Screen of Deceit (17 page)

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Authors: Nick Oldham

BOOK: Screen of Deceit
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Christie shook his head and glanced at his watch, frowning. ‘He'll be getting out just about now, I guess. He'll be back on the streets soon, after having admitted nothing in interview.'

‘Why?' Mark demanded, as though Christie was stupid.

‘Because there's a difference between suspecting something and knowing it and proving it. There's no evidence against him as regards Beth.'

‘What about dealing on the streets?'

‘He's caught bang-to-rights, there, but because we have to have the powder found on him analyzed, which takes time, and because he's a juvenile, he gets released. He'll get reported and be at court sometime in the future, who knows when?'

‘So he just carries on like before?' Mark said, aghast. ‘Then he goes to court and gets a slap on the wrist?'

‘Something like that,' Christie agreed blandly. He was watching Mark intently, weighing him up, judging him. ‘Unless …' he added mysteriously.

‘Unless what?' Mark asked uncomfortably.

Christie rotated his jaw, squinted thoughtfully, then asked, ‘Who's the Crackman?'

‘Like I said, I don't know. Look, you're talking in riddles – what the fuck do you want with me?' he hissed.

Christie ignored him. ‘If you don't actually know who this Crackman is, who do you suspect he is?'

Mark sighed. His body deflated and, as though he was reciting something boring for a teacher, said, ‘I don't know who the Crackman is, OK? All I know is that it's some mysterious guy, some big-time drugs dealer who controls all the drugs sold on Shoreside, and maybe other places, dunno. He's got a network of people who sell for him and as far as I know, none of them even know who he is. That's it, OK?'

‘But no name?'

Mark shook his head. ‘Could be Troy Costain, possibly,' he ruminated. Costain was one of Shoreside's biggest criminals, one Christie knew well. ‘He's a dealer – and everything else, thief, handler …'

Christie nodded sagely. ‘And you think Jonny Sparks is one of this Crackman's dealers, whoever he might turn out to be?'

‘Pretty sure. Look, come clean with me, eh? I basically know nothing. I don't do drugs, don't go anywhere near them, I don't mix with people who do. I don't steal – well, with the exception of sandwiches – and I go to school every day. Eventually I want to get out of this town, get a decent job somewhere, maybe like Jack … and that's me. Beth got involved with the wrong crowd and paid the price. It happens. I hardly ever see Mum, who sleeps with just about every guy who gives her a wink, and I'm me. I try to be good. I try my best.'

‘Yeah, I really think you do.'

Mark slurped his Coke, stunned he had revealed so much about himself so quickly to a complete stranger – and a cop at that! Must be going soft in the head, he chided himself, although it actually felt quite good to get that off his chest.

‘All right, Mark, you've been open with me, so it's time for me to tell you where I'm coming from.'

‘This should be fun.'

‘Shut it, smart arse,' Christie said with a grin. ‘The Crackman exists,' he began after a breath. ‘I don't know who he is or where he operates from, though I have some suspicions. It could be Costain, but then again it might not be. Whoever it is, we've been after him for about two years now. He plays his cards very close to his chest, is very careful. He never meets his dealers face to face. As far as I know he operates by dropping off and picking up drugs and cash through various secret locations, like spies used to do with hard copy information and payments in the old days.'

‘Dead letterboxes, you mean?'

‘Exactly – how do you know about them?'

‘I've read John Le Carré.'

‘I'm impressed.'

‘Don't be – carry on.'

‘One dealer who tried to unmask him came a cropper … six months down the line he's still recovering, but says he doesn't know who the Crackman is – or won't tell. You want to deal with the Crackman, you do it on his terms and don't step out of line – apparently.'

‘So nobody knows who he is?'

‘Some people do, obviously. And there's some talk of a turf war bubbling. You know what a turf war is?'

‘Oh, please!'

‘Some dealers are stepping on each other's toes, and the Crackman is involved – but our intel isn't good.' Christie took a sip of the coffee he'd acquired while Mark was in the bathroom and grimaced. ‘I know Sparks, had a few run-ins with the little runt, and I'm pretty sure he is one of the Crackman's dealers, too.'

‘And?' Mark waited.

‘Ultimately the Crackman is the person who is responsible for Beth's death.'

‘Even I worked that one out,' Mark said stonily.

‘And I've worked out that you want to find out who killed her, hence the little fisticuffs with Sparks. Am I right?' Mark said nothing, but kept his eyes firmly on Christie. ‘Not the ideal way of getting a result, if you ask me.'

‘No one is.'

‘You,' Christie said with a sharp jab of the finger, ‘are the closest I've come to nailing the Crackman, which must tell you something.'

‘That you're crap at your job?'

Christie scowled, but did not rise to the jibe. ‘No, what it says is that he is very difficult to nail.'

‘But I don't know him.'

‘True.'

‘So what are you getting at?' Mark demanded angrily. ‘Stop piss-balling me about and tell me.' He had pretty much reached the end of his tether with the cops, and this one in particular. It was about time he came to the point of this conversation, at which moment Mark would tell him where to get off and stick it where the sun don't shine.

Christie clasped his hands on the table in front of him.

‘We both want the same thing. You for personal reasons; me for professional. You want justice for Bethany; I want justice to hammer down on the Crackman. The two desires are closely interlinked.' He raised his clasped hands, fingers intertwined with each other. ‘Like this.'

‘You're wrong, actually. I don't want justice, I want revenge.' Mark glowered coldly at the DCI.

‘Here'll do.'

Christie stopped the car on the road that circled Shoreside. Mark had no wish to be seen being dropped off by the police outside his house, even if it was a plain car. Everybody knew cop cars on the estate, marked or unmarked. He opened the passenger door and swung out his legs. Christie clamped a hand on his shoulder. Mark looked back.

‘Think about it. I'll get your bike dropped off,' he said.

Mark gave a quick nod. Christie removed his hand and the young man climbed out and began walking away, no backward glance at the copper, nothing to show he was remotely interested in the proposal which had just been made to him. He just knew that Christie's hard-edged eyes were burning two holes in his shoulder blades.

With a fixed expression, Mark strode home in five minutes.

Home: the empty house. The rooms echoed.

He entered the kitchen. It was back to normal now, after he and Jack had cleaned it up. He gulped, cleared his mind, crossed the floor where Beth's body had lain and, realizing he was now famished beyond belief, heated up a big can of spag bol and put four slices of slightly stale bread through the toaster. With a glass of Vimto, he retreated with his feast up to his room and scoffed until he felt he was bursting. Then, belly full like a lazy lion, he lay on his bed and thought about Henry Christie and their conversation …

‘I can't talk in great detail until I know you're up for it and can be trusted,' Christie had explained.

‘Up for what?' Mark said guardedly.

‘Playing a part … setting a scene … pulling a scam, sort of …'

‘I don't follow.'

‘OK … I think you've been deeply affected by your sister's death—'

‘Yeah, so what?' Mark snapped irritably. ‘I think we've covered that, don't you?'

They were on the beach, walking side by side, out of earshot of anyone.

‘Hear me out … you are so devastated that you start going downhill. The clean-livin', good citizen Mark Carter goes right off the rails, which you might already have started to do' – Mark opened his mouth to protest. Christie held up a silencing hand – ‘Shush … you've stolen from a shop, you've publicly assaulted someone, you've been arrested, you're on bail … and these are things that I think should continue. You need to get arrested a couple more times to secure your street credentials, you need to alienate your mates – for a while, anyway – you need to become someone who has lost it, y'know. Become vulnerable and ready to be manipulated … and then you need to gain the confidence of somebody you hate; you need to worm your way into them and use them to discover the true identity of the person who killed Bethany.'

Mark soaked it in. ‘You mean go under cover and set up Jonny?'

‘I mean exactly that. Play it right with him and he'll lead you to the Crackman … not directly, because we know Jonny doesn't actually know who he is … but he has ways of contacting him, as we've discussed, and that leaves a trail. Contact is always a weakness.'

‘What about his mobile phone?' Mark asked. ‘Didn't he have that on him when he got arrested? That would've had the Crackman's number on it, wouldn't it? That would have been a start for you.'

‘Good thinking – except Jonny didn't have a phone on him,' Christie told him. ‘He's pretty savvy like that. He doesn't deal with a phone on him – and neither did Sam or Eric.'

Mark sneered. ‘So are you asking me to be an undercover cop?'

‘Sort of.'

‘And a grass?'

‘Depends on your perspective. Are you a grass or someone out for revenge?'

Laid out on his bed, Mark ran it all through his head repeatedly. It was scary on one hand, exciting on the other. If Mark had two more hands he would have said it repelled him on the third hand and lured him on the fourth.

The thought of helping the police did nothing for him. He had avoided them all of his life and though he didn't dislike them like other kids did, he always knew they were trouble.

But the thought, the possibility, of bringing down Jonny Sparks and the Crackman … well, how challenging was that?

But so very horrendously dangerous.

‘Yeah, it is dangerous territory,' Christie had admitted when Mark put that to him.

‘If Jonny Sparks ever found out I was grassing on him, he'd kill me,' Mark said simply, but with a terrifying casual reality. ‘That's if I ever even got as far as getting him to trust me. One slip, I'd be dead meat.'

‘Always a possibility, which is why you'd have to do things very carefully.'

‘And then the Crackman! Jeez! Even if I got past Jonny, then I slipped up, I'd be sold as burger meat down on the prom.'

‘I'd protect you all the way,' Christie promised. ‘I can't go into detail as to how, but you'd always be covered and this operation wouldn't go on for ever. It'd be time-bound. A few weeks at most. I couldn't ask you to do any longer … less, if possible.'

Very bloody dangerous, Mark thought, lying on his bed, his mind twisting and turning like a rollercoaster on Blackpool's Pleasure Beach. One foot wrong and he'd be hammered at best, or at worse, dead meat, as he'd said, sold between two halves of a sesame seed bap.

‘Thing is,' Christie had said as they headed off the beach towards his car, reading Mark's mind, ‘you cannot tell anyone you've had this conversation, because this conversation hasn't happened. If you want to think about what I've said, the only person you can run it past is yourself. You can't have a chat about it to your brother or your mum or mates, because if you do the whole thing will crumble and I'll just deny it. Even if you decide to help, you still can't tell anyone. You have to understand that.'

Mark thought carefully. ‘How legal is this?'

‘Which bit?'

‘Any of it.'

‘We use kids as test purchasers, buying alcohol and fags from off-licences who sell to minors.'

‘With consent from parents, presumably?'

‘Yep.'

‘But you want me to do this with no consent at all?'

‘Er, yep.'

‘Bit of a step up from buying alcopops to nailing a violent drug dealer, isn't it?'

Christie shrugged unsurely. ‘Yep.'

‘Have you got permission to do this?' Mark asked incisively, seeing that the detective was starting to squirm a little. ‘Y'know, like, from your bosses?'

Christie pulled at his collar. ‘Yeah,' he said unconvincingly.

Mark snorted with disbelief.

‘Look, Mark' – Christie stopped and spun to face him – ‘whilst this is going on, every normal way of trying to ID and arrest the Crackman will also be going on. This is just in addition to everything else, something extra that might or might not work. You'll be protected every inch of the way and because I'm good at doing this sort of thing, there's no way you'll end up in court giving evidence or even having them suspect you were involved in their downfall. If we do it right, that is. Trust me.'

Mark nearly belly-laughed at that. Trust a cop. Think not.

Back on his bed he laughed again, then got up to go to the toilet. On the landing his laughter faded as the emptiness of the house hit him once again. He peed quickly, brushed his teeth and quickly scooted back to his room, slotting the bolt to lock himself in. He stripped, pulled on his night shorts and slid under the duvet, switching off all but the bedside lamp.

‘I wonder if I can do it?' he pondered out loud. ‘I wonder.'

Could he endure living a lie? Was he good enough at lying to pull it off in the first place? Did he have the bottle to wear a wiretap? Christie had mentioned this might be necessary. Then did he have the ability to steer conversations in particular directions without the other person realizing he was doing it? Could he put up with having no friends, making them believe he'd gone bad, even if it was only for a short period of time?

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