‘Tom’s coming. You don’t want him to see you lying on the floor like that, do you?’
She shook her head.
‘I’ll get you sat upright. Want you to look good for the camera!’
‘Camera?’
‘Uh huh.’
Feeling a little drunk, she asked, her voice slurring, ‘Sshwhy camera?’
‘You’re going to be a star!’
67
At 1.25 a.m. there was a sudden burst of Jay-Z as Glenn Branson’s mobile phone rang in his bedroom. Hurriedly shooting his arm out, to answer it and silence the bloody thing before it woke Ari, he knocked over the glass of water on his bedside table, and sent the phone and his alarm clock thudding to the floor.
He sprang out of bed in the darkness, his brain a little scrambled, and scrabbled under the chair beside the table where the phone had fallen, the music getting louder. He finally grabbed hold of it and thumbed the answer button. ‘DS Branson,’ he said, as hushed as he could, crouching as if somehow that would make his voice even quieter.
It was Tom Bryce, and he sounded terrible. ‘Detective Sergeant Branson, I’m sorry to call you so late.’
‘No, no worries, Tom – just hold—’
‘For Chrissake!’ Ari said. ‘You arrive home after midnight and wake me up, and now you’re waking me up again. I think we should consider separate bedrooms.’ Then she pointedly turned over away from him.
Great way to start the week, Branson thought gloomily, heading out of the room. He carried the phone into their bright orange bathroom and closed the door.
‘Sorry about that. I’m with you now,’ he said, perching naked on the lavatory seat for want of anywhere else. ‘So tell me?’ The room smelled of grout. He looked at the shiny new glass shower door, fitted only last week, and the crazy tiger-striped tiles Ari had chosen and which the fitter had only finished putting up on Friday. They’d moved into the house three months ago. It was in a nice position, a short distance from both sea and open countryside, in Saltdean, although at the moment, Ari had told him, the whole neighbourhood was on edge because it was less than a mile away that Janie Stretton’s body had been discovered.
‘I need to know this line is secure,’ Tom Bryce said, sounding close to hysterics. There was a roaring sound, as if he was driving.
Branson looked at the caller display; the man was calling on his mobile phone. Trying to help keep Bryce calm, he said, ‘You’ve phoned my police mobile – all its signals are encrypted. It’s totally secure.’ He decided not to mention that Tom’s mobile, presumably a normal one, was open to anyone out there who tuned into its frequency. ‘Where are you, Tom?’
‘I don’t want to tell you.’
‘OK. You’re not at home?’
‘No, it’s not safe to talk in my house – it’s bugged.’
‘Do you want to meet me somewhere?’
‘Yes. No. Yes – I mean – I need you to help me.’
‘That’s what I’m here to do.’
‘How do I know I can trust you? That it will be confidential?’
Branson frowned at the question. ‘What assurance would make you feel comfortable?’
There was a long silence.
‘Hello? Mr Bryce, Tom, are you still there?’
‘Yes.’ His voice sounded faint.
‘Did you hear my question?’
‘I don’t know if I – if I should. I don’t think I can take the risk.’
The phone went dead.
Glenn Branson dialled the number on the display, and it went straight to voicemail. He left a message saying he had called back, then waited a couple of minutes, wide awake, his brain racing, wishing Ari would be more understanding. Yeah, it was tough, but it would just be nice if she showed a little more sympathy. He shrugged. What the hell. Maybe he should read that book she’d bought him for Christmas, Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus. She’d told him it might help him understand how a woman felt. But he doubted he ever truly would understand what women wanted. Men and women didn’t come from different planets; they came from different universes.
He dialled Bryce’s mobile number again. It still went straight to voicemail. Next he dialled the man’s home number, feeling a sudden deep dread that he could not define.
‘Gone?’ Roy Grace said, standing next to Branson in the hallway of Tom Bryce’s house at ten past two in the morning, staring in bemused fury at the young family liaison officer. ‘What do you mean, he’s fucking gone ?’
‘I went up to see if he was all right, and he wasn’t there.’
‘Tom Bryce, his four-year-old daughter and his seven-year-old son leave the house and you didn’t bloody notice?’
‘I, uh . . .’ Chris Willingham said helplessly.
‘You fucking fell asleep on the job, didn’t you?’
‘No, I . . .’
Grace, chewing gum to mask the alcohol on his breath, glared at the young officer. ‘You were meant to be looking after them. And keeping an eye on him as the prime fucking suspect. You let them walk out on you?’
The FLO talked both detectives through all that had happened in the past few hours, in particular the email Tom Bryce claimed to have received and which had vanished from his computer.
Grace had come straight from the Royal Sussex County Hospital, where the young Detective Constable he had such high hopes for, Emma-Jane Boutwood, was on life support and about to be taken into theatre. He’d had the grim job of phoning her parents and breaking the news to them that their daughter was not expected to live.
He had dragged himself away from Cleo reluctantly and on a high, but after finding out the full scale of E-J’s injuries, all memories of his time tonight with Cleo had been erased – at least temporarily – and he was now feeling very low, and desperately concerned for Emma-Jane.
The driver of the van, as yet unidentified, was still unconscious and in the intensive care unit at the same hospital. Grace had ordered a twenty-four-hour police guard on his bed, and left instructions with the constable who had turned up that, the moment the man regained consciousness, he was to be arrested for the attempted murder of a police officer. Grace could only hope they wouldn’t have to upgrade the charge to murder.
Meanwhile DC Nick Nicholl was waiting for him back at the Incident Room with a laptop computer he wanted Grace to see, and dodgy Mr Tom Bryce had done a moonlight flit with his two kids – just what was that all about?
And the week was just over two hours old.
Turning to Branson he said, ‘This phone call Bryce made to you – you said he sounded strange. Scared?’
‘Well scared,’ Branson confirmed.
Grace thought for a moment. ‘Did you get him to fill out a missing persons report form for his wife yesterday?’
Branson nodded.
‘You filed it?’
‘Yes.’
‘Phone Nick – he’s at the Incident Room now. Ask him to look it up. It’ll have the addresses of Mrs Bryce’s close relatives and friends. A frightened man is not going to drive far with two small children in the middle of the night. Have you put out a description of the car?’
Both Chris Willingham and Glenn Branson stared at him blankly. It clearly had not occurred to either of them.
‘What the fuck is going on?’
Glenn Branson, trying to calm him down, said, ‘Roy, I didn’t know how far we were supposed to go keeping tabs on him. Chris was just here to help him cope and to offer protection.’
‘Yes, and if we circulate a description of the bloody vehicle he’s in, we can get him even more protection – from every damned patrol car that’s out there.’ Which wasn’t very many at this time of night, he knew.
‘Shall I tell Nick to call out the rest of the team?’
Grace thought for a moment. The temptation to haul Norman Potting out of his bed was almost irresistible, but he had a feeling it was going to a very long day today. He would let as many of them as possible have a night’s sleep, so at least he would have some fresh, alert people at the eight thirty briefing.
He needed to organize a replacement for Emma-Jane, he realized. And how was Alison Vosper going to react to yet another road traffic accident caused by a police pursuit? The taxi driver was in hospital with various minor injuries, his passenger, who hadn’t been wearing a seat belt, had a broken leg. An Argus reporter was already down at the hospital, and they would be all over this story like a rash.
Fuck, fuck, fuck.
‘One problem – I don’t know the registration of the vehicle he’s in,’ Glenn Branson said.
‘Well that shouldn’t be too hard to find – there is probably the logbook somewhere in the house.’
Leaving Branson to make the call and the FLO to search downstairs for information on the car, Grace went upstairs, found the children’s bedrooms then the master bedroom with its unmade bed. Nothing. Tom Bryce’s den looked a lot more promising. He glanced at the man’s desk, piled high with work files, and a webcam on a stalk. Crinkling his nose against the stench of vomit, he rummaged around in the drawers but found nothing of interest, then turned to a tall black metal filing cabinet.
All the information was in a file marked cars.
Not all police work required a degree in rocket science, he thought.
Fifteen minutes later, Grace and Branson were in a grim elevator, with obscene spraypainted graffiti on every wall and a puddle of urine in one corner, in a tower block on the Whitehawk council estate.
They emerged at the seventh floor, walked down the corridor and rang the bell of Flat 72.
After a few moments a woman’s voice called out, ‘Who is it?’
‘Police!’ Grace said.
A tired, harried-looking woman in her early fifties, wearing a dressing gown and pompom slippers, opened the door. She looked as if she had been attractive in her youth, but her face was now leathery and criss-crossed with lines, and her wavy hair, cut shapelessly, was blonde, fading into grey. Her teeth were badly stained – from nicotine, Grace judged by the reek of tobacco. Somewhere behind her in the flat a child was screaming. There was a faintly rancid smell of fried fat in the air.
Grace held up his warrant card. ‘Detective Superintendent Grace of Brighton CID, and this is Detective Sergeant Branson. Are you Mrs Margaret Stevenson?’
She nodded.
‘You are Mrs Kellie Bryce’s mother?’
She hesitated for a moment, then said, ‘Yes. ’E’s not here. You’re looking for Tom? ’E’s not here.’
‘Do you know where he is?’ Grace asked.
‘Do you know where my daughter is?’
‘No, we’re trying to find her.’
‘She wouldn’t disappear – she wouldn’t leave the children. She didn’t never hardly bear to let them outta her sight. She wouldn’t even leave them with us. Tom brung the kids here about an hour ago. Just rang the bell, bundled them in, then left.’
‘Did he say where he was going?’
‘No. ’E said ’e’d call me later.’
The screaming got worse behind her. She turned anxiously.
Grace fished a card out of his pocket and handed it to her. ‘Please call me if you hear from him – the mobile number.’
Taking the card, she asked, ‘Do you want to come in? A cup of tea? I must stop Jessica crying; my husband’s gotta have his sleep. He’s got the Parkinson’s. ’E must have rest.’
‘I’m sorry we disturbed you,’ Grace said. ‘Mr Bryce didn’t say anything at all?’
‘Nothing.’
‘He didn’t explain why he was bringing the children over in the middle of the night?’
‘For their safety, that’s what ’e said. That was all.’
‘Safety from what?’
‘Didn’t say. Where’s Kellie? Where do you think she is?’
‘We don’t know, Mrs Stevenson,’ Glenn Branson said. ‘As soon as we find her, we’ll call you. Mr Bryce really didn’t say where he was going?’
‘Going to find Kellie, ’e said.’
‘He didn’t say where?’
She shook her head. The screaming got louder still. Grace and Branson exchanged glances – a question and a shrug.
‘I’m sorry we disturbed you,’ Grace said. He gave her a smile, trying to reassure her. ‘We’ll find your daughter.’
68
Tom, driving Kellie’s Espace slowly north out of Brighton, holding his mobile phone in his hand, was shaking. The road was quiet, just occasional headlights coming the other way and, from time to time, lights appearing in his mirror, then passing him.
Indistinct thoughts flitted in and out of his mind, like the shadows made by his headlights. His whole body was clenched tight. He leaned forward, peering through the windscreen, shooting nervous, darting glances into the mirror, fear riddling his stomach.
Oh my God. My darling, where are you?
He did not know what he was doing here or what to expect. His brain felt locked; he was unable to think out of this box, unable to think beyond those words on his computer screen.
He had visions of the girl, Janie Stretton, in her room being butchered by the hooded man with the stiletto blade. But it wasn’t Janie Stretton now, it was Kellie.
He couldn’t imagine where Kellie was nor what was going through her mind. He just had to get to her, whatever it took, whatever it cost.
Money. That’s what they would want, he suspected hazily. They had kidnapped Kellie and now they wanted money. And they would have to believe him when he told them he did not have very much, but he would give them everything he had in the world. Everything.
A road sign loomed up. cowfold. haywards heath.
Suddenly the display on his mobile lit up and it began ringing:
Private number calling
Nervously, he pressed the answer key. ‘Hello?’
‘Mr Bryce?’
It was DS Branson. Shit. He killed the call.
Moments later there was the double beep of a message waiting.
He played it. It was DS Branson, for the third time, asking him to phone him back.
Kellie, my darling, for God’s sake call me!
Headlights loomed in his mirror. Although he was only doing forty on a dual carriageway, this time they stayed behind him, right on his tail. He dropped his speed to thirty. Still the headlights stayed behind him. His throat tightened.
His phone rang again. On the caller display was a number he did not recognize. He answered, a cautious, shaky, ‘Hello?’
A male voice in a guttural eastern European accent said, ‘Mr Bryce, how are you doing?’
‘Who – who are you?’ he said. The lights were right behind him, dazzling him.
‘Your wife would like to see you.’
Finding it hard to see the road ahead, he said, ‘Is she OK? Where is she?’
‘She’s fine, she’s great. She is looking forward to seeing you.’
‘Who are you?’
‘There is a lay-by coming up in half a mile. Pull into it and turn your engine off. Stay in your car and do not turn round.’ The phone went dead.