Authors: Mark Billingham
Tags: #Police Procedural, #Police, #Homeless men, #Mystery & Detective, #Police - England - London, #General, #Mystery fiction, #Homeless men - Crimes against, #Fiction, #Thorne; Tom (Fictitious character)
Jesmond was stubborn as wel . Stubborn, and with pips on his shoulder. 'He might know about it anyway. He might have watched Palmer mess it up. He might have seen him fail to kil Jaqueline Kaye. What then?'
'Obviously, we can't rule that out completely until the missing body turns up and we establish time of death, but the Lovel and Choi kil ings would indicate that isn't part of his pattern. I think Nicldin does his bit and then gets another jolt from sitting back later, and watching the reports of Palmer's kil ings on TV and in the papers. Sir.'
Jesmond shook his head, slowly. 'We must have other options. More conventional avenues of investigation. We have a description for a start and it certainly sounds as if a decent description is what got us Palmer in the first place.'
'You're right, sir,' Thorne said, thinking, Yes, and who was that down to? 'Unfortunately, the description Palmer has given us, based on the single meeting the two of them had in the brasserie, is hardly decent. Nicklin had a beard. For al we know he doesn't have it any more. Al Palmer real y has is an impression of this man, a description based on his memory of him, rather than on the way he looks now.' Thorne pictured the look of confusion on Palmer's face, as he'd tried, with very little success, to recal how the boy he used to know had looked that day he'd strol ed up to his lunch table and turned his dul little world on its head. 'Palmer can describe the fifteen-year-old boy like he saw him yesterday, but he can't give us an accurate picture of the man who walked into that brasserie six months ago. We've got height and a rough idea of weight, clothes, colouring, but we don't have a face. We sat him down with the CCTV footage from Euston, but he couldn't pick Nicklin out.'
'Or wouldn't; Jesmond said. 'We can't be certain he wants his friend caught as much as he says he does.'
Thorne shook his head. 'I am certain of that, sir.'
And yet...
There was something that Palmer was keeping hidden. He appeared
to be co-operating ful y, to be answering every question, but Thorne sensed there were secret places he was unwil ing to go, pictures he was wary of painting too ful y.
Thorne would keep digging. If they'd let him...
'What about these e-mails?' Jesmond opened a green folder and began pul ing out copies of the messages Nicklin had sent to Palmer. The tech boys had printed them out from Palmer's home PC.
'They're untraceable,' Thorne said, emphatical y. 'Anonymous servers. Accounts set up on stolen credit cards. He was very careful.'
Jesmond quickly re-read a couple of the mails, clenching his jaw at the most chil ing - the ones that had issued Palmer with his instructions: the dates, venues and methods of the kil ings.
'Can't we just monitor his e-mails?' Jesmond asked. 'Have them forwarded on to one of our computers?'
Thorne leaned forward. 'We wil be watching for any communication from Nicklin, of course, and using the description we've got, but I stil don't think it's enough sir. It's got to be al or nothing.' He pul ed
one piece of paper away from the others, slid it in front of Jesmond. 'Look at that one, it pre-dates the first kil ing by a few weeks.' Jesmond picked it up, started to read.
Received: (qmail 27003 invoked by alias); 28 Jun 2001 11:35:29 -0000
Date: 28 Jun 2001 11:35:29 -0000
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Subject: THINKING OF SUMMER
From: Old Friend.
Martin. Any thoughts yet? I can see you're thinking about it. You look miles away sometimes and I know that you're picturing it. Soon it wil be a lot more than a picture. I'm presuming (as I could always presume with you) that you're bn board. I wil give
you details in the ful ness etc etc. Your face tel s me that you're remembering those summers. Think about the summers to come ...
Jesmond looked up, and across at Thorne, his face giving nothing away. Stupid, or just playing stupid, Thorne was finding it hard to tel .
'He's watching him, sir. He says so. "I can see you", "you look miles away", "your face tel s me". He's watching him.'
'It sounds like he was watching him, granted,' Jesmond said.
'I think he stil is. He likes to be in control.'
Norman was keen to show that if his last question was a little... sil y, it was a long way from typical. 'If he is watching, then what are we talking about? You've said yourself that we can't be sure he didn't see Palmer screw up with Jacqueline Kaye? He might also have watched him walk into that station on Monday. If he already knows we've got Palmer, Detective Inspector, what you're asking would be an enormous and potential y dangerous waste of time. Wouldn't it?'
It was the obvious question. The one Thorne had been most afraid of. He knew his response was hardly convincing, but it was the only one he had. 'It's a risk worth taking. It's why we need to do this quickly.' Jesmond stared down at the papers in front of him. Norman put away his pen. Thorne thought of something else. 'I'm not saying he watches Palmer al the time.
He can't. He gave Palmer the impression that he had a ful -time job...'
Jesmond started gathering up his notes, like he'd already made up his mind. 'Risk, you said. Risk is a very good word for it, Thorne. We take a murderer, a man who has kil ed at least two women, and just put him back on the street...'
Thorne sighed in frustration. 'That isn't what we'd be doing. I told you...'
'What would you cal it, then?'
'Just leaving him ... in vision. Not frightening Nicklin off. One way or another, when it's over, Palmer goes away.' Thorne looked back to Brigstocke, searching for backup and not getting it. He knew he couldn't rely on the DCI's support. Brigstocke was stil smarting from Thorne going it alone two days earlier.
Interviewing Palmer without waiting for him. The bol ocking he'd dished out was stil being talked about by anybody who'd been within half a mile of his office.
Back to Jesmond. 'Organised Crime do this sort of thing al the time, sir,' Thorne said. 'When they need a witness on the inside. I don't see why we can't do the same. We release Palmer on police bail, pending further enquiries. It's a common enough procedure...'
It was probably as close as Jesmond came to losing his temper. 'I'm perfectly aware of the procedure, Thorne, but Palmer is not a fucking loan shark. He's kil ed two women, and we don't normal y go around releasing murderers on police bail.'
There was little Thorne could say and Jesmond quickly relaxed. The advantage was his. He took out a handkerchief and pushed one corner up a nostril, digging around, his face contorting with the effort. 'So, hypothetical y, Palmer's walking about, we're watching him. Then what? Nicklin makes a sil y mistake? He hasn't made too many so far has he? So, we wait for him to kil again?' Thorne said nothing. He knew it might come down to just that. 'I'm not sure you've thought this through, Inspector.'
'With respect, sir...' The volume rising now. Precious little respect anywhere.
Brigstocke leaned across the table. 'Listen, Tom...'
Thorne narrowed his eyes and opened his mouth far too quickly. 'That fence you're sitting on must be playing havoc with your arse, Russel .'
Jesmond raised a palm but Thorne carried on. He looked at each of them as he spoke, knowing he only had the one chance, if that. 'Yes, Palmer is a kil er, a fucking freak, and when this is al over, whatever we decide to do, he's going away for the rest of his life. He wants to go away, he's not angling for anything, he's not trying to make a deal.' He stopped, took a breath, carried on. 'I fimly believe, however, that if
this investigation continues along the lines I have suggested, he wil not be a danger to anybody...'
Jesmond was ready to come in. Thorne didn't let him. 'I think this is our only chance to get Nicklin and if we don't take it, we'l regret it down the road. Now, as things stand, with a kil er in custody, we al get patted on the back or promoted or whatever. Later there'l be blood.'
He stared at Jesmond. Why the luck should you care? You'l probably be long gone by then. He had drawn the line at talking about 'taking ful responsibility' but something in Jesmond's smal , ratty eyes told Thorne that it would be a given; that should it prove necessary, the grip he was barely maintaining on his career would be loosened by a few strategical y placed boots on fingers. Something else told him that it was al academic anyway. They weren't going to go for this in a mil ion years...
Thorne stood up. 'I've said my piece I think, sir.'
Jesmond looked to his col eagues, straightening his papers like a newsreader for want of anything better to do. 'Thank you, Inspector. Obviously, this needs discussing and not just by us. I've got a conference cal with the Deputy Assistant Commissioner arranged and he may want to take it even higher. So...'
So... Thorne sat in the office next door, fighting a childish urge to put a glass against the wal , and cursing the tiny strand of DNA somewhere within him that made him do ... these things.
Made him incapable of settling for anything.
He had never been one for war stories. He could prop up a bar with the best of them and swap tales, but when stories of who put who away were told, he would smile, slap backs and retreat inside himself to where he could silently revisit failure. Success did not occupy him a great deal, but failure was always around, waiting to be given the nod. He was English, after al .
It wasn't the ones he caught that Thorne remembered. That he always remembered. It wasn't the ones he final y got to see in an interview room or through the peephole of a holding cel , or across a
courtroom. It wasn't them.
It wasn't the Palmers.
Thorne had forgotten the faces of a dozen convicted kil ers down the years, but he stil saw, clearly, those kil ers for whom he never had a face at al . He would do whatever was necessary to prevent Stuart Anthony Nicklin as was, taking his place in that particular gal ery.
Bloody-minded, stubborn and pig-headed were easy words to use. Guilty on al three counts. Yes, yes and yes again. But they were not the right words.
It would have been so easy to accept the plaudits and take what had been handed to him on a plate. Easy to look at a picture of Martin Palmer on the front page, to prop up that bar for a night or two. Easy to pose with the victims' relatives, to shake hands and look into grateful faces, then turn away, ready to go to work again, to begin the next hunt.
Easy to crack on, smug and satisfied.
So hard to dismiss a smal boy with a squeaky hammer.
Can you forget his face, Charlie? I hope so...
Now Hol and and McEvoy were moving across the incident room towards the open doorway of his office. He watched them getting closer, taking an age to get to him, wondering at the expressions on their faces, tight and dark, the piece of paper in Hol and's hand, the fist clenched at the end of McEvoy's arm. Then they were in his office and the sheet of paper was on his desk, and he was trying to take in what it said and McEvoy was talking.
'The body of Miriam Vincent was found this morning in her flat on Laurel Street in Dalston. She's been dead a couple of days. Shot in the head.' McEvoy's tone had been professional, calm and informative. Now, in a reddening rush, she let the anger come through. 'She was a student at North London University. She was nineteen for christ's sake.., a fucking teenager...'
Hol and looked at her, alarmed at the sudden display of emotion.
Thorne took it, used it, let her anger clear his head. Where a few moments before he had felt woozy and disorientated, now he was suddenly bright and focused. He knew exactly what to do.
'I haven't seen this.'
McEvoy cocked her head. 'Sorry... ?'
'You couldn't find me. Clear?' He handed the piece of paper to Hol and, pointed towards the office next door. 'Go and tel them.'
Hol and hesitated for a second and McEvoy snatched the paper from him. 'I'l do it...'
Thorne held out his hand. 'No you won't, you're too.., charged up. They've already had me.'
McEvoy handed back the piece of paper, grunted and turned away. Thorne passed it on to Hol and, caught his arm, squeezed. 'Calm...'
Hol and nodded and quickly marched out. Without looking back he walked straight up to the door of the adjoining office, knocked and went in without waiting to be asked.
McEvoy went back to the incident room and while he waited, Thorne watched her, moving among her fel ow officers, fired up about Miriam Vincent's murder, blazing with the knowledge of it. He liked her anger. He understood it. He worried that lately, she seemed a little less able to control it.
McEvoy and Hol and were the only people, aside from the three next door, who knew what he was proposing to do. The rest of those working on the case were stil flushed with the success of the Palmer arrest. There was suddenly a lot more laughter around the building, and those not laughing were only nursing the hangovers that came from too much celebration.
He knew that if his idea was to stand any chance of working, the celebration would need to stop. The lid needed to come down hard and stay on tight.
Thorne suddenly saw how unutterably stupid he was being. Stupid to think that the powers-that-be would agree to releasing Palmer and stupid for wanting them to. He started to feel relieved, light and free of it, anticipating their polite but firm refusal.
He knew that what he was planning would have gone down like a cup of cold sick anyway, for al sorts of reasons, not least the time of year. He wondered whether he owed his col eagues a chance to wind down a little, to level out, to have a life with their families.
It only took a second or two to remember that there were others, dead and alive, to whom he owed a lot more.
Those that would pul faces if Thorne got his way, those that would mutter in corners and ignore him in the pub after work, had not met Carol Garner's mother and father. They had not met her son. Perhaps he should invite what was left of that family down for the day, show Charlie around the station and sit every single officer, every member of the civilian staff, down with them for fifteen fucking minutes.