Good as Dead (39 page)

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Authors: Mark Billingham

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller

BOOK: Good as Dead
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‘Not a peep,’ Yates said.

Donnelly stared at the speakers for a few seconds, as though willing Stephen Mitchell’s voice to suddenly burst from them. ‘Oh, Christ.’ He turned and looked at Chivers.

‘DS Weeks assured us that everything in there was fine.’ Pascoe sounded as though she was talking to herself. ‘Repeatedly.’

‘You
told
us it was fine,’ Donnelly said.

‘Because I believed that it was.’

‘All that guff about her voice being normal and no signs of coercion. “There isn’t a problem,” you said. That was your
professional opinion
, if I remember rightly.’

‘That’s the way I remember it, too,’ Chivers said.

Pascoe looked as though the breath had been punched from her. ‘This wasn’t just me,’ she stammered. ‘Nobody else seemed too concerned about Mitchell.’ She stood up, fumbling to straighten her jacket. ‘It was not just me … ’

Donnelly reached for a headset and threw it at Pascoe.

‘Call her.’

SIXTY-TWO

Helen had been unable to say anything, to
do
anything but watch, when Akhtar had walked calmly away into the shop with her phone.

Does this have a camera on it?

She had fought to control her breathing as she thought about what he might be taking a picture of, struggled that little bit harder as she considered what he might be thinking of doing with such a photo. After a minute or so, she had finally managed to catch her breath and hold it. She had almost convinced herself she was being ridiculous, when the smell hit her and she knew that she had been right to worry.

He had torn open the bags.

Something like this had been coming for the last few hours, the signs had been clear enough. Or might have been, if she had been able to think clearly and focus for five minutes, if she had not been in such a state herself.

She suddenly remembered something Paul used to say. An expression he’d picked up somewhere.

Up and down like a whore’s drawers.

He’d said it a lot – always in that comedy ‘cockney wanker’ voice he was so fond of – those first few months she’d been carrying Alfie. When the hormone fairy arrived and the mood swings really kicked in.

She felt tears building and held her breath again, refused to let them rise.

She needed to concentrate …

It had been coming. Akhtar’s hand on the gun, cradling it, the talk about being ‘fobbed off’. Being ‘ignored’. She had asked him for tea and he had snapped at her; her well-being or comfort no longer of any concern, no longer something worth worrying about. Not by him, at any rate.

And now he had done something stupid. Worse than stupid.

When he had finally come back in, apologising for the stink and squirting that air-freshener around, there had been this look on his face. Like he’d accomplished something. Triumphant, almost.

‘There,’ he had said. ‘
There
’, like ‘that’ll show them’ or ‘now we’ll see who gets fobbed off’ and more than anything Helen had wanted to strike out hard and smash and claw at his face. To tear the smirk off and demand to know what the
fuck
he thought he was doing.

At that moment, she knew that she could hurt him.

She looked across at him. Sitting in his chair, his hand was on the revolver in his lap still, but his eyes were fixed happily on the television screen, as though he had done no more than simply cause a little mischief. Put the cat among the pigeons.

Helen knew that if Akhtar had sent a picture of Stephen Mitchell to anyone on the outside, there might not even be time to finish the programme he was watching.

She inhaled through her nose, so she would not have to taste it. The smell was still fierce, the cheap air-freshener no more than a top note, almost as sickening as the stench it was failing to mask. She breathed it in, because she had to.

Rotten meat and lemons.

SIXTY-THREE

McCarthy had punched in the code needed to access the private lift. It had been sent by text message the previous day. He and Thorne said nothing as the lift rose up towards the penthouse level, then just before they reached the top floor, McCarthy said, ‘They’re not always about the sex, you know?’ He looked at Thorne. ‘These parties. Sometimes it’s just a question of meeting people and talking, without having to worry about what they’re thinking. It’s about having fun and not having to lie. You said it yourself this afternoon in my office. It’s about being yourself.’

The doors opened.

‘All very touching,’ Thorne said. ‘Except when “yourself” is nuts deep in an underage boy.’

The man who answered the door had the build of a nightclub bouncer, but his suit was somewhat better cut and Thorne doubted he ever had cause to turn people away for wearing trainers. He nodded his recognition at McCarthy then looked Thorne up and down.

‘A guest,’ McCarthy said.

The man at the door sniffed. ‘Nobody said anything.’

‘Sorry.’ Thorne smiled. ‘Should I have brought a bottle or something?’

‘Oh come on, Graham, stop pissing around,’ McCarthy said. ‘He’s with me, all right? And I’m gagging for a drink.’

In the hour and a half since McCarthy had told him about the party, Thorne had been thinking very carefully about the best way to get inside. To make his entrance. At this point of course, it would have been easy enough simply to produce a warrant card, to put a shoulder against the door and march inside shouting the odds. Thorne doubted very much that he would encounter a lot of resistance if he did, certainly none of an aggressive nature, but all the same he had decided on a rather more low-key approach. He wanted to walk in there with the not-so-good doctor and for it to be seen. He needed the man whose evening he was intent on spoiling to see clearly that the chain was broken and that McCarthy was
his
. To understand, as quickly as Thorne could engineer it, that no amount of wriggling was going to get anyone off the hook.

‘Actually, Graham, we’re both gagging for a drink,’ Thorne said.

Graham rolled his eyes and stood aside. ‘Enjoy … ’

They laid their jackets down on a cowhide-covered chaise longue just inside the door. McCarthy took a glass of wine and Thorne helped himself to water from the tray proffered by a teenage boy with spiky black hair and pupils like piss-holes in the snow. Then they took three steps down into a large, open-plan living area.

Thorne smelled marijuana, amyl nitrate and aftershave.

Money …

The décor and furnishings reminded Thorne of Rahim Jaffer’s flat and he wondered if it was all those evenings the young man had spent in places such as this that had given him a taste for the ultra-modern and expensive. Ironic, as they had certainly helped pay for it. Looking around – as though he were doing no more than admiring the art on the walls or the stylish light fittings – Thorne counted fourteen men in the room. Forty-ish and upwards and all dressed as though they had just come from one office or another, and while most had a drink in their hands, some had not yet been there long enough to loosen their ties.

There were at least the same number of boys.

While their prospective clients were just starting to relax and remained content to talk among themselves for a while, most of those who had been invited to provide a paid service did the same thing. They were gathered in twos and threes at the edges of the room. Whispering and giggling, moving in time to the low-level soft rock, or hovering near the long glass table where a cold buffet had been laid out.

Two distinct groups, for the time being.

There was plenty of eye contact though. Sizing-up being done on both sides. Sly looks and not so shy smiles.

The boys were white, black, Asian. A selection made deliberately, Thorne guessed, so as to appeal to all tastes. He wondered if the same consideration had gone into picking out the invitees according to their age. Thorne guessed that the majority were fifteen and up, but several were younger – or were at least trying to look younger – while two boys who stood close together near the food could not have been more than twelve.

Someone had probably agreed to pay a little more for them.

With McCarthy staying close to him as per instructions, Thorne wandered across the bleached-wood floor to stand near the vast windows that ran around half the room. A man with swept-back silver hair tapped a finger against the rain-streaked glass and nodded out.

‘Shame about the bloody weather,’ he said. ‘Out on that balcony you get the most astonishing view.’

Thorne turned and leaned back against the glass, scanning the room.

The man nodded towards a skinny boy in a tight black vest who looked to Thorne as though he was not that long out of Spiderman pyjamas. ‘Mind you, the view’s pretty spectacular in here … ’

At that moment, Thorne got his first look at the man he was there for. He walked into the room from one of the two softly lit corridors running off on either side. Coming from the toilet, Thorne guessed, or perhaps a bedroom, though it did seem a little early for that. Thorne watched the man help himself to a drink from another of the boys with the trays, then lean across, smiling at whatever the boy had said, to take something from the buffet. He popped the food into his mouth as he turned, and saw McCarthy.

He raised his glass and started walking towards them.

It took a few steps before the man got his first good look at Thorne, before the easy stride faltered, just a little. Thorne was impressed that he had been recognised so quickly. It had been eight months after all, and even then they had only been face to face for half an hour or so.

As long as it had taken for Thorne to give his evidence.

‘Smashing party, your honour,’ Thorne said.

The man stood close and stared hard at McCarthy, but McCarthy refused to meet the look, staring down instead into his wine glass. The man shifted his attention. Said, ‘Thorne.’

Thorne was even more impressed that his name had been remembered. Then he realised that McCarthy would have been in regular contact with his colleague from the moment Thorne had turned up at Barndale two days earlier and begun asking questions. That the man in front of him was simply putting two and two together.

The quicker he made four, Thorne decided, the better.

‘Your friend Dr McCarthy here has been great company,’ Thorne said. ‘And a
fascinating
storyteller.’ He looked at McCarthy. ‘You can toddle off now, Ian. My sergeant’s waiting for you downstairs.’

McCarthy hesitated, but only for a second, and neither Thorne nor the other man bothered to watch him leave.

‘So, who’s waiting for me?’ the man asked. ‘Not a lowly sergeant, surely.’

The music got louder suddenly, and someone let out a whoop of excitement from the other side of the room.

Thorne did not blink.

‘You’re all mine,’ he said.

SIXTY-FOUR

Helen Weeks’ phone rang out. Ten seconds, fifteen. Twenty …

‘They’re not going to answer,’ Chivers said.


They?
’ Pascoe stared at him. ‘What exactly do you think is going on in there?’ Chivers started to answer, but Pascoe talked over him. ‘Because two and something days is a bit quick for Stockholm Syndrome to have kicked in, you know what I mean?’

Twenty-five seconds.

‘Neither the hostage nor the hostage taker is answering the phone,’ Chivers said. ‘I was stating a fact, that’s all. There was no—’

The call was answered and, almost simultaneously, all five people inside the truck held their breath. Pressed hands to headsets. There were a few, crackly seconds of near-silence, then Helen Weeks said, ‘Hello.’

‘Helen, it’s Sue Pascoe. I need to speak to Mr Mitchell.’ Calm, but authoritative. The tone she reserved for particular types of crisis intervention.

‘He’s asleep.’

‘I’m sorry, but you’re going to have to wake him up.’

‘Is there some sort of problem?’

‘I need to speak to him
now
, Helen. I need to know that he’s all right.’

There was a pause.

Chivers looked at Donnelly, turned his palms up.

‘Helen?’

‘Hang up now.’ Akhtar’s voice. Calm, but authoritative.

‘It was an
accident
.’


Hang up!

The line went dead.

Pascoe removed her headset and dabbed fingers against the film of sweat on her ear. Donnelly and Chivers were already moving together towards the back doors, and their body language – their shoulders together, their heads low and close – made the manner of the conversation they were gearing up to have abundantly clear. Made it equally obvious that any further contribution from Pascoe would be entirely superfluous.

‘Going in through the front isn’t an option,’ Chivers said.

‘Right.’ Donnelly began nodding.

‘The shutters wouldn’t be a problem, but we’d be too far away. He’d have too much time to react. The back door’s the obvious entry point.’

‘How long?’

‘Best part of an hour to get set up. Forty minutes at a push.’

‘So let’s push it.’

Chivers jumped down from the back of the truck and immediately began shouting. Donnelly started talking to Pascoe. Something about how vital her role was going to be in this last hour or so, something about redeeming herself, but it took her a few seconds to focus. She was remembering something she had said to Tom Thorne.

The hostage is mine to lose.

And the nothing she’d had to say to Stephen Mitchell’s wife.

SIXTY-FIVE

Looking at him, Thorne suddenly had a very clear image of His Honour Judge Jeffrey Prosser QC dressing before a trial. Transforming himself, enjoying the ritual. He pictured the man standing in front of a large mirror in his chambers, the smile widening and the blood rushing to his cock as he slipped on his purple robe and red sash. As he became empowered. The wig would be last of all, best of all. Stern and imposing suddenly, that blissful scratch of horsehair against the tender pink skin.

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