Authors: Rebecca Bradley
By the time I got back from my meeting with Youens I was stressed and wanted to run to the kitchen to find that spoon for my eyes. The amount of times I’d had to admit I didn’t know something to him made me feel like I didn’t have a handle on the case and it annoyed me as much as it had very obviously annoyed him. He’d said the investigation was toxic to his area and infecting his residents and turning them into monsters. Because of course they were never predisposed to this behaviour before our offender started his business of randomly poisoning people.
We needed to get a grip on this and get a grip now before more bodies dropped on either of us.
Ross was already back with the CCTV collection and was sitting in the CCTV viewing room going through it. I spoke to Martin who was stretching his legs around the incident room.
‘So, the owner of the shop is a woman in her late fifties. Doesn’t understand how any of her products could have been tampered with. She hasn’t seen anything but she was more than happy to hand over all her CCTV discs as she doesn’t want to get a reputation for being one of the stores where there is dodgy food. She asked Ross if she should be closing the store or anything. He didn’t know and called me, and to be honest, boss, I don’t really know. Has our offender put this stuff in more than one tub, or even in more than one product?’ he asked, looking a little more pensive than I was used to seeing him, his hands in his pockets as he stood in front of me, shoulders slumped forward.
‘As we’ve identified her store as a source of one of the outbreaks I think we need to inform CRCE and let them take the lead with those questions don’t you? It’s not our area of expertise. She needs to keep the shop closed until they contact her and go from there, but they’re very good and will be in touch with her soon,’ I answered.
‘I did tell Ross to keep it closed until I’d spoken with you to be on the safe side.’
‘Great. Thanks, Martin. And how’s it going with checking the CCTV? What about any other staff?’
‘She has two other part-time staff members. Ross took statements from them. They both say the same thing. Nothing suspicious seen and this is out of the blue to them. After getting back in, Ross volunteered to start viewing straight away, so I’ve left him to it.’
‘And we’re running background checks on the owner and the staff as well?’
‘Yes, I’ve started it but still have a lot to do.’
‘Great. HOLMES will be able to identify if any of the nominals are known to each other, which will help us to see if there is a link anywhere.’
‘I fed all the names to Diane to index on HOLMES before I continued with my stuff.’
‘Thanks, Martin. I’m glad I have you on the team right now.’ I made a move towards my office. ‘How’s Ross doing?’
Martin walked with me. ‘He’s doing okay, I think. He’s subdued. But you’d expect that, with what has been happening. He desperately wants to stay here, that much is obvious, so he’s doing all the jobs, even the tedious ones that will hopefully show him in a positive light. I know it’s not my place to ask, but they’re not going to boot him, are they?’
‘Not if I can help it they’re not. Not if I can help it.’
It was late, the sun had set and the heat of the day had finally given way to a cooler easier evening. A light was on in the upstairs window. He’d be sat in bed, glasses perched on the end of his nose, book in hands, drooping into his lap as his head nodded downwards.
I had a key but I didn’t like to use it. Not now, not when he was in bed. I knocked softly on the glass pane and waited. Then knocked again because in his fitful sleep pretence of reading he wouldn’t have heard me the first time. I checked my phone for texts or missed calls as I waited for him to rise and answer the door. Nothing had come through. I didn’t want to use the Q word, even to myself, but a silent phone was good news.
A light went on.
‘Who is it?’ the voice behind the glass asked. Did I hear fear? I forget he ages as I age. But mostly, I think he’s lost on his own.
‘It’s me, Dad.’ It had been a couple of weeks since I had spoken with him. It always caused me to feel guilty but with the pressures of the job and the difficulties in the relationship, I didn’t seem to be able to call him or visit any more often than I did, but this was different.
‘Hello?’
‘Dad, it’s Hannah.’
‘Hannah!’ the joy in his voice nearly broke my heart. The door swung open and his face shone. ‘Come in, come in. How are you?’
I picked up the four carrier bags at my feet, my arm twinging, and walked over the threshold. ‘I’m good. You?’
He looked at the bags, stepping back out of my way, confusion crossing his face. ‘Good. Good, yes,’ he paused, ‘how’s the arm?’
‘Still sore, but you know … still healing.’
‘Yes. These things take time. Don’t push it, Hannah. Take care of yourself.’ He grabbed at the bags, taking them from me.
‘I am, Dad, I am …’ I gritted my teeth. We walked into the kitchen. ‘Look, I called for a specific reason this evening.’
‘Okay.’ He dumped the bags on the kitchen worktop.
‘I’ve brought your weekly shopping round so you don’t need to go out to the supermarket and buy it yourself.’ He looked at me in silence. ‘If there’s anything I’ve missed, text me.’ He frowned. ‘Or call. And I’ll bring that round as well.’
‘What on earth for? I’m quite capable of doing my own shopping. You know that, why would you do this?’
‘You’ve read the papers, Dad. Please do this for me. I’m not asking you to stay indoors or anything, just to stay out of food stores. I don’t want you to get caught up in anything and get hurt. You can still go about your daily business as usual. Please, Dad?’
He sighed. ‘Okay. But only because you actually asked, Hannah, and not because you told me to.’
‘Thank you, Dad.’ I rubbed my arm. ‘It’s because I care.’
‘I know. And when I ask you for something, it’s always because I care as well.’
‘I know. I’ll order your shopping online for next week, as I’m not sure if I’ll get time to do it again. But, I don’t want you doing it until this is resolved. I hope that’s good with you?’
He looked at where I was rubbing. ‘Hannah?’
‘What is it?’
‘She was worried as hell, you know.’
‘Yeah, well she lost all rights to be worried when she lost her rights to freedom, didn’t she?’
He sighed. ‘She’s paying for her crimes in prison but she’s still your sister. You were stabbed. She couldn’t get to you, see you. It hurt her.’
‘I have to go. I need to get some sleep before I get back into work early tomorrow. Night, Dad.’
Another sigh. ‘Night, Hannah. And thank you.’
I wrapped my arms around him and he squeezed me tight. ‘Night, Dad.’ I had to leave; we were about to go round in circles again. He couldn’t grasp where I was coming from. We were all he had since Mum died, I knew that, but I couldn’t forgive Zoe. She was my sister, but my anger towards her was still too raw to speak to her, it was still too raw to speak about her.
The position she had put me in before she’d been arrested was unbearable. She’d nearly cost me my job, my career – or she would have done if the people I knew had taken things at face value.
2 weeks ago
People forget. It’s easy for them to move on with their lives. To not pick up the phone. To not visit.
Life is busy
they say when they bump into you, their eyes wary. Like rabbits caught in the headlights. What should they do? What should they say? They’d forgotten, but they can see it’s not been that easy here for you. They look about them for a reason to leave quickly, their mouths moving rapidly with platitudes, trying to fill the void with anything but the truth – that it all became too difficult, so they forgot and they moved on. They don’t know the loss, the pain, the heartache, loneliness, and the deep soul-wrenching agony of something torn away. They forget the promises of help, support and of being there for them that they uttered at the start. Those promises had expiry dates on them, yet they were unspoken. Presumed known. But what were they supposed to do? They had lives.
Lucky them.
Now, as they stand here, Connie looks shrunken to Isaac. Like a rag doll that has been put in the wash on hot, and high spin, and left on the side to dry in the sun. Shoulders curled over, as though she wants to hide herself away as much as she can. He knows she doesn’t like to go out of the house but the necessities need doing and he hates to see her wither inside so he pulls her out with him once a week but when this happens it hurts.
How are they supposed to move on from this so quickly, or at all? It’s not a pet dog they’ve lost. There isn’t a time frame for when the pain will start to lessen. Here they were in that awkward position of being the people no one wanted to bump into. Connie didn’t have the strength to pretend she was any better than she was, and stammered at the inane babbling of their so-called friend. The odd hand that reached out and touched her arm for a split second made her jump. Human touch, aside from Isaac’s, wasn’t something she had experienced in a while. It was alien and forced. He could see she wanted to cry out. To howl out at the world. But she held it in. They both held it in. But the agony of holding it in was tearing them apart shred by tiny shred.
Eventually, the empty chatter stopped. An excuse was found and the used-to-be friend moved on. Connie sighed. Isaac felt the knot of anger in his gut grow ever tighter.
The morning papers were nearly as much our nemesis as the killer. I could see this etched on Catherine’s face as I sat in her office with Grey, the morning briefing only fifteen minutes away. She was calm. It was as though she had worked out there was no point in raising her blood pressure because it was all misdirected anger. I wasn’t going to defend the
Today
because of Ethan, but there would be no story to write if there were no killings of this kind to write about.
‘
Police Failure Puts Residents At Further Risk.
Really? They’re going with that today?’
I didn’t answer her. It pretty much explained itself as a rhetorical question as she turned her back to us and looked out the window at the secure police car park below. Last night had seen another public order incident over food stuffs and this in a supermarket. The
Today
was obviously running with it. The pressure to bring in the killer was mounting with the people of the city getting nervous.
‘I want Claire in here as soon as she gets in this morning. We need to be responding to this.’ She turned back to face us. ‘We can’t sit back and let them take pot shots at us and watch the whole of Notts crumble before our eyes. We need to get in front of it. Or at least catch up with it.’ She was obviously calming down as she now sat in her chair, smoothing her trousers down at the knees. ‘We’ve been on the back foot this whole time. I have to admit that. I never in a lifetime expected something of this magnitude to ever come across my desk and have to be dealt with while I sat here.’ She eyed us up as though looking into our souls for evidence we might repeat her confession of not being prepared or acting correctly to a job. I didn’t move. I had Grey at the side of me and that’s what supervisors were for. If anyone was going to be eaten alive today, it certainly wasn’t going to be me.
Grey was statue still, which was unusual for him. The man who always fidgeted with his fingers was rigid. With fear? Someone needed to speak next, not just allow Catherine to speak to herself, which was likely to get her more annoyed than she already was as she spiralled around in anger at the situation.
‘I’ll speak to Claire, Ma’am. Make sure she’s apprised of your request to see her. We still have a lot of enquiries to continue with today so we could make some headway that will knock the
Today
off their perch. But I agree, it’s not good for the community. Chief Superintendent Youens will not like waking up to this today, either.’
She groaned. ‘Don’t remind me. Another call I’m going to have to be smoothing over. It seems that recently I am spending all my time making promises we can’t keep or apologising for things we do.’ She looked at Grey. ‘And the hammer is not just going to fall on my head.’
His fingers twitched. ‘I’ll go back to see Youens while Hannah gets on with the investigation. It’ll keep the coast clear for her to work.’ His throat scrambled to get the words out, his Adam’s apple bobbing up and down hard in his scrawny neck.
She leaned back, seeming more appeased. ‘Okay. Let’s make today matter.’
Ross was already in the viewing room continuing to go through the CCTV from the shop. He must have got in early. This was a throwback to his good days.
‘How’s it going?’ I handed him a coffee and kept the mug of green tea for myself.
‘Boss,’ he acknowledged. ‘Slow going. Lots of activity. This woman has a good business on her hands. It’s really busy. Customers coming and going at all hours, but at least I know what area I need to be focusing on.’
I nodded.
‘I’ve made a note of the date, time and description when someone goes into the freezer and takes out ice cream, even if it isn’t Dawn,’ he continued. ‘So far I haven’t seen anyone stand and meddle with one and place it back in but I’ll keep watching.’
Ross seemed more like himself. His eyes were brighter, more alert. There was less of a roundness to his shoulders.
‘How far back does the CCTV go?’
‘She keeps it for twenty-eight days before recording back over it. It was due to be done again in a week so we have three weeks to look through. It’s lucky with things like this when we don’t call on the day they’ve just erased everything.’
‘True. Though Dawn was even luckier she was on the ball that night and called an ambulance and also that it wasn’t the digoxin that was in her system.’
‘We’ve a great camera angle here, boss; we stand a good chance of ID-ing the copycat at least.’
‘Good work. Keep at it, Ross.’
‘Yes, boss.’
‘And Ross.’
‘Boss?’
‘Get a haircut, will you.’
My phone was ringing as I walked into my office.
‘DI Robbins.’
‘Ma’am, it’s Penny from CSU.’
‘Hi, Penny,’ I replied.
‘We have some results for you which I’ve emailed to you, but I wanted to phone to make sure you got it and the email doesn’t sink in your inbox.’
‘That’s great. Phoning was probably a good idea because the way my inbox works, it’s like a game of chance some weeks.’
I opened up my computer with my spare hand as I spoke. ‘What do you have, Penny?’
‘We finally found the source of the digoxin in Lianne Beers’ address. It was in a microwave ready meal, one of those breakfast oat things and it was enough to take effect fairly quickly; well, to make her feel ill and then kill her.’
‘And how did it get in there?’
‘The packaging was already damaged. It had a discounted sticker on it from the local shop so she wouldn’t have been surprised with the damage or have been worried by any tampering because she wouldn’t have seen it as tampering. The actual digoxin was injected into the paper-card case of the meal under the lip, so the box was open and injection site wasn’t visible unless you were looking.’
‘Oh Christ. Seriously? This is one smart offender to target already damaged items.’
‘I know. It has now narrowed down our testing range for the other jobs that are in. We can look for any food products that have a discounted sticker on first and put that to the top of the queue if you’re happy with that?’
‘Absolutely. Thanks, Penny. I’ve found your email and will read it fully for details including markings on the sticker etc.’
‘No worries. We’ll get working on the next job. Thanks, Ma’am.’
Discounted goods. Damaged packaging. No wonder this poison was getting into people. We were up against someone who really wanted to hurt people.