Rope Enough (The Romney and Marsh Files Book 1) (2 page)

BOOK: Rope Enough (The Romney and Marsh Files Book 1)
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Park said, ‘Shouldn’t I have a lawyer or something?’

Romney smiled at him. ‘No, lad. That’s only if we suspect you of some wrong doing. Why do you ask? Guilty conscience?’

The youth looked horrified. ‘No. I’ve done nothing wrong. I swear.’

‘It’s all right,’ said Romney, patting his leg. ‘We know that. But you’re a witness to a very serious crime. At the moment you’re our only witness. We need to know what you saw and we need it while it’s still fresh in your head. Before those x-rays they’re going to give your noggin wipe your memory.’ The young man looked freshly terrified. ‘Just kidding,’ said the policeman. ‘Tell me what happened in the order that it happened and don’t leave anything out.’

Park appeared to be searching his thoughts for where to start and finding it difficult. Marsh scratched something into her notebook.

‘This bloke walked in out of nowhere.’

‘No car?’

‘No. It was dead. Usually is that time of night. Claire was sitting behind the counter and I was filling up the crisp rack. I knew as soon as I saw him we were in trouble. He had a hooded top on. It was pulled up over his head and he had some kind of covering over his face and he was wearing those gloves like the ambulance people.’

‘How tall?’

‘Taller than me and bigger. He had a gun.’

The officers shared a look: Romney’s asking why hadn’t he been told immediately? Marsh’s indicating that it was the first she’d heard of it.

‘You’re sure?’ said Romney.

‘Positive. He started waving it around and ordering us about. He made us turn off all the outside lights and the shop lights and lock the doors. Then he shoved us through to the back room.’ Marsh’s frantic scribbling scratched away in the ensuing quiet. ‘What happened to Claire?’

‘Don’t you know?’ said Romney, surprised.

The youth shook his head and then brought both hands up to cradle it in a show of obvious pain. ‘He made me fix her to the table with bits of plastic and put the hood over her head.’

‘What hood?’ Romney’s exasperation at yet another piece of important information that he knew nothing about was clear.

‘He had a hood, like a cloth bag. When I’d tied her to the table, he made me put it over her head.’ Tears formed in the young man’s eyes. ‘Then he hit me over the head. That’s the last thing I remember until I was brought round by someone with smelling salts. Honestly, that’s all I know.’

A tear streaked down his pimply cheek and Romney felt great sorrow for the youngster. In a softer tone, he asked, ‘Would there have been much money in the till, or any lying around?’

The youth wiped at his face with his sleeve. ‘Some. It wasn’t a busy shift. A couple of hundred at most, I suppose. I don’t really know. Claire took the money.’

‘The plastic ties that he made you secure her to the table with, where did they come from?’

‘His pocket.’

‘You’re sure? He brought them with him? He couldn’t have picked them up in the garage?’

‘No,’ said Park. ‘We don’t have anything like that.’

With the top from a condom packet being recovered from the scene, Romney had intended to question Park, then physically unknown to him, with suggestions that perhaps he and the unfortunate Claire Stamp might have whiled away a boring evening or two gaining carnal knowledge of one another in the back room using condoms from the garage’s stock. Now, he saw this as a needless and unnecessary line of enquiry. He settled for asking, ‘How was your relationship with Miss Stamp?’

The spotty youth seemed baffled by the question. ‘All right, I suppose.’

‘How long have you been working here?’

‘About six months.’

‘Is there anything else you can think of that might be important?’

‘He wasn’t English. He didn’t say much, but he had one of them eastern European accents.’

‘That’s interesting,’ said Romney. ‘How do you know it was eastern European?’

The young man snorted. ‘You can’t live in Dover and not know what an eastern European accent sounds like. Bloody Kosovans are everywhere.’

Romney exchanged a look with Marsh. ‘I hope your head’s all right, son. We’ll be in touch soon to get a formal witness statement from you.’

Once more, Romney patted the lad on the knee and the police officers shuffled out. Romney waved at the ambulance men who had taken shelter in the garage shop.

The police were half-way across the concrete forecourt when a voice called out behind them. They turned to see the rear door of the ambulance open and Park standing on the top step. ‘What did he do to her?’

Romney just raised a hand in farewell, as though he hadn’t heard him properly, and strode off leaving Marsh standing awkwardly between them.

She caught up with him inside the garage shop where he’d taken refuge in the warmth. She could see from his face that he was a lot less happy than he’d been before going into the back of the ambulance.

‘Guns, foreigners, what looks like pre-meditated rape and one of the nastiest bastards in town arrested. Christ. What a mess.’ He ran his fingers through his thick wavy hair.

‘It could have been a fake gun,’ said Marsh, ‘and accents can be faked. Park doesn’t strike me as the sharpest tool in the shed.’

Marsh’s phone rang. As she answered it, Romney took a look around. He noticed the cigarette rack behind the counter was completely full apart from one section that was empty. He was staring at this when Marsh caught up with him.

‘That was the station. They’ve been through all the footage they have of cameras around this area. Nothing of a man fitting our description for the last couple of hours. Maybe he did have a car but parked it away from the garage.’

‘Maybe. Make a note to find out what brand of cigarette is missing from there.’ Romney indicated the rack with his chin. ‘And find out whether it was full before they were attacked.’ Marsh jotted in her notebook. ‘Who was first into the building?’

‘Two uniforms. One of them is by the door.’

Romney looked up at him but couldn’t put a name to the face. He didn’t look much older than the youth he’d just spoken to in the ambulance and Romney reflected sadly that these young men shouldn’t be witnessing this kind of horror. How could it not deeply affect them?

Romney beckoned him over. ‘Constable...?’

‘Marrin, sir.’

‘Right. Constable Marrin. You were one of the first in?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘Tell me how it went.’ Romney was impressed when the officer consulted his notebook.

‘Constable Spencer and myself received a call to investigate the concerns of a member of the public who’d come to collect his girlfriend after work. When we arrived, we found the man banging on the doors. It all looked closed up and locked down, but he was adamant that something was wrong. In fact while the lights had been turned off inside and out and the doors locked the pumps were still operational. The alarm was also not activated. We contacted the station and they located the manager. He had spare keys and was with us within twenty minutes. He opened up and Constable Spencer and I investigated.’ The young officer paused to swallow and moisten his lips for what he had to say next.

‘In the back room of the garage we found a female bound by the wrists and ankles to the surface of the table.’ He hesitated before continuing. ‘Her top had been pulled up over her head and she was naked from the waist down apart from socks and footwear. The lady was conscious and hysterical. A male, the youth in the ambulance,’ he added, looking up at the DI, ‘was lying on the floor unconscious. His wrists had been similarly bound behind him. He was bleeding from the head suggesting that he’d been struck a forceful blow. Constable Spencer and I cut the woman free and made her as comfortable as we could. The ambulance service was called. The first ambulance took the female victim with Constable Spencer to the William Harvey hospital. The female victim’s boyfriend, a Mr Simon Avery, was arrested for assaulting a police officer and taken down to the station.’

‘Very good,’ said Romney. ‘Where’s the manager now?’

The PC pointed through the window at a car parked in the shadows. ‘We asked him to wait in his car until we need him, sir.’

‘Thank you. That’s all for now.’

The constable moved back to his position at the door. Romney checked his watch. The ambulance with Carl Park inside left the forecourt.

Grimes checked with Romney that there was nothing else required of him and headed back to the station to circulate what scant details they had of the assailant to officers working the night shift.

To Marsh, Romney said, ‘Well, Sergeant, I’ll let you finish things up here and I suggest that once you’ve told the manager he can have his petrol station back you go home and get a good night’s sleep, what’s left of it. Tomorrow is going to be a very busy day.’

‘Ms Stamp, sir?’

‘I doubt very much that she’ll be any good to us tonight and vice-versa. If she was sedated, far better to let her get some rest. We’ll see her tomorrow.’

‘What about this Simon Avery bloke, sir?’

‘You’ve not had the pleasure of meeting our Mr Avery, I suppose, in the short time you’ve been with us?’

‘No, sir.’

‘He’s a nasty piece of work. He has as many pretensions as he has convictions and as a villain he’s on the rise. Small time today, but he’s one for the future. A rising dark star, you might say. A night in the cells won’t do him, or Dover, any harm.’

The DI nodded to the constable whose name he had already forgotten, walked out of the shop, got into his car and drove away. Home was not on his mind.

 

*

 

Romney had started seeing something of Julie Carpenter, a Primary school teacher and several years his junior, a little over a month before. They had met when he had visited her school as part of a regional campaign for something he now struggled to recall. Another pointless initiative dreamt up by someone at area with nothing else to do except find ways to justify their position and their nice fat salary. Still, that cloud had had a silver lining. After two failed marriages and staring down the barrel of middle age, he hadn’t ever expected to make such a connection again. In fact, he had sworn to himself that he wouldn’t, but, as he had cause to reflect often in his chequered personal past, men are men and there was little he could do about it except enjoy it while it lasted. It was a philosophy that seemed to be having positive repercussions in his private life even if they might prove to be short-lived.

Julie Carpenter lived alone in a new development of starter homes on the outskirts of the town high up on what used to be known as ‘the roughs’ before the green belt of Dover was loosened to encompass the town’s spreading development plan. In truth, the homes were little more than prefabricated hutches huddled together. Wafer thin dividing walls and with no room for the children of residents to play other than the street. Every bit of greenery sacrificed, it seemed, in order to squeeze another couple in. Someone should have made the planners move in for a few years, see how they liked it.

It was there, at her home, that Romney had been enjoying a comfortable evening: good food, a bottle of wine, a film and the promise of another of the kind of nights he didn’t think at forty-two he’d ever see again. He checked the time. It was late. Very late.

His mobile signalled a waiting message. He checked it as he drove and his spirits dampened when he read that she had gone to bed in preparation for a busy day. He cursed and at the fork in the road that could have either taken him up the steep climb to her home or in the opposite direction to the rambling old renovation project he’d saddled himself with, he turned for home.

 

*

 

Detective Sergeant Marsh sensed an opportunity to make up some ground on the investigation quickly and earn some credit into the bargain. Having overseen the final processes of the initial police investigation; seen the SOCOs and the last officer off the site, and handed back control of the building to an anxious and fidgety manager, she decided to drive the fifteen miles up the motorway to the William Harvey Hospital. With the clear run that she would have at that hour, she reasoned, it shouldn’t take her twenty minutes each way. Factor in another thirty minutes at the hospital and she could still be in bed for threeish. She’d managed later nights with earlier starts.

Balking at having to pay two pounds to park in an empty car park and seeing no one in the attendant’s kiosk, she ignored the pay and display machine and the warning signs, braved the inclement weather and crossed the deserted expanse of tarmac towards the hospital entrance. The doors were locked. Spying the A&E unit she went along and, showing her ID, discovered that Claire Stamp had been taken up to a secluded room.

She was shown through to the bowels of the hospital and given directions to the wing where she would find the rape victim.

The hospital was eerily quiet being bereft of the usual populace and activity that made every hospital in the country a mirror image of itself: the flower sellers, the ‘friends’ volunteers, the bewildered relatives, the uniformed medical staff, the sick-but-mobile shuffling about in their pyjamas dragging wheeled contraptions dispensing essential fluids or collecting them, sometimes both. The smell was the same though: stewed root vegetables, disinfectant, urine and death.

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