FORTY-TWO
Why?’
‘Why what exactly? Sir.’
‘After she hung up – why didn’t you call her back immediately. Find out why she was so keen to get a comment?’
Because I missed out on your dish of hindsight. Sir. Sarah had been in with Baker for forty-two minutes. She’d not expected it to drag on this long, knew it would last three minutes more at most. Something vital was about to come up. Not that she could see the future any better than the past, but because she’d arranged it with Harries. He’d ring at 9.45 on a pressing matter and she’d get to leave. Her suspicions about Harries were on hold, she’d keep a watching brief while allowing him the benefit of the doubt. Which was more than Baker was giving her. At the moment she wasn’t so much on the carpet as admiring its underlay.
She knew he was ego-aggrandizing at her expense but in a way he was right: she should have phoned King back after that call last night. She pursed her lips. The error ten years ago had been saying too much, yesterday it had been saying too little. She’d make up for it big time when she next saw King. Baker tapped his foot, still waiting for an answer.
‘You’re right. I should have called her. I should have known when she hung up so fast that she was up to something. I’m sorry, sir.’
‘You’d best not be taking the piss, Quinn.’ Fifteen minutes she spent listening to Baker’s lecture on handling the media, mainly King. His ideas for the latter were inventive if not – for her, anyway – anatomically impossible. She glanced again at her mobile. If it didn’t ring any minute she’d road test them on Harries.
‘Anyway, Quinn, I had a word with her editor first thing. Guy called Bob Grant.’
‘Oh?’ Took his time getting round to that. ‘Has he agreed to a retraction?’
‘Not exactly.’
‘An apology?’
‘Not in so many words.’
Great prowess dealing with the press, chief. ‘What then?’
‘We’ll be asked to contribute when they do a follow-up.’
‘And that’s it?’
‘That your phone ringing?’
‘9.45 I said. Not a minute more. Not a minute less.’
‘Yeah, but, boss . . .’ Harries was striding to keep up as Sarah headed down the corridor to the incident room.
‘Do you have any idea what it’s like to be cooped up in the same room as that man for more than an hour?’ His Old Spice hadn’t even started wearing off.
‘Something important came up.’
‘I know that. I told you it was vital you got me out of there the second—’
‘No, I mean it, boss. We got a call.’
Something in his voice made her stop, turn. ‘This had better be good.’
‘A punter. Some bloke reckons he saw a woman on the waste ground carrying a baby, the same day Evie was abducted.’
‘Why the hell hasn’t he come forward before?’
‘He wasn’t aware of all the fuss.’ Harries paused. ‘Until he saw Karen Lowe’s interview. Last night.’
No wonder he’d hesitated. It was quite a bombshell. Sarah’s thoughts raced. The guy could be a prime witness. Had she made a bad call, not giving King access to Karen sooner? Had the reporter been right all along? She shook her head. No way.
‘Has this bloke been on another planet?’
‘He’s . . . erm . . . well . . .’
‘Stop pissing around Harries.’
‘His name’s Walter Clarke. He’s in his late-seventies and he was calling from Lea Bank.’
She’d heard of the place. ‘The rest home?’
He nodded.
‘Brillliant.’ She sighed.
‘They’re old. Not stupid, ma’am.’
She ignored the rebuke, asked another question. ‘It’s over Walsall way, isn’t it?’ They were walking again, heading for the motor this time.
‘Yes. He used to live in Small Heath. One of those houses they knocked down in Blake Street? He likes getting back when he can give the staff a slip.’
‘Wanders a lot, does he?’
‘It doesn’t mean his mind’s not all there.’
She sniffed.
‘What’s the matter with you, ma’am?’
‘I beg your pardon?’
He shook his head. ‘Doesn’t matter.’
Clearly it did.
They were pulling out of the car park when she next spoke. ‘So what else did Mr Clarke have to say?’
‘Not a lot. The old dragon who runs the place took the phone off him. Said if we wanted to speak to him we could go there. It was her phone bill he was clocking up.’
‘Reckoned it was a waste of money, did she?’
His knuckles whitened round the wheel. ‘We’ve got our first real break since this case began and you’re belittling it before we even speak to the guy.’
She turned her head, gazed through the window.
‘You just don’t like it, do you?’
‘I really wouldn’t try telling me what I like or don’t like, constable.’
‘The fact the break came via the media. Would it be any easier if it wasn’t Caroline’s piece?’
‘I’d so back off if I were you.’
‘If I were you I’d be pleased not—’
‘I’ve no intention of whooping with joy because a septuagenarian with a penchant for away days sees a woman with a baby. It doesn’t mean I’m not interested. Don’t assume I’m dismissing it. But there’s a long way to go before a jury says guilty.’
Sarah found herself desperately wishing for a short cut through Walter Clarke’s meanderings. He’d talked them through his school days, army days, high days and holidays. Give me a break, Walter. If there was any consolation for the inordinate amount of time this was taking it was being late for the showdown with Caroline King. She’d asked Dean Lavery to phone the reporter, invite her in for a little chat. He’d texted twenty minutes ago to say she was at HQ. Walter Clarke was still showing no sign of arriving at the point. Her prompts so far had been counter-productive, she let him ramble, allowed her own thoughts to wander.
She wondered about the other calls after last night’s programme. According to Paul Wood forty plus people had phoned in. Most were being followed-up, checked out. She suspected it would be another instance of quantity rather than quality. That was certainly the case with Walter Clarke’s outpourings.
She cut the old boy a glance, saw a cross between Captain Bird’s Eye and Alan Sugar. Walter sat well back in an ancient wing chair, cup of tea balanced on his paunch; slippered feet an inch or two off the carpet. ‘Yeah, Winnie was a good bloke.’
Churchill. She tuned out again. Thought of another good bloke: John Hunt. They’d chatted earlier when she’d asked him to chase forensics. She’d sensed he still felt a touch miffed because he was no longer her partner. Mind she also realized she quite missed the older man’s unquestioning support. Talking of old men . . . She tuned in again.
‘I know there’s not much of it left, but I still like to go back, have a look round. I can see it all in my head. I was born in number six, see, then after the war me and Betty moved to number twelve. The kids were born there. Top room at the back.’ His smiled faded. ‘Always thought I’d die in that house . . .’
His voice petered out. She tried steering his thoughts. ‘You phoned us, Mr Clarke. Can you tell us again what you saw last time you were there?’
He stared into the distance, miles away, a lifetime ago. She wondered what was in his mind’s eye.
Walter saw a scruffy little fellow with scabby knees and bruises from fights with his mates; he saw a good-looking kid leaving school at fourteen and learning a trade; a handsome young soldier with big boys’ battle scars then a loving husband with pretty wife and well-mannered kids.
All these images Walter saw more clearly than his own reflection in the mirror every morning. He barely recognized the face that looked back with its deep lines, dull blue eyes. The once fine features were now coarse, misshapen. No one really looked at it any more. Only Walter and he hated it. Quite often these days, Walter had taken to leaving off his glasses. Soft focus was easier than hard reality. He was still proud, he could pretend. It helped him to turn a blind eye to the yellowing walls and nicotine stained ceiling in his room; the fussing and faults and over-friendliness of fellow residents and the prying and patronizing of the owners. It was more difficult to ignore the odours of age: a staleness, a trace of something less than fresh however fastidious the personal hygiene. He considered it a smell peculiar to aging flesh and it wasn’t easy to ignore because some of it emanated from him. He knew this, was shamed by it. It was why he took refuge in the past.
Sarah gently removed the cup from its precarious perch on the old boy’s stomach. His eyes struggled to focus for a few seconds, then: ‘You know love, they should never have knocked them houses down.’ Dust rose when he whacked the arm of his chair. ‘They mightn’t have looked much from the street but they were little palaces inside. People kept ’em spick and span in them days. And another thing, everybody knew their neighbours. Not like now when hardly anyone knows and nine times out of ten couldn’t give a monkey’s. It’s why I knew who she was straight away, see.’
Sarah and Harries exchanged glances. Was that a pearl among a pile of verbal pig food?
‘The minute I clapped eyes on her, I knew. They used to live round the corner, see. I’ve known her since she was a kid. Cheeky little sod she was.’
Sarah wanted no misunderstanding. She spoke slowly, clearly. ‘Who exactly are we talking about, Mr Clarke?’
‘I’m not deaf y’know. Nor thick.’ He’d misunderstood.
She smiled. ‘I appreciate that Mr—’
‘I’ve told you once. Don’t you listen or something?’
‘We have to be absolutely clear here, Mr Clarke. I know you spoke to one of my officers on the phone, but I need you to tell me again now.’
‘OK. But this’ll be the last time. Why don’t you people make notes?’
Harries shrugged, he was.
‘I got the bus to Paradise. It’s a nice journey. I like the bus.’
‘When was this, Mr Clarke?’
‘Do you want me to tell you or not?’
She’d swing for him in a minute. ‘Yes. Of course.’
‘It was the day they were talking about on the telly last night. It’s what made me think of it. If you’d seen anything they said, call the police. So I did.’
‘Right. Good.’ Sarah bit her lip. ‘So what did you see?’
‘I saw the woman. The mother. She had the baby. She was walking along carrying the baby in her arms.’
‘Did you speak to her?’
‘No she was too far away.’ He scratched the beard. ‘She didn’t see me. I did wave.’
‘You saw her walking along. What happened?’
‘Nothing.’
‘Nothing? Where did they go?’
‘I dunno. I weren’t that interested tell the truth.’
‘What time was this, Mr Clarke?’
‘I don’t wear a watch, love.’
‘Approximately?’
‘Must’ve been about lunchtime. One-ish? I was getting peckish. I went in The Swan. Had a pie and a pint. Never thought no more about it till I saw the news last night.’
Sarah wasn’t convinced but could see no reason why he’d fabricate the story. More likely, he was mistaken. ‘You can state categorically can you that the woman you saw was Karen Lowe?’
‘If that’s the name of the woman on the telly. That’s who I saw. Without a doubt.’
‘I thought you said you knew the family. That you saw Karen grow up.’
‘I’ve seen lots of kids grow up, love. It don’t mean I remember all the names.’
‘But you’re absolutely certain it was Karen Lowe?’
‘No I’m making it up.’ He scowled. ‘Course I’m sure. What do you take me for?’
A cantankerous old git. ‘You’ve been very helpful, Mr Clarke. Thank you for your time. We may need to talk to you again.’
‘Don’t suppose there’s a reward or anythin’?’
‘What do you reckon, boss?’ Harries and Sarah were walking back to the motor. She reckoned a number of things, including the fact she’d forgotten to get back to Tom Lowe. The Birmingham News hadn’t carried anything about a reward though so the old man wasn’t just after a fast buck. Not that she thought he’d be in line for a payout.
‘I think Walter Clarke’s convinced he saw Karen Lowe.’
‘But?’
‘What does it amount to? He saw a woman he says was Karen Lowe carrying a baby across waste ground off Blake Street. He didn’t speak to her because she was too far away. He thinks it was lunchtime because he was hungry. He didn’t see where she went or what she did. It’s not a lot, is it?’
‘It’s more than we had yesterday.’
‘It’s not enough.’
‘Do you think he saw her though?’
‘I think it depends whether he’s long- or short-sighted.’
Harries frowned. ‘But he wasn’t wearing glasses.’
‘Precisely.’ And he clearly owned a pair. The indents on the bridge of his nose bore witness to that. Question was how much he needed them. There’d been no mileage further antagonizing the old man. She’d get a couple of DCs over with photographs, if he picked out Karen Lowe it would be a start. She couldn’t see it herself though.