This was a man who had chopped up his best friend two weeks earlier and had expressed no remorse, no curiosity, no revulsion â in fact, no emotion at all.
âI don't think a deal is going to work for you. You've killed someone â and in a particularly brutal way.'
âI've got information.'
She sighed, thinking for the moment about the anonymous woman left in the trunk in 1934. She imagined that her killer had acted more soberly, in cold blood, when he cut up her body. She turned back to Parker.
âI'm listening.'
He looked at her coldly.
âNo â doesn't work like that. I need to know I'm getting a deal.'
She stood, nodded at Reg Williamson, who was leaning by the door.
âConversation over, then.'
âBollocks. Who can authorize a deal?'
âNo one. You can talk to me or you can talk to that wall.'
âNo deal, no talk.'
She grimaced, sat down again, not wanting to be here.
âGive me a hint,' she said, trying to keep the revulsion out of her voice. She was disgusted by this man.
âI know who did them rapes in Milldean. During the street party.'
There had been three reported rapes during the riots.
âYou mean during the riots?'
âFucking great that was.'
âWho was it?'
âMy mate.'
âThe one you killed?'
âThat's why I done it. He can't be behaving like that with young gels.'
âThat was your motive for killing him and chopping him in pieces?'
She couldn't keep the disbelief out of her voice.
His hand dropped into his lap. He stroked himself for a moment. Then he seemed to forget and the hand lay there on his thigh.
âYou look like you got great tits. Can I have a squeeze?'
âWatch your language, lad,' Williamson growled.
âFuck you, fat man.'
Williamson moved off the wall but Sarah raised a hand to stop him.
âAre you saying that's why you did it?' she said.
âWe done a lot of kit that day. I was gone, man.'
He lapsed into silence. Gilchrist sat still, looking down at the coffee stains on the table between them. Parker brought his hand up from his thigh and started clasping and unclasping it in his other scrawny hand on the table in front of him. His nails were chewed down to the quick and he had âlove' and âhate' tattooed in blue ink, one letter at a time, on the knuckles of each hand.
Gilchrist remembered being terrified by a film she'd seen on the telly as a kid.
The Night of the Hunter
with Robert Mitchum as an insane preacher pursuing two little children after he'd murdered their mother. Much of it seemed to take place at night or in places with deep, frightening shadows.
Mitchum had been so scary and psychotic. To demonstrate his preaching on the struggle between good and evil, he too had âlove' tattooed on one hand and âhate' on the other, and he clasped his big hands together and wrestled them. She'd been terrified. She shuddered now at another image of this looming man towering over a helpless little girl.