The Hollow Man

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The Hollow Man Page 32

by Oliver Harris


  “Who is it?”

  “Take your pick: Aleksander Boskovic, Niko Pacassi, Nathan Risboro, Carel Dupont. The first three pseudonyms come up in connection with a series of killings along the Amalfi coast between 1995 and 1997. Carel Dupont fits the same description, wanted for the murder of Swiss judge Carla Pinto in 1996. Never found. The Swiss think that Dupont is probably the pseudonym of someone of Croatian origin, connected with a number of killings while travelling on Belgian passports in the name of Christof Segers, Jens Thomas, Jean-Paul Claessens. Those were in Paris, Marseille and Stockholm. The Police Nationale call him le chasseur, the hunter.”

  “That’s cute of them,” Belsey said.

  “From the weapons and tactics favoured, Swiss and Italian investigators profiled him as military-trained, probably with experience in a sniper unit during the Bosnian War. They narrowed it down to Milan Balic, a crack shot who helped take several cities across Herzegovina before going private, mostly for the Mafia in Naples. More recently he’s murdered a Nigerian ambassador and an Egyptian banker who’d fallen foul of Prince Faisal bin Abdul Aziz.”

  And from there it looked like he was on the HKGC payroll. It was in the pay of the prince that he turned up as Christian Le Febvre in Macao, associated with a hit on two of the gaming consortium’s rival developers in a bathhouse on the southern edge of the autonomous zone.

  “Were the killings connected to the Dream City Casino?” Belsey said.

  “That’s right.”

  Belsey made some calls. There was no Ninth International HIV Research Conference, it was a cover story for a visa application. He called Emergency Services Central Command. Charlotte Kelson had been taken to St. Thomas’ Hospital.

  55

  No one in or near Forensic Command knew where Belsey might find a travel agent’s. Eventually he found an independent package holiday firm on Kennington Road, with security grilles over the window and a sign that said “Victory Holidays.” Inside were pictures of white beaches and two staff with fake tans.

  “I need a flight tonight,” Belsey said. “The cheapest you’ve got. Late as possible.”

  “Anywhere?”

  “Within reason.”

  The girls laughed. There was a clatter of painted nails on computer keyboards.

  “Thessaloniki,” one of them said.

  She had a map inlaid on the desk and pointed with the end of a ballpoint to the south of Greece. It would work, he saw. Greece was EU, which meant there was no limit on the cash he could carry. It meant high-volume travel and low scrutiny; a low-suspicion destination, even for a wrecked man with no luggage.

  “When’s it going?”

  “Eleven-thirty tonight from Stansted. Air Berlin.”

  He could travel down into Turkey via Kipoi. The border police would be looking for drugs coming west, not individuals heading east. The E90 highway became the D110 in Turkey, and he could follow it to Istanbul. Easy to get lost there, sort visas, put his head down in a cheap room for a while. With luck he’d have the money to lie low. From there any transport could take him south to Ankara, and from Ankara he could bus it east, to the Habur border gate, into Nineveh. Nineveh, for Christ’s sake. “Good for resorts,” she said. “Might be a bit chilly at this time of year.”

  “What’s the total with tax?”

  “Will you be checking baggage?”

  “No.”

  “Thirty-two pounds.”

  “I’ll get it.”

  The flight was in just over ten hours. He took his ticket and said his mobile had died and asked if he could make a couple of calls on their phone. He offered the girls money, which they declined.

  He called Kovar.

  “Meet me at the House of Commons. St. Stephen’s Gate. Seven o’clock this evening.”

  “The House of Commons?”

  “Do you know it?”

  “I’ll be there,” Kovar said.

  Belsey booked a Prestige car on Devereux’s account for the same time. There was a serious risk that the booking drew unwanted attention. He had no idea how deep the police operation against Devereux was currently working. But he couldn’t cut corners. He needed to set the scene perfectly, right down to the last detail.

  “I want one of the limos,” he said. “Something with space. Pick me up on Millbank, by Victoria Tower Gardens, seven o’clock. Next to Parliament; as close as possible to the no-drive zone.”

  Belsey hung up. The travel agents stared at him. He thanked them again as he left.

  56

  Six hundred minutes to take-off.

  Belsey left the car at the top of Kennington Road and bought some flowers near the Imperial War Museum. He walked to St. Thomas’ Hospital. It was the end of weekend mop-up, casualties off the battlefield. He stepped through bleeding couples, crash victims, the glassed and the glassy. He avoided two reporters, quick off the mark, waiting for news from the ER.

  A uniformed constable sat outside Charlotte’s ward. He looked up at Belsey with business eyes. No one Belsey knew. Belsey got the scan: face, fingers, waist, and an uneasy glance at the bouquet.

  “Sorry, chap.” The constable raised a large hand.

  “I’m a friend.”

  “No visitors at all at the moment. She’s sleeping anyway.”

  “Is she OK?”

  “I can’t give any information.”

  “Can you give her these?” Belsey offered the flowers.

  “No.”

  Belsey looked past him, through a small window with a slat blind. He could see some bed linen—nothing else. He felt his fury return. He walked back down, gave the flowers to an old woman with tubes in her neck and called Met Central Operations.

  “This is Detective Constable Nick Belsey from Hampstead CID. I was present at the shooting on Cavendish Square. I have information about a suspect.”

  “OK.”

  “Which station is dealing with it?”

  “Who’s that?”

  “Detective Constable Nick Belsey, from Hampstead police station. I have information about the shooting.”

  “Go into West End Central. Can you do that?”

  “Yes.”

  “Quick as possible.”

  He made West End Central in less than fifteen minutes. A constable greeted him and led Belsey through the station to an interview room in which three men had apparently been waiting. It was badly lit: one of the strip bulbs had gone and most of the light came from a desk lamp. Sitting at a table was a thick-necked, shaven-headed officer with a goatee and a stained shirt tight across his beer gut. With him were a thuggish ginger-haired constable and a man in a caramel-coloured suit. It took Belsey a second to recognise the suit as Nigel Herring, Northwood’s stooge.

  Now he took a better look at all their faces. He didn’t know the constable. The goatee was the man he’d seen leaving Chris Starr’s office with a bag of shredded paper. He didn’t look much friendlier now. A uniform jacket with sergeant’s stripes hung over the back of his chair.

  Belsey braced himself for the possibility that he had walked into a less than ideal situation. He could smell their sweat; they had been in the room for a while. But it wasn’t an investigations team. A copy of the Mail on Sunday lay on the desk, among stained paper plates, cartons of juice and cigarette packets, a story connecting PS Security and Chief Superintendent Northwood ominously to the fore.

  “What is this?” Belsey said.

  “Sit down.”

  “I’ve got a name,” he said. “For the shooting.”

  “A name.”

  They all looked blank. Then the sergeant laughed. The ginger constable shut the door.

  “You’ve got a name all right,” he muttered.

  “Let’s do this the easy way, Nick,” the sergeant suggested. He had cagey eyes. Belsey surveyed the mess on the table, the newspaper, thei
r smirks. Then he surveyed Nigel Herring.

  “Sit down,” Herring said.

  The young constable put a hand on Belsey’s shoulder. He forced him into the plastic seat and tapped the paper.

  “What’s this?”

  “What does it look like?”

  “Looks like someone talking crap.”

  “You’ll have to write them an angry letter then.”

  The sergeant leaned forward. “You’re not in a position to be a whistle-blower, Nick.”

  “Sounds like you’ve got a guilty conscience.”

  “What about your conscience?”

  “Nothing I can’t deal with.”

  Herring threw a photo of Jessica Holden onto the table.

  “Know her?”

  “The face is familiar.”

  “Anything to tell us about her death?”

  “That the investigation’s a fuck-up.”

  There were glances between the three men.

  “Maybe it is,” Herring said. “When were you last on The Bishops Avenue?”

  “For Christ’s sake,” Belsey said, as a deeply unpleasant scenario began to gain clarity. “Are you all PS Security boys? Is that what this is about? Have I fucked with your bonuses?” He wondered where it was all going. Now he studied the room more carefully, analysing his options: the layout, the three men, the desk.

  “Answer the question.”

  “No comment.”

  “Had you ever spoken to this girl before the day she died?”

  “No comment.”

  “What about Charlotte Kelson?” Herring said.

  “Never heard of her.”

  “She was investigating you, Nick.”

  “That’s one way of putting it,” the constable added. They all laughed.

  “And now the poor woman’s in the hospital,” Herring said. “She was investigating you and how on earth you tie in to all of this. I can see why you’d be coy.”

  “Meet a young lady and don’t tell her your name,” the constable tutted. “Cheeky.”

  “Try to fleece a young reporter and then turn nasty on her,” Herring suggested.

  “Get her phone number and then lie to her network operator so you can access confidential data,” the sergeant said. “That’s love, Nick.”

  Belsey sighed. “And yet it’s not me in the papers this morning,” he said.

  “Oh, Nick. Why make enemies? Making enemies hurts.”

  Belsey looked up in time to see the fist. It belonged to the constable. It caught him square in the face and he lost vision for a second. There was a lot of laughter in the office now.

  “A present from friends.” The ginger one punched him again. Belsey gripped the chair to stop himself being lured into the trap of fighting back. That was what they wanted; then there’d be three men on him, no holds barred, and the cuffs would come out.

  “Fuck you,” Belsey said.

  “Oh no! Best tell Internal Affairs.”

  More laughter. Belsey tried to think. He could see this act going on for a while and didn’t imagine it would become more endearing.

  “She’s made a statement against you,” Herring said.

  “She wasn’t making many statements last time I looked,” Belsey said. He licked his lips and tasted blood.

  “You keep turning up where people die,” the sergeant said. “Looks like unlucky coincidence.”

  “Is that what you’re charging me with?” Belsey asked.

  “Want to know what we’re charging you with?” Herring said.

  “Impress me.”

  “Conspiracy to rob, conspiracy to defraud, perverting the course of justice and attempted murder.”

  “Attempted murder of who?”

  “Charlotte Kelson.”

  “For Christ’s sake.”

  “Would you like to nominate a solicitor?” the sergeant asked.

  “Or how about you just try and explain yourself.” Herring stared at him.

  “I’ve got no comment,” Belsey said.

  “Any comments about this?”

  They prodded the newspaper across to him: Charlotte’s criticism of the mighty Chief Superintendent Northwood. Belsey scanned the desk under the pretence of studying the story—regulation-issue Styrofoam, no cutlery. The only solid objects were the tape recorder and the desk lamp.

  The constable admired Charlotte Kelson’s byline.

  “She’s nice. Did you get a shag for this?”

  “Twat.”

  The ginger thug came over and clapped him on the ear. So they were going to keep on playing roughhouse. That was West End Central for you. Belsey looked again at the desk lamp. They had the same make at Hampstead.

  “I asked you a question,” the thug said.

  “Would I fuck you?” Belsey said. “Was that the question?”

  “You’re a disgrace.”

  “You’re a credit to the police,” Belsey said. He could hear keys jangling. Which one of them had keys? The ginger PC had a chain from his pocket to his belt. Belsey brought a hand up to his face and felt the mess. “Can I get a tissue from my jacket?” he said. They grunted. Belsey found a clump of tissues and dabbed at the blood.

  “You’ve forgotten something,” he said.

  “What?”

  “You haven’t read me my rights.” They smiled at this. Belsey stopped dabbing. He put his hands in his lap. He wrapped the bloody tissues around his right hand.

  The sergeant drawled laconically: “You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be used in evidence. Has that been understood?” He raised an eyebrow.

  “Don’t you think you should cuff me?”

  “Come on, Nick,” Herring said.

  “Cuff me.”

  The constable moved towards Belsey. Belsey popped the bulb, smashed it on the desk and jumped up, elbowing the constable hard in the face. He got a hand in the man’s hair and wrenched his head back, fitting the jagged stem into the soft flesh beneath his chin.

  Herring and the sergeant froze. Belsey pulled the head back farther so everyone had a good view of the shards. The constable gurgled. Belsey pushed the base deeper until he stopped struggling. There was a smell of burning skin.

  “Back off or I rip his throat out,” Belsey said.

  “Don’t do anything stupid,” Herring said.

  Belsey moved the constable backwards towards the door. He kicked the handle and continued out, down the corridor, dragging his hostage.

  “Open the back,” Belsey shouted as he approached the desk. Blood was dripping off his elbow. He passed through the exit door out to the parking lot.

  Belsey dropped the constable hard, so that he was winded. He unclipped the keys from his chain. The car key had a Mazda logo on the ring. There was one black Mazda MX–5 in the parking lot. Belsey got inside the car, fired the engine and drove it through the barrier.

  He checked the rearview when he was on Chandos Way and saw their faces. His hand on the steering wheel was caked in blood.

  Four hundred and fifty minutes.

  57

  He raced it to Hampstead, stopping to wash the blood off at a drinking fountain on Heath Street. There’d be an All Ports warning out in ten or fifteen minutes: to airports, ferry ports, international train stations. The borders were closing in. He had a couple of hours before the system fully connected. They would put out a bulletin with his name on, including calls to every patrol unit, but that didn’t mean the stations would know until the next start of shift meeting. He was counting on circulation lag, and got it.

  PC Craig Marshall on the front desk nodded.

  “Nick.”

  “Craig.”

  “How’s things?�


  “Ticking over.”

  Belsey went up to the second floor, past the Community Support office, to the room they used for evidence storage. PC Drakeley, on guard duty outside, signed his name in the book.

  “All well, guv?”

  “Very well, thank you.”

  Belsey walked in, opened the safe, removed ten grams of ketamine and a Sig Sauer P220 handgun. He stuffed them into the pockets of his jacket. He couldn’t find any money. There were bullets for the Sig in a separate cabinet at the side. He emptied them all into his pockets and walked out.

  “Have a good one, Nick.”

  “See you around.”

  Up to the CID office, which was empty. So this was it, he thought—a silent good-bye. He picked up a phone on Rosen’s desk and called Duzgun.

  “It’s Jack Steel. Is my order ready for collection?”

  “It’s ready. Do you have the money?”

  “I’m getting it now.”

  Belsey called Emmanuel Gilman and it rang ten times, then went to voice mail.

  “You’re in luck,” Belsey said. “I’ve got something for you. I need seven hundred in cash and that’s a bargain.”

  Halfway down the stairs he bumped into Trapping: gangly, grinning.

  “Nick.”

  “Rob. Have to run.”

  “I got a name for the assault on Thursday,” Trapping said.

  “Good work, Rob.”

  “Everything on the Halifax job is on your desk. Patrick Dent’s given five alibis so far. The CPS called—”

  “I’m in a bit of a rush right now.”

  Trapping frowned. “Are you OK?”

  “I’m good. I’ve got to run, though.”

  “Can you sign the forms?”

  “Sure.”

  Belsey went back up and signed them. He gave Trapping a wink and touched his arm. What did he want to say? Good-bye. Do not embrace the idea of being a policeman. Manage your expectations. Remember to move.

  He ditched the Mazda in Camden, and stole an old Citroën estate from behind the market. It had a baseball cap under the passenger seat. He put the cap on, pulled it low and started driving. King’s Cross, east on City Road, Commercial Road, into Docklands. At a red light he leaned down and loaded the gun. He breathed in the smell of polish and cordite. He put it back in his jacket and continued weaving between the office blocks of Canary Wharf.

 

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