Double Dealing (Detective Sergeant Catherine Bishop Series Book Two)

BOOK: Double Dealing (Detective Sergeant Catherine Bishop Series Book Two)
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Double Dealing

 

 

 

Lisa Hartley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Also by Lisa Hartley:

 

On Laughton Moor
– available in paperback and on Kindle.

 

Double Dealing: A Detective Sergeant Catherine Bishop Novel

This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons either living or dead or to actual events or circumstances is entirely coincidental.

 

Authors note:
Northolme, its residents and its police officers do not exist and although some of the locations used do, they are used here in a purely fictional context. Although Lincolnshire Police is obviously a real organisation, it has no affiliation with this book.

 

All rights reserved.

 

© Lisa Hartley 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cover art designed by paperandsage.com

 

For Tracy

 

 

1

 

 

 

 

Midnight. She was cold, her shivering uncontrollable. She hunched on the filthy carpet, her arms wrapped around her knees, nausea rising in her throat. The two men who had collected her were somewhere in the house, though she hadn’t seen them for a while. They’d given her water and food but had left her alone now in this awful room after showing her where the toilet was, the bowl lined with plastic sheeting. She knew only too well what they were waiting for. Blinking tears from her eyes, she wished she had never agreed to this. It had been terrifying, from the moment she’d said she would do it to arriving here, grubby, humiliated and longing to be at home. Her stomach was bloated and felt enormous. She shifted her weight, trying to find a position that was a little more comfortable but it was impossible. Sniffing again, she wiped the tears away with the back of her hand. It would be worth it. She was so nearly there now, and then it would be okay. It would be over and she could go home. Trying to relax, to allow nature to take its course, she stretched out her legs. There was a buzzing sound in her head, louder and louder, and she raised a trembling hand, trying to swat the noise away as if it were an annoying house fly. It didn’t work. The sound grew louder. She moaned a little, swiping at her ears with her hands.

  There was a sudden explosion of colour behind her eyes, a kaleidoscope of reds, greens and blues; every shade she’d seen before and some she’d never dreamed of. She felt ill and disorientated, her mind reeling, every sense overwhelmed in a second. Glancing around, she blinked, trying to make sense of what she saw. There were faces, thousands of them, screaming, taunting and mocking. White light blinded her as she tried in vain to stay still. She knew she was falling forward but couldn’t stop herself. She didn’t want her face to make contact with the carpet but there was no way to prevent it happening. The light faded to black and she vomited. Her limbs twitched a few times and then there was nothing.

2

 

 

 

 

They climbed aboard the bus that would take them over to where the plane stood waiting. Thousands of stars danced in the dark skies above them, the moon bright and the air still warm at ten fifteen in the evening. Catherine Bishop turned to her companion as the driver started the engine and the packed bus began to move.

  ‘I think we should come back as soon as we can.’

Thomas laughed.

  ‘How do you think I’m going to be able to afford that? It’d be great, I just need a spare grand or so.’

  As they settled into their seats, Catherine sighed in contentment.

  ‘I love sitting by the window.’

  ‘I know you do, you big kid. It’s going to be a long flight home in the dark though.’

  ‘You’ll be all right, you’ll sleep.’ Catherine wriggled until she was comfortable, then adjusted her seatbelt and fastened it. Thomas stowed their rucksacks in the overhead compartment before taking his own seat.

  ‘I’m so glad we came,’ he said.

‘Egypt is top of my list of favourite holidays.’

  ‘I’ll have to see how it goes, but I’d love to come back. Maybe in the summer? It would be good to have another holiday to look forward to, time to relax.’

Catherine settled back as the safety video began to play on the monitors.

 

 

 

  Catherine’s eyes opened when Thomas nudged her arm. The lights in the cabin were dimmed and the only sound was the noise of the plane’s engines.

  ‘Look,’ he whispered, pointing towards the window.

Catherine sat up straighter, squinting. As she watched, there was a second’s flash of white, lighting the sky below them.

  ‘What is it?’

  ‘Lightning. We’re flying above a storm.’ Thomas leant closer, angling his mobile phone towards the window to capture a photograph of the display, like fireworks that were being lit just for them. Catherine watched in awe as the blackness below was illuminated every few seconds. Thomas was right. The holiday had been a great idea.

 

 

 

  She awoke with a jolt as the main lights came back on and the cabin crew manager began her final announcement: ‘Welcome to East Midlands Airport, where the outside temperature is three degrees . . .’

‘Ugh, no,’ Catherine groaned. She stood up and collected her phone and book from the seat pocket in front of her. ‘I’d just got used to it being at least twenty every day.’

‘Back to the real world now,’ Thomas said, leading the way down the aisle.

A world without Claire,
Catherine thought as she followed her brother.

3

 

 

 

 

Footsteps on the floorboards outside, though she couldn’t hear them. A cough.

  ‘You all right in there?’

There was a pause, then a head appeared around the door, baseball cap pulled low over the brow.

  ‘Oh shit.’ He stepped over to her, bending closer, then raising his voice. ‘You need to come in here.’

The other man stomped up the stairs.

  ‘What’s wrong with you? You want everyone in town to hear?’

He caught sight of the lifeless body slumped on the filthy floor. Middle-aged and wiry, he wrinkled his nose at the smell that filled the room. The younger man was almost wringing his hands.

  ‘What are we going to do? She’s dead, how can she be? The boss is going to kill us, you know how much that stuff is worth? Not to mention we’ve now got a dead body to sort out. God, she’s been a nightmare from the start, whinging and whining, then we had to rearrange getting her home . . . ’

  ‘You can’t blame her for that, it was just bad timing. Look, calm down, will you? Are you sure she’s dead?’

  ‘I’m not touching her, it looks like she is to me.’

Squatting over the woman on the floor, the older man felt for a pulse in her neck.

  ‘She’s gone all right.’

  ‘So what do we do?’

  ‘I’ll show you.’

Taking a closed knife from his pocket, he exposed the blade and brandished it at his companion, who backed away, shuddering.

  ‘You’re not seriously going to . . .’

  ‘No. You are.’

 

4

 

 

 

 

Opening his eyes, Mark Cook felt the enormity of his hangover, groaned and closed them again. As he swallowed, the lingering taste of alcohol and kebab meat almost made him retch. He reached out, fumbling on the bedside table to see if he’d remembered to bring a glass of water to bed with him. No such luck. His mouth was parched and his head pounded. Groaning again, he managed to sit up as rain began pattering the window. The room was dull, the half-drawn curtains blocking what little light there was outside. He leant over the bed, his stomach protesting, a vague memory of dropping his phone on the carpet flitting through his mind. Blinking at the screen, he checked the time: eight thirty-seven am. Lauren would have gone to work. Then he blinked, his stomach tightening as he remembered.

  His wife wouldn’t be at work today.

  He stood, head still thumping, and made his way downstairs, downing half a pint of water as soon as he reached the kitchen. He hadn’t wanted to come into the room, not with the smell and the lingering accusations, but he had to. He couldn’t put it off any longer. As he turned to put the empty glass into the sink, it slipped from his grasp, shattering as it hit the tiled floor. With a curse, he bent to pick up the bigger pieces, swearing again when one dug into his thumb. Sucking the droplets of blood from it, he picked his way across the room, avoiding the spatter and mess, to retrieve the dustpan and brush. Wouldn’t do for the cat to get a shard in her paw. He wrapped the fragments in several sheets of newspaper and shoved the lot in the bin. As he turned back, he caught sight of a few droplets of blood on the cupboard handle, more on the floor. Swallowing deeply, nausea climbing his throat, he moved to the sink, took a bucket out from beneath it. He squirted a good measure of bleach inside and turned on the hot tap. Bleach would do the trick. Better not let the cat in.

  He mopped the floor and wiped down the cupboards, then washed the table top and legs and the wooden chairs and work surfaces with a spray cleaner that also contained bleach.

  Adding to the sweet, sickly smell in the room was the cat litter tray, standing in the corner, needing attention. Sighing, he took the roll of black plastic bin bags from under the sink and emptied the mess into it, his stomach heaving again in protest as he did so. He also removed the head of the mop and dropped it into the bag with the mess from the tray. Nose wrinkling in disgust, he unlocked the back door and dropped the bag onto the path outside, planning to take it as far as the wheeled bin when he was wearing more than a pair of boxer shorts. Another black bin bag that contained his ruined clothes, stained and stinking, sat accusingly beside the back door.

  The cat herself sidled up as he was closing the door and he bent to pick her up before she stood on the bleached floor, then turned to find her sachets of food in the cupboard. He set her down outside with her bowl, closed the door and filled the kettle and stood scrolling through Facebook on his phone while he waited for it to boil. Lauren’s last status was a cheery sentence about how much she was looking forward to the weekend. He set the phone on the worktop, his hand trembling.

  The house was silent, Lauren’s absence echoing through every room. Mark took his mug of coffee through to the living room, avoiding Lauren’s spot in the middle of the sofa and settling in an armchair. He glanced up at the framed wedding photograph on the wall and Lauren stared back at him, her eyes bright with joy and love. His lips tightened as he thought about the last time he’d seen her, her expression disgusted, accusations falling from her lips. His defensiveness, her disbelief.

  His fury.

  Mark went back into the kitchen and picked up his phone. He rang his wife’s number, knowing there was no chance of a reply. Blinking back tears, he typed out a text instead: R U OK? Worried xx

  She wouldn’t answer, but he had to try, to show that he loved her, was thinking of her. It was all he could do now. He had ruined everything. They had been married just three years, having met at school.

  How long should he leave it before he contacted the police?

 

5

 

 

 

 

With some swearing, Catherine Bishop managed to persuade her car into a tiny space between a liveried white van and a moped. She slid out of the driver’s seat, then wriggled through the door in undignified fashion, hoping no one was watching her through the tinted windows. Northolme’s police station was an unattractive building, two storeys of scruffy red bricks and peeling paintwork. It faced the main road through town with the grammar school sprawling opposite. On the patchy grass in front of the building, an elderly man was whistling as his Jack Russell emptied its bowels, a copy of one of the more provocative tabloids nestling under his beige rain-coated arm. Catherine gave him a pointed look as the dog straightened. He tutted, taking an age to remove a small plastic bag from his pocket and start bending towards whatever his dog had left behind. The terrier, no doubt feeling lighter, energetically kicked two tufts of grass into the air and one hit its owner square in the face as he neared the ground. Catherine hid a smile and hurried towards the main entrance, a cascade of swearing from the dog owner following her. She took a deep breath.
This is it then. Come on, you’re absolutely fine,
she told herself.

  The desk sergeant, Rich Smithies, tapped his watch.

  ‘What time do you call this?’

  ‘Half twelve, what time do you call it? We only got home in the early hours,’ Catherine replied. She leant over and helped herself to a sherbet lemon from the bag Smithies was trying to conceal behind a pen pot on the front desk.

  ‘Oi,’ he protested as Catherine flicked the wrapper in the general direction of his bin.

  ‘You need to find a better hiding place than that, Rich,’ she called over her shoulder. ‘Bunch of criminals in here, you know.’

  Through the battered double doors and up the stairs, the worn carpet almost trodden through in places. A landing at the top where a hot drinks machine hummed away to itself. Next to that, another machine selling crisps and sweets and one filled with cold drinks jostled for space.

  There was a canteen down in the bowels of the station, but these machines were quicker for a snack. That the hot drinks machine produced the same mid brown slurry whichever button you pressed was a minor point. Through another set of double doors and into the CID office. Whiteboards, filing cabinets, desks, all looking as if they belonged in a skip rather than a busy police station.

  ‘Afternoon, Sarge.’ Detective Constable Chris Rogers grinned as she walked through the door. ‘Did you miss us?’

  ‘Constantly. Every second was a nightmare.’ She pulled a face at him. ‘Yeah, about as much as you missed me.’

His laughter followed her to her desk. She sat down, the threadbare blue seat creaking in protest. Detective Constable Anna Varcoe appeared in front of her.

  ‘Was that your chair? All-inclusive food for a week . . . ?’

  ‘Funny. You should have seen the cakes though.’

Anna nodded towards the square of work surface that served as their office kitchen. No one trusted the hot drinks machine; one taste of its interchangeable brown watery beverages was definitely enough.

  ‘I bet it was amazing. Tea?’

Catherine switched on her computer and monitor, which took its time to start up, wheezing like an ailing asthmatic.

  ‘Go on then, thanks. What’s been happening?’

Before Anna could reply, the doors at the other end of the office were flung open and Detective Chief Inspector Keith Kendrick strode into the room. He was a big man, well over six feet tall, with a voice to match his stature.

  ‘Detective Sergeant Bishop. We’ve been pining away without you.’ He waggled shaggy eyebrows at her.

  ‘How’s it been here?’ she asked.

Kendrick snorted.

  ‘Let’s go through to my office and I’ll update you. It’s been non-stop thrills, I’ll tell you that much.’

  ‘Really?’ Catherine followed him across the room.

  ‘No, not really. We’ve had Willy Moffatt in the cells for a start.’

Catherine groaned.

  ‘Let me guess - flashing little Willy again?’

He screwed up his face.

  ‘In a nutshell, as it were, yes. He even did a dance this time so it jiggled around a bit. Three old ladies at a bus stop. One had a camera phone that her grandson had given her and took a decent close-up, so he couldn’t really argue.’

They reached Kendrick’s office door and he gestured for Catherine to go inside.

 
‘He never argues, I think he’s quite proud of himself.’

  ‘God knows why,’ Kendrick sniffed, heaving himself into the chair behind his desk. ‘Little Willy is right.’

Catherine smiled at the man who sat in the corner of the office, flicking through a notepad.  ‘There can’t be anyone in town that hasn’t seen it by now,’ she said. ‘Good afternoon, DI Knight.’

Detective Inspector Jonathan Knight smiled, not quite meeting her eyes. ‘You’re looking better, Catherine.’

  ‘I feel it.’

Kendrick leant back in his chair, counting on his fingers as he spoke.

  ‘Ongoing cases: Willy Moffatt – I’ve mentioned him, indecent exposure and generally being a mucky little so and so. The Paul Hughes murder – Jonathan can fill you in on that. A domestic in Harborough Street – husband and wife brawling in the house, took it out into the street and he ended up cracking his head on the pavement. It’s a messy case and we’re trying to charge them both, but he’s still in hospital. The muggings – that started before you went away,’ Catherine nodded. ‘Well, there was another one, got away with a new iPhone and a wallet full of cash this time. Same crap description: slim bloke, hooded top, nasty-looking knife. We’ve got a picture from the CCTV, but it’s useless at best. And the rest . . . well, as I say, ongoing cases.’ He grinned. ‘Bet you’re delighted to be back.’

  ‘Have I been away?’

Kendrick picked up a pen up from his desktop and tapped it against his teeth as he studied her.

  ‘How are you feeling?’ he asked eventually.

Catherine looked away, over at the bedraggled pot plant that sat on the top of a blue metal filing cabinet, then at the blind that was higher at one end than the other. Finally, her gaze to fell to her lap.

  ‘I’m okay, thanks. Better.’

  ‘The Super’s been asking after you too, wanting to know how you’ve been.’

  ‘That’s . . . that’s kind of her.’

Kendrick lowered his voice a little.

  ‘There’s been nothing in the press, by the way. The Pollard case is over, closed. I know you want to come back to work and just get on with it, and I think that’s for the best. The Paul Hughes case is still ongoing, but . . . I told the Super I thought your leave would have done you the world of good.’

  ‘And it has.’ Her voice was firm.

  ‘Good. Well, I’m sure you’ll have a thousand and one lovely emails to catch up on . . .’

Catherine took the hint and got to her feet.

  ‘No doubt. Thank you, sir, for the support when . . . you know.’

Kendrick waved her away, not quite able to hide his smile.

 

 

  Catherine worked through her inbox, reading a few emails and deleting the rest. She didn’t seem to have been missed too much. Picking up her mobile phone, she scrolled through the contacts until she reache
d
‘Claire Weyton’
.
She stared at the screen, knowing she should delete it. Claire was gone. Sipping tea, she brooded. Two uniformed constables who were standing at the other end of the room chatting cast a few glances in her direction. Catherine fought the urge to march up and confront them, but she knew it was futile. She would have to accept the fact that, for a while at least, she would be the talk of the station.

  When she’d finished her tea she dialled the number for the Force Headquarters on the outskirts of Lincoln and asked for DI Foster. After a few clicks, his voice, bluff and belligerent, echoed in her ear.

  ‘DS Bishop? What do you want?’

She hesitated, taken aback by his aggressive tone.

  ‘Good afternoon, sir. I’d like to talk to you about the case we were . . .’

He interrupted with a sound of contempt.

  ‘Would you? Didn’t you do enough damage the first time around?’

  ‘Pardon?’

  ‘You know what I mean. You arsed up months of surveillance.’

She laughed, not quite believing what she was hearing.

  ‘Are you joking? Anyone who was in that house disappeared long before we arrived on the scene.’

  ‘Not the only cock-up you’ve made recently, though that’s not the right phrase to use where you’re concerned, is it?’ Foster gave a nasty laugh and Catherine could hear voices in the background joining in. Her cheeks flushed and she gripped the receiver.

  ‘I just wanted to see if I could help.’

  ‘We don’t want or need your help, Sergeant. Leave it to those who actually know what they’re doing. ’

He slammed down the phone and Catherine was left still holding the receiver to her ear. The venom in Foster’s voice had shocked her, causing a tiny chink in the armour she’d pulled on since Claire’s death. They obviously all knew the full story over at Headquarters. Claire had worked there of course; she had only been in Northolme for a few short weeks as part of another assignment. Catherine felt shaken; Foster’s knowing, mocking tone had uncovered old memories, thoughts and feelings she had thought long buried. Her first few months on the force, keeping her sexuality hidden. Confiding in another new recruit that she had thought she could trust, who had then blabbed to everyone. The comments, the sneers, the looks of pity, some of understanding. No one willing to stick their own neck out enough to sympathise or empathise though. She swallowed, feeling sick. Just when you thought change had happened, that acceptance and equal rights were the norm, a throwaway comment, or unguarded phrase revealed the truth – that some people’s prejudices were still hidden away. Scratch lightly and they would be revealed, sickening and abhorrent, running through them as deeply as bedrock and as eternal as the colour of their eyes.

  What could she do though? It was Foster’s case. She had resolved to keep her head down as much as she could, do her job with a fixed smile, however much it might hurt. Was it worth disrupting that, sabotaging her career, damaging it even more than it had been already?

  She thought back to what she had heard about the ordeal of the young girls in the brothel, the filth they had lived in, the men they had been forced to service week after week, month after month. Stories similar to many she had heard during her career, but still so affecting, so tragic. Girls in their teens, girls whose lives were blighted, ruined. Girls whose days were endured, not enjoyed. Was she betraying them as well? Foster and his team were on the case, she knew that. He was an experienced officer, and who was she to think she could do a better job than he could? She shook her head, furious with herself. Her feelings about the case, about the betrayal and exploitation of the young women involved wouldn’t help them. She had been blinded and had allowed, for the first time in her career, her personal life to infringe on her working hours.

  She had let them down.

  Hating herself, she turned back to her emails.

  ‘Catherine?’ Jonathan Knight was standing in his office doorway, smiling. ‘Could I have a word?’ She got to her feet slowly. ‘Did you speak to DI Foster?’ he asked as she approached. Catherine blushed, her eyes on the grubby carpet tiles.

  ‘I did, but he wasn’t encouraging. It might be best if I leave them to it.’

From her expression Knight surmised that Foster had said a lot more than that, but he didn’t want to push.

  ‘I see.’ He met her eyes for once, seeing the hurt there, the betrayal. It would take time for her to come to terms with what had happened, he knew that. Being the talk of the station, if not the whole force, couldn’t be helping. Catherine cleared her throat.

  ‘How’s the Paul Hughes murder investigation going?’ she asked.

Knight shook his head. ‘Honestly? It’s not. Dead end after dead end. I’m expecting the case to be reassigned, in fact I’m surprised it hasn’t been already. Paul Hughes was a career criminal just like his dad Malc, involved in organised crime and who knows what else. We’re struggling and I don’t think I’ll be given much more time.’

  ‘But you’ve had experience with the Hughes family, you know how they work.’

  ‘That might be part of the problem.’

  ‘How do you mean?’

Knight met her eyes and held them for a few seconds. Having come to a decision, he got up from his chair, stepped across to his office door and closed it. Catherine half-turned in her chair as the DI began to loosen his belt.

  ‘Don’t worry . . .’ Knight’s shirt was untucked now and he was unfastening buttons. He turned his back, pulled his shirt up as high as he could, and Catherine gasped as she saw it. A crude tattoo filled the upper right part of Knight’s back; the rough outline of an eye and the initials ‘MH’. For a moment, Catherine couldn’t speak but eventually she managed to stammer, ‘Malc Hughes did that?’

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