Passion Killers (3 page)

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Authors: Linda Regan

BOOK: Passion Killers
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“It was self defence,” Kim insisted.

Susan stepped to the front of the group and grasped Shaheen’s shoulders. “It doesn’t matter what it was! Get a grip, Shaheen. It never happened, OK?”

Shaheen struggled to control her sobs and reluctantly nodded her head. The girls huddled round her, hugging each other for comfort.

Susan took a deep breath. “We must never talk about this again. Not ever, not to no one. Agreed?”

Kim, Theresa, Katie and Olivia nodded. After a moment Shaheen followed suit.

“We carry on as if it never happened,” Susan said. “If we’re questioned, we have to tell the same story. He was alive when we left the club. That’s all we have to say. He paid us, and we left.”

“Questioned? Who by?” Shaheen sounded wary.

“The police, maybe. We have to come back on Monday night as if nothing has happened. With luck we’ll just find the club closed, but in case...”

“Let’s agree the story, then.” This was Katie. “We did our last stripping spot at the usual time, got paid by Ahmed in our dressing room then all left the club together. He was alive when we left.”

“We stick to that story no matter what happens to us in the future,” Susan said firmly. “Agreed?”

“Agreed.” They piled hands in a gesture of solidarity.

“Susan’s right, Shaheen.” Theresa squeezed her arm, and the other girls nodded their agreement. “What happened tonight must never be mentioned. Even amongst ourselves. You never know who might overhear.”

“So what happens on Monday?” Shaheen asked, still a little tearful.

Susan was still in charge. “We come to work as usual. There’ll be no job, probably no club – but we act surprised.”

“And after that, we go our separate ways,” added Olivia. “But whatever happens, we keep the secret. We never tell a soul.”

Brian had found it a real struggle to get Ahmed’s trousers back on, so getting the body into the car had seemed a doddle. Everyone had left the club except the bar manager; after seeing him off the premises, he had reversed his car to the back door, then slung one of Ahmed’s arms around his neck as if he was drunk, and dragged him round to the passenger door. Ahmed’s dead body slumped back in the seat, looking so life-like it gave him the creeps.

Burying the body in the foundations of the office block was a great idea. The concreting would be finished in forty-eight hours and nobody would ever know what lay beneath it. He glanced over at the seat beside him; Ahmed could easily have been asleep. The red g-string protruded from his shirt pocket like a handkerchief.

It was then that Brian glanced in his mirror and noticed the police car behind him. Don’t panic, he told himself; just drive properly and stay within the speed limit. They’d have no reason to stop him.

It was another couple of seconds before the flashing blue light reflected in his mirror. As the police car pulled alongside him and signalled for him to pull over, he realised that in his haste to get Ahmed in the car, he hadn’t turned on the lights.

As the two policemen approached his car, one carrying a breathalyser kit and the other a torch, the irony hit him. He never touched alcohol; he was a lifelong teetotaller.

1

Detective Inspector Paul Banham was making good progress. In his eleven years as a detective in the murder squad he had on many occasions sought the help of psychological profilers, and he had enormous respect for them. But counselling, he had discovered, was psychology of a different colour.

Counselling was personal: in his case very personal indeed. For one thing it meant facing up to his reaction to – no, his all-consuming fear of – looking at certain corpses. It was common knowledge among his colleagues that he got the shakes, and sometimes even fainted or threw up when he looked at a young, murdered woman.

But that wasn’t the worst part. His counsellor was also helping him to deal with his sex life, or lack of it; and the prospect of his colleagues knowing about his inadequacy in that department didn’t bear thinking about. If they found out he’d be a laughing stock, and would never command the respect he needed to head a murder enquiry. He’d never be able to show his face in the incident room again.

Of course, Lottie knew. They were twins, and though he hadn’t told her, she knew anyway, just as he knew things about her. She had been the one to suggest that he talk to someone; in fact she had begged him to seek counselling, and once or twice they had almost quarrelled about it. He had argued that it wouldn’t help, that the only thing that would solve the problem would be if the police finally caught the bastard who had murdered his wife and their eleven-month-old daughter, and ensure that bastard suffered as terrifying an ordeal as the one he’d inflicted on Diane and baby Elizabeth. If that happened, Banham could put his life back together, perhaps even love again, physically as well as emotionally. But despite breakthroughs in forensics, after eleven years they were highly unlikely to catch the killer.

So Banham had given in to his sister’s nagging and taken the bull by the horns. He had been having regular sessions with a counsellor for several weeks now. He had to admit it was a lot to do with Alison Grainger, the detective sergeant with unusual black-flecked, sludge-coloured eyes who had crept into his heart.

It was seven years since she had moved over to the murder division of CID to work with him, and from the start they had understood each other and worked well together. The squad’s success rate was improving all the time. Recently he had realised how attracted he was to her. A few weeks ago he had invited her out for a candle-lit supper, and she had asked him to her flat for coffee afterwards. In a blind panic he refused, with the feeble excuse that business and pleasure didn’t mix.

That made Alison very angry, and no one wanted to be on the wrong side of Alison Grainger’s temper. So he decided it was time to do something. He made an appointment with Joan Deamer, a middle-aged, approachable counsellor his sister Lottie promised would change his life.

That was seven weeks ago, and already he was beginning to feel different. The physical feelings he’d believed he would never experience again had started to stir. At one counselling session they had talked about blue films, and Joan had given him a couple to take home. The effect had been like a door bursting open; after eleven celibate years, he found he could function physically again. He had a sexual future, and the person he wanted in it was Alison Grainger.

Mrs Deamer had urged him not to give up on a relationship with Alison. She had assured him he could always ask her out again; Alison was quite bright enough to see past his excuse about not mixing business with pleasure, and if she felt as he did, she wouldn’t hold his moment of panic against him.

But he wasn’t sure; his confidence was still on the low side. As he walked down the steps from Joan Deamer’s office the thought of that temper brought a smile to his face. He knew the signs: the black flecks in her sludge-coloured eyes seemed to expand, then the verbals began to flow within seconds. Those eyes were beautiful: so much so that he even looked forward to her losing her temper.

He flicked his wrist to check the time. It was seven-thirty, nearly bedtime for his six-year-old niece Madeleine. He decided to head for his sister’s; he could ring for a pizza for himself and Lottie, and while they waited for it, he could read Madeleine another chapter of the book of stories he had bought her the previous week. He loved watching her angelic little face as she listened to the goings-on of the Flower Fairies’ daily duties. Tonight it was the turn of the Cowslip Fairy.

The drive took him twenty minutes, including a quick stop at the garage for a couple of cans of lager, a bunch of flowers for Lottie and far too many bars of chocolate for Bobby and Madeleine.

He made it as far as the doorway; a beautiful, excited six-year-old princess ran down the stairs announcing to the doll on her arm, “It’s Uncle Paul. He brings us chocolate, Barbie.”

Then his mobile began its urgent chirp.

*

Half a dozen police cars, blue lights flashing silently, signalled the spot as Banham drove down the road.

A uniformed officer stood in front of the blue and white plastic cordon, redirecting cars down the next side road. Banham flashed his warrant card and the officer waved him through. Alison Grainger was already there, bending over the boot of a car with a torch in her gloved hand.

She looked around as Banham approached. No one ever described Alison as pretty, or even striking; in fact DC Colin Crowther, the team’s self-styled expert on women, had once said she was pretty average. But Banham thought she was beautiful. She reminded him of a red squirrel; she often wore her long, naturally curly, mouse-coloured hair tied back in a pony-tail resembling a bushy squirrel tail.

Heather Draper the police pathologist was peering into the car boot alongside Alison. When she saw Banham she moved to block his view.

“She’s been dead about two weeks, we think, guv,” Alison said. She was dressed from head to toe in black, a woolly hood over her head and hair to keep out the bitter February cold. Only her face peeped out, with one escaping curl balanced on her forehead. Banham found her wide-set sludgy eyes more captivating than ever with her curly hair covered. He stared into her serious face and read the concern in her eyes.

“It’s not a pretty sight,” she warned.

He nodded, and took a deep breath as he moved toward the boot. Alison shone the torch on the contents.

The dead woman was curled in a foetal position, her bloated face angled and facing him. Blood from the wounds in her head had slid down her forehead, congealing around a colony of maggots over the holes that once were eyes. Other overfed insects that had feasted on her now lay dead in the rotting remains of her open throat.

Bulging from her disintegrated mouth was a piece of rotting, discoloured fabric. A thin, blood-drenched ribbon hung from one side of the blackened lip, making her look almost vampire-like. Even in the winter gloom Banham could see she looked Asian; her hair, now grey with dirt, had been black and her skin light brown.

After a few seconds he turned to Heather Draper, who was dressed in the usual blue plastic overall. “The nose was broken too?” he said.

She nodded.

He rubbed his fingers across his mouth, a habit he had when he was thinking. He hoped neither Heather nor Alison realised how much of an effort it was to hold himself together and not throw up.

“She obviously put up one hell of a fight. I hope she was dead before he closed the boot,” he added quietly.

“I wouldn’t want to say until I’ve done a full examination,” Heather said, “but that’s the way it looks. I think the legs were broken afterwards, to fit her into the space.”

“He was either very strong or very angry,” Banham said, turning his head to keep the smell at bay. “Any signs of sexual assault?”

“No.” Alison and Heather spoke in unison.

“But this?” He indicated the g-string bulging from her mouth. “It’s underwear, isn’t it?”

“Not hers. She’s still wearing her knickers.” Alison Grainger pointed her torch on the body. The stink of excrement from her black skirt made Banham turn away to grab a lungful of fresh air.

Heather Draper lifted the skirt with blue latex-gloved hands, revealing warm, unglamorous thermal knickers.

“There,” said Alison. “A bit different from what’s jammed in her mouth.” She too turned away from the stench and inhaled fresh icy air.

“He broke both her legs to get her in there,” Banham said thoughtfully. “So he was in a hurry. But he made time to force those things in her mouth.”

“You mean, you don’t think it was an afterthought?” Alison asked.

Banham shook his head. “No. Something tells me she was in the car with him.”

“She’s a bit old to be a tom, guv.”

“Some men like them older.”

“Not even older toms wear knickers like that, though. So, if she was in the car, she knew her killer.”

Banham walked round to the front of the car. A group of SOCOs were busy with their swabs, tweezers and tiny polythene evidence bags. Max Pettifer, head of forensics, and Banham’s
bete noir
, was sliding a brush around the steering wheel. He heaved his bulk out of the car and smirked at Banham. “Not throwing up in a bucket?” he said, lifting a thick, wiry eyebrow.

One of these days, Banham thought, he was going to take a pair of forensic tweezers and pluck a few of Max’s stray eyebrows. He waved at the air in front of the other man’s face. “I’m surprised you’re not, after the amount of garlic you ate last night.” He stepped back. “Have you got anything of interest to tell me, like was she a passenger in the car?”

“Urine on the head rest of the passenger seat,” Max said flatly. “With luck that’ll be your killer’s DNA. He probably got over-excited and pissed in her face. She’s been there a good couple of weeks from the state of the maggots,” he added.

Banham muttered reluctant thanks and returned to the waiting Alison. “Who found the body?” he asked her.

“Uniform,” she told him. “Look at the way the car’s parked. It looked abandoned, so they radioed it in. Turns out it was reported stolen two weeks ago. The woman who owns that house said she first noticed it four days ago. Uniform checked the boot and...”

“Right, get the car to the pound,” Banham interrupted. “How soon can I have your first report?” he called to Max Pettifer.

“As usual, guvnor. As soon as I get it done.”

“And yours?”

Heather Draper was a lot less irritating. “I’ll work as quickly as I can,” she told him.

He started back towards his own car, the gruesome image of his own wife and baby on that fateful night flooding his mind. But he shook away the memory before it consumed him. He had to focus. This woman was probably a wife and mother. Her family would be relying on him, and he wasn’t going to disappoint them.

Alison called after him, “Where are you going, guv?”

He looked over his shoulder. “To the station, to make a start.”

She caught him up. “Do you want some company?”

He found himself staring into those sludgy eyes. “Haven’t you anything better to do?”

She shook her head and shrugged.

She had no idea how much pleasure that gave him. “Come on, then. Leave your car. I’ll drive.”

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