Authors: Mark Timlin
3
So that's the way it was that morning. Just another morning as far as I was concerned. Until the telephone rang and everything changed, just like it always seems to.
I leant over and picked up the receiver. âYeah?' I said.
âMr Sharman?' I didn't recognise the voice.
âYeah,' I said again.
âIt's Frank Grant here.'
I didn't recognise the name either. âYeah,' I said for the third time.
There was a long pause as if the name alone should have meant something to me. âFrank Grant. You remember.'
âNo.' I didn't even bother to think about it.
âFrank Grant,' he repeated, almost like a mantra. Or as if maybe it was the last thing in the world that he was sure of.
I was getting tired of guessing games. âListen, Frank Grant,' I said, âI've got a lousy hangover and I'm tired. I'm sure I should know you, but I don't. So give me a clue, or get lost.'
âYou used to call me “Sailor” Grant.'
And that's when I dropped the phone. It bounced off my chest, and I grabbed for it, catching it before it hit the carpet.
â
Sailor Grant
,' I said.
âThat's right. Do you remember now?'
I would have thought it was bloody obvious that I did.
âYes,' I replied. âHow did you get this number?'
âI asked around. You haven't moved far.'
I had, but I came back.
âWhere are you?' I asked.
âClose.'
That was what I was afraid of.
âIt's been a long time,' I said.
âTwelve years I've been inside. I'm out now on licence.'
Twelve years, I thought. Could it really be that long? Longer really, what with the trial and all. But of course it could. Where did it all go?
âWhat do you want?' I asked.
âI want to see you.'
Dream on, I thought.
âI don't think so,' I said.
âYou know I didn't do it, Mr Sharman. You were the only one who believed me.'
I didn't want to remember.
Another pause lengthened down the telephone line as he waited for a reply.
When I didn't make one, he spoke again. Pleading this time.
âPlease, Mr Sharman. It isn't too late to put it right. I need to see you.'
âNo, Sailor,' I said. âPerhaps you do, but I really don't want to see
you
. It was all too long ago.'
â
Please
, Mr Sharman.' He was sounding desperate by then.
âNot in this life, son,' I said, put down the phone, and reached over and pulled the plug out of the wall. I took another mouthful of beer, laid my head back on a cushion, and let my mind float back twelve years.
4
Detective Constable Sharman. First day attached to CID at Brixton nick with the new rank, on transfer from Kennington. Mid-twenties with his whole life in front of him. The sky was the limit. Who knew where he might end up? Commissioner maybe.
It was not to be, of course. DC was the highest rank I ever attained.
But then. Oh, then.
Young. Fit. Newly married. First mortgage on a flat in Streatham, and a baby soon. My wife just had
that
feeling. In love forever, with no one else but her. But forever is a very long time.
I was driving a second-hand Cortina then. One careful lady owner who only used it on Sunday to drive to church. You know the deal. âYou're a police officer, sir?' said the salesman. âOur favourite kind of customer. Of
course
we'll come down a couple of hundred quid on the asking price. A free service and a tankful of petrol? No problem. And listen. If you hear of any nice motors coming up for auction through the Met, let us know. We'll make sure you don't lose by it.'
That's how it starts. And you end up taking backhanders for looking the other way, and eventually commit grand larceny.
But that morning, all of that was yet to come.
I arrived at eight-thirty sharp. New suit. Clean white shirt neatly ironed by the loving wife. Tie done up tight, and black lace-up shoes polished brightly.
I reported to the detective inspector. He seemed about as interested in me as I was in nuclear physics, and sent me to introduce myself to the detective sergeant. If anything he was even less interested, and told me to go to the canteen to find another DC to talk to. He was eating double egg, sausage, beans, tinned tomatoes, chips and a fried slice. If anything he was the least interested of the lot. He sneered at my suit and made me buy him a cup of tea.
When he'd finished his breakfast, he looked at his watch. âI'll show you round the manor when I've had my tea,' he said. âI know a boozer that needs checking out. Guv'nor should be bottling up in a few minutes. He'll be glad to buy us a pint or two.'
The DC took out an unmarked car that stank of last night's Chinese takeout, and we drove through the back streets of Brixton to a little pub close to a council estate. The draymen were delivering, and we walked round the back, through a door and into the saloon bar. There was a dour-looking geezer behind the bar, leaning on the counter drinking a cup of coffee. As soon as he saw us he took down two pint glasses. âLenny,' he said, by way of greeting.
The DC's name was Leonard Millar, with an âa'.
âTom,' said Lenny. âThis fashion plate is Nick Sharman. Detective constable of this parish. He's the replacement for Sammy Plant. You'll be seeing something of him over the foreseeable future, I have no doubt.'
âA pleasure,' said Tom, and stuck out his mitten.
I took it and shook it, and agreed that indeed it was a pleasure.
âWhat's your poison, Nick? Don't mind if I call you that?' said Tom.
âNo,' I replied. âA pint of lager would be good.'
I wasn't
that
used to drinking so early, but I'd soon learn.
Tom pulled two pints, and Lenny and I dragged a pair of stools up to the bar. Lenny said, âWhat kind of weekend did you have, Tom?'
âQuiet,' replied Tom.
âAnything known about that blag at Safeways last week?'
âNot a word, Lenny.'
âIf you hear anything â no matter what.'
âYou'll be the first to know.'
âGood,' said Lenny, and turned to me. He was about thirty-five. Going to seed fast. Too many early-morning fry-ups, followed by a few pints probably. He was shorter than me, and fat, with a chin that almost hid the knot of his greasy tie. âGot any fags, Nick?' he asked.
I took out a packet of Silk Cut and put them on the bar. They helped themselves. I took one myself, and Tom lit all three with an ancient Ronson petrol lighter.
Just then the draymen came in, and Tom busied himself pulling them a pint of best bitter each. Lenny sank half his lager with one swallow and said, âGood bloke, Tom. Well worth cultivating. Knows a lot of what goes on round here. Treat him right and he'll do the same to you. This place never closes.'
âDon't the punters know he's on our side?'
âThey know we come in here. But if the punters stayed out of every pub in Brixton that makes us welcome, most would have been out of business years ago. No. It's a game, Nick. You must know that. You've been in the job long enough. We protect our sources, and they protect us. We don't take liberties. Nothing's ever said. If the info doesn't pan out, we don't come back with baseball bats. That's not the way it works. Learn that, and you'll not go far wrong.'
The pair of us sat in the bar until opening time, and through till the three o'clock bell went, and Lenny told me something about the DS and the DI I'd be working with. I was getting well pissed by then, and hadn't had to put my hand in my pocket once. I was beginning to wonder when we'd do some real work, when Lenny said, âTime-to-go time, son. Don't think it's going to be like this every day. The DS told me to break you in gentle. I think we'll get back to the factory and see what's occurred whilst we've been enjoying a nice drink in here.'
âSuits me,' I said.
âYou drive,' said Lenny. âYou're more pissed than me.'
So I did.
5
When we got back to the station, the balloon had gone up. A balloon that wouldn't land again for another twelve years or more.
The DI was standing in the CID office, with the DS who'd sent me to see Lenny Millar. The inspector's name was Paul Grisham. The sergeant's, Collier. Terry Collier.
âWhere have you two been?' demanded Grisham.
âI've been showing Sharman round the plot,' said Lenny.
âRound the pubs more like,' replied Grisham. âSharman, you look pissed.' He wasn't a detective inspector for nothing.
âA girl's been raped,' Grisham went on. âBehind some lockup garages at the back of the town hall. It's a bad one. She's been pretty badly knocked about.'
âHow badly?' asked Lenny.
âBadly enough. She's still unconscious. They don't know if she'll live.'
âWhen?' asked Lenny.
âAn hour or so ago. When you were on your fifth pint.'
I was beginning to wonder if the man had us bugged.
âDo we know who she was?' Lenny again.
âNo. Not yet. I've got two DCs and the uniforms out searching the area to see what they can find. She had no ID on her.'
âNo bag?' I asked.
Grisham's eyes moved to me. âOh, it speaks,' he said. âNo. No bag.'
âAnyone in the frame?' asked Lenny.
âNo,' Grisham said. âNot yet.'
Collier got into the act. âYou two,' he said to Lenny and me, âget out and have a drive round. See if you can find anyone who fits the bill. And stay out of the pubs.'
âYes, skip,' said Lenny, and the phone rang.
Grisham picked it up, barked his name into the receiver and listened. âChrist,' he said. âAre you sure?'
He listened again.
âHas anybody told him?'
He was silent for another moment.
âJesus,' he said. âWhy on our ground? OK. I'll make sure he's informed.'
He put down the phone, and stood for a moment, before turning to face the three of us again.
âThe girl who was raped. She's been identified. Her name's Carol Harvey.'
No one said a word.
âShe's the daughter of a certain DI Harvey who's stationed down in Purley. And if that's not bad enough, she's also the niece of our own dear detective superintendent, Alan Byrne. And she's only fourteen, poor cow.'
âChrist!' said Collier. âAre you sure?'
âYes I am,' replied Grisham. âHer face is pretty well knocked about, but one of the WPCs down at the hospital recognised her. She's been here to see her uncle a few times.'
âAnd Mr Byrne doesn't know?' asked Collier.
âIt's my pleasant duty to inform him,' said Grisham.
Then he noticed me and Lenny, still standing there listening.
âWhat are you two doing?' he shouted. âYou've got a job to do. Get out and do it. I want a result on this yesterday.'
6
Lenny and I went back to the car, and he drove slowly round Brixton. I was feeling lousy, and wanted another drink, but I knew that would have to wait.
He spotted Sailor Grant outside a fish shop, eating chips out of a bag.
âSailor,' said Lenny.
âWho?'
âThe little shithead there, eating his supper.'
I looked at the man that Lenny had pointed out. He was about thirty-five. Short, thin, and shifty looking. His hair was blond and lank and lay close to his head. His face was as vacant as an empty shop. He was wearing jeans a size too big, and a jacket a size too small.
Lovely, I thought. As upstanding a citizen as I'd seen in a long time. This geezer was a pull waiting to happen, and we were ready to oblige.
âWho is he?' I asked.
âSailor Grant. Used to be in the Merchant Navy till they threw him out for conduct unbecoming. A right nasty little scrote.'
âWhat does he do?'
âTakes his cock out in front of little kids mostly. Hangs around the schools. You know the type. He's scared to show it to a grown woman in case she'd tear it off and stuff it down his throat. I've nicked him half a dozen times myself.'
âDoes he do more than flash?'
âNot so far. But there's always a first time.'
âCarol Harvey'd be a bit old for him, wouldn't she? If he's into young kids. Nonces are like leopards, they rarely change their spots.'
âShe's only fourteen, Grisham said. And we don't know how big she is. She might be right up Sailor's alley. Or maybe he thought it was time to progress to bigger and better things.'
By then, Sailor had turned and was walking along the road, still eating his chips, and we were shadowing him on the other side of the road. He didn't seem to be in any hurry to get anywhere.
âGonna give him a tug?' I asked.
âSure we are.'
Lenny waited for a gap in the traffic and steered the car across the road, and let down his window. âHello, Sailor,' he said, and the way he said it didn't sound in the least bit funny. âGot a chip for me?'
Sailor Grant almost dropped the greasy package he was holding.
âHello, Mr Millar,' he said. âWhat can I do for you?'
âYou been a naughty boy again?'
Sailor's face went white, and I could see that he was trembling at the question and the tone in which it had been put.
âNo, guv. Honest.'
âYou haven't got an honest bone in your body,' said Lenny.
He stopped the car and got out. He took the bag of chips from Sailor's hand, and dropped them into an overflowing litter bin where a few slid out of their container, and joined the rest of the rubbish on the pavement.
âGet in,' said Lenny. âWe'll give you a lift.'
âIt's all right, guv. I can walk, honest.'
Lenny grabbed him by the upper arm, opened the back door of the car, thrust Sailor into the back seat, and slid in after him. âYou drive, Nick,' he said. âI'll keep our friend company in the back here. By the way, Sailor, this is DC Sharman. Remember his face. It's for sure he'll remember yours.'
I moved over to the driving seat, put the car into gear and pulled away.
âWhere to?' I asked.
âJust drive.'
This was all years before the Police and Criminal Evidence Act. We often used to conduct interviews in the car then. All the better to get a cough from the suspect.
âWhere were you earlier this afternoon?' asked Lenny.
âAbout.'
âAbout where?'
âJust about.'
âWho with?'
âBy myself.'
âSailor doesn't have many friends,' said Lenny to the back of my head. âDo you, Sailor?' he said to our prisoner, if you could call him that.
âI've got friends.'
âAre they all horrible little nonces like you? Or do you count the little kids you frighten with your willy?'
Sailor didn't reply.
âA young girl was raped earlier today,' said Lenny. âRound the back of the town hall. Did you get up that way at all this afternoon, Sailor?'
âNo. Honest. I was on the other side.'
âThe other side of what?'
âBrixton. I was up Stockwell way.'
âHandy that,' said Lenny.
I pulled the car into the kerb, set the handbrake, and turned to face the back of the car.
âDid you touch the girl?' I asked.
âI don't know no girl,' said Sailor, happy to talk to a new face who might be on his side.
âWe'll get a doctor to examine your privates,' I said. âHe'll be able to tell.'
âI had a bath. I'm clean.'
âYou don't know the meaning of the word,' said Lenny.
âWhen?' I asked.
âWhat?' said Sailor.
âWhen did you have a bath?'
âThis morning.'
âAre you sure?' said Lenny. âSure it wasn't this afternoon, after you screwed her?'
âNo.'
âHave you been wearing those clothes all day?' I asked.
âYeah.'
âWe'll search where you live,' I said. âAnd examine all your clothes. If you're lyingâ¦'
âI'm not. I ain't got that many clothes. The rest's in the laundry.'
âWhen did you put them in?' I asked.
âJust now â' Sailor stopped as the enormity of what he'd said hit him.
âA bath and clean clothes all in one day,' said Lenny. âIs it your birthday, or what?'
âMe clothes were dirty.'
âI bet they were,' said Lenny. âCovered in come stains. Was that it?'
âNo. Just dirty.'
âAre they in the machine now?' I asked.
âYeah. I was going to have my chips and go back and get them.'
âWe'll get them for you,' I said. âOn the way to the station.'
âNo,' protested Sailor. âNot the nick.'
âIt's got to be,' I said. âRight, Lenny?'
âThat's the way it looks to me. You're in dead trouble here, Sailor. The girl was a copper's daughter, and our super's niece.'
Sailor went even paler, as Lenny spoke.
âI neverâ¦' he said, but we weren't listening. I put the car into a U-turn, and headed back to the laundry next to the chip shop. Lenny Millar and Sailor came in with me, and I emptied the machine he'd been using, put his clean clothes into the black plastic sack he'd brought them in, and drove them, him and Lenny to the station.
Lenny and I wheeled Sailor Grant into an interview room at five in the afternoon. We'd called in on the RT and Collier and Grisham were waiting for us. We had our suspect in for questioning, and the fun was just about to begin.