Dead Girls: An addictive and darkly funny crime thriller. Graeme Cameron
‘What about DNA?’
‘Oh, yeah, we’ve got fucking tons of the stuff. Just nothing to match it to. There’s no Breckland Butcher in the database, unfortunately.’
‘No what?’
‘That’s what the papers have been calling him.’
Ugh. ‘Well they can piss off.’
‘Yes, I told them that.’
‘So.’ I scanned the boards a second time. ‘Aside from Erica, how many of them can we place there?’
‘One,’ she said. ‘Kerry Farrow.’
My stomach flipped. ‘Kerry,’ I repeated. I’d been there, looked That Man in the eye as he swore he’d never laid eyes on her; as he smugly pointed out the errors in our evidence; even as he correctly predicted that a body we’d found didn’t belong to her. ‘Where? In the . . . that cage?’
She nodded again and then cocked her head at the photos of the cell, I guessed as much to avoid my eye as anything else. ‘Yeah, and only in the cage,’ she said. ‘Unlike Erica, who’d been all over the place. The cage, and every room in the house, including sleeping in the master bedroom.’
I heard a voice in my head then, although it was indistinct, genderless, and I couldn’t for the life of me place it. ‘I’m not going back in a cage,’ it shrieked.
Jenny saw me shudder and said, ‘You okay?’
I wasn’t. Trying to think felt like staring into a black hole. I’d already forgotten the names she’d just given me, and the rest, whatever she said before the part about the DNA, was little more than a faint echo. ‘Kerry,’ I said, for no reason other than to try to hold my focus. ‘Kerry was at the house.’
‘It’s not your fault,’ she said, but I didn’t know what she meant, and had I done so, I probably wouldn’t have believed her anyway. I needed to press on.
‘No trace of Samantha?’
‘None. Nothing in the van, either. All we harvested from that was bleach.’
I thought back to the first time I’d met That Man. I’d been there, right in the back of that Transit. It had smelled of sweat and peroxide. There’d been a box – a large one, large enough to hide in, and filled with thick grey woollen blankets. ‘Was there anything in the back when you recovered it?’ I wondered aloud.
‘No, I think it was empty. Why?’
‘If there’s a box of blankets in the inventory, they need swabbing.’
She made a note.
‘Is there any connection between Samantha and Kerry,’ I asked, ‘besides their job?’
‘Not that we’ve established yet. But what we have got is footage that puts Reed, or whatever we’re calling him, close to where Kerry was last seen, and we’ve got her DNA in a dungeon under his property. That’s a done deal, Ali. Anything we find on Samantha is a bonus at this point.’
‘A bonus?’
Jenny raised a defensive hand and said, ‘I know. I know what you’re about to say. But right now, we’ve got nothing on Samantha, and the only way we’re likely to get anything is if we find Reed and he talks to us, because no other fucker is.’
I tried to take stock, to dismiss the feeling that it all made less sense now than it had when I’d walked in. What had Jenny said about Erica? That her DNA was all over That Man’s house? It didn’t fit with what I thought I knew about her, but what was that, really? That she was an innocent victim, an abductee? I couldn’t know that, could I? She’d come out of that house shooting, but at what? At whom? ‘Jenny,’ I said, almost afraid to ask the question that was playing on my mind. ‘You’re not entertaining the idea that Erica and that man could be collaborating, are you?’
Jenny looked at me like I’d completely lost the plot. ‘I don’t know what the hell I think,’ she said. ‘But frankly, I hope they are on the run together because we’ve got about as much chance of tracking him down on his own as we have of catching Jack the Ripper. The man’s a ghost. We don’t know who we’re looking for. He could be anywhere, or nowhere, and everyone who’s seen his face is either dead, missing or in this room.’
And I couldn’t remember it. ‘And Kevin,’ I reminded her. ‘Kevin’s seen it.’
She dropped her eyes to the desk and heaved a deep sigh. ‘Yes, well, Kevin took a blow to the head too, didn’t he.’
‘So what you’re saying,’ I said, the dread tingle of hopelessness trickling through my veins, ‘is that we’re absolutely nowhere?’
Jenny, expressionless, sipped her coffee. ‘We’ve got four missing women we think are connected,’ she said. ‘We’ve got one gunshot victim, two presumably dead detectives, a basement, a van, a shitload of keys and a man who doesn’t exist. So yeah, to all intents and purposes, we’ve got fuck all. We’re nowhere. Square one.’
I looked back to the board, to a photograph of a collection of door keys arranged in a neat square on a table, all but one or two attached to hand-numbered yellow tags. ‘Christ,’ I thought aloud. ‘You said at least eight potential properties?’
Jenny nodded, sniffed, frowned. ‘I know,’ she said. ‘Meaning at least eight potential cages, and no way of tracking them down.’
We shuddered in unison, and shared a moment’s silence. And then I was confused again, and feeling like I’d missed something. ‘Wait,’ I said. ‘Did we lose the witness as well?’
She looked at me blankly for a second, and raised an eyebrow and shook her head and shrugged. ‘What witness?’
‘The witness John interviewed. Who was with him on the night Kerry disappeared. It was the first thing he told us when we questioned him.’
A flash of panic passed across Jenny’s face, though she tried to hide it. She took a slow breath, and leaned forward across the desk, her brow furrowed deeply. ‘Ali,’ she said. ‘What are you on about?’
I felt heat spread through me, shame and panic and frustration all tangled together as I tried to remember. ‘John,’ I repeated. ‘He talked to a woman. Anna? Annie? A witness. An alibi, I guess. Didn’t you know?’
Jenny shook her head. ‘When was this?’
‘I wasn’t with him,’ I said. ‘It was after that first interview, though. Look it up. It’s in the file, right?’
‘No,’ she said. ‘No, it isn’t. There’s no mention of any of it. What are you . . . Ali. Look at me.’
I met her eye. It was emerald green, bright with adrenaline. I felt sleepy all of a sudden, and my leg hurt.
‘Ali,’ she said. ‘What witness?’
Annie was drunk, just like yesterday, but just like yesterday, she wasn’t going to let that stop her. There was daylight left, hours of it, but it wasn’t enough. Between them, the plodding train, the circuitous bus and the overstretched minicab company would ensure that darkness was waiting when she got home.
It had beaten her before, the sunset, two weeks ago, when she’d been late coming off shift. The village got dark too quickly; too many trees, not enough streetlamps. No light pollution out there, away from the city. Just shadow, and sky. She’d pulled up a few houses from home, main beams illuminating the road, the fence line, the hidden places between the hedgerows, and there she’d sat for a quarter of an hour until she was certain nothing was waiting for her. Or at least nothing that walked upright. Afterwards, she’d swung the car across the road and lit up the front of the house, aiming the lights through the windows, searching