Tuesday 2 October
Â
N
EXT MORNING, I DRESSED CAREFULLY. I DON'T OFTEN wear a skirt but I have a couple of more formal outfits for when the job demands it. The smarter of the two, a dark-blue suit from one of the high-street chains, is plain but respectable. I wore it with a loose cream blouse and twisted my hair into a knot at the back of my head. It could almost have been a trainee barrister staring back at me from the bedroom mirror. From the neck down, of course.
My face was still a mess. My nose was swollen and discoloured and the bruising around both eyes, whilst fading, was still very much in evidence. The stitches were visible at my left temple and my lips were twice their normal size. Joesbury hadn't been lying that night in hospital; my injuries were 90 per cent superficial and already improving. I was still barely recognizable though.
Every cloud, as they say.
I spent less than an hour in the office, drinking strong coffee, trying to summon up enough nerve for what I had to do. When the police left my flat the night before, it had been nearly two o'clock in the morning. They'd carried out a thorough search of the park and the alley leading up to it, but had found nothing. By the time they finished, the words âwild goose chase' were practically hovering in the air above their heads. It wasn't even as though I had anything
concrete to tell them. Scuffling sounds and footsteps. It could have been anything. Anyone. I didn't mention the music. To do so would have been to face too many unanswerable questions. I drank a third cup of coffee, collected Mizon from the next room and left the station.
First on the list were the Benn children, whose mother had been found dead the previous evening in a room sprayed liberally with her own blood. Out of respect for the immediacy of their grief, we'd arranged to see them at the home of friends, where they'd stayed overnight.
Felix Benn was twenty-six years old. I'd put his height at six two and his weight at around 180 pounds. He was a sportsman, it was clear from his walk, the way he held his shoulders, from the muscle visible through the pale-blue polo shirt. He was fair-haired, freckled, thin-faced. His younger brother, Harry, was similar but darker, maybe not so tall. Madeleine, at seventeen, was slender as a willow with long blonde hair. She was the only one who'd been visibly crying. I introduced myself and Mizon and said how sorry I was for their loss. They nodded and thanked me, three polite, well-brought-up kids.
âCan you think of any reason why anyone might want to kill your mother?' I asked, once I'd gone through the basics. âWhy someone might want to kill Mrs Jones and also Mrs Weston â Mrs Briggs, as she was when you knew her?'
Felix shook his head. âMy mother never did anyone any harm,' he said.
I turned to Harry and Madeleine. âYou both still live at home, I know,' I said. âHow did she seem yesterday morning?'
They looked at each other, then back at me. âMornings are always a bit hectic,' said Harry. âBut she seemed OK.'
âShe was pissed off about that journalist,' said Madeleine quietly. âThe one that kept calling her.'
âSomeone was calling her?' I asked.
Madeleine nodded. âA reporter. Calling about Geraldine and Amanda. She said she was talking to several of the mothers from the school, wanted to get a feel for what everyone thought, whether they were scared.'
âWhen was this?' asked Mizon.
âIt started a few days ago,' Madeleine said. âIn the end, Mum told me that if she rang again, to say she wasn't in.'
âDid your mother mention a name at all?'
Madeleine nodded. âI wrote it down. It's in my bag in the hall.'
Mizon and I and the two boys waited while Madeleine fetched her bag. She handed a small notebook over and the two of us looked down at the name Charlotte Benn had warned her daughter about.
Emma Boston.
Â
As Mizon drove us back to the station, I phoned in the news about Emma Boston being in contact with Charlotte Benn and was told that someone would be sent out to find her. We arrived to find that Tulloch, Anderson and several of the team were still at the public meeting over at St Joseph's and that it had already featured on several morning news programmes and London-based radio stations. We learned that Emma had yet to be located and people in her building thought she might have gone away for a few days.
The Jones children, sons of the blonde woman who'd died in my arms the night all of this started, were waiting for us.
Jacob, aged twenty-six, had prematurely greying hair and startling blue eyes. His mother's eyes. He was tall, with long arms and legs, good-looking and aware of it. He was a junior doctor in Sheffield. Joshua, at nineteen, was taller than his brother but very slight. We spoke to the boys for twenty minutes and got the same old story. Their mother had had no enemies. They had no idea why she had been on the Brendon Estate that night. They couldn't imagine why anyone would want to hurt her. They weren't aware of her having been in contact with Charlotte Benn in years. Amanda Weston, formerly Briggs, they barely remembered.
The Weston/Briggs children, just like the two Jones boys, were sad, scared and angry. Like the Jones boys, they could tell us nothing. By the time Mizon and I had finished with them, Tulloch and the others were back. The public meeting had been an ordeal, by all accounts. Nearly seventy confused and frightened families wanting answers we didn't have. The mothers in particular had been told to take extra care in the coming weeks, to report anything suspicious, to let people know where they were at all times, to pass on the warning to others connected with the school.
The post-mortem examination on Charlotte Benn's body had now taken place and we'd had early results emailed through. Death had been caused by massive loss of blood when both carotid arteries were cut. She'd probably died some time between eight and ten o'clock on the morning of Monday 1 October. A little late to mark the exact anniversary of the Ripper killing, but I guess our killer had to wait for her to be home alone.
Â
At the end of the day, I drove home, but instead of going inside, I walked to the South Bank, bought a burger and sat on a bench to eat it, watching the river that I knew couldn't scare me any more. I sat there for as long as I could bear it, waiting for the shadow drawing closer, for the voice whispering in my ear. When I needed a change of scene I crossed Vauxhall Bridge and headed for Westminster. I kept in the open, in well-lit spaces, easy enough to spot, not too vulnerable to being jumped on. Just by the Houses of Parliament, I turned quickly on the spot and saw a dark shape disappearing into a side road. I was being watched. Impossible to tell who was watching.
Nothing happened. No one came anywhere near me. By ten o'clock, I was cold and exhausted. I made my way home and went to bed. For a few hours, I actually slept.
When I arrived at work the next morning, Mizon was finishing a cigarette at the front door. She stubbed it out as I approached.
âEveryone's upstairs,' she said. âA woman arrived five minutes ago, asking to talk to the DI. She's claiming she's the next victim.'
Wednesday 3 October
Â
J
ACQUI GROVES WAS THIN AND PALE WITH CHESTNUT HAIR IN A chin-length bob. She wore nice clothes, good jewellery and a little more make-up than the average woman in her late forties. I watched the internal TV screen as first Tulloch and then Anderson joined her in the interview room. Around me, the team crowded close.
âTwo kids,' said someone directly behind me. âTwins. Boy and a girl. Toby and Joanna. Both went to St Joseph's. Twenty-six years old now.'
On the screen we watched Groves reach into her bag and pull out a narrow white envelope. She handed it across the desk to Tulloch. âThis arrived this morning,' she said. âIn the post.'
Tulloch made no move to take it. âCan you tell me what it is?' she asked.
âCuttings from a newspaper,' Groves replied. âTwo of them. One about the murder of Geraldine, the other about Mandy.'
âDo you know who sent them to you?' asked Tulloch.
Groves shook her head. âThere's also a note,' she said.
Tulloch inclined her head. âPlease go on,' she said.
âIt says, “TIME FOR NUMBER FOUR”,' said Groves. âMeaning me, I suppose. I'm number four.'
Tulloch nodded at Anderson, who got up and found gloves from
a drawer in a nearby desk. He put them on and then pulled the contents out of the envelope. The camera was too far away for us to see them clearly, but they appeared to be exactly what Groves had described. Almost. The press reports weren't cuttings, they'd been lifted off the internet and printed out on standard office A4 paper.
âPostmarked late Monday night,' said Tulloch. âIn central London. Do you have any idea why someone might want to send you this?'
Groves shook her head.
âShe's lying,' muttered someone behind me.
âNot sure,' said Joesbury, who'd moved closer to my chair. âShe looks scared to me.'
Then the door of the interview room opened and someone we couldn't see stuck their head inside. Tulloch suspended the interview and then she and Anderson left the room.
We waited for Tulloch and Anderson to go back into the room, for something else to happen. Nothing did. People began to drift away from the TV screen. Someone offered to get coffee. No one seemed able to get on with any work. Just when we were ready to give up, the door opened.
Tulloch had no need to call for silence. I could hear people around me breathing.
âJacqui Groves's husband, Philip, is downstairs volunteering to make a statement,' she said. âSo are Geraldine Jones's husband, David; Jonathan Briggs, Amanda Weston's first husband; and Nick Benn, who found his wife's body on Monday. And three heavy-duty solicitors.'
Silence around the room. I wondered if anyone could hear my heart beating.
âThe detective superintendent wants to be present,' Tulloch went on. âWe're starting in five minutes. I guess this is it, everyone.'
âTalk to them individually,' said Joesbury. âIt's too easy for them to stick to their story if they're together.'
Tulloch and he held eye contact for a second. âI know that,' she said. âBut they're here voluntarily in the presence of some very aggressive legal help. For now, I think we just have to listen to what they've got to say.'
As soon as she left, the rest of us turned back to the TV and
flicked it to the main interview room on the top floor. As the screen flickered into life, we saw Anderson checking the recording equipment. Then the door opened and the room started to fill with tall men in expensive suits. I saw a resemblance to Felix Benn in one man. Another looked a little like Joshua Jones. The two lawyers were easy to spot. They didn't look scared. The superintendent came in with the third lawyer and they all took seats around the large glass table. Through the windows behind them we could see the rooftops of Lewisham and a cloudless autumn sky.
Anderson took a seat. They were all waiting for Tulloch. Minutes passed and still she didn't appear.
âShe's making them wait,' muttered Mizon, who was just behind me. I wasn't so sure. I rather thought she'd gone via the ladies' room. At my side, Joesbury looked at his watch and his frown got more pronounced.
Another minute and one of the solicitors turned round to look at the clock on the wall. The detective superintendent breathed out heavily just as the door opened.
âGood morning,' said Tulloch as she closed the door softly behind her. The men got to their feet, including, after a second or two, Anderson and the DS. All of them towered over Tulloch. She moved to the nearest vacant seat and pulled it away from the table.
As the men sat, the youngest of the three solicitors started scribbling notes. Out of the corner of my eye I saw Joesbury biting his thumbnail. We all waited for Tulloch to begin. She was sitting with her back to the camera and we couldn't see her face. We could see her hands though, on the table in front of her, pale and very still.
âI understand you have a statementâ' she began.
âOne moment, please,' interrupted one of the lawyers, a tall man with ginger hair. âCan we establish some ground rules, first of all?'
Tulloch inclined her head.
âThese gentlemen are here voluntarily, in the spirit of being as helpful as possible. What they have to say is almost certainly not relevant to the investigation, but in the interests of full and frank disclosure. As suchâ'
âI understand that perfectly,' interrupted Tulloch. âBut my team has a great deal to do today. Who's going to start?'
âMiss Tulloch,' began the ginger-haired solicitor.
âDetective Inspector Tulloch, and no disrespect, sir, but I think we've heard quite enough from you for the time being.'
A short flurry of appreciative noises from people around me.
Without giving the solicitor a chance to speak further, Tulloch turned to the husband of the latest victim. âMr Benn, why don't you begin?'
Benn looked down at the glass table. âIt's probably nothing,' he said. âIt was a long time ago and no reason whyâ' He stopped and ran a hand over his face. âSomebody else is going to have to do it,' he said.
Three husbands and one ex were exchanging glances around the table. The young solicitor was still scribbling away.
âThere was an incident,' said David Jones, Geraldine's husband, after a moment. âYears ago. We don't see how it can be relevant, butâ'
âWhenever your people have talked to us, Miss Tulloch,' said another man â âJonathan Briggs,' I heard someone mutter at my side, âAmanda Weston's first husband' â âthey've been trying to establish a connection of some sort between the families. At first, with Geraldine and Amanda, we just thought it was the school. Then when Charlotte was killed too, I started thinking. I phoned Dave and then we got in touch with Nick. We agreed we should come and talk to you.'
âWith three lawyers,' murmured Joesbury. âSounds like more than a cosy chat to me.'
âYou mentioned an incident,' said Tulloch. âCan you tell me what that was?'
Silence again.
âIt was in Cardiff,' said Jones after a moment. âEleven years ago this summer just gone. It involved the boys.'
âYour sons?' asked Tulloch.
Jones nodded. âThey were in a rowing team â coxed fours. They'd gone to take part in a regatta inâ'
âI'm sorry, can you explain that term for me? Coxed fours?'
âFour oarsmen in the boat, one oar each,' said Jones. âWhen they have two oars it's called sculling, not rowing. Our boys rowed. And there was a fifth team member, little lad, he was the cox.'
âI understand,' said Tulloch. âPlease, carry on.'
âThe boys had gone to compete in the South Wales regatta. Starts up at Llandaff and finishes in Cardiff, in Bute Park. They did well, they won one of their races, were placed in another.'
âGet on with it,' someone near me muttered. Someone else shushed him.
âThey were allowed to go out on Saturday night,' said Philip Groves. âBloody stupid idea, if you ask me, kids that young, but they were allowed to go to the centre of Cardiff. I got a phone call at one a.m. to say they'd all five of them been arrested.'
âWe were phoned at home,' said David Jones. âI drove up. Got to Cardiff about six. Nick was there already, then Jon arrived. And the other lad's dad.'
âWho was he?' asked Tulloch.
âChap called Robert Curtis,' said Groves. âLives abroad now. We couldn't get hold of him.'
âWhat had they been arrested for?' asked Tulloch.
âThere'd been an accusation,' said Jones. âCompletely fabricated, of course, but the police claimed they had no choice but to investigate.'
âWhat sort ofâ'
âThey'd been drinking in one of the town-centre bars,' said Benn. âMakes me bloody livid even now. None of them were older than fifteen. They should never have been served.'
âThey were big lads,' said Groves. âOarsmen have to be.'
âThey were arrested for underage drinking?' asked Tulloch, as puzzled glances were being exchanged around me.
âNo,' said Jones. âIf only. They met up with two girls, you see, local girls. Both well known to the police in Cardiff. The eldest in particular a known trouble-maker.'
Over Tulloch's shoulder I could see her fingertips were starting to tap gently on the glass table. âGo on,' she said.
âThey left the bar shortly after eleven,' said Jones. âThe girls went with them. They went into the park. The big one in the middle of Cardiff.'
âBute Park,' said Benn.
âThey were young, they'd been drinking, they had two pretty girls with them,' said Briggs. âYou can imagine the rest.'
âActually I can't,' said Tulloch, her voice like ice. âPlease fill me in.'
âThey had a good time,' said Jones. âThey gave the girls some money to get a taxi home and they said goodnight. That should have been the end of it.'
âAnd it wasn't?' Tulloch's hands were so still now they could have been made of glass like the tabletop.
âNext thing they know, the girls are at Cardiff Central police station, claiming they've been raped. The police have no choice but to go through the motions, get the girls examined, go down to the scene, bring the boys in. Because they were all underage, the parents were contacted.'
âLet me get this straight,' said Tulloch. âYour sons, and one other boy, were arrested and charged with the gang rape of two girls.'
Jones slapped his hand down on the table. âNo, Miss Tulloch. They were never charged.'
Joesbury moved away from my side and walked to a desk at the far side of the room. He started moving the computer mouse around.
âThere was no evidence against them,' Jones was saying. âNeither of the girls had a mark on them. There wasn't even evidence that sex had taken place. All the boys used condoms, thank God. And the girls supplied them.'
Joesbury had picked up the phone. He turned his back on the room.
âNone of the boys tried to deny that they'd had sex,' said Benn. âBut they were all very clear that it had been the girls' idea, that they'd suggested going to the park in the first place. God knows we're all vulnerable to hysterical females crying rape.'
âHow old were these girls?' asked Tulloch.
âThe eldest was nearly seventeen,' said Briggs. âWell known to the local force. She was in with a joy-riding gang. Used to steal cars and drive them around the docks and then torch them.'
Joesbury was talking to someone. I forced myself to concentrate on the screen. At the other side of the room, another phone began ringing. Barrett picked it up.
âAnd the youngest?' asked Tulloch.
No one answered her.
âHow old was the younger girl?' repeated Tulloch.
Still no response.
âAll the boys were under the legal age of consent,' said the ginger-haired lawyer. âThese were kids. A situation got out of hand. The police at the time did everything by the book, but no charges were brought.'
Barrett finished talking, put the phone down and looked at me.
âIt came down to the word of two working-class girls with reputations against those of five public schoolboys with influential fathers,' said Tulloch.
âNot exactly,' said Ginger Hair. âThe police found the condom packets. The girls' fingerprints were on them. Why would they be if they hadn't bought them in the first place? Those girls went into Bute Park expecting to have sex and then, possibly because the boys didn't give them as much money as they were hoping for, they got nasty. Now, I think my clients have been as cooperative as you could expect, given the very considerable distress they've been subjected to andâ'