by John Harvey
Rachel turned the collar of her coat up against the ends of her hair. Hands were back in her pockets. “We’ll talk tonight, okay?”
“Okay,” Chris sighed. “Yes, sure. You haven’t got any idea when…?”
“No.” She paused. “Chris…”
“I know. You’ve got to go.”
Along the path and down the worn steps, he didn’t expect her to look back but waited, anyway, until she was out of sight. He used his hand to wipe the surplus water from one of the benches by the front of the church and sat down.
“How many, Graham?”
“Forty-three.”
“Same age as John Benedict.”
“Sir?”
Resnick pointed at the letter at the top of its pile.
“Amazing, isn’t it?” Millington said, adjusting his tie.
“What’s that?”
“All these blokes out there. Needing to, well, go through this sort of rigmarole.” He stood up, flexing his legs where the muscles had been stiffening. “I never thought anyone took it seriously. Personal columns. Computer dating. What sort of a state do you have to be in to do that?”
Resnick looked at him. “Lonely?”
“I still reckon…”
But Resnick cut him off. “When you were getting them out of the drawer, you were careful about touching them?”
“Kid gloves.”
“I don’t suppose we’ll get any prints, but there’s no point in making it more difficult. Collect them up, will you. Best get them back to the station.” He glanced back down at the letters. “One or two going to get the kind of reply they didn’t bargain for, I shouldn’t wonder.”
“Everything all right?” asked Carole when Rachel walked back into the office.
“Urn, why?”
“Thought you seemed a little preoccupied, that’s all.” (So it had to be right; that’s what she was.)
“I’ve been thinking about these Sheppard kids and now I wonder if fostering is the best answer after all. It might be better to leave them in the grandmother’s home; there’s room, so that’s not a problem. Her lack of mobility had decided me against it, but maybe that could be coped with. Get someone to call in there on a regular basis. Morning and evening to start off with. It would be a way of getting the woman to accept help for herself anyway. Might turn out to be a better solution for her and the children. What do you think?”
Sixteen
Suddenly, it was a fine autumn day but Resnick had missed the rainbow. The sky was a wash of pale blue and the sun strong enough now to draw color from the bricks. He walked along a narrow street between warehouses, four or five stories high, substantial, the windows perfectly placed, proportioned. If you looked upwards to the curved arches of the roofs, it was easy to think you were in another city.
Resnick turned right, where the hardware merchant, greengrocer, the purveyor of yeast tablets, urine bottles, and athletic supporters had all waited until their leases had expired and gone with them. He went down the hill past the video diner, a window crammed with art-deco furniture, men’s clothing shops with names like Herbie Hogg, Culture Vulture.
The sign above the gym was purple neon, like handwriting, Victor’s Gym and Health Club. Bowed-glass windows showed sets of weights, dumbbells, leotards in violent colors. The reception area was a small bar: freshly squeezed orange juice, vegetable shakes, espresso. The receptionist had stainless steel hair and the most perfect makeup job Resnick had seen since he’d got trapped in a department store lift with four assistants from the perfumery department.
She was looking at a tall coffee-colored man who was lounging in an oatmeal sweatsuit, limbs carelessly arranged for the best effect.
Neither of them paid Resnick much attention. From deeper inside the building came the muted sound of disco music, an irregular succession of grunts and thumps. Out here, nobody moved. Nobody sweated.
“Do I go straight through to get to the gym?” Resnick asked.
“Why d’you want to do that?” the girl said, not looking at him, concentrating on the man in the sweatsuit. There was a plastic badge pinned to her loose pink top and on it, in lettering not unlike that of the sign, Jane was written in purple ink.
“Why do people usually?”
An eyebrow lifted, not far. “You’re not a member.”
“No.” He was beginning to feel like the Dyno-Rod man.
“Oh, then you got one of those things we sent out. Leaflets. Three free sessions. Through the door, right?”
“Right.”
She looked past Resnick to the man. “I told Victor it was a stupid idea.”
Something or somebody landed heavily on the floor immediately over their heads.
“You’ve got to hand it in,” she said to Resnick. “The leaflet. Otherwise you can’t get the sessions.”
Resnick shook his head. “I tore it up.”
“All in one go,” the man said, “or did you take it a little bit at a time?”
Jane thought that was very funny. The laughter broke from her and when she tried to stifle it tears came to her eyes and tight wheezing sounds caught in her throat. She was in danger of choking or, at the very least, of her makeup cracking apart.
“Easily amused,” Resnick observed.
“Jane, she’s got a great sense of humor.”
“Don’t you think you should do something?” Resnick said, looking at the way her eyes were growing increasingly alarmed, trapped in the center of her face.
He shrugged and moved lithely around the bar, a couple of well-placed pats in the small of the back, an energetic release of air, and Jane was sitting up right as rain with a carrot and wheat germ cocktail in her hand.
“I’m here to see Warren,” Resnick said. “I was told he’d be in the gym.”
“Why d’you want to see Warren?” the man said.
“Why do you need to know?”
“We don’t encourage folk walking in off the street and…”
It was getting tedious. Resnick took out his wallet and showed his identification.
“I’ll fetch him,” the man said.
Resnick put the wallet away. “I’ll find him.”
There was just a moment when he thought the man might be about to try and stop him, but the muscles relaxed and a finger pointed along the short corridor. “Up the stairs. Left. Straight ahead.”
“Yes,” said Resnick. “Follow the noise.”
High-toned sweat and embrocation. Up here the effort was real and nobody bothered too much about keeping the backs of their shorts rolled over so that the designer labels showed. As weights were lifted and set down, the boards vibrated beneath Resnick’s feet. A small-boned Chinese woman lay on her back, legs arched into the air, while a fifteen-stone instructor added another ten pounds to her load.
“That’s not all she can do.”
Resnick angled his head to the right.
“Restaurant where she works. I was in there once. Nice place. Not your take-away. Linen napkins. Finger bowls. These guys came in from the pub; one of them, real foul-mouthed, objectionable. Sits there ordering the lagers, making remarks at the other customers. Everyone staring down into their chow mein, pretending it isn’t happening. She goes over and tells him to be quiet or leave. He starts calling her a few choice things, so she says she’s going to call the police. He grabs at her, misses, up from the table, trying again. She turns, cool as you like, one foot in his balls and the next one takes his eye out. Out. Well, dangling. They have to sew it back in casualty. Four-and-a-half hours. Can’t see the scar, but he’s got this dreadful squint.” He held out his hand. “I’m Warren.”
“Detective Inspector Resnick.”
“I figured.”
The handshake was firm and smeared with sweat. Warren was a couple of inches shorter than Resnick, ageless, his skin glistened and, yes, his muscles had been nurtured to the point where they were awesome. He was wearing loose-fitting gray sweatpants and a black cotton vest that stuck to back and ches
t. Bare feet.
“Let’s talk in here.”
Resnick followed him into a small room next to the men’s changing room, a couple of chairs and a desk, rosters pinned with bright yellow tacks to a hessian-covered board on the wall.
“Staff perks,” explained Warren, sitting down, gesturing for Resnick to do the same.
“You know Georgie Despard,” Warren said.
“A little.”
Warren laughed. His teeth were even, the one left of center had a tiny gold star set into it. He said, “Georgie says you’ve been on his case for years.”
Resnick shook his head lightly. “Not any more.”
Warren laughed again. “He’s fly, Georgie.”
“How come you know him?”
“Him and my old man, they were up in the Smoke together. Years back. His folks had moved up here and, oh, that wasn’t right for George. He wanted some action. My old man’d grown up there, like him. George went back. Fine times. I’d see ’em getting ready, suits, shiny suits. They’d start weekends up West on a Friday night, the Flamingo. Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames. John Mayall. That bloke who threw himself under a Tube train—what was his name? I forget it now.” He stretched back in the chair and sighed with the pleasure of remembering.
“I don’t imagine all they got up to was dancing.”
Warren leaned easily forward. “Sorry about not coming up to the station.” He shuddered. “Something about those places.”
“As long as you’re still willing to talk.”
“About Macliesh?”
“Unless there’s anything else you…”
“Macliesh.”
“All right.”
“You’ve got him banged up for doing that woman.”
“He’s in custody.”
“Not for long.”
“How’s that?”
“I mean, for all I care about the bloke, he could stay there. It’s where he’s come from and he’ll be back, one way or another. They always are. Don’t know how to get on in the world, his sort. No idea of, you know, coming to terms with it.”
“The time I’m interested in…”
“The Monday night, right? When it happened. According to the papers, anyway. Has to be.”
“Has to?”
“That’s when Macliesh has got me pulled in for his alibi.”
“You saw him on the Monday?”
“Met him here. In the bar. Him and Mottram.”
“Mottram?”
“Scouser.”
“Friend of yours or Macliesh’s?”
“Macliesh’d never set eyes on him before. I know him from the States. Used to go over, every year, bodybuilding contests, exhibitions, Mister Universe.”
“Mottram was a body-builder?”
Warren smiled and showed his inlaid tooth. “If Mottram stood still on a grating, he’d go down it. No, he was working with a couple of fighters, corner work; he was a good cuts man. Then his fingers went.”
“Started to shake?” said Resnick. “Stiffened?”
Warren was still smiling. “Got into an argument with this bloke who had an ax.”
Resnick thought about it: not for too long.
“What was he doing here? In the city.”
“Drifting around. Bumming what he can. He’d been in that day, earlier. I told him to stick around and see what Macliesh came up with.”
“One thing I don’t see,” said Resnick. “How Macliesh was talking to you in the first place? I don’t see the connection.”
Warren pulled a sweater up from the floor and slipped it on; the sweat was beginning to dry cold. “If I’m going to carry on talking…” He glanced at the closed door, “…it’s just inside this room right? There’s nothing else here to interest you, just Macliesh. Right?”
Resnick nodded.
Both men knew that the policeman would not forget whatever Warren told him, that he’d file it away, worry over it, use it how and when he could. They also knew that whatever was said, there would be no witnesses.
“Time to time,” Warren said quietly, “if there’s a job wants doing that might need a little muscle, people will put people in touch with me. It’s nothing organized, just word goes round the clubs. Late, you know. They see me on the door in a made-to-measure suit, bow tie, looking hard. Like I say, people talk to people. I don’t know who Macliesh talked to except that he ended up talking to me.”
“That Monday?”
“That’s right.”
“Tell me about it.”
“We went down to this Italian restaurant along the street and he’s going on about this warehouse out on the industrial estate, drawing maps all over napkins like a bad movie. There’s security patrolling the place, that’s why he wants me to hold his hand. Reckons he’s got a stone-cold market for this stuff, computer parts, some bits and pieces of junk, I don’t know.”
“This was Macliesh’s idea? Top to bottom?”
“Of course,” Warren grinned. “What d’you think?”
“What happened?” Resnick asked.
“There’s security there all right, uniformed bloke in a van, probably done time himself, dog with him, some kind of attack dog, I don’t know one from another except I hate all of them. Vicious bloody things. Then Macliesh starts seeing burglar alarms all over the place, reckons they must be on the direct to your boys. Real panic. We hang around for a bit, drive away, back, drive away again. By now he’s not so sure about off-loading the stuff. Mottram’s well down a bottle of malt whisky, well down, and I’m looking another wasted night square in the eye.” Warren rocked back in his chair. “It’s a blow-out.”
Resnick nodded. “Hours? How long was Macliesh in your company?”
“Met him here, eight, half-past, by the time it was all over, half-one, two. Waste of bloody time.”
“You’ll sign a statement?”
Warren looked at him for a couple of moments, finally sighed. “Not if it means going to the station, but, yes, I suppose so.”
Resnick stood up. “The officers who were in before, I’ll get them to come down.”
“Now?”
“Now.”
Warren shrugged massive shoulders. “Fair enough.”
At the head of the stairs, Warren said, “Give your best to Georgie, then?”
“Don’t bother.”
Seventeen
Vera Barnett had already told them. As soon as she stepped into the airless hallway, faint with furniture spray and lily-of-the-valley, Rachel knew. The dry turning of locks and fumbled chains had taken minutes; the obscured murmurings of apology and frustration from behind the door. She sat in a wheelchair, uncomfortable, blue slipper-socks pulled over wrinkled tights, a plaid rug laid across her lap. Most of the curl had gone from her hair and it clung like a wig, ill-fitting and gray. She was staring at the swollen knuckles of her hands as though they had betrayed her once again.
“Mrs Barnett, I…”
“I haven’t got the strength.”
“That’s all right.”
“Is it?”
Rachel moved towards her, a half-smile. “I see the chair arrived.”
“It’s no good.”
“It looks fine.”
“It’s no good.”
Rachel moved around the older woman, taking the handles of the chair. “You’ll soon get used to it.”
“To being a cripple.”
“That’s not what I mean.”
“What else am I doing in a wheelchair?”
Rachel started to back the chair round, wanting to move out of the hall. The sounds of muffled tears came from another room, intermittent.
“We talked about that, Mrs Barnett. About how it might help you while the children are here, so you don’t have to go chasing after them all the time and wear yourself out.”
“You talked about it.”
Rachel applied pressure to the handles and the chair rose up on its rear legs so that she could swing it round.
“Be carefu
l!”
“I am. Don’t worry.”
When the front wheels touched ground again, lightly, Vera Barnett groaned.
“Let’s go into the living room,” Rachel said.
“You won’t get it through the door. Not without banging.”
“I’m sure we can manage.”
“It’s too big.”
“It’ll be okay.”
“Not made for it, places like this. They’re not designed for cripples and invalids. Those wheels will take all the paint off, marks and scratches. It isn’t going to be any good.”
Rachel brought the chair round adjacent to the electric fire, pressed her foot down on the brake, and sat on the Parker Knoll chair opposite. “If you really don’t want it, Mrs. Barnett, I could call through to the department in the morning and ask them to come and take it away again.” She looked at her evenly. “Is that what you want me to do?”
Vera Barnett didn’t say anything. She fidgeted her hands along the edge of the rug and looked at the bars of the fire. Apart from the scrape of the older woman’s breathing, the only sound was the single repeated tick of the clock on the mantelpiece, between Luke’s school photograph and a china dog.
“How are the children?”
Vera Barnett closed her eyes. “How do you think they are?”
Rachel continued to look at her. The sound of crying rose up with a sharpness that broke on a silence of its own.
“Their mother taken away from them.”
“Did you tell them how…?”
“I told them she’d been in a accident. A motor accident. While she was out.” She looked at Rachel accusingly, expecting to be accused. “What did you want me to say? That she’d been killed by some monster. Raped and killed. Murdered. Is that what I should have said?”
Rachel shook her head. “No,” she said softly. “No.”
“Quick and done with, that’s what it was. Peaceful. That’s what…that’s what…” Her fingers were rubbing against the canvas at the side of the chair. “She didn’t feel any pain.”
Rachel guessed she had been holding in the tears for a long time, too long, and now they came in sobs that made the bones in her chest and head ache. Rachel stood beside her, one arm lightly against her shoulder, a hand between her hands.