Authors: Fiona Barton
Glen said I should start looking for a little job. Outside the area.
I told him I was nervous about facing strangers, but we agreed I needed something to keep me busy. And out of the house.
Glen said he'd go back to the idea of starting his own business. But not driving this time. Something on the internet. Some kind of service.
âEveryone's doing it, Jeanie. Easy money and I've got the skills.'
I wanted to say so many things, but it seemed best to keep quiet.
Our attempt at looking to the future lasted just over a month. I'd begun working Fridays and Saturdays at a big salon in town. Big enough to be anonymous with lots of walk-ins and not too many prying questions. Classier than Hair Today, and the hair products were very expensive. You could tell they cost a fortune because they smelled of almonds. On my work days, I caught the tube up to Bond Street and walked the rest. It felt OK, better than I thought.
Glen stayed at home in front of his screen, âbuilding his empire', as he called it. He was buying and selling stuff on eBay. Car stuff. There were always parcels being delivered and clogging up the hall, but it kept him busy. I helped a bit, wrapping things up and going to the post office for him. We got into a routine.
But neither of us could put the case behind us. I couldn't stop thinking about Bella. My almost little girl. I find myself thinking it should've been us. She should be here with us. Our baby. Sometimes I find myself wishing he had picked her up that day.
But Glen isn't thinking about Bella. He can't put the entrapment behind him. It weighs on his mind. I can see him brooding, working himself up, and every time there's something on the telly about the police, he sits there fuming, saying how they've ruined his life. I've tried to persuade him to let it go, to look to the future, but he doesn't seem to hear me.
He must've made a phone call, because Tom Payne came to see us one Thursday morning to explain about suing the Hampshire Police Force. We'd get compensation for what they'd put Glen through, he said.
âSo they should. I was locked up for months because of their tricks,' Glen said and I went to make some tea.
When I came back, they were working out figures on Tom's big yellow pad. He was always good at numbers, Glen. So clever. When they did the last calculation, Tom said, âI reckon you should get about a quarter of a million,' and Glen whooped like we'd won the Lottery. I wanted to say that we didn't need the money â that I didn't want this dirty money. But I just smiled and went over and held Glen's hand.
It's a long process but it gives Glen a new focus. The eBay parcels stop arriving and instead he sits at the kitchen table with his paperwork, reading reports and crossing stuff out, highlighting other bits with new coloured pens, punching holes in documents and filing them in his different folders. Sometimes he reads a bit out to me, to see what I think.
âThe effect of the case and the stigma attached to it means that Mr Taylor now suffers frequent panic attacks when he leaves the house.'
âDo you?' I ask. I hadn't noticed. Not like my mum's panic attacks, anyway.
âWell, I feel churned up inside,' he says. âDo you think they'll want a doctor's note?'
We don't go out much anyway. Just to the shops and once to the pictures. We tend to go very early and shop in big, anonymous supermarkets where you don't have to talk to anyone, but he's nearly always recognized. Not surprising really. His picture was in the papers every day when the trial was on and the girls on the tills know it's him. I've said I'll go on my own but he won't hear of it. He won't let me face it alone. He holds my hand and braves it out and I learn to give anyone who dares say a word a look, to shut them up.
It's more difficult when I meet people I know. When they see me, some cross the road, pretend they haven't noticed me. Others want to know everything. I find myself saying the same thing over and over: âWe're fine. We knew the truth would come out â that Glen is innocent. The police have got a lot to answer for.'
Mostly, people seem glad for us, but not all. One of my old clients from the salon said, âHmm. But none of us are completely innocent, are we?'
I told her it had been lovely to see her but I had to get back to help Glen.
âIt'll mean going back to court,' I work myself up to say to him one day. âHaving everything dug up again and gone through. I'm not sureâ'
Glen stands and holds me. âI know it's hard for you, love, but this will be my vindication. This will make sure people know what I went through. What we went through.'
I see the sense in that and try to be more helpful, remembering dates and terrible encounters with people in public to put in his evidence. âRemember that bloke at the cinema? He said he wouldn't sit in the same room as a paedophile. Shouted it and pointed at you.'
Of course Glen remembers. We had to be escorted out of Screen 2 by Security âfor our own safety', the manager said. The bloke kept shouting, âWhat about Bella?' and the woman with him was trying to make him sit down.
I wanted to say something â that my husband was innocent â but Glen gripped my arm and said, âDon't, Jean. It'll make it worse. He's just some nutter.'
He doesn't like remembering this but he writes it down in his statement. âThanks, love,' he says.
The police resist the compensation claim â Tom says they have to because it is taxpayers' money they will have to pay out â until the very last minute. I'm getting dressed in my court outfit when Glen, already in his good suit and shoes, gets a call from Tom.
âIt's over, Jeanie,' he shouts up the stairs. âThey've paid up. Quarter of a million.'
The papers and Dawn Elliott call it blood money, made on the back of her little girl. The reporters write horrible things about Glen again and they are back outside. I want to say âI told you so,' but what good would that do?
Glen goes quiet again and I pack in the job before they can let me go.
Back to where we started.
A
FTER THE TRIAL
collapsed, there was a different kind of sadness for Bob Sparkes. And anger. Mostly directed at himself. He'd allowed himself to be seduced into this disastrous strategy.
What had he been thinking? He'd heard one of the senior officers describe him as a âglory hunter' as he passed an open door on the top floor and he'd cringed. He thought he'd been thinking of Bella, but perhaps it was all about him.
âAnyway, it's not glory I'm covered in,' he told himself.
The report that finally emerged, five months after the end of the trial, was written in the sanitized language of such documents, concluding that the decision to use an undercover officer to obtain evidence against the suspect was âtaken on the basis of expert opinion and extensive consultation with senior officers, but the strategy was ultimately flawed due to the lack of proper supervision of an inexperienced officer.'
âWe screwed up' was the bottom line, Sparkes told Eileen on the phone after a terse meeting with his chief constable.
The next day, he was named and shamed along with his bosses in the papers as one of the âTop Cops' who had âwrecked' the Bella case. There were calls from politicians and punters for âheads to roll'; Sparkes kept his head down as the clichés were trotted out and tried to prepare himself for life after coppering.
Eileen seemed almost pleased at the thought of him leaving the force; she suggested security work, something corporate. She means something clean, he thought. His kids were brilliant, ringing most days to urge him on and make him smile with bits of their news, but he couldn't look much beyond the end of each day.
He started running again, remembering the release it had given him as a young father, letting the rhythm of his pounding feet fill his mind for at least an hour. But he returned home grey-faced and sweating, his fifty-year-old knees killing him. Eileen said he had to stop; it was making him ill. That and everything else.
In the end, his disciplinary hearing was a civilized affair with questions posed politely but firmly. They already knew all the answers, but procedures had to be followed. He was put on gardening leave while he waited for the outcome and was still in his pyjamas when he took the call from his union representative; the force had decided to place the blame higher up and he would have a reprimand on his record but he wouldn't be sacked. He didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
Eileen cried and hugged him hard. âOh Bob, it's all over,' she said. âThank God they saw sense.'
The next day he went back to work, assigned different duties.
'A fresh start for us all,' DCI Chloe Wellington, newly promoted to fill the disgraced Brakespeare's chair, told him as part of some sort of re-education interview. âI know it is tempting, but leave Glen Taylor to someone else. You can't go back to it, not after all this publicity. It would look like victimization and any new lines would be tainted by that.'
And Sparkes nodded, talking convincingly about the new cases on his desk, budgets, rosters and a bit of office gossip. But as he walked back to his office, Glen Taylor was top of his list; he was the only name on his list.
Matthews was waiting for him and they closed the door to talk tactics.
âThey'll be watching us, Boss, to make sure we don't go anywhere near him. They've brought in a senior detective from Basingstoke to review and plan the next steps for the Bella Elliott case â a woman, but a good bloke. Jude Downing. Do you know her?'
DI Jude Downing tapped on Sparkes' door that afternoon and suggested a coffee. Slim and red-haired, she sat opposite him in a café down the road â âCanteen is a bit of a bear pit,' she said. âLet's get a latte,' â and waited.
âHe's still out there, Jude,' Sparkes said finally.
âWhat about Bella?'
âI don't know, Jude. I'm haunted by her.'
âDoes that mean she's dead?' she asked and he didn't know how to answer. When he was thinking like a copper, he knew she was dead. But he could not let her go.
Dawn was still interviewed on slow news days, her childlike face staring accusingly out of the pages. He had continued to ring her every week or so. âNo news, Dawn, just checking in,' he would say. âHow are things?' and she would tell him. She had met a man she liked through the Find Bella campaign and was managing to get through the days.
âThere are three of us in this marriage,' Eileen said once and laughed that dry, fake laugh she reserved for punishing him. He hadn't risen to it, but he stopped mentioning the case at home and promised to finish painting their bedroom.
Jude Downing told him she was looking at every piece of evidence to see if anything had been missed. âWe've all been there, Bob. You can get so close to a case like this, you can't see clearly any more. It's not a criticism, just how it is.'
Sparkes stared into the froth on his coffee. They had dusted a chocolate heart on it. âYou're right, Jude. Fresh eyes needed, but I can help you.'
âBest if you step back for the moment, Bob. No offence, but we need to start from the beginning again and follow our own leads.'
âOK. Thanks for the coffee. Better get back.'
Eileen listened patiently later as she poured him a beer and he vented his rage. âLet her get on with it, love. You are giving yourself an ulcer. Do the breathing exercises the doctor gave you.' He sipped his beer and practised the feeling of letting things go, but it just felt like letting things slip away from him.
He tried to immerse himself in his new cases but it was surface activity. A month later, Ian Matthews announced his move to another force. âNeeded a change, Bob,' he said. âWe all do.'
Ian Matthews' farewell bash was a classic. Speeches from the grown-ups, then a drink-fuelled orgy of hideous anecdotes and maudlin reminiscences about crimes solved. âEnd of an era, Ian,' Sparkes told him as he released himself from the sergeant's beery hug. âYou've been brilliant.'
He was the last man standing, he told himself. Apart from Glen Taylor.
His new sergeant arrived, a thirty-five-year-old, frighteningly clever girl â âWoman, Bob,' Eileen had corrected him. âGirls have pigtails.'
She didn't have pigtails. She wore her glossy brown hair up in a tight bun, the tension on the fine hairs at her temples causing her skin to pucker. She was a sturdy young woman with a degree and a career path apparently tattooed on the inside of her eyelids.
DS Zara Salmond â Mum must have a thing about royalty, he'd thought â had transferred from Vice and was there to make his life easier, she said, and began.
Cases ebbed and flowed through his door â a teenage drug death, a run of high-end robberies, a nightclub stabbing â and he waded through them, but nothing could wrest his attention from the man who shared his office.
Glen Taylor, grinning like a monkey outside the Old Bailey, glimmered on the periphery of his day. âHe's here somewhere,' became his mantra as he quietly pored over every police report from the day Bella disappeared, wearing away the letters on his keyboard.
Sparkes heard on the canteen grapevine when they hauled Lee Chambers back in to have another look at him. He'd done his three months for the indecent exposure, lost his job and had to move, but, apparently, had lost none of his front.
Chambers apparently wriggled in his chair, protesting his innocence, but told them more about his trade in porn, including his opening hours and regular haunts, in return for immunity from further prosecution.
âOne to watch' was the verdict from the new team, but they didn't believe he was their bloke. They spat him back out, but his information gave the service-station search a new focus and the CCTV finally yielded some of Chambers' customers. Sparkes waited to hear if Glen Taylor was among them. âNo sign, Sir,' Salmond told him. âBut they're still looking.'