by Jane Casey
‘Good to go?’
‘Yeah.’ Maitland stood behind me, in a heavy overcoat, with a police radio in one hand and a camera in the other. He looked as tense as if he was going on a picnic, and he grinned at me. ‘Don’t worry. We’ll get plenty of warning if he shows up.’
‘Are you sure that works in here?’ Reception could be patchy. I really didn’t want any surprises because the radio was only getting static.
‘I’ve checked.’ He folded his arms in front of him and looked at me expectantly. ‘But the longer you take, the riskier it gets.’
‘Okay, okay. Don’t hurry me.’
We were standing by the front door in the narrow hallway that ran down the middle of Stuart Sinclair’s flat. It was dark but smelled chemically clean. On my right was a bedroom, with a small bathroom beyond it. On my left, there was a living room and an equally small kitchen.
‘At least you don’t have many rooms to search.’
‘That can be harder.’ I could see telltale signs that he was both neat and a pack rat: an overfull bookcase stood at the end of the hall, with boxes stacked on top of it and piles of magazines underneath, all squared off and organised. Chaos would have been easier to rummage through. ‘If everything is jammed in together, I’ll have to take it all out to see if there’s anything useful.’
‘Go on, Chuckles. What are you waiting for?’
The truth was, I didn’t know. I was waiting for the blinding flash of inspiration that would show me where Sinclair had stashed everything that related to his little hobby. I was also on edge in case he was expecting a visit from the police and had booby-trapped the place accordingly. Under the terms of our search warrant we could go through the place without getting his permission to be there. I had a feeling he wouldn’t grant it, if he was offered the option. I didn’t want to tip him off that we’d been there if we didn’t find anything – we’d need to set up surveillance on him and try to catch him doing something incriminating, which would only work if he was confident our attention was elsewhere. So I was keeping my eyes peeled for stray hairs, black threads or artlessly arranged piles of paper that would give the game away. It was a lot easier to set a trap than to avoid springing it. That was why I’d been sent in on my own, with Maitland for muscle, just in case. The fewer people there were in Stuart Sinclair’s flat, the less chance there was we’d leave a trace.
‘Where are you going to start?’
‘Bedroom.’
‘Not the living room?’
‘It doesn’t look as if he has many visitors, but if he did, that’s where they would go. I’m betting anything dodgy is in here.’
‘On you go.’
I pushed open the bedroom door slowly and slipped inside, straining to see in the dim light. He had dark blue curtains that were still drawn even though it was daylight. I made sure there wasn’t a gap in the middle, then took out my torch and started looking.
The bed was made, the duvet smooth. His shoes were lined up underneath it: many pairs of trainers, two pairs of smart shoes, one pair of desert boots. I checked the soles, quickly, and shook every shoe to check there was nothing inside it. The floor was carpeted and looked clean. I recalled that the killer had been scrupulous about leaving the crime scenes neat and tidy. It really would have been a lot more helpful if he’d been a slob.
I nudged the wardrobe doors open and bit back a gasp.
‘You okay?’ Maitland suddenly loomed in the doorway.
‘Got a shock.’ I swung the doors back so he could see the full-length mirror on one side and the full-length poster Stuart Sinclair had stuck on the other.
‘Is that him?’
‘It certainly is.’ In the picture he was wearing a small pair of shorts and had a deep tan. His muscles were sharply defined, gleaming with oil, and he was posing with his hands on his waist in the best bodybuilder style, biceps bulging. ‘Mr Fitness. I think this is his motivational material.’
‘Twat,’ Maitland said, and snapped a couple of pictures before he retreated. We needed to record anything remotely suspicious where we found it because Sinclair could remove it before we got a chance to come back.
I carried on searching, finding three smart suits with ties and shirts among the more casual clothes. To myself, I murmured, ‘What do you need suits for? You’re a teacher. Go to a lot of funerals?’
Nothing in the bottom of the wardrobe. Nothing on top. The bedside tables were empty. The chest of drawers contained neat piles of folded clothes. The drawers didn’t pull out all the way but I checked the undersides anyway, lying on the floor, and even ran a hand along the back panel of the drawer to make sure there was nothing dangling down behind. I checked under the mattress and found nothing except slats. I checked under the pillow. Inside the pillowcases. Inside the duvet cover.
‘Anything?’
I took the torch out of my mouth, where I’d held it while I was replacing the bedclothes. ‘You’ll be the first to know.’
‘Five minutes.’
‘Got it.’
I did the bathroom in two minutes: whitening toothpaste, hair dye and moisturiser. Expensive shampoo and conditioner. Eye cream. The guy used more products than I did.
The kitchen was tiny and so clean I wondered if he ever used it. The cupboards were full of protein powder and energy bars. The fridge contained egg whites, rice milk, turkey, chicken and cod, and a couple of bags of spinach.
‘Fun,’ I said.
Maitland was pacing up and down the hall like a bear in a zoo. ‘Wish he’d invite me round for dinner.’
I kept searching. No wine or beer. A box of green tea, loose, with a Japanese tea set and little cups without handles. Some rice cakes and noodles.
There was a small freezer in the corner, with three drawers, and I ripped through it. Top drawer: more fish and lean meat. No ice cream. Middle drawer: frozen vegetables. No chips. Bottom drawer: plastic storage boxes opaque with frost. The top two seemed to be mince. A larger, flat one underneath them was far too light when I picked it up. I peeled the lid back and jumped.
‘Whoa.’
‘What’ve you got?’
‘It’s okay.’ I lifted it up very carefully and draped it over my fingertips so it could hang properly. ‘It’s just a wig.’
‘In the freezer?’
‘Yep.’ I couldn’t stop smiling. ‘Nice hiding place. The colour matches Angela Poole’s hair. The length and style is the same as hers was. And I bet we’ll be able to match the hair we found on Anna Melville’s body.’
Maitland took some pictures while I detached a couple of hairs and folded them into an evidence envelope. Then I replaced the wig in the box and the box in the freezer.
‘Can I tell them?’ He lifted the radio.
‘Be my guest. I’m going to keep looking, though.’
In the living room I found weights and exercise DVDs, along with four stainless steel knives in a flat holder taped to the underside of the dining table. They were a Japanese make and exceedingly sharp. There was a gap in the middle.
‘He could be carrying a knife.’
‘I’ll let them know.’
More bookcases, more books. I liked a room full of books, but not when I was in a hurry and trying to search with a light touch, because Godley had said to stay wary in case the wig wasn’t a match. There was no way I could go through every book and check there was nothing hidden inside and I chewed my lip, knowing I was missing something.
Nothing hidden under a sofa cushion. Nothing inside the loose covers. Nothing under the rug.
A big rubber plant in the corner caught my attention. It was in a pot with wheels so you could move it around easily. I pulled it away from where it had been standing and saw that the fitted carpet wasn’t quite level. It rose up in the corner, where the carpet tacks had been removed.
‘Gotcha.’
It was easy to peel back the carpet, though I panicked a little when I saw nothing but floorboards. I stuck my hand in under the carpet as far as it would go and swept it
back and forth in an arc, swearing as my muscles complained about the awkward angle. I forgot all discomfort when my fingertips brushed against something. I stretched even further and managed to get a grip on the corner of what proved to be an A4 envelope. I checked there wasn’t anything else to find, and came up with two more.
‘Harry? I’ve got something.’
He came and stood in the doorway, watching as I shook out the contents of the first envelope on the table. Pictures and medical notes. It was a history of remaking Stuart Sinclair from the tubby buck-toothed boy Derwent had tormented into, well—
‘Is that Josh Derwent?’ Maitland asked.
It was a picture I hadn’t seen before, a close-up of Derwent smirking at the camera, wearing school uniform. Two smaller pictures were clipped to the back. The first proved to be a candid shot of him talking, in profile, while the second was him smiling at someone. He must have just been in the shower. His hair was wet and slicked back instead of hanging around his face, so you could see the details – the planes of his face, the line his hair followed, the shape of his ears.
‘I think Derwent was his ideal. Like the world needed two of them.’
Maitland snorted. I skimmed through the paperwork.
He’d had dental work on the NHS but the major stuff – a jaw realignment and a set of crowns – had been done in Hungary. He’d gone to Los Angeles for a nose job and chin implant, at a cost that made my eyes wide. Over four visits to South Africa he’d had extensive liposuction and an eyelift, and had his ears pinned back. The pictures told the full story: a transformation from an unhappy, sagging young man to the toned, even-featured man I had met. He had removed body hair, tanned, reshaped his hairline, lightened his hair, exercised obsessively and it all worked. I tried to remember if I’d noticed anything strange about his face and how it moved, which was the usual giveaway with plastic surgery. The only thing I’d noticed was a resemblance to Derwent, which I’d put down to coincidence. And I’d noticed he was surprisingly hot.
‘Creepy,’ Maitland said. ‘What else?’
The next envelope was a gut punch: a full set of crimescene and autopsy pictures from the Angela Poole case.
‘How did he get those?’
‘Stole them. They went missing during the investigation. The SIO left them lying around. Stuart was the main witness – I bet he was in and out of the police station all the time.’ I tapped one. ‘He must have uploaded them to the website he showed me. These pictures were his reference material for the murders he committed and he had to make sure anyone could have seen them and done the same.’
‘Clever.’
‘No one is saying he’s not clever.’ I was really starting to hate Stuart Sinclair. I could taste it like bile at the back of my throat. He’d come so close to being discounted as a suspect. I’d come so close to overlooking him.
I’d met him and interviewed him before Deena died, and I hadn’t suspected him for one second.
The third envelope was in some ways the most interesting. It contained maybe fifty file cards with names, addresses, personal details and physical descriptions of women, and a card wallet. I flipped it open. ‘Bingo.’
‘What’ve you got?’
‘Fake police ID in the name of DI Josh Derwent, but that’s Sinclair in the picture.’
Maitland leaned in to see. ‘It looks rubbish. Nothing like the real thing.’
‘Good enough to pass on the street, in the dark, especially if he just waves it at them.’ I sat back on my heels. ‘Got him.’
‘I’d have thought so. What else is in there? What are all the cards?’
‘Research.’ I flipped through them, finding Jenny Coppard. Her card had a red asterisk on it, and the information that she was a mother was circled in the same pen. He liked virginal women, I thought, not mothers. But Jenny had been useful all the same.
‘I haven’t found cards for any of our victims,’ I said, shuffling through.
‘Maybe he hides them somewhere else.’
‘Maybe he doesn’t keep them once they’re dead.’ They were no longer targets then. No longer a challenge. Not interesting.
I sped through the last cards and froze. ‘You’re fucking kidding me.’
‘What?’ Maitland leaned in. ‘Oh, lucky you.’
Stuart had filled out a card for me, with my phone number and a physical description and – in capitals – KNOWS JD!!! There was a red asterisk on the top, though.
‘I wonder why I failed.’
‘Too tall,’ Maitland suggested, and grinned when I glared. ‘Too risky.’
‘He doesn’t like taking risks,’ I agreed. ‘He likes to feel safe.’
‘Well, let’s hope he’s yearning for the comfort of home.’ Maitland pointed with the radio. ‘Collect all the paperwork. We’ll take it with us. Let’s put the plant back where it was, just in case he gets back here without us spotting him. But I’d say we’ve got more than enough to arrest him. And once we’ve done that, we can tear this place apart to make sure we’ve found everything.’
I rearranged the carpet and plant, then had a last walk through the flat, checking that everything was as I had found it.
‘Happy?’ Maitland asked.
‘Ecstatic,’ I said, and meant it. All we had to do now was catch him.
Chapter 37
Catching Stuart Sinclair, of course, was easier said than done, because all we could do was wait. Godley had a team of about twenty officers deployed in cars and vans around the area, all watching, all ready to go at any moment. The tension was a killer. The atmosphere was so highly charged I couldn’t see how Sinclair would miss it when he came home. Or maybe he’d seen us already and was on the run. Maybe he’d had a silent alarm in his flat and he was never coming back.
For two hours and through four suspects who turned out not to be him I tortured myself with worrying about whether I’d done something wrong and scared him off. Eventually I put my head down on the steering wheel of the car and moaned.
‘He’s never coming back. We’re never going to catch him. He’s going to go abroad again and get more plastic surgery and a fake passport.’
‘He’s not a criminal mastermind,’ Liv said. ‘He’s not any kind of mastermind. He spent hundreds of thousands of pounds to look like Derwent. What does that tell you?’
‘Obsessive personality. Bad judgement. Serial killer. You’re right. I’m not taking him home to meet my parents.’ I stayed where I was, though, my hands gripping the wheel so hard my knuckles bleached.
‘I don’t think I’ve ever seen you so edgy. Are you okay?’
‘This has been the week from hell. Of course I’m not okay.’
‘Are you missing Rob?’
‘Yes.’
Her eyes went round. ‘Wow. No prevarication. No excuses. It must be love.’
‘So what?’ I was grinning, though.
‘So I didn’t think you’d ever admit it.’
‘Yeah. I should really tell him.’
‘Maeve Kerrigan, are you actually telling me you haven’t said “I love you” yet to the perfect man? Your soulmate? The guy who makes you smile every time I even mention his name?’
‘He knows,’ I protested.
‘That doesn’t mean he shouldn’t hear it occasionally.’ The radio in the footwell by Liv’s feet crackled and she picked it up.
‘We’ve got an IC-1 male on foot towards the address. Just turned off Argyle Road onto Larchfield Avenue.’ It was James Peake’s voice, and he sounded calm and matter-of-fact. Good radio voice, I thought irrelevantly, trying to stop my heart from racing.
‘He’s coming from over there,’ Liv said, having checked the map. She was pointing to the other side of the area we were watching. I sat back in my seat, the tension still knotting my stomach even though we were on the wrong side and too far away to be involved.
‘Blue jeans, black jacket with a Superdry logo on the shoulder, grey trainers,’ Peake added.
‘Stand by,’ Godley sa
id. ‘Let’s confirm the ID before we move.’
I felt the tension in my arms as I put one hand on the door handle. Our car was parked near the main road, a short distance from the flat. I calculated there were ten or twelve officers closer than us or in a better position to bring him down, but I was still going to be in the game, and from Liv’s face she felt the same way.
And I could see him now, in the distance. He was maybe thirty metres away from the gate to the flats. He was walking easily, looking relaxed, a gym bag slung over his shoulder. ‘It’s him.’
‘Definitely our man,’ Maitland said over the radio at more or less the same time.
It was all that Godley had been waiting for. ‘Strike, strike, strike.’
The street came alive with people as everyone bundled out of their cars, converging on Sinclair. The strategy was to move fast, confuse and disorientate the target and control them by getting them down on the ground before they could think about fighting back. He had the reactions of a cat, though. He’d had no warning but in less time than it took to blink he was running, sprinting up the pavement towards our position.
‘Coming this way,’ I said to Liv in a rush.
Before Sinclair got close to us DI Bradbury got in front of him. Without hesitating, Sinclair threw the gym bag at his head, scoring a direct hit. Bradbury went down like a felled tree and the next officer, who happened to be Harry Maitland, tripped over him. Together they made quite a formidable obstacle for the pursuers behind, who crashed into each other and slowed themselves down. Sinclair didn’t look back as he raced away, taking advantage of the mayhem. The smooth, organised arrest had disintegrated into chaos in seconds and I couldn’t quite understand how, except that we’d had all the time in the world to prepare but Sinclair had had all the luck. James Peake kicked himself clear and put on an extra turn of speed but Sinclair had gained five or six metres on him.
Which left me and Liv to block Sinclair before he got to the open road. Seeing us in front of him he swerved, diving across the street to the opposite pavement. I bolted to do the same and cut him off, careless of traffic, my Asp racked and ready to use. Liv was right beside me, shouting to him to stop.