The man certainly looked like a murderer, thought Lucy Blake. Then she pulled herself up short. Murderers came in all shapes and sizes, and often in the most unlikely guises. It was unprofessional to decide that anyone ‘looked like a murderer’; CID sergeants shouldn’t even think like that.
Well then, he looked guilty. That was surely fair enough. He was in his late twenties, with a growth of black stubble around his chin and his cheeks which was undoubtably not due to fashion. He had straight black hair, lank because it needed a wash. His eyes were rimmed with red, as though he had not slept well for many nights. He might have been good-looking in better times, but he looked as if those times were a long way behind him.
His clothes had been of good quality when new, but they were shabby with age and neglect now. His shirt had a button missing at its frayed neck. His black leather jacket was scarred, with one of the pockets half torn away.
And at ten thirty on this Monday morning, in the airless confines of the interview room, on the other side of the small square of table beneath the pitiless overhead light, he smelt. The man had that stale, unwashed, defeated odour which is familiar to all policemen.
He was nervous. He did not know what to do with his hands. He put them on the edge of the table in front of him, then down by his sides, then on to his thighs under the table. If they’d given him a chair with arms, he would have gripped them and kept his hands still that way. Now he was trying to avoid rubbing them together, to avoid giving these people that outward sign of his inner anxiety. He glanced sharply at the faces of Peach and Blake as they came into the small room with its scratched green walls, then dropped his gaze to the floor and kept it there.
Peach studied him with distaste for a moment before he said, ‘You are Nigel Rogan?’
The man nodded, glanced briefly up into the Chief Inspector’s dark eyes, and dropped his gaze again. ‘You don’t look like a Nigel to me,’ said Peach inconsequentially. ‘More a Fred or a Bert, I’d have said. Someone with dirty fingernails and a taste for the squalid. Still, perhaps you were more charming as a child.’ He looked as if that didn’t seem to him a very likely thing. ‘Do you want a brief?’
‘No. I don’t need one. I shouldn’t be here.’ The defiance of the words was undermined by the dull hopelessness of the delivery.
Peach reached over and set the cassette turning in the recorder, announced the names of the principals in this little drama, and allowed himself a theatrical sigh. ‘Mr Rogan, you are here to answer questions concerning the murder of Sarah Dunne on the night of Friday the fourteenth of November last.’
‘Don’t know why. I didn’t even know the girl.’ With his eyes on the floor and his automatic, unthinking denial, he looked like a scruffy schoolboy brought before the headmaster after a prank gone wrong, hopelessly denying what he and everyone else knew was true.
‘You knew her, Mr Rogan. In every sense of the word, including the biblical one.’
The red-rimmed eyes lifted up again at that, and for a brief moment fear flashed into the grey pupils. ‘I didn’t know that girl. Didn’t kill her. That’s the truth, so I’ll go on repeating it.’ He glanced automatically at the silently turning wheels of the recorder.
‘You may well do just that, Mr Rogan. You may repeat it in court, for all we care. If the evidence against you is strong enough, it won’t matter a jot.’ Peach smiled his satisfaction at that thought. He’d never been quite sure what a jot was, but it usually seemed to impress villains.
It was the mention of court which seemed to stir Rogan from the apathy of despair. He looked hard at Peach, apprehension stirring him into life. ‘You haven’t got any evidence against me.’
Peach studied him, as hard and unashamedly as if he were a slide under a microscope. ‘You’ll have to do a lot better than this, Mr Rogan. We have the dead girl’s clothing. Forensic can learn a lot from that, you know. We also have the DNA sample you were kind enough to volunteer to us last night.’
‘I didn’t even know the girl.’
Peach shook his head sadly. Lucy Blake said, ‘Where were you on the night of Friday the fourteenth of November, Mr Rogan?’
‘I don’t know. Not just like that. It’s a long time ago.’
‘Nine days. Not so very long, is it?’
He seemed to come to a decision. ‘All right. I was in Brunton. But I didn’t murder anyone.’
‘What were you doing on that night, Nigel?’
He looked into the DS’s green-blue eyes, so much brighter than his own lustreless ones, and seemed to come to a decision. ‘I picked up a girl that night. It’s nothing to be proud of, is it? That’s why I didn’t want to talk about it.’
‘Can you give us her name?’
‘No. It – it wasn’t that kind of pick-up. I – well, I made an arrangement with her.’
‘You made an arrangement to pay her for sex, didn’t you?’
‘Yes.’ He glanced at Peach. ‘She was only young. She made the first move – offered herself, like. She was the first one to speak. I think she said I didn’t come from round here.’
Peach took up the questioning again, more quietly than he had spoken originally. ‘Where did this sparkling exchange take place?’
‘In the Fox and Pheasant.’
It was one of the town’s seedier pubs, in one of the districts where the rows of small terraced houses had lived on long after the mills they had been built to serve had closed down. It could hardly have had a less appropriate name, being as far from green fields as any of the town’s hostelries. It was the kind of place where women of the streets often went looking for trade.
It was also within three hundred yards of the spot where Sarah Dunne’s body had been found.
Peach said, ‘They’d remember you, would they, in the Fox and Pheasant? Be able to confirm this part of your story at least?’
‘They might. I think I only had one drink. The girl was anxious to get on with it, you see.’
Peach leaned back, as if to get a fuller view of a man he might want to remember. ‘Describe her to us, Mr Rogan.’
Panic flashed into the watery-grey, red-rimmed eyes. ‘I can’t remember much about her.’
‘Try. In your own interests, as well as ours.’
‘She was young. Slim. Wearing a short skirt.’
‘Brilliant. That’s really going to help us to identify her!’
‘I’m sorry. I didn’t think I’d be questioned about it like this, did I? When you’re paying for it, you want to get on with it, you don’t—’
‘Colour of eyes?’
‘I – I don’t remember. Blue, I think, but I’m not certain.’
‘Colour of hair?’
The thin, sharp features contorted into a frown. ‘Not blonde. But not a brunette either.’
Lucy Blake leaned forward. ‘Like mine, was it, Nigel?’
He looked at her rich chestnut hair as if there must be some hidden trap in the invitation. ‘Not – not quite like that. Not as long as yours. And not as shiny. And without that reddish tinge. Light brown, I’d have said, this girl’s hair was. And straight and shortish, I think. That’s as near as I can get.’
‘Anything else?’
‘She had some kind of short coat or jacket above her skirt, I think. And – and I don’t think she’d done much of it before.’
‘Much of what, Nigel?’
‘Prostitution. Whoring. Whatever you like to call it.’
‘And what was it that made you think that?’
Again that intense concentration. If the man was acting, he was very good at it, and the rest of his bearing and appearance didn’t suggest he had the resources for acting. ‘I don’t quite know. She was very young, as I say, but it was more than that. It was something in the way she went about it. For a start, after she’d spoken, she sort of waited for me to make the next move, instead of making the running. And she seemed almost grateful when I asked her to name her price – they’re usually only too anxious to tell you what it will cost, to set out the terms of the transaction.’
They caught a flash of searing self-contempt in the last phrase, a little of the world he had left to become the parody of the man he used to be. He seemed for a moment to be immersed in his own thoughts, so that Lucy Blake had to prompt him with, ‘And was there anything else to make you think this girl was new to the game, Nigel?’
He shrugged hopelessly. ‘Her conduct generally, I suppose. She didn’t – well, didn’t control things the way these women usually do. She seemed almost as though she was going to back off when we left the pub. I had to take her hand and lead her along.’ He struggled with himself for a moment, then said quickly, ‘We were going to her place, but when I suggested a quicky in my car at half price, she accepted immediately – seemed almost relieved.’
‘And how much was half price?’
‘Twenty-five. She’d asked for fifty. That shows she was new to it, doesn’t it, accepting half like that?’ He was pathetically anxious to convince them now, pathetically anxious to put his head into the trap he had set up for himself. ‘They don’t usually cut their prices in half, once they’ve agreed a fee, do they?’
‘No, they don’t, Nigel, that’s right. So you went to your car. And sex took place there, did it?’
‘Yes.’ Perhaps this was the moment when he realized for the first time the implications of convincing them of his story. ‘I gave her the twenty-five pounds and sex took place.’ He repeated the phrase woodenly, as if it had some mystical power of its own.
‘On the back seat of your car?’
‘Yes. Do the details matter?’
‘They may do, Nigel. We shall probably need to examine your car, in due course.’
The fear was back in the face which a moment ago had been anxious only to convince them of the authenticity of his story. ‘Why would you want to do that? I told you, I didn’t kill anyone on that night.’
Peach took over again, his voice harsh and hostile after Blake’s softer tones. ‘So you did, Mr Rogan. But we may need a lot of convincing about that. Where did this exchange take place?’
‘I don’t know the name of the street where I was parked. It was only about two hundred yards from the pub, I should think.’ He brightened a little as a thought occurred to him. ‘There were some lock-up garages, away from any houses. I’d parked in the shadows beside them.’
‘So tell me again how much you paid this girl.’
‘Twenty-five pounds. I told you, she’d asked for fifty at first, but that was taking me back to her room. We were on our way there when I suggested a quicky in the back of my car for twenty-five.’
‘And she accepted? Just like that?’
‘Yes. She didn’t argue. I was a bit surprised at that. I told you, that’s what made me think that she was quite new to—’
‘How did you pay her? Can you remember the denominations of the notes you gave to her?’
Rogan thought hard, as if he could win himself some credit for accuracy here. ‘A twenty and a five, I think. Yes, I’m sure it was, because I remember taking new notes out of my—’
‘And what happened after you’d had your bit of fun on the back seat of your car?’
‘I – I was anxious to get away, as far as I can remember. I told her I had to be off. She didn’t argue; she just snatched up her pants from the floor and left and I drove away. But before she went, she leant across and kissed me on the forehead.’ His hand rose to his forehead at the sudden memory of it. ‘That was another thing that made me think she must be new to the game.’
There was a pause of several seconds whilst they contemplated each other. Nigel Rogan’s eyes flashed from Peach’s implacable face to the softer features of Lucy Blake, trying unsuccessfully to read what was going on in the minds behind the eyes which studied him so relentlessly. He had forgotten all about hiding his hands now; they twisted and untwisted on the edge of the square table in front of him.
Peach said slowly, ‘You’re a cocaine addict, Mr Rogan. That’s what brought you to our attention last night.’
‘I’m not an addict. I like my crack, like it a bit too much perhaps, but I’m in control. I’m going to give it up.’
The protestation of addicts the world over, whether it be gambling, alcohol or hard drugs. Peach smiled sourly. ‘If the amount of crack cocaine you had in your possession was for sale, we’ll have you for dealing. If it was all for your own use, I’d say you were an addict. You’ve lost a wife and two children, and I should think you’re well on the way to losing your job.’
Rogan stared down at his twitching fingers. ‘You know how to kick a man when he’s down. I’m going to give it up. Being brought in here like this, spending a night in your cells, has brought me to my senses.’
He meant it, thought Peach. Really believed he could do it. At this moment he believed it, but the resolution wouldn’t last. It never did: that was part of being an addict. He said, ‘You’ll need help. Don’t make the mistake of thinking you can do it on your own. But we aren’t concerned with your habit. Not here. We’re concerned with the death of Sarah Dunne on the night of the fourteenth of November.’
‘That was nothing to do with me. I’ve told you, I—’
‘You still don’t get it, do you, Rogan? Your brain’s so addled with crack that you can’t see where all this has been leading.’
‘I’ve told you what I did on that night. I may not be proud of it, but—’
‘What time did this episode take place, Mr Rogan?’
He shook his head several times, not in denial, but apparently in an attempt to clear it. ‘I’m not sure. Around ten o’clock, I should think.’
‘The report on the post-mortem examination tells us that Sarah Dunne was killed between nine and eleven on that night.’
‘Not by me, she wasn’t.’
‘The description of the girl you picked up in that pub. The one you took to your car. The one you gave your money to.’
‘It’s not complete. It’s the best I can do.’
‘Maybe. It’s also a description of the girl who was murdered on that night. A description of Sarah Dunne. It may not be complete, but every detail you’ve given us tallies.’
‘But – But I didn’t—’
‘The girl who was in your car on that night was Sarah Dunne, Mr Rogan.’
The name he had never known was being thrown at him now like a series of stones. He licked his pale lips, felt the sharp stubble against his dry tongue, said desperately, ‘You can’t be sure of that. If you take me round the town, show me some of the young girls on the game, I’ll try to pick out the one who—’
‘You won’t. It would be a pointless exercise. Sarah Dunne had twenty-five pounds in her pocket when she was eventually found. In the form of a twenty pound note and a five pound note.’
The hands gripped the edge of the table convulsively. ‘That’s still not conclusive. In a court of law they’d say—’
‘The DNA sample you gave us last night. It’s been tested this morning. It matches the semen samples taken from the body of Sarah Dunne.’
Rogan’s eyes glazed with defeat, his breath suddenly the loudest sound in that small, stifling room. After a few seconds, he said hoarsely, ‘I didn’t kill her.’ Neither of the CID officers helped him out with a comment, and eventually he added inconsequentially, ‘I’m sorry she’s dead. She seemed like a good kid, to me.’
Tom Boyd knew that this must be done, but he wasn’t enjoying it.
The Inspector had only spoken to his Chief Constable once before, and that had been at a social function, when they were bidding farewell to a retiring Superintendent. He found that the top man was at any rate a good listener. He heard Tom out with only a couple of terse questions. And he gave the impression that he had heard much worse than this, that nothing would shock him.
The CC thought for a few seconds when the sordid little tale was complete, or as complete as Tom was prepared to make it. Those seconds seemed like minutes to Tom. He could not know that this experienced senior policeman was evaluating what he had heard, wondering just what had been held back, conjecturing whether this grizzled officer who stood shame-faced in front of him could indeed be a murderer, and what the repercussions might be if he was. The CC said eventually, ‘What is your marital status, Inspector Boyd?’
‘I’m divorced, sir. I have one child, sir, a grown-up daughter, who’s married and lives in Norfolk. I see her only about twice a year.’
‘And you don’t have a regular partner?’
‘No, sir.’
The CC had come across many men like this in his time. Divorce was an occupational hazard of police work. Men remained sexually active, but without an obvious outlet. And Boyd certainly wasn’t handsome; he might have made a reliable husband, but at pushing fifty, stolid and flat-faced, with the haircut and the bearing of an earlier generation, he wasn’t going to have too many offers.
The CC felt a sudden, disturbing spurt of sympathy for the man who stood embarrassed before him. ‘And where were you on the night of the fourteenth of November, when this girl was killed?’
‘I was at home, sir. Alone, unfortunately.’
‘I know that’s what you told this DCI and his sidekick from Brunton. I’m asking you now whether it’s the truth.’
‘It is, sir, yes.’
‘Right. You did right to come to see me. Let me know if there are any more developments. We’ll do whatever we can for you if there are enquiries from Brunton. That is to say, we’ll say you’ve given impeccable service here, and been of good character. It may not be much, but bear in mind that they won’t have many suspects for this who’ll have that kind of support.’
‘No, sir. Thank you, sir. And I’m sorry for bringing this embarrassment upon the service.’
‘These things happen, Inspector Boyd. It won’t count against you here. Providing you didn’t commit this murder, of course.’
He had meant it as a little joke to conclude the interview, but neither of them felt much like laughing.
Thirty miles away, in another police station at Brunton, Thomas Bulstrode Tucker had prepared the words he proposed to deliver to his Chief Inspector. He tried not to issue them through clenched teeth as he said, ‘I enjoyed our golf yesterday, Peach. I can’t remember when I last played so badly, but it was an enjoyable afternoon.’
He can’t even lie convincingly, thought Percy Peach. Not to me, anyway: he must have been able to lie persuasively to someone, to have got to where he is. ‘Glad to hear it, sir. Your Captain seemed to enjoy it, too, judging by his speech at the dinner. Very pleasant chap, I thought.’
‘Yes, well, this is all very nice, but back to business, eh?’ Tucker spoke as if Peach and not he had introduced the diversion of golf. ‘How near are we to clearing up this prostitute’s murder? The media are pressurizing me to hold an update briefing, but if you’ve nothing to deliver, I’ll need to hold them off.’
‘There’s been progress, sir. We interviewed the copper in the case on Saturday afternoon. It didn’t seem appropriate to report our findings to you in a social situation at the golf club yesterday.’
‘Quite right.’ Tucker reflected that he had suffered quite enough without having a policeman thrown into the conversation as a murder suspect.
‘An Inspector Tom Boyd, sir. From the Blackpool force. Traffic section.’
‘At least he’s not one of ours.’ Tucker’s relief was so great that he voiced it aloud.
‘No, sir. Playing away from home, he was. He got that bit right, at least. But he’d have been better to go further afield. He’s admitted to conducting aggressive sex with a Brunton tom last Thursday night.’
‘Aggressive sex?’
Tucker looked nonplussed, and Peach had a sudden glorious vision of Bru¨nnhilde Barbara pursuing Tommy Bloody Tucker round the house in her underwear, uttering whoops of sexual excitement. Bloody hell!
He kept his face commendably straight as he said, ‘Boyd gave us certain details, sir, but I think we shall find out more if we can interview the tom in question. We hope to find her some time today.’
‘Has this Inspector Boyd given any indication that he might have killed Sarah Dunne?’
‘No, sir. He vigorously denies it. But he has no alibi for the night of her murder.’
The Chief Superintendent shook his well-groomed head doubtfully. ‘I can’t see it being a policeman, you know.’ Tucker had apparently wiped from his memory the fact that a member of his own CID team, a man dubbed by the press as the ‘Lancashire Leopard’, had proved to be responsible for a series of four killings less than two years ago. He sighed heavily, like a patient man who has much to bear. ‘Have you any more likely suspects?’
‘We’ve got a man down in the cells who looks as guilty as hell, sir.’ Peach, remembering the hopeless droop of Nigel Rogan’s shoulders as he had been led from the interview room, decided that this was a fair description.
Tucker brightened. He moved into his elder statesman mode and leant forward, placing his elbows on the surface of his large, empty desk, steepling his fingers and nodding sagely. ‘Have we got enough to charge him, Peach?’
Peach pursed his lips, then nodded slowly. ‘I think we have, if we choose to. He’s admitted picking up Sarah Dunne on that night, admitted to paying for her sexual favours, admitted to giving her one on the back seat of his car. A cut-price one, as a matter of interest, sir. He admits to giving her a twenty pound note and a five pound note in payment.’
‘And?’ said Tucker.
The bugger obviously doesn’t read the details I submit to him in memos, thought Percy. I don’t know why I bother – except that I have to, because Tommy Bloody Tucker demands that I keep him briefed in writing. ‘The notes we found in the pocket of the girl’s jacket were a twenty and a five, sir.’
‘Ah!’ A great and welcome light illuminated the features beneath the distinguished silver hair. ‘It begins to look as if we have our man.’
‘The man is a crack cocaine addict, sir. In my view, that is: I don’t suppose for a minute that he’s registered as an addict. He works a night shift in a printing works. My impression is that he won’t keep the job much longer with his crack habit, but that’s by the way.’
‘It will be if I can charge him with murder!’
Peach let the switch to the singular pass without comment. ‘Perhaps partly because he was off his head on crack when he was brought in last night, Rogan volunteered a sample of his hair for DNA analysis. It has been matched this morning with that of the semen samples taken from the body of Sarah Dunne.’
‘Right! Let’s charge the bugger. I’ll call a media conference for this afternoon and announce that we’ve got our man!’ Tucker jutted his jaw forward in a rare image: the steely man of action.
It was tempting, but Percy decided he could not let this run. ‘I’ve questioned him this morning with DS Blake, sir. I’m not satisfied that he is our man.’
‘But you said yourself he’d paid her for sex in the back of his car. We have the banknotes he passed to her. And if the semen sample tallies with his DNA, how much more do we need?’
‘No more, sir. We’ve got an excellent case. And he admits all the things I’ve told you. But he denies murdering the girl.’
‘And you believe him?’ Tucker was suddenly full of contempt for the naivety of his DCI.
‘I think I probably do, sir, yes. Of course, if you’d like to speak to him yourself, he’s still in custody. Be very useful to have the opinion of the man in charge of the CID section on this.’
Tucker was tempted. It would be splendid to produce a confession from the man who had hoodwinked Peach. But he did not want to break the habit of the last ten years and get involved with the gritty reality of an investigation. Moreover, there lurked at the back of his mind a respect he dare not express for the methods and opinions of the egregious Peach. If the DCI thought the man was innocent, if Percy Peach hadn’t wrung a confession from him, then it was unlikely anyone else was going to succeed.
The Chief Superintendent said reluctantly, ‘Let’s presume you’re right and this Rogan man’s not guilty, for the moment. Have you anything else of interest to report on this case?’
‘Yes, sir. Phone call to CID at 22.17 hours on Saturday night, sir. By a man purporting to be the murderer of Sarah Dunne. Asking for you, sir. But taken by DC Pickering, who was alone in the murder room at the time.’
‘Phone call saying what, Peach?’
‘Call purporting to be from the murderer, sir. Made from a public phone booth in Birmingham. By a man with a Brummie accent. Brummie or Black Country, sir. We’ve got the recording of the call, so we can submit it to a voice expert at Forensic.’
‘You think our killer is from the Midlands?’
‘Difficult to say, sir. This could be a hoax call. Chummy didn’t use any information he couldn’t have got from the press. But he referred to the two similar killings of toms in the Birmingham area and claimed responsibility for those as well as for Sarah Dunne. I have the tape here, sir.’
‘Right. Leave it with me. I’ll pass it on to Forensic.’
‘Yes, sir. Bear in mind that it may be a hoax, though. There are—’
‘I’ll be the judge of that, Peach. It’s part of being in charge of an investigation, to make judgements on things like this.’
‘Yes, sir. Rather you than me, sir.’
‘That’s all right. You get about your business and stop wasting valuable time.’
Tucker’s lethargic imagination had been stirred into vigorous life. He picked up the internal phone and began immediate arrangements for a media briefing at three o’clock. With a man under arrest and a DNA semen match, plus a phone call from a man claiming responsibility for this and two other murders, there was much to report. He’d show the critics that Chief Superintendent Thomas Tucker was a man to be reckoned with, a man who got things done.
It hadn’t yet occurred to him that these two new items of information were in fact contradictory.