Read Lazy Bones Online

Authors: Mark Billingham

Tags: #Rapists, #Police Procedural, #Psychological fiction, #Serial murders, #Mystery & Detective, #Police, #General, #Mystery fiction, #Rapists - Crimes against, #Police - Great Britain, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction, #Fiction, #Thorne; Tom (Fictitious character)

Lazy Bones (21 page)

BOOK: Lazy Bones
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170

Brigstockc glanced at Thorne, raised his eyebrows. Jesmond was just getting warmed up...

'Yes, we might be looking for a prison officer. But we might also be looking for someone who's a friend of a friend of a teacher with a big mouth. Or someone who lives next door to an indiscreet social worker, who likes to natter while they're washing their cars on a Sunday morning...'

'Are you saying that we've been wasting our time for a week?' Thorne said.

The Detective Chief Superintendent shrugged, like he'd been asked if he'd lost weight, or caught the sun. 'Ask me that again when we've caught him...'

Jesmond seemed to relish moments like this. Thorne looked across at him and thought, You real y enjoy pissing on my chips, don't you?

'I see what you're getting at, sir,' Thorne said. 'But it can't hurt, I mean, at least in the short term, to carry on assuming that the kil er has a direct contact with one of the bodies we're talking about. Social services, the probation service...' ,

Jesmond cocked his head to one side, waiting to be unconvinced. Brigstocke tried to help out. 'It's a decent avenue of inquiry, sir,' he said. Thorne sniffed. 'Our only decent avenue of inquiry...'

'Wel , I think you'd better go out and find us another one,' Jesmond said. 'Don't you?'

Thorne said nothing. He watched the hand pushing back the wisps of sandy hair. The strange area on either side of the nose where webs of veins met spatters of freckles. He looked at the dry lips cracking themselves into a smile and it struck him, as it always did, that Jesmond smiled with his eyes closed.

Thorne smiled himself, remembering how he'd once described Jesmond's face to Dave Hol and. 'You know the sort of face,' he'd said. 'If you hit it once, you couldn't stop.'

Jesmond leaned forward across the desk. 'Seriously, though, let's think about what you're saying. As an example, why don't we look at 171

the possibility that the kil er has a direct connection with the police service...'

'A police officer,' Thorne said.

Je'smond simply repeated himself and pressed on. 'A direct connection with the police service. Now, apart from the sheer numbers involved, the methods employed to access and utilise the Sex Offenders Register vary wildly from force to force. Some access it via the Police National Computer. Some graft Register information on to existing systems, or create dedicated databases...'

Brigstocke puffed out his cheeks. Thorne could already sense things going away from him, could feel himself starting to drift.

'Some are stil using manual, paper-based systems, for heaven's

sake,' Jesmond said. 'And we al know just how secure they are.' Brigstocke nodded. 'How secure anything is!'

Thorne was tuning it out. Thinking about those jungle drums... 'The fact is, the whole system's a mess,' Jesmond said. 'There is no single strategy for managing and sharing sex-offender information, either with other agencies o} with one another. Some believe that general access to local officers is vital to 6btain the ful intel igence benefit. Other areas, other stations, simply have a nominated officer who gets informed whenever the Register is updated...'

Thorne could smel another turd in his bed...

The way it was being laid out, the kil er could have found his rapists almost anywhere. On the Internet or in a wastepaper basket. It was clear that if they had ten or a hundred times as many officers working on this, tracking down the man they were after the way he'd been hoping to was a non-starter.

'It isn't just us, either,' Brigstocke said. 'The courts are supposed to notify us when there's a need for an individual to register, and for how long, and it should be confirmed by the prison or the hospital or wherever when he gets released. Wel , that's the bloody theory, anyway. Sometimes the first you hear about a sex offender on your patch is when they tel you themselves, for fuck's sake...'

172

Jesmond leaned back in his chair and smiled. Eyes closed. 'So, when I say you'd better find us another decent avenue of investigation, I'm simply being practical. I'm thinking of the best way, the fastest way to catch this man...'

Thorne nodded. Said it under his breath...

'Ooh.t Whay-hay! Clack!'

In the Major Incident Room, business carried on as usual, but each officer was keenly aware that things might be about to change. Each man or woman on the end of a phone or hunched over their paperwork glanced across occasional y in the direction of Brigstocke's office, knowing that behind its closed door, decisions were being made which would affect them al .

Each casual conversation ful of unspoken concerns. Some less to do with overtime than others. Some, at bottom, fuck al to do with work at al ...

'Jesmond had a face like fourpence when he marched through here,' Kitson said.

Hol and glanced up from his computer screen. 'Looked much same as he always does, if you ask me...'

'I know what you mean,' Kitson said. 'He's a miserable sod. Stil , I think we must be doing something wrong. They've been in there a while.' She looked across to where the Incident Room led out on to the corridor that housed the smal suite of offices - Brigstocke's, the one she shared with Tom Thorne, Hol and and Stone's...

Kitson sat down on the edge of the desk. She placed a hand on top of

the computer Hol and was working at. 'Can't you do this in your office?' Hol and peered at his screen. 'Andy's working in there...'

There was grime on the top of the computer. Kitson took out a tissue, spat' on a corner, and began rubbing at the heel of her hand. 'Not a problem, is there?'

Now Hol and looked up at her. 'No, it's fine. Just easier to concentrate in here sometimes...'

173

Kitson nodded, carried on rubbing, though her hand was clean. 'Sam Karim tel s me you've been putting yourself up for quite a bit of overtime lately.i Working al sorts of hours...'

Hol and clicked furiously at his mouse. 'Shit!' He looked up, blinked. 'Sorry...?'

'It's a good idea. Trying to stash a bit of money away before the baby arrives.'

Hol and's face darkened for a second. The smile he conjured didn't altogether chase the shadows from around his eyes.

'Right,' he said. 'I mean, they're expensive, aren't they?'

'You think nappies are a price, mate, wait until he wants CDs and the latest trainers. Is it a he or a she? Do you know...?'

Hol and shook his head, his eyes meeting Kitson's for half a second and then sliding away to her chin. 'Sophie doesn't want to know.'

'I did.' Kitson's voice dropped down a tone. She opened up the tissue and began to tear it into smal pieces. 'My other half wanted to wait and see, but I've never real y liked surprises. I sent him out of the room after we'd hd the scan so they could tel me. Did it with al the kids. Managed to k&ep it secret right up until the births...'

Hol and smiled. Kitson crushed the pieces of tissue into her fist

and stood up. 'Are you going to take any time off afterwards?' 'Afterwards?'

'Al this overtime you're piling up now, you can probably afford a break, spend a bit of time at home with Sophie and the baby. Mind you, the Federation's stil fighting to get paternity leave up from two

days. Two days! It's a bloody disgrace...'

'We haven't real y talked about it...'

'I bet she'd like you to though.' Kitson saw something in Hol and's eyes, nodded sympathetical y. 'She must hate al this extra work you're having to do...'

Hol and shrugged. Let his head drop back to his computer screen. 'Oh, you know...'

174

Kitson took a step away from the desk. She opened her hand above a wastepaper bin and sprinkled the pieces of dirty tissue into it.

Hol and watched her go, thinking, Actual y, you probably don't.

Thorne stuck his head round the door of the Incident Room, tried not to gag on a breath of late-afternoon hot air and fermenting aftershave. He waved to Yvonne Kitson. She clocked him and walked quickly across.

'Get everyone together at the far end,' Thorne said. 'Briefing in fifteen minutes.'

Without waiting for a response, Thorne turned and moved away, back up the corridor towards his office...

Sensing that Jesmond was probably right. Knowing that he was right about the Register, but that even if the Miler was a social worker or a probation officer or a copper, they were going to have to get him some other way.

He threw his jacket across the desk, dropped down into the chair. There was a smal pile of mail he hadn't dealt with. He began to sort through it... If he was a copper?

Thorne would not have bet on it. In al his years he'd known plenty of bad apples, worked with his fair share of shitbags, but never a Miler. It was an interesting idea, a seductive one even, but beyond being convenient in TV shmvs, it was not much use to him.

He dropped a bunch of envelopes into the bin, those that obviously contained circulars or dreary internal memos going in unopened. He always saved the interesting-looking ones until last...

There were stil aspects of the case that bothered him, that he'd flag up at the briefing. The bedding that had been removed for a kickoff. And the other thing. The thought he couldn't articulate, couldn't shape and snap up.

Something he'd read and something he hadn't...

It pretty much amounted to less than fuck al . Not a decent lead, not

175

a bit of luck. He could only hope that some bright spark came up with something useful at the briefing.

When the photographs tumbled out of the white envelope, it took Thorne a few seconds to understand what he was looking at. Then he saw it. Then his heart lurched inside him and began to gal op.

As an athlete's heart rate recovers more and more quickly as his fitness increases, so Thorne reacted less and less, physical y at least, to images like those that would soon be scattered across his desk. The thumping in his chest was already slowing when he reached into a drawer, took out a pair of scissors and snipped away the elastic band that held the bundle of pictures together. The breaths were coming more easily as he used the tip of a pencil to separate them. By the time he'd decided that he wanted a closer look, remembered where he could find the gloves he needed, his heartbeat was stow and steady again.

There was no longer any visible movement, no judder of the flesh where his shirt stuck damp against his chest...

Thorne stood, moved of into the corridor and turned towards the Incident Room. As he walked, he felt amazingly calm and clearheaded. Coming to shocking conclusions and making trivial decisions. The kil er was even more cold-blooded than he had imagined...

He was supposed to be seeing Eve later on. Obviously, he would have to cal and cancel. Perhaps she would be free tomorrow...

Into the Incident Room, and Kitson was moving across from the right of him, eager to talk about something. He held up a hand, waved her away. The box stood, a little incongruously, on a filing cabinet in the far corner of the room, exactly where he'd remembered seeing it. He pul ed out the plastic gloves, like snatching tissues from a cardboard dispenser, revealing the transparent fingers of the next pair.

Hol and was behind him, saying something he didn't catch as he turned to walk back...

The briefing, whenever they had it, would certainly be a bit more lively. Whatever Jesmond thought about the route the investigation was taking, it 176

had definitely become heazv going. Those photos, what was in them, would

get it started again.

Jump leads.

Not a bit of luck, exactly, but fuck it, close enough...

Thorne walked into his office and straight across to his desk. He knew even as he was doing it, even as he pul ed on the gloves and delicately picked up a photo by its edge, that he was probably wasting his time. He had to go through the motions, of course, but the gloves were almost certainly unnecessary. Though he knew the surface of a photograph was as good as any at holding a fingerprint, he also knew that the man who had taken it was extremely cautious. Aside from the prints of postal workers and prison officers, or the hair and dead skin of the victims themselves, they'd got nothing from any of the photos or letters thus far. This was, after al , a kil er who removed the bedding from his murder scenes.

Stil , everybody made mistakes now and again...

Thorne flicked quickly through the photos. The close-ups of the battered and bloodied face, those thin lips thickened, then burst. Te movement in the ful -length pictures captured in a sickening blur. Pictures taken, unbelievably, while the victim was stil alive. Thrashing...

He pushed aside the interior shots and lowered his head, checking to see if the kil er had made one mistake in particular. He stared closely at the photo that had been very deliberately placed on the top of the pile. The first picture he had been intended to see. The window of the shop next door...

A kil er's little joke.

Thorne was dimly aware of the figures of Hol and and Kitson, watching him from the doorway as he squinted at the picture. Hoping to see a distorted image that would probably be worse than useless, but would show him that he was dealing with fal ible flesh and blood. Searching in vain for a reflection of the cameraman in a tiny, black mirror.

Looking for the kil er's face in the eye of a dead fish.

177

He was pretty sure he'd picked a good one.

The list had to be looked at careful y. He couldn't just print off a copy and stick a pin in. Not that there was that much time to look at it when he had the chance, but he was getting better at selecting the likely candidates quickly. With the previous two he'd chosen a couple of decent-looking ones and gone through the details more careful y later, when he could take his time.

He'd done the same thing with this one, rejecting a couple of names for various practical reasons - location, domestic set-up and so on - and coming up with a winner.

Christ, though, there were plenty to choose from. The serious cases, the ones he was interested in, would be on the Register indefinitely, and those that did eventual y come off the list, after five, or seven or ten years, had

BOOK: Lazy Bones
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