Authors: Nick Oldham
Henry's main problem was that he was now out of the detective grapevine and could not keep abreast of what was going on in investigations any more. That sort of thing happened when the head of FMIT cut you out â not many other people wanted to spend a lot of time with you, either, lest they received the same fate.
He needed to find out â because he was certain of one thing: the man in the fridge was the same man he had come to blows with in a back alley in Preston and had escaped his clutches.
âFinished.' Tope rose creakily from the vomit-clearing task and shoved the mop into the bucket with a squelch.
âIt is clean?' Bill asked patronizingly. He'd been watching Tope without helping.
Tope shook his head and brushed past. Henry followed the two of them out of the mortuary, giving a nod and a wave of thanks to the mortuary attendant, who had retreated to his office. He was now playing a song by Doctor and the Medics. It seemed he had a self-burned CD with tracks on it that were in some way related to the world of medicine and death.
In the car Henry suddenly felt drowned by weakness. He gave Tope, now fully recovered from his bout of illness, the instruction to get back to headquarters and not to spare the horses. Henry wanted to get home, sink a couple of JDs and then collapse into bed with Kate.
As the three officers sauntered out through the hospital, neither noticed the diminutive figure of the mortuary attendant tiptoeing after them. He opened double doors quietly, peeked down corridors, seeing the three cops turning right at the far end of another corridor in the direction of the exit. He followed silently, his shoes making no sound on the polished surfaces. He managed to follow them out of the hospital and watched them struggle to find the change to pay at the pay station, then walk across to where their car was parked.
Happy they'd gone, he came back inside and sauntered up to the reception desk, where he used the phone.
âIt's me ⦠You said you wanted to know if anyone came to see Motta ⦠Well, someone did ⦠Three of 'em ⦠Cops, yeah ⦠Don't know, I was casual about it, didn't want to freak 'em out ⦠Only one ⦠The guy was a DCI ⦠Yeah, I'm sure ⦠Positive ⦠His name was Christie, Henry Christie.'
H
enry had a restless night, more through the intake of too much Jack Daniel's than anything else. He never really slept well after too much alcohol, but often kidded himself he did. And though he was feeling pretty wrecked, he rolled out of bed at seven, fixed the shower, because for some unfathomable reason Kate had unscrewed the shower head from the pipe, and was on the road by seven thirty, still damp.
He'd arranged to meet the âA' Team at headquarters at nine, when they would decide on the plan of the day before shooting down to Merseyside.
There was something he wanted to do before actually going into headquarters, hence the early start.
He took the A563 from Blackpool to Preston and pulled up at the new police operating centre in the city just before eight. This was where the investigation was being run into the deaths of the two women who'd been stabbed to death by â he now believed â Jonny Motta.
The Major Incident Room was strangely quiet. In fact, as Henry peered through the glass panel in the door, it was deserted. He checked his watch to make sure the clocks hadn't gone backwards or something. To say the least, he was surprised verging on shocked to find the room wasn't buzzing with activity. For a double murder, unsolved as far as he knew, he would have expected to have had to push his way through a throng of cynical but eager detectives.
He tried the door and found it locked. With a âHarumph' of annoyance he spun on his heels to find a key, returning a few minutes later with a cleaner who was grumbling about having orders to let no one in other than DCI Carradine, the SIO, who would then decide who came in after him.
âI'm really not supposedâ' the cleaner began in protest.
âOpen the door,' Henry said flatly. Then added, âPlease.'
With a sigh she did as bid and allowed Henry access. He ran the side of his hand down the bank of switches and the fluorescent lights clicked and hummed on reluctantly.
Henry walked slowly around the room.
The walls were plastered with charts, which he fully expected to see, but nothing else. No photos of the deceased and none of the suspect caught on camera which, again, he found odd. Unless of course the offender had been caught and he didn't know anything about it, or the enquiry was being scaled down and he didn't know about that, either.
His hands were thrust into his pockets, his face screwed up in a puzzled way.
Behind him the door of the MIR opened.
He turned.
Jack Carradine entered and was immediately on the offensive.
âWhat're you doing in here?'
Henry pouted, unfazed. âJust bobbed in to see how things were progressing. Y'know â showing some interest.'
Carradine said, âAttention unwelcome ⦠you're not on this investigation and only I have access to this room, so you shouldn't even be in here.'
âActually it's a bit more than passing interest,' Henry said.
Carradine posed with disbelief. âWhat?'
âA line of enquiry for you.'
âWouldn't be anything to do with Jonny Motta, would it?' he sneered.
âActually, yes,' Henry said dubiously.
Carradine gave a snort of derision. âHe's not the man.'
âBut he â¦'
âLooks like the guy in the CCTV, admittedly,' Carradine finished the sentence for him, âbut it's not him, trust me.'
âOK, no probs,' Henry said. âStill, do you have any photos of him I could have?'
âWhy?'
âJust humour me. OK?'
âHenry, the world has been humouring you for too long. I don't have any stills and if I had you wouldn't be having one. I expect you to accept my word that the Merseyside connection has been checked out thoroughly and there is no connection.'
âSo how's the enquiry going?'
âIt's a tough one. The victims haven't even been properly identified yet. Maybe when that's done, we'll take a major leap forwards. Y'know, find out how they lived, find out how they died?'
âAny leads at all?'
âPossibly Albanian prostitutes plying their trade up here. OK?' he concluded shortly.
âRight, OK, fine,' Henry said. âJust trying to help out.'
Carradine's face softened, but not genuinely. âAppreciate it. Honestly. Sorry I was a bit â terse â pressure and all that.'
âWhatever,' Henry said.
âYou back down to Merseyside today?' Carradine said conversationally.
âYeah â ruffle some feathers,' Henry said maliciously and watched the shadow cross Carradine's face which he wasn't sure how to interpret. âYou were in Merseyside once, weren't you?'
âBriefly, years ago.' It was a dubious answer.
âProbably meet some of your old mates, then. D'you keep in touch?'
Carradine's mouth twisted into a cruel grin. âHenry, they'll chew you up and spit you out.'
âGuess I'll just stick to the bottom of their feet, then.' He gave Carradine a short nod and made to leave the MIR. At the door, he stopped and turned. âOne thing, though.'
âAnd what would that be, Henry?'
âJonny Motta
is
the guy I chased on the night of that double murder.'
âAnd how can you be sure of that?'
Henry's eyes narrowed. âHe just is, and I know it.'
He went out of the room, and on the corridor outside he picked up pace and by the time he left the operating centre he was almost doing the four-minute mile as he legged the two hundred or so metres to the multi-storey building which was once the main police station in Preston.
His swipe card still allowed him access to the basement garage. He ran past the closed, locked and inaccessible cell complex, jumped in the lift and took it up to the floor on which the CCTV room was situated, the one he'd visited the night he'd turned out for the girl's murder.
And, with shift rotas being what they are, and it being such a small world, he found the same wheelchair-bound CCTV operator on duty, the one with whom he'd had a major fallout for her lack of vigilance. As he pushed through the door, breathless, she looked up from the screens, saw him and her face dropped even further than the one on Jonny Motta's corpse.
Because Henry wanted her on his side, he gave her one of his world-famous lopsided grins that he egotistically believed was one of his greatest keys to a woman's heart. However, this particular wheelchair-bound lady did not seem too impressed. He perched the corner of his bum on the desk in front of her and said, âHi.'
She gave him a curt nod. Today, it seemed, he wasn't faring too well in the popularity stakes.
âCan I help you?' she asked.
âRemember our meeting a few weeks ago?'
âHow could I forget?' She sounded hurt.
âGood ⦠could I get a copy of said CCTV tape on a disc, please? The bit with the man.' He didn't add, âThe man you neglected to see,' because it might not have been helpful in furthering his cause. But he did add, âPlease,' because even if he wasn't Mr Popular, he was always polite.
âThe DCI running the murder has a copy.' She didn't look at Henry as she spoke, but kept her eyes glued to her monitors giving her pigeon's-eye views of the city.
âI'd like a copy, too, please.'
âI'm afraid I can't do that. I've been told I can't release any more copies to anyone without that DCI's authority.'
Henry digested this. âI'd really like you to get me a copy,' he insisted.
âSorry, can't.' This time her eyes rose to his, defiantly, triumphantly, mockingly. I must really have upset her, he thought.
âIt's not an option,' he told her. âI want a copy.' He smiled dangerously. âBecause it's more than your job's worth to refuse to do it.'
âI'll sue you for disability discrimination,' she warned him. âYou'll be at an employment tribunal before you know it.'
Henry leaned forward so his face was on a level with hers. He recalled reading somewhere that it was always good practice to get down on to their level. âAnd I'll get you fuckin' sacked. I don't have time to arse about, young lady.'
The woman's face set hard and it was clear that the cogs were churning in her mind. Was he bluffing? Was he full of bull? Did he mean it? Did he have the power?
âYou've already made one faux pas and got away with it,' he said, adding on the pressure he didn't really want to. âSo just do it.' His eyebrows raised and lowered quickly.
âMy relief comes in at eight thirty. I'll do it then,' she caved in, not realizing that Henry
was
actually bluffing and
was
full of BS. âI wouldn't want to leave the place untended, would I?'
But what really was bothering Henry was why Carradine had stopped anyone else getting hold of a copy of the tape. It wasn't as though any evidence could be contaminated because the original should be stored safe and sound in the system somewhere and if it came to court proceedings, then that original would be produced, not copies.
âI'll get a coffee and come back in twenty minutes,' Henry told her. âThen we can be friends.'
âI don't understand it,' she said worriedly, almost verging on hysteria. Henry's face was now granite.
âExplain,' he snapped.
âI checked the hard drive storage to run a copy off for you and it wasn't there.'
Henry could easily have barked, âIt wasn't there! What do you mean, it wasn't there?' It's what he wanted to do and would have made him feel good â i.e. blowing his stack. Instead, with a furrowed brow he said, âDoes that mean it's been wiped clean or something?'
She looked helpless, âI guess so.'
âAnd is that the whole of that particular tape, or just the section I want to see?'
âIt's the file with the bit you want in it. Each file is four hours long, running from midnight onwards. The four hours after midnight on that night aren't there.'
âWho sets up the files?'
âThe computer.'
âDoes it also back up automatically?'
She nodded.
âSo there's a chance there is a backup file. Can you access that and give me a copy from that?'
She neither nodded nor replied.
He said, âYou can't, can you? Because the backup tape's not there, is it?'
âNo,' she squeaked.
âWho has access to these files, these computers?'
âUs, the operators, our supervisors and if the police want to see them, they can and we do the copies for evidence if necessary.'
âAnd you're sure DCI Carradine has a copy of the incident?'
âYes. I did it for him.'
âThank you.' Henry stood up, then turned back. âYou must not tell anyone that I've been here this morning and found this out, OK?' He smiled. âOur little secret â for the time being.'
After briefing his team at headquarters and arranging a pool car for each of them, they went their separate ways on their allotted tasks. Henry, deciding to claim mileage for his own car, went to Liverpool in it.
Before setting off, though, he popped along to the accounts department and checked how much money was remaining in the Operation Wanted fund. He managed to speak to Madeline about this and after some flirting, she told him the news: three hundred and twenty pounds. Not enough to get even halfway to Australia, even by bike, should he have decided it was necessary to recapture the third felon on his wanted list.
He mentioned about being disappointed that he'd probably never get to Australia and she blurted, âI'm going to Florida with John in a month. Disney and Key West. Taking the kids â his two from a previous marriage. Three weeks, sun, sea and scary rides and swimming with dolphins.'