Chapter Ten
Sunday, 26 June, Wiltshire - 2.10p.m.
FOR. VARIOUS REASONS, DS Sean Fraser was none too happy about accompanying Maddocks to the interview with Jane Kingsley, and he sat in gloomy silence in the passenger seat as the car headed for Salisbury. He had made himself a hostage to fortune by rashly promising his wife and two young daughters that he would take them to the beach at Studland that Sunday, and their tears and recriminations at the cancelled treat lay heavily on his conscience. His gloom was exacerbated by Maddocks’s disgusting cheerfulness at the thought of a possible collar which he chose to express through a tuneless and repetitive rendering of ‘The sun has got his hat on, Hip-hip-hip-Hooray...’
‘Give over, Guv,’ he said at last. ‘It’s worse than having a tooth extracted.’
‘You’re a miserable creature, Fraser. What’s eating you, anyway?’
‘It’s a Sunday, Guv, so it’s going to be a waste of time. You realize her entire family will probably be there visiting her, which means we won’t get a look in, not unless we want Kingsley on our backs as well.’
‘Nn-nn.’ Maddocks gave a self-satisfied grunt. ‘I sent Mandy Barry over to chat up the nurses this morning and find out who’s been visiting Jane and when. According to her, Kingsley hasn’t been near his daughter since she was admitted, the stepmother’s been in once and doesn’t look like showing again, and the two brothers came independently and left in sulks. The word is there’s no love lost between any of them, so the chances of them giving up their Sunday for her are non-existent.’
‘You’re round the flaming bend,’ said Fraser angrily, seeing himself cast as co-conspirator in Maddocks’s unorthodox methods. ‘By the book, the Super said. He’ll flip if he finds out you’ve had Mandy sneaking around behind people’s backs.’
‘Who’s going to tell him?’ said Maddocks carelessly. ‘I’d be even more round the bend if I went in cold.’ He swung the car on to the main road and accelerated up the hill. ‘Look, lad, you’ve got to find some backbone from somewhere. You’ll never get anywhere in this business if you can’t act on your own initiative occasionally.’ He broke into his tuneless dirge again.
Fraser turned away to gaze out of the passenger window. What really riled him about Maddocks was that the bastard was more often right than he was wrong. Initiative in Maddocks’s vocabulary meant taking short-cuts and using methods that wouldn’t stand scrutiny for a minute under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, but he got away with it because, in his own terminology, ‘he could smell guilt’. Privately, Fraser put this down to the fact that the Inspector was as ethically bankrupt as the people he arrested - he had heard more than one whisper that Maddocks had taken bribes in the past - but this raised troubling questions about the effectiveness of policemen and, as Fraser was a thoughtful man, the whole issue worried him. For there was an intrinsic absurdity about forcing the police to follow every rule, when criminal behaviour, which was dedicated to rule-breaking, remained unchanged.
Nightingale Clinic, Salisbury - 2.30p.m.
Alan Protheroe listened to what the two detectives had to say with a frown creasing his amiable face. ‘Presumably there’s more to this than meets the eye,’ he suggested. ‘If the Hammersmith
police only wanted the address of Miss Harris’s parents, why didn’t they telephone Miss Kingsley and ask her for it?’
‘Because, in the message she left on Harris’s answerphone, she refers to this clinic as a nutters’ hospital,’ said Maddocks easily, ‘and, as I’m sure you know, there are rules governing the police in the way they question the mentally disturbed. So, before they approached her direct, Hammersmith asked us to find out why she was here, and we discovered very quickly from our colleagues in Fordingbridge that she had been admitted following a suicide attempt after her fiancé deserted her for Miss Harris. We have no desire to upset her unnecessarily, so it was felt that any questions should be asked by plainclothes policemen.’
Alan took exception to his references to ‘nutters’ and ‘the mentally disturbed’. More, he took exception to Maddocks himself, disliking the man’s over-powering personality which thrust into the room like a bad smell. ‘Why didn’t you ring me?’ he said suspiciously. ‘I would have been happy to ask the questions for you.’
Maddocks spread his hands in a gesture of surrender. ‘All right, I’ll be honest with you, sir. The problem is not Miss Kingsley but Miss Kingsley’s father. The orders from above are very clear. Do not give Adam Kingsley any excuse to sue the Hampshire police for alleged insensitivity towards his sick daughter. We haven’t a clue what her reaction will be to questions about the woman who seduced her fiancé. For all we know, the mere mention of Meg Harris’s name will have her climbing the walls, and we have enough difficulty paying our policemen without squandering the budget on court battles with a tetchy millionaire who’s already worried about his daughter’s state of mind.’ He turned his hands palms down. ‘And with good reason, it would seem. By her own admission, she’s in a nutter’s hospital and she’s shit-scared she’s going round the bend. Her words, sir, not mine.’
Fraser had to admire Maddocks’s psychology. Whatever Protheroe’s suspicions about their motives for being there, he was side-tracked into defending his clinic and his patient. ‘I would prefer it, Inspector, if you ceased referring to the Nightingale Clinic as a nutters’ hospital,’ he said tartly. ‘Jinx has a healthy cynicism about everything, coupled with a dry sense of humour. She was clearly joking. I have no concerns at all about her mental equilibrium. Nor, I am sure, has she. She has limited loss of memory following her accident, but is otherwise mentally acute.’
‘Well, that’s a relief,’ said Maddocks. ‘It’ll be all right for us to talk to her then?’
‘Assuming she agrees, then, yes, I see no reason why not.’ He stood up and led the way to the door, noticing with interest that Sergeant Fraser appeared to find Detective Inspector Maddocks as uncongenial as he did. The body language spoke volumes, principally in the younger man’s attempts to keep daylight between himself and his superior. He took them down the corridor. ‘I think it would be better if I remained during the interview,’ he said, tapping on the door of number twelve.
‘I see no reason why not, sir, assuming Miss Kingsley agrees,’ said Maddocks with derisory emphasis.
Jinx, in her turn, listened to the Inspector’s explanation for being there. She sat in the chair by the window and, bar wishing the two policemen ‘good afternoon’ when they came in, said nothing until Maddocks had finished. Even then she didn’t answer immediately, but eyed him in silence for a moment or two with curiously little expression on her pale face. ‘Meg’s parents live in a village near Warminster called Littleton Mary,’ she said finally. ‘Her father’s the vicar there. I’m afraid I can’t give you the telephone number because it’s in my address book and I don’t have that with me, but I should imagine it’s in the book. Her father’s initial is C for Charles and he and Meg’s mother live in the vicarage.’
She reached towards the cigarette packet on the table, then changed her mind and left it where it was. She found herself reluctant suddenly to draw attention to the tremors in her hands, and doubted her ability to hold the flame steady long enough to light a cigarette. ‘But Meg won’t be there,’ she continued in her deep voice. ‘She’s on holiday in France at the moment.’
‘Well, that would explain why we’ve had difficulty contacting her,’ said Maddocks, as if hearing this information for the first time. He glanced towards Alan Protheroe. ‘In fact, Doctor, I really don’t think we need keep you, not unless Miss Kingsley feels nervous at being left on her own.’ He smiled down at her. ‘Do you, Miss Kingsley?’
She shrugged indifferently. ‘Not in the least.’
‘Then thank you very much, sir. We won’t be long.’ Maddocks stood by the open door.
Alan frowned at him angrily, well aware that he was being rail-roaded. ‘I’d rather stay, Jinx,’ he said. ‘I’m sure your father would expect me to.’
She gave her low laugh. ‘I’m sure you’re right, but as you keep trying to persuade me, Dr Protheroe, I call the shots, not my father. Thank you anyway. I think I can manage a few questions on my own.’
‘Well, you know where I am if you need me.’ He allowed himself to be closed out by Maddocks’s firm hand on the door, but he wished he knew what the hell was going on. It was obvious that Jinx was as reluctant as the policemen to let him listen in on the conversation.
Inside the room, Maddocks beamed encouragingly at Jinx. ‘Any idea which part of France, Miss Kingsley?’
She shook her head. ‘No, but I can probably guess. I know the man she’s gone with. His name’s Leo Wallader and he has a cottage on the south coast of Brittany. The address is Les Hirondelles, rue St Jacques, Trinité-sur-mer. There is a telephone, but again’ - she gave a small shrug - ‘the number’s in my address book.’
Maddocks nodded. ‘But if you know she’s in France,’ he said with a puzzled frown, ‘why did you telephone her London number?’
Jinx looked at him for a moment, then picked up her cigarette packet and tapped a cigarette into her fingers. Nicotine was more important than pride. She reached for the lighter but Fraser was there before her, holding the flame steady beneath the wavering tip. She thanked him with a smile. ‘Meg can ring her answerphone and listen to her messages,’ she said. ‘I assumed that’s what she’d do.’
‘Who told you she was in France?’
‘Her partner, Josh Hennessey.’ She gazed at him through the smoke. ‘He phoned me on Wednesday.’
Maddocks glanced towards Fraser to see if he’d written that down. ‘And has Meg called you back, Miss Kingsley?’
‘Not yet, no.’
‘Is this Mr Hennessey in contact with her?’
‘Not as far as I know. She didn’t give him a contact number.’ He made a play of consulting his notebook. ‘In fact we know about Mr Leo Wallader. He came up in connection with your car accident. I believe he was your fiancé until a couple of weeks ago?’
She blew a stream of smoke into the air and watched it ripple towards the ceiling. ‘That’s right,’ she said evenly.
‘But he preferred your friend Meg Harris and left you for her.’
She smiled slightly. ‘Right again, Inspector.’
‘So perhaps Miss Harris is embarrassed to phone you,’ he suggested, ‘despite your insistence in your message that you don’t bear grudges.’
She tapped ash into the ashtray. ‘To tell you the truth,’ she said slowly, ‘I can’t really remember what I said.’ She looked at him with an enquiring expression in her dark eyes.
‘You talked about political incorrectness, said you ought to be ripping her first editions to pieces, told her you’d lost your memory after driving at a concrete post and asked her to phone you here if she could stand the embarrassment of talking to you. Does that ring any bells?’
‘Only alarm ones,’ she murmured. ‘You were very precise in your introductory spiel. You said that Hammersmith police had listened to her messages, taken down this phone number and then asked you to contact me here for her parents’ address. You made no mention of listening to the tape yourself.’ She pressed the palm of her hand against the side of her head where a pain was beginning. ‘So either you were there when they listened, or they made a copy which they sent on to you.’
‘They faxed us a transcript,’ said Maddocks. ‘Why does that alarm you?’
‘May I see the fax?’
He glanced at Fraser again. ‘Did we bring it with us, Sergeant? The last time I saw it, it was on your desk.’
The young man shook his head. ‘Sorry, Guv. I didn’t think we’d need it.’ He turned to prop his notebook against the wall, hoping that his anger and unease were less obvious than they felt.
Jinx watched him for a moment. He was a poor liar, she thought, but then his complexion was against him. He was fair, like Fergus, and the blood ran too easily to his face. She felt a twinge of sympathy for him. He had a bully for a boss and she knew better than anyone that it took a peculiar kind of courage to stand up to bullies. ‘As a matter of interest,’ she said calmly, “why didn’t you phone Meg’s business number and ask Josh these questions?’
‘Because Hammersmith have been unable to locate it,’ said Maddocks. ‘As I explained at the beginning, she appears to be in the process of moving out. According to them, there’s nothing left except a few first editions, some clothes and the cat.’
She turned to Fraser. ‘So who’s looking after Marmaduke?’ ‘The neighbour, Mrs Helms,’ he answered obligingly.
There was a long silence.
‘What exactly has happened to Meg?’ asked Jinx quietly. ‘I can’t believe that Winchester CID would go all the way to London to search someone’s flat just because her credit cards have been stolen.’
Maddocks, controlling an urge to show Fraser what a pillock he thought him, perched instead on the edge of Jinx’s bed and leaned forward, hands clamped between his knees. ‘It wasn’t only hers that were stolen,’ he admitted gravely, ‘but Mr Wallader’s as well. The registered address for his cards is 12 Gienavon Gardens, Richmond, which was already in the Hampshire police file as a result of your accident. Richmond police were able to give us the address and telephone number of Leo’s parents because they retrieved that information from your house following the crash. However, when we contacted Sir Anthony to discover where Leo and Meg have gone he couldn’t tell us anything. And that worried us, because we couldn’t understand why neither of them had notified the credit companies that their cards had been stolen. If they’re in a cottage in Brittany, then perhaps that explains it, but I don’t understand why Sir Anthony couldn’t give us the address:’
She drew away from him into the back of her chair and tried to control the panic in her heart. Something else had happened ... something so terrible that she was too frightened to search her memory for it... ‘He doesn’t know it,’ she said in an uneven voice which came back to her through the thudding, racing blood in her ears. ‘He knows very little about his son. Philippa, too.’
Maddocks’s heavy face drew closer, his shrewd little eyes fixed on hers. ‘Are you all right, Miss Kingsley?’
‘Yes, thank you.’ Something else had happened ... forget... forget... FORGET! ‘As far as they’re concerned,’ she went on more steadily, ‘his only capital assets are a few stocks and shares, when in fact he has the cottage in Brittany, a house in London, which he rents out to anyone who can afford it, and a condominium in Florida. There could be a great deal more, for all I know. Those are the three he told me about.’
‘Do you know the address of the London house?’
They’d had a row ... Anthony and Philippa had been there ...I want to marry Meg ... Meg’s a whore ... She flicked her gaze back to Maddocks’s face. ‘Only that it’s in Chelsea somewhere,’ she said, licking her lips nervously. ‘His solicitor could tell you. His name’s Maurice Bloom and he has an office somewhere off Fleet Street. I’m sure you can find him through the Law Society.’
Maddocks checked to see that Fraser had taken down the name. ‘Is there a good reason why he doesn’t want his parents to know about his properties?’ he asked her.
She thought about that. ‘It depends on your definition of good. Yes, he has a reason and, personally, I think it stinks, but it makes sense to Leo.’ She paused. ‘I can’t really tell you what it is without sounding bitter.’
‘I think we need to know,’ said the Inspector.
Did they? She was finding it hard to concentrate. I said goodbye to Leo at breakfast... we’re getting married on the second of July ... ‘They’re a type, not Philippa so much perhaps, but Anthony and Leo certainly.’ Her voice sounded strangely remote again. ‘You never pay for anything if you can get someone else to pay for you, you use other people’s expertise to help you up the ladder, and you plead poverty all the time while making snide remarks about how wealthy everyone else is. It becomes very wearing very quickly for the person who’s being bled, particularly when you know that the parasite you’re supporting is rolling in it.’ Was she mad? These were the last people who should be hearing her confession. Talk to the doctor ... he wants your stay here to be comfortable... it’s a free choice...
Maddocks watched her eyes grow huge in a face made tiny by her lack of hair. He felt the pull of their attraction even while he was thinking: Got you, you murdering bitch. You really hated the poor bastard. ‘And Leo did this to you?’ he asked gently.
‘Not immediately. He wasn’t so crass. Actually, he was quite generous at the beginning. It was only when he moved into Glenavon Gardens that I realized what I’d saddled myself with.’ She took deep breaths.
‘There’s no hurry, Miss Kingsley. Take your time.’
Memories of Russell’s murder flooded her mind. Take your time ... there’s no hurry ... we know your father hated him enough to kill him ... we know your father’s a psychopath ... ‘He’s a believer in the what’s-yours-is-mine principle,’ she said in a rush to drown out the voices in her head, ‘but without the reciprocity. He was just as secretive with me as he was with his parents. I only found out about his properties when Maurice Bloom phoned him at my house one day, and it was clear from his end of the conversation that he owned something in Florida. I was angry enough to make him tell me about it, because he had given me the impression he was in financial difficulties.’ So much so that, like Fergus, he had borrowed money from her handbag. God, she remembered now. It was the meanness that had finally got to her, the tax dodges, the obsessive secrecy surrounding his bank and credit card statements, the me-me-me of his lifestyle.
‘What sort of job did he have?’
She noted the past tense but let it pass. ‘He called himself a stock broker but, as he never mentioned clients by name, I guessed he was playing the markets for himself.’
‘Did he go out to work each day?’
He certainly went Somewhere each day. ‘He spends his time in the City.’ I want to marry Meg ... ‘Keeping his finger on the pulse, as he calls it.’
‘What sort of financial difficulties did he say he was in?’
‘He said he’d lost everything on some bad investments but I think he was lying. He was always complaining about how badly off he was compared with me. He used to do the same with his father.’
‘Yet you said his father’s the same.’
She had let rip the day she decided to end it, told them all what she thought of them, called them over-privileged leeches whose only claim to respectability was that one of their ancestors had had the brains and the balls to earn a title. ‘Anthony’s certainly very mean. He never pays bills until the final demand arrives in the hopes the business may have gone under before he has to write the cheque.’
‘If I understood you right, Miss Kingsley, you’re saying Leo touches his father for money.’
She nodded but didn’t say anything. God, but they’d hated her for it. And triumphant Leo had told her he’d been having an affair with Meg, and that she was the one he wanted to marry. And the shock had been ENORMOUS! She remembered it all. Anthony’s loathing ... ‘You’re the daughter of a barrow boy ... we never wanted you in this family ...’ Philippa’s distress. ‘Do stop ... do stop ... words can’t be taken back ...’ Leo’s sulk ... ‘I want to marry Meg. ..I want to marry Meg...’
‘Which is why he’s never told him about these properties he owns?’ Maddocks suggested. ‘He doesn’t want his father to know what he’s actually worth.’
She nodded again. ‘He was - is’ she corrected herself, ‘obsessive about money. They both are.’ She called her thoughts back from the past. ‘One thing I can absolutely guarantee is that Leo would have his credit cards stopped the minute he realized they were stolen. And he certainly wouldn’t leave for France without them.’
‘So what are you saying?’
I’m saying Leo’s dead. A picture flashed out of nowhere into her tired brain. A lightning image, sharply defined, but so brief that it was gone again before she could register what it was. Meg’s a whore... Meg’s a whore.. .too many secrets... déjà vu ... this has happened before ... ‘God,’ she said, pressing a bruised hand to her chest, ‘I thought - just for a moment, I thought...’ She looked blankly at Maddocks. ‘What did you ask me?’
He hadn’t missed the flicker of astonishment that swept across her face. ‘I was wondering what conclusions you’ve drawn from the fact that Leo hasn’t had his cards stopped?’
She pressed trembling fingers to her forehead. ‘I feel awful,’ she said abruptly. ‘I think I’m going to be sick.’
Fraser bent down to look into her face. ‘I’ll get the doctor to you,’ he said.
‘The name of Miss Harris’s company, that’s the only other thing we need,’ pressed Maddocks, getting to his fact. ‘We can take it from there. You said her partner was Josh Hennessey. What’s the name of her company?’
‘Leave it out, Guv, for Christ’s sake,’ said Fraser angrily, pressing the bell beside the bed. ‘Can’t you see she’s not well?’ ‘Harris and Hennessey,’ she murmured. ‘The number’s in the book beneath Meg’s home number. M. S. Harris first, then Harris and Hennessey. I don’t understand why you didn’t call it before coming here.’
‘Well?’ demanded Maddocks of Fraser as he unlocked his car door. ‘Why the hell didn’t we?’
‘Don’t ask me, Guv. I went to Downton Court, remember. My recollection is that the Super instructed you to find out what you could about Meg Harris.’
‘It’s bloody Hammersmith’s fault,’ said Maddocks irritably. ‘Goddammit, they’ve got the fucking telephone books in front of them.’ He slid behind the wheel. ‘What did you make of her?’ Fraser folded himself into the passenger seat and pulled the door shut. ‘I felt sorry for her. She looks really ill.’
‘Hmm, well, it didn’t stop her running rings around you, did it?’ He fired the engine.
‘Or you,’ said Fraser curtly. ‘You set the alarm bells ringing, not me.’
But Maddocks wasn’t listening. He thrust the car into gear and swung the wheel. ‘I’ll tell you something, she certainly didn’t like Leo very much, or the parents either. You’ve met Sir Anthony. Would you say her description of him was accurate?’ ‘You can’t tell much about a man when he’s in shock. He’s not poor, that’s for sure.’ He thought back. ‘Matter of fact, I did think he was a bit of a pseud, but the poor bastard was about to be hit with his son’s death, so I didn’t analyse over much.’
‘It’s odd, though,’ said Maddocks thoughtfully. ‘If she despised them all as much as she claims she did, then why was she going through with the wedding? I mean, it was Leo who called it off, not her, and if he was so obsessive about money, why did he get shot of a Kingsley in order to hitch himself to a vicar’s daughter? It doesn’t ring true to me.’ He gave Fraser a
friendly punch on the shoulder. Well done, lad. Looks like you were right all along. She’s our villain, no question about it. Now all we have to do is nail the bitch.’
Fraser had his doubts. She’d looked so damn good on paper, but the person, predictably, was a different matter. Could someone so frail have committed so physical a crime? ‘She’s not strong enough, Guv. There were two of them and Leo was over six fact.’
Maddocks slowed at the clinic gates. ‘She’s sharp as a tack. She used deception to kill them, not strength.’ He pulled on to the road. ‘And don’t be seduced by that feeble-little-girl act either. Christ, I’ve never met such a calculating woman. She was one step ahead of us most of the time, and if she’s suffering from amnesia I’ll eat my hat.’
The Ragged Staff, Salisbury - 6.30 p.m.
WPC Blake, comfortably unobtrusive in jeans and a T-shirt, finally tracked Samantha Garrison to earth in a city centre pub. She was alone at the bar, a rather pathetic sight in a tight black strapless sheath that showed every one of her middle-aged bulges and encouraged her underarm fat to flow like soft lard over the sequined border. Limp hair hung like a damp curtain about her heavily made-up face and cheap scent rose in a thick miasma from her warm pores.
‘Samantha Garrison?’ she asked, slipping on to the neighbouring stool.
‘Oh, Jesus,’ sighed the woman, ‘tell me you’re not the filth, there’s a love. I just don’t need the aggro at the moment. I’m having a quiet drink in my local, all right? Do you see any customers because I sure as hell don’t. Chance’d be a fine thing on a Sunday night in this miserable hell-hole.’
‘I’m not here for aggro,’ said Blake, catching the barman’s eye. ‘What are you drinking?’
Samantha eyed the half-pint of bitter that she’d been spinning out for the last forty minutes. ‘Double rum and Coke,’ she said.
Blake ordered a gin and tonic for herself, waited for the drinks to arrive, then suggested they adjourn to an isolated table in the window.
‘You said no aggro,’ Samantha reminded her. ‘What do you want to say to me over there that you can’t say here?’
‘I want to talk about what happened to you on the twenty-third of March. I thought it would be less embarrassing if we were a little more private.’
A bleak expression settled over the painted face. ‘I knew that one would come back to haunt me. What if I say I don’t want to talk about it?’
‘Then I’ll be conducting a one-sided conversation which everyone will hear.’ She glanced towards the barman. ‘I’m trying to make things easy for you, Samantha. If you’d rather, we can go back to your house.’
‘Gawd no. D’you think I want my kids reminding what happened?’ She eased off the stool. ‘Get your arse over here then but I’m not making no promises. It still gives me the sweats just thinking about it. I suppose it’s what happened to that other girl that’s got you on my back again.’
Blake took the chair opposite and leaned forward, elbows on the table. ‘Which other girl’s that?’
‘The word is another one got done same as me.’
‘It certainly looks like it.’
‘Is she talking?’
‘Not at the moment. She’s too scared.’
Samantha took a huge swallow of her rum and Coke. ‘Not bloody surprised.’
Blake nodded. ‘We need one of you to help us. We’re worried that if he does it again he might kill the next girl.’ She examined the woman’s face closely. ‘Girl,’ she thought, was quite the wrong expression. Flossie had given her age as forty-six and Samantha would never see forty again. There were other similarities, too. They were both plump, both blonde and both extremely heavy-handed with near-white face powder. ‘How did he contact you, Samantha. Did he pick you up off the street, or do you advertise somewhere?’
‘Listen, love, I said I wouldn’t make no promises and I meant it.’
‘Flossie called me “love”. You call me “love”. Look, please don’t take offence, but you and she are very alike. I’d describe you both as “motherly”.’ She paused to collect her thoughts. ‘The only reference Flossie made to her attacker was to call him little Lord Fauntleroy, so I’m guessing he’s much younger than both of you, probably well spoken and probably handsome, and I’m guessing, too, that he didn’t choose either of you by accident. Judging by the fact that you and Flossie are of similar age and similar appearance, he was clearly looking for a specific kind of prostitute. Which means he must have picked you up off the street or he wouldn’t have known what you looked like. Am I right?’
‘I’m long past walking the streets, love.’ Samantha sighed again. ‘Look, get me another double rum and Coke, then maybe - just maybe - I’ll tell you.’
‘I’m not shelling out again unless it’s a definite maybe,’ said Blake firmly. ‘This isn’t official, you know, it’s my own hard-earned money I’m using.’
‘More fool you, dear. No one thanks you for anything these days.’
‘How much did he pay you to keep quiet?’
‘Forty,’ said Samantha, ‘but it’s not the money, love. It was him. He promised me another going over if I opened my mouth, and I believed him. Still do, if it’s of any interest to you. He was mad as a bloody hatter.’
‘Forty,’ Blake echoed in genuine astonishment. ‘Christ! He must have money to bum. What do you normally charge? Ten?’ No answer. ‘So he’s a rich, well-spoken, handsome young man?’ Again no answer. ‘Come on, Samantha, how did he know what you looked like? Tell me that at least. It means I can put the word out among the other girls to be careful in future.’
The woman nudged her glass towards the WPC. ‘I reckon you’ve got it back to front, love. I reckon he was expecting something young and pretty, and found a fat old slag instead. All I know is, he rang me on the number on my card - and the card’s in that many shop windows I wouldn’t know which one he saw - made an appointment to visit, climbed on to my sodding bed and went berserk. Claimed I was old enough to be his mother and that I’d no business to be advertising under false pretences. Now give us a fill-up, there’s a good girl.’
Blake took the glass and stood up. ‘So you think he’s a regular round the prostitutes but only lashes out at the older ones?’
The heavy shoulders rose in a shrug. ‘Thinking’s never been my strong point, dear. If it had, I’d have been a brain surgeon. Mind, I reckon his father beats up on his ma. “Tell ‘em your old man did it,” he said, “and they’ll believe you.”‘