‘PC Westerley – thanks for calling me back.’
‘Well, I didn’t have much choice, did I?’
I let him have his moment. ‘Did you get a chance to pull the file?’
‘Yes. I don’t know what you expect to find, though.’
‘Maybe nothing,’ I said. ‘Or maybe you have some insight I hadn’t considered or wasn’t able to find.’ It was
a crude tactic but the uniforms at the bottom of the food chain usually spent half their existence wiping boot prints off their faces.
‘Okay,’ he said. There was already a change in his tone, suggesting my tactic had worked. ‘What do you want to know?’
We started talking about Sam, about the day he disappeared and about the file Westerley had opened on him. He said he’d initially spoken to Julia at the station on Earls Court Road, but had followed it up with a visit to the Wrens’ home.
‘Julia said you pulled the footage from the Tube as well.’
‘Yes.’
‘Were you able to locate Sam?’
I heard him leaf through a couple of pages. He was probably trying to get back up to speed on the fly. It didn’t really matter, though. If he’d managed to locate Sam, spotted where he got off the train, Julia wouldn’t have hired me to find him. ‘He got on the Tube,’ Westerley said eventually, sounding like he was reading directly from his own report, ‘and he didn’t get off again.’
Thanks for the info
. ‘You didn’t see him get off?’ I asked.
‘No.’
‘How far did you follow the footage?’
‘All around the Circle line until it terminated at Hammersmith.’
‘It didn’t bother you that you couldn’t find him?’
He muttered something I couldn’t make out, but it was obvious he didn’t like this line of questioning. It made him look amateurish, and if he felt like this was a character assassination, he’d close up. I moved things on.
‘What background did you do on Sam?’
‘Background?’
‘Relationships? Finances? Work?’
A pause. ‘I looked into it,’ he said, but it was an obvious lie. If he’d been twenty years younger, he might have seen it as a challenge. But not now. Now he prioritized his cases according to how difficult they were, and how much of it would blow back at him if it didn’t get put to bed. There wouldn’t be a lot of fallout from Sam Wren’s disappearance because he didn’t tick any of the boxes: he wasn’t underage, he wasn’t female, he didn’t suffer from mental health problems and he wasn’t a danger to the public.
‘Did you recover any personal possessions?’ I asked.
‘Like?’
‘Well, he had a briefcase with him the day he disappeared, for one.’
‘I put in a call to the Tube’s lost property department to see if there was anything with Wren’s name on it. But that was a dead end.’
‘But you took his toothbrush away, right?’
‘Right. We always try to do that in missing persons. You never know when it may come in useful. We got some fingerprint lifts and a DNA sample from the brush.’
‘Did either of those lead anywhere?’
‘Nowhere new.’
That stopped me. ‘What do you mean, “new”?’
‘We obviously had his details on file from that incident twenty months back. He was never charged with anything, but it’s just something we do.’
‘What incident?’
‘That fight he was involved in.’
‘Fight?’
‘Oh, I thought you’d know this.’
I’d done a basic background check on Sam the day after Julia had first approached me to see if he had any kind of record. He didn’t. Julia hadn’t mentioned anything about a fight either, which meant one of two things: she’d lied to me, or at least chosen not to say anything – or, more likely, it was so minor, she hadn’t thought to bring it up.
‘What was the fight about?’ I asked.
‘Uh …’ I heard Westerley turn a couple of pages. ‘Two men started at each other’s throats at the entrance to Gloucester Road Tube station at about 7.45 a.m. on the morning of 14 October 2010. One of them, a Simon Mbebeni, claimed the other, Robert Stonehouse, racially abused him at the ticket machine. Stonehouse had a mate with him, James Quinn. Quinn’s been done for public order offences before and, in the subsequent interviews, admitted to having something of a problem with the UK’s immigration policy, so who knows who really instigated it? Maybe Stonehouse, maybe Quinn, but Stonehouse admitted telling Mbebeni’ – more pages being turned – ‘ “You can’t get away with that here, you fucking monkey” after Mbebeni appeared to jump the queue. He also admitted to throwing the first punch and breaking Mbebeni’s nose in the process, but only after Mbebeni had pushed him into the ticket machine.’
‘So where does Sam come in?’
‘He entered the station about ten seconds after it all kicked off, and tried to help Underground staff break it up. He had to contend with Quinn, Quinn got aggressive and attacked Mr Wren. Mr Wren fought back and punched
Quinn in the throat, probably not intentionally, but Quinn blacked out and got rushed to hospital. It looked like Mr Wren was going to be charged, but his solicitor eventually got the charges dropped.’
‘What did the others get?’
‘Stonehouse got a year, Quinn six months and Mbebeni got a suspended sentence, a fine and two hundred hours’ community service. One of the London Underground employees was also cautioned – CCTV footage showed him laying into Stonehouse big style.’
‘Who was the employee?’
‘Uh, his name was …’ A pause as he searched for it. ‘Duncan Pell.’
The guy in the booth I’d talked to at Gloucester Road the day before.
Interesting
. He’d been weird when I’d tried to ask him questions: defensive, introverted, agitated. Something didn’t sit right then, and it sat even less comfortably now. If he had the capacity to put his fist through someone’s face, plainly he was no shrinking violet.
‘Pell got a caution and a £500 fine,’ Westerley went on, ‘but his representative argued – successfully – that he was trying to protect the public from Stonehouse and Quinn, so Pell got to keep his job and didn’t have to do community service. I have to say, it probably helped that Quinn was a massive racist, and that Stonehouse threw the first punch at Pell. It’s much easier to get people on your side when you don’t start the fight and when one of the men you’re up against thinks Hitler was an okay kind of guy.’
‘What do we know about Pell?’
‘Know about him?’
‘What’s his background?’
More pages being turned.
‘Ex-army. He enlisted at sixteen, worked his way up to lieutenant, left at thirty-one after two years in Afghanistan. Prior to that, he’d been in Bosnia. So basically perfect preparation for working on London Underground.’ He chuckled to himself.
I thanked him and hung up. The clock was showing 11.49. My mind returned to the very start of the case; to Sam getting on the Tube.
I dialled Ewan Tasker’s number.
‘Raker.’
‘How you doing, Task?’
‘Yeah, good. You?’
‘Tired.’
‘What, you been up bumping and grinding with the missus all night?’
I smiled. ‘You’ve got a one-track mind.’
‘It’s the only action I get at my age.’
‘Listen, I need another favour from you. Last one, I promise.’
‘That’s what you always say.’
‘I need some more CCTV footage.’
‘From when?’
‘Same day, 16 December, but I need everything – literally, everything – you can lay your hands on. Ticket halls, walkways, escalators, elevators, everything.’
‘Gloucester Road only?’
I thought about it. On the footage I had, Sam disappeared between Victoria and St James’s Park. ‘Gloucester Road through to, say, Westminster, just to be on the safe side.’
‘You got it.’
‘One other thing.’
‘Here we go.’
‘Same deal,’ I said. ‘But Gloucester Road on 14 October 2010.’
‘Just Gloucester Road?’
‘Just Gloucester Road.’
‘October the …?’
‘Fourteenth.’
‘That’s nineteen, twenty months back.’
‘Right.’
‘What are you going back that far for?’
‘I’m going to watch a fight.’
Julia Wren was the manager of an Italian called Sal’s on Bayswater Road. The plan had been to call her, to find out when she’d next be home and to tell her what I’d found out about Sam. It was going to be painful, but she deserved to hear it. Instead, when she picked up, she insisted I came to her work. She was on shift until midnight, and she wanted to hear where I’d got to. ‘It might not be the sort of thing you want to discuss at work,’ I said to her, but that only seemed to harden her resolve. So I headed for the restaurant.
Inside, it was half full and Julia was sitting at a table near the back, going through some receipts and cross-checking them against printouts. She seemed a little brighter than the last time I’d seen her, perhaps because she thought I might be bringing some positive news. But by the end of this, she would probably wish I’d never arrived.
As one of her waiters got me a glass of water, we talked about the restaurant, and then finally she asked how things were going with the case.
‘I need to tell you a couple of things about Sam.’
An expectant look. ‘Okay.’
‘Some of it’s going to be hard to hear.’
Now a frown started to form. ‘Okay,’ she repeated.
‘Maybe we should discuss this somewhere more private.’
‘Just …’ She paused. ‘Just tell me.’
‘How well did you know the people he worked with?’
‘I knew them well enough,’ she said, but she was uncertain of herself now.
‘Who did he talk about?’
‘Ross, obviously. Iain. Sam and I used to go out with Iain and his girlfriend from time to time. There were a couple of others too. Esther. Abi. I think a guy called Dave.’
‘Did he ever talk about his secondment to Michaelhouse?’
‘Yes, of course.’
‘Ever mention an Ursula Gray?’
‘Ursula?’ A pause. ‘Yes, he mentioned her.’
‘Much?’
She stopped. Frowned. ‘Quite a bit, I guess.’
‘What did he used to say about her?’
‘I can’t really remember. Nothing that particularly sticks with me. He used to tell me what they’d been working on; clients they’d been to see.’
‘Did you ever meet her?’
‘No.’ A hesitation. ‘Yes. Uh, I mean, not really.’
A weird answer. I studied her for a moment. ‘Not really?’
‘A couple of times. I never chatted to her much.’
I paused, letting the silence prepare the way for what I was about to tell her, when I noticed a subtle change. Her eyes snapped to me, as if she was worried I might notice something, and I was reminded of that first night I’d met her, when she’d skipped around the fact that she and Sam had been fighting. Back then, it had been out of some
misplaced belief that I would judge her. Now it felt different. Now it felt like deception.
‘Are you okay?’ I asked.
‘Sure.’
I watched her. ‘Julia?’
She flinched at the mention of her name, and when she looked up she had an expression etched into her face that didn’t house one grain of truth: a smile that was as thin as paper, eyes that held no warmth, a mouth so small and tight it was like she’d tried to force it closed to prevent anything coming out.
And, in that moment, I suddenly understood.
She’d managed to convince me that the lie she told me that first night was about the two of them fighting; about the guilt she felt in continually pushing him for the truth about his work. But it wasn’t that at all. Not even close to it.
It was the affair with Ursula.
‘You knew about it,’ I said.
She didn’t reply and, in the silence, I had to bite down hard to prevent myself reacting. I leaned back in my seat and drew my coffee towards me.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said finally.
I didn’t respond, trying to figure out what her reasons might be for telling me another lie.
‘I found out late last August,’ she said quietly.
‘Then why the
hell
didn’t you tell me that?’
‘I just …’ She paused as the waiter passed, and then watched as he disappeared down to the front of the restaurant where a waitress was busy laying tablecloths and putting out cutlery. ‘When I read about you, when I
was researching you, I read this article about your cases. And this one bit of it stuck with me. It said you never took on work like this. Affairs. Stuff to do with money. I thought, if I told you the truth, you’d never agree to help me.’
‘It was a newspaper report, Julia.’
She looked at me, puzzled.
‘It’s
fiction
. No one’s called me “Mindhunter”. The tabloids just made it up like they make everything else up. Journalists don’t decide what I do and do not take on.
I
decide it. You should have told me
everything
.’
‘I just didn’t think you’d –’
‘You should have told me.’
‘I didn’t want to do anything to stop you from helping me.’
I said nothing, and looked away.
‘Look at me,’ she said, but was gesturing towards the restaurant. ‘I’m a manager of an Italian restaurant on £27,400 per year, have no husband, no brothers or sisters, both my parents are gone, and I’ve got a mortgage so big, some days it’s all I can do not to cry at the thought of it. At least with Sam, whatever his flaws, I had a home. He had a good job, was on good money and – even if we had to become more frugal – it’s easier to face up to those sacrifices if you’re doing it with someone else.’
‘So not telling me about the fact he was having an affair for the best part of a year would do what exactly? Stop me from bringing him back so he can pay the mortgage?’
She frowned. Hurt. To her, it felt like she was bleeding out and all I was doing was picking and prising at the wound. I realized I was just offloading on her now, letting the frustration out, but it was difficult not to. I was sick of the lies.
‘You know Robert has offered to help you out?’
‘He offered to help Sam out.’
‘He said you didn’t have to worry about the mortgage.’
‘Did he?’
‘You don’t believe him?’
She smiled, but there was nothing in it but sadness and humiliation. ‘How exactly do you ask someone for £3,000 a month for an indefinite period?’