Authors: David Peace
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural
He coughs and sits forward slightly in his chair and says: I have been authorised by your Police Committee to invite you to take extra leave. You will not be going back to Leeds and you can consider yourself off the Ripper Investigation.
For now or forever?
Forever.
Youve spoken to Philip Evans, Sir John Reed?
Yes. Its been agreed that Chief Superintendent Murphy will take over the investigation, using your team.
I say: What am I supposed to have done?
I cannot say.
I look at Maurice Jobson
Hes looking at the floor.
Angus says: I can tell you that it has absolutely nothing to do with Leeds or the Ripper Investigation.
I didnt ask.
Well, Im telling you.
Well, let me tell you something: I have no intention of accepting any free leave. If you have the grounds for a suspension, then suspend me. Otherwise, I will continue with my duties as an Assistant Chief Constable.
Ronald Angus stands up: Mr Hunter, it is now my intention to ask you to leave your office and these headquarters right away
What?
Maurice Jobson stands up next to him.
Me: Youre joking?
Angus shakes his head.
Jobson is looking past me, out of the window behind me.
Slowly I stand, looking around the office
The Christmas cards and the unopened post in the tray, the photographs and certificates on the wall, the awards and commendations, my whole office
But it doesnt feel like my office
Because it isnt my office
Im choking
Trying not to sway as I stand there
Trying to think
Think, think, think
.
I reach for my briefcase and I open it, sweeping the cards and the unopened post into it
And I stare at the photographs and the certificates on the wall, the awards and commendations; their awards, their commendations, thinking:
Fuck em fuck em all
.
And I walk to the door
Trying not to stumble, briefcase under my arm
And I open the door.
Angus says: Two oclock tomorrow.
What?
Meet us here at two oclock tomorrow please.
And I just nod and walk out into the corridor
And I stand there, in the corridor, until Jobson comes up behind me.
This way, he says and leads me over to the lift.
He presses the button and we wait.
The lift arrives and the door opens
He says: Sorry about your house.
I look at him
He looks away.
Outside, outside in the car park
Outside in the car park, looking at my new digital watch:
14:36:04
Struggling with the car door and my briefcase
Slumped behind the wheel:
Fudged
.
Struggling, slumped and fucked
In the reserved space that still says:
Peter Hunter Assistant Chief Constable
.
Someones tapping on the glass
I open my eyes:
Dark, night
.
The policeman is saying:
Im sorry, you cant park here.
Fuck
.
Its reserved.
And I switch on the engine and the headlights in the reserved space that says:
Assistant Chief Constable
.
No name
Only:
Assistant Chief Constable
.
I drive out of Manchester, through Wilmslow, and on to Alderley Edge.
I turn on to the Macclesfield Road.
There are no fire engines tonight.
And I pull up on the road and park there, the drive covered in the debris
The house, whats left of our house in silence
Our home
Gone
Lit match, gone.
I get out of the car and pick my way up the drive through the debris until Im stood in front of the burnt-out shell of my house, seeing those marks and smelling that smell, tasting that taste, again
Tears in my eyes
Unable to stop the tears, the fear
Unable to stop the fear
And I walk through the places where there were doors and windows, where the walls are now black, and I keep walking along the side of the garage until I come to the War Room
The War Room
Everything gone
Everything but the fear
Knowing
Knowing theyre doing this to me because of who I am, because of what I am
Because of who I know, of what I know
Because of the fear
To give me the fear
And I bend down and take a handful of warm black ash and I spit in that black ash and rub it between my fingers and my palms and then I take the ash and draw a cross upon my face
A cross to keep the fear away
A cross to keep the fear
A cross to keep
A cross to
A cross.
once again thank you for being a friend for you have seen my face in the stamp on the envelope of the letter e sent and e will leave this place to meet a friend in the winter that never leaves and says in a yorkshire way e say the weather is letting us down again winter still in the middle of may transmission ten sent may eighteenth nineteen seventy nine in morley Joanne clare thornton found dead in lewisham park the following morning struck twice on the head dead instantly clothes repositioned body stabbed twenty five times with a kitchen knife with a four inch blade extensive damage to abdominal area and to vagina one shoe placed between thighs coat thrown over her e parked and ran to catch up with her and e said excuse me and e asked her the time and she squinted at the clock across the way and said it was half past eleven and e said my what good eyes you have and she said thank you and e said where have you been and she said to see her grandmother and e said have you got far to go and she said it was quite a walk and e said have you not thought about learning to drive and she said she preferred to ride horses and e said well you should be careful out here alone in this park at this time of night you cannot trust anybody these days and e stooped to pretend to tie my shoelace and then e took the hammer from my pocket and e hit her twice on the top of the head and dragged her from the path and e sorted out her clothes then e took out the ten inch philips screwdriver which e had sharpened to a point and e took out the kitchen knife and e stabbed her twenty five times and three times e inserted the screwdriver into her vagina and e punctured her uterus winter still the following received june twentieth nineteen seventy nine e am jack e see you are still having no luck catching me e have the greatest respect for you george but lord you are no nearer catching me now than four years ago when e started e reckon your boys are letting you down george they cannot be much good can they the only time they came near catching me was a few months back in chapeltown when e was disturbed even then it was a uniformed copper not a detective e warned you in march that e would strike again sorry it was not bradford e did promise you that but e could not get there e am not quite sure when e will strike again but it will be definitely some time this year maybe September October even sooner if e get the chance e am not sure where maybe manchester e like it there there is plenty of them knocking about they never do learn do they george e bet you have warned them but they never listen take her in preston and e did did e not george dirty cow come my load up that at the rate e am going e should be in the book of records e think it is up to eleven now is it not well e will keep on going for quite a while yet e cannot see myself being nicked just yet even if you do get near e will probably top myself first well it has been nice chatting to you george yours jack the ripper no good looking for fingerprints you should know by now it is as clean as a whistle see you soon bye hope you like the catchy tune at the end ha ha thank you for being a friend traveled down road and back again your heart is true you are a pal and a confidant e am not ashamed to say e hope it always will stay this way my hat is off will you not stand up and take a bow if you threw a party invited everyone you knew you would see biggest gift would be from me and the card attached would say thank you for being a friend if it is a car you lack e would surely buy you a white corsair whatever you need anytime day or night it always will stay this way when we both get older with walking canes and hair of grey have no fear even though it
Chapter 17
Joans parents house, sitting in their front room among the Christmas cards, their front room and Christmas cards like the front room that was our front room with its Christmas cards, the front room that was our front room until Thursday night, in front of their tree, their tree like the tree that was our tree until Thursday night, sitting in their front room, Mr and Mrs Roberts trying to leave us alone, give us some time, give us some space, some time and some space like the time and the space that was our time and our space until Thursday night, but theyre in and out all the same, me and Joan sitting in their front room on their sofa, the sofa like the sofa that was our sofa until Thursday night, sitting in their front room on their sofa like the teenage couple we never were, me wanting to hold her hand
Holding her hand
Holding her hand, holding back my tears, trying to catch hers, trying to stop them, but all the things weve lost, theres so much, weve lost so very much, too much, the things weve lost, there are so many, weve lost so very many things, too many.
The application forms, shes sobbing.
We can easily get more, that wont be a problem.
But we havent got a house, Peter. Theyll never let us
Well get a new one, rebuild the old one. The insurance
Not if it was those lights.
It wasnt the lights, I snap. And it doesnt make any difference even if it was.
But itll be years.
No, it wont.
Theyll never let us, not now.
Of course they bloody will.
Holding her hand, holding back my tears, trying to catch hers, trying to stop them, but all the things weve lost, theres so much, weve lost so very much, too much, the things weve lost, there are so many, weve lost so very many things, too many.
Her mother puts her head round the door again: Another cup of tea anyone?
I glance at my new watch, shaking my head and lie: Ive got to be in the office.
At least youve still got a job, Joan sniffs. Least youve still got that.
I get into the car.
I sit behind the wheel.
I look at my watch again:
10:08:00
I turn the key in the ignition and pull out of their drive.
I head into Manchester
Head into Manchester because Ive got nowhere else to go:
Nowhere but here
.
Saturday 27 December 1980
Two oclock:
Manchester Police Headquarters
The eleventh floor:
I knock on the door of the room that was my office, that was my office up until yesterday afternoon.
Come.
I open the door.
Ronald Angus is sitting in the chair that was my chair, the chair behind the desk that was my desk, the desk in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon at 14:35:00.
Sit down, says Angus, nodding at the empty chair next to Chief Superintendent Jobson
I sit down.
Angus leans across the desk, the desk that was my desk, and he hands me a piece of paper
I take it from him and I read:
Information has been received which indicates that during the past six years you have associated with persons in circumstances that are considered undesirable, and by such associations you may have placed yourself under an obligation as a police officer to those persons
.
Thats it? I ask.
Yes.
No names, no times, no dates, no places?
Its not an allegation, nor a complaint.
So what is it?
It is information received that needs to be investigated.
So let me help; tell me the names of these people with whom Im supposed to have associated?
I cant.
Well then, tell me what kind of obligations Im supposed to have placed myself under?
I cannot.
Im smiling
Despite myself I am smiling
Smiling at Ronald Angus, the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire, the West Yorkshire force that forty-eight hours before I was investigating, smiling at him sat there in the chair that was my chair, the chair behind the desk that was my desk, the desk in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon.
Mr Hunter, he says. I know how this looks, so I know what youre thinking. But I can assure you my own reputation for fairness and integrity is as much on the line here as your own.
I cant help myself: Is that supposed to make me feel better or worse, sir?
Angus has had enough: Mr Hunter, to be blunt: I dont care how you feel.
Silence
In the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon, silence
Silence until Maurice Jobson says: Peter, were going to have to ask you to provide us with full details of your bank account and any credit cards and savings accounts you might have had in the last six years.
Why?
Jobson shakes his head: I cant tell you, you know that.
No, I dont know that.
OK, well Im telling you now.
OK, Maurice, I smile. Ill tell you something shall I? I am under no legal obligation whatsoever to provide you with that information.
No, youre not, interrupts Angus. But if you dont oblige us, Ill just get a judge to make you.
Then youd be wasting even more of your time than you already are.
And why would that be?
I cant give you it.
Cant or wont? smiles Angus.
Cant.
Why not? asks Jobson.
The fire.
Angus sits back in his chair and sighs: Convenient.
What? I say, voice raised: You what?
Jobsons holding onto my arm, pulling me back down into the chair in front of the desk, the chair in front of the desk that was my desk, the desk in the room that was my room, the room that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon, Jobson telling me: Take it easy, now. Take it easy.
What about your passport? asks Angus.
What about it?
Lose that as well?
I tell him: We lost everything.
Thats a pity.
Why? I ask. Going to take that as well were you?
Yes.
Fucking hell, I say, shaking my head.
Again silence
Again silence in the office that was my office, that was my office until yesterday afternoon
Again silence until Angus says: Two oclock. Monday.
Thats it? I say.
Wakefield, he says.
What?
Two oclock. Monday. Wakefield.
Youre joking? Youre supposed to come here. Its procedure.
Mr Hunter, sighs Mr Angus. We want this thing over and done with as much as you do. But you also know more than most the pressure were under over there, so if you want us to get a move on with this wed be grateful if you wouldnt mind coming over to Wakefield on Monday.