Read Crossing the Line (Kerry Wilkinson) Online
Authors: Kerry Wilkinson
when there was ketchup smeared across his chin.
Dave nodded beyond her again to where the former superintendent was walking towards them, tray
in hand, face blank. Jessica stood. ‘Niall?’
He almost dropped the tray in surprise at someone speaking to him. ‘Jessica, I, er . . .’
‘Are you all right?’
His eyes darted both ways, wanting out of the conversation. He tried to laugh it off but his other
features betrayed him. ‘Yes, just a busy morning – so many things to work through up there.’ He
stepped past her, heading for a single table.
‘If you need me, you know where my office is.’
Niall nodded, muttering, ‘Of course’, but she knew he had no intention of visiting her.
When Jessica sat down, the sauce had disappeared from Rowlands’ chin. ‘He really has got it bad,
hasn’t he?’ Dave said.
‘He’s probably just lonely – his wife died, now this. Slowly, it’s happening to everyone who has
been a part of his life.’
Before she could stop herself, Jessica was yawning. When her eyes had finished watering, Dave
was staring at her. ‘Sodding hell, that was like being hit by a cyclone. You’ve not been out looking for Tony since that night we were out, have you?’
He picked up a piece of fish, meaning he wasn’t looking straight at her as Jessica lied by telling
him she’d not even thought of Tony since the night they’d gone out together.
She’d spent each evening trawling the back streets of Manchester city centre trying to find Tony or
any possible reason why he was connected to Scott Dewhurst. She’d been propositioned by drunken
weekend revellers, ended up with frozen bits she didn’t know she had, and hardly slept. Meanwhile,
Thomas’ warning kept drifting around her head.
He ain’t scared of you boys in blue.
There was nothing new in that. When she had worked in uniform, Jessica had arrested drunken
women fighting each other who wouldn’t have stopped scratching, biting and kicking until they’d
killed the other person. They were so much worse than the men and, when restrained, they’d thrash
around, try to headbutt the arresting officer, spitting and saying they were going to kill everyone and
anyone.
The drink made them fearless.
Then there were the groups of youngsters who’d roam the streets, throwing stones at cars and
giving anyone who tried to stop them a mouthful of abuse. They knew swear words Jessica had never
come across when she was their age, jeering that they were below the age of criminal responsibility
and couldn’t be touched.
Their age, upbringing and sense of invulnerability made them fearless.
With Scott, she’d seen it herself because it was a part of him. The way he’d stood across the road
from Tony’s flat with a sense that what he wanted would inevitably happen. Then in the alley, she’d
seen his cocky swagger. It wasn’t something brought about by money, it was the absolute knowledge
that he was untouchable. Jessica had even seen it through Josh’s reaction when she had been in his car
going through the photographs. He’d faltered, wanting to make sure she was talking about the right
person.
Scott Dewhurst wasn’t fearless because of booze or naivety, it was because he didn’t have that
emotion. He didn’t care about the police and would have no concerns about her. Not only that but
people were naturally scared of him.
Perhaps she was?
She’d looked up everything she could find on Scott. His record was so sparse that they had next to
nothing on him in their system and Internet searches had thrown up little more. All she really had was
the confidential SCD files Josh had emailed her. She had read and re-read the notes until she could
practically recite them word for word. Josh had told her that Scott wasn’t top of the tree in
Manchester’s criminal underworld, so she had even started investigating the person to whom he
answered.
Christian Fraser ran an empire of low-level clubs and pubs around the city that were almost
certainly a front for dealing drugs and laundering money. He was the one the SCD
really
wanted, with Scott someone they thought could potentially turn. The pair’s combined criminal records were almost
nothing – two smart guys building a fortune on the backs of the easily manipulated. What could either
of them possibly want with Tony?
For Jessica, things had already gone too far. Dave had done enough for her in the past and how
could she ask Izzy to help when she was a mother? She was supposed to be an inspector now and yet
she’d done the same stupid thing she always did – got involved. This time it was worse because
she’d allowed Tony to get to her. Stupid, alcoholic, tea-loving junkie Toxic Tony Farnsworth was in
her head and she couldn’t get him out.
What on earth had he got himself into?
‘Jess—’
Rowlands’ voice brought her back into the room. ‘Wuh . . . what?’ she replied.
‘You’re worried about him, aren’t you?’
‘Who?’
‘Tony.’
‘Don’t be wet.’
Jessica hid behind her plastic teacup but Dave wasn’t fooled. ‘Have you ever looked into his
background?’
‘What, the sleeping rough?’
‘His parents.’
‘I know they own some houses and that they’ve got a few quid.’
Dave shook his head, stuffing the final three chips into his mouth in one go. ‘Mmmf, pfft, mmph.’
‘Attractive.’
He swallowed. ‘Come with me.’
Jessica threw the remains of her tea into the bin thinking she wouldn’t be surprised to find out days
later it had melded with Dave’s leftover baked beans to create some sort of toxic superbug. Rowlands
led her through the corridors towards the main floor where the constables worked. It was one of the
warmest areas of the building, largely because they were packed in so tightly. There was a clatter of
keyboards, slam of phones and general undercurrent of swearing. At the back was a large whiteboard
listing everyone’s outstanding cases – or at least it should have done.
‘Hasn’t anyone updated that?’ Jessica asked, nodding towards the board.
‘No one knows where the pens are – they keep going missing.’
‘You’re detectives – do some detecting and bloody find them. Either that or get creative and nick
them from somewhere else.’
‘Is that official GMP policy?’
‘Unofficially, yes. Now what have you got?’
Rowlands’ desk was a clutter of folders, paperwork and magazines. He leafed through the top one
which had a half-naked girl on the front.
‘If it’s some gran-bang porn mag starring your girlfriend then I’m not interested.’
Dave wasn’t listening, picking up the stacks of work papers and putting them down again, checking
under his keyboard, and then starting to go through the drawers. Rubber bands, biros, a can of Fosters,
paperclips, a laser pen, coins, a packet of matches, buttons . . .
‘Wow, you’ve got more crap in your desk than I’ve got in mine.’
Dave held out a small carved wooden frog. ‘Want that?’
‘Why would I?’
‘No idea – I think it was in here when I moved in . . . Aha!’ From the bottom drawer, Dave pulled
out a glossy, slightly ripped magazine covered with tea-mug rings. On the front was a photo of a
scantily clad female with her arms and legs fully outstretched in a way that couldn’t be comfortable.
‘I thought I said no granny porn?’
Dave began flicking through the pages. ‘It’s from a Sunday newspaper a year or so ago. The picture
on the front’s from some photographer’s profile. They like to pretend they’re all arty, instead of just
taking porno pics. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.’
‘Why’d you keep it?’
Rowlands thrust the magazine into her hand, pointing at an entry at the bottom of a page. ‘They do a
rich list every year. I’m not really fussed but I got reading for some reason and look who popped up.’
Number 397
Anthony and Sylvia Farnsworth, property, £188.5m
Anthony Richard Farnsworth’s father was a miner, his mother a baker and housewife. He grew
up in Bradford, West Yorkshire. By the age of nineteen, he had married his grammar school
sweetheart, Sylvia, and founded Farnsworth Properties. Initially, he renovated run-down houses
bought at auction but quickly developed a reputation for the speed at which he could work. What
could have been a risky investment in buying a large plot of land outside Halifax turned into a
windfall when the council commissioned him to spearhead their social housing push. The
custom-built estate was completed ahead of schedule and he received additional praise for the
high-quality builds. Farnsworth’s hands-on, personable approach has garnered him a solid
reputation throughout the industry, leading to a succession of housing contracts from local
councils. He currently lives close to Huddersfield in West Yorkshire with his wife, Sylvia. This
year they will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. They have one son, Anthony Junior.
Jessica had spent so much time looking into Scott that she’d not bothered to do her research
properly on Tony. She knew his parents were rich – but this was on a different level. Suddenly she
had a little over one-hundred-and-eighty-eight-million reasons why a person like Scott Dewhurst
would be interested in Toxic Tony.
25
Jessica stared at the heavy red lights of the lorry in front beaming through her car’s windscreen like
two giant Catherine wheels. She pulled the handbrake up for the umpteenth time and turned to the man
in the passenger seat. ‘Has there ever been a bigger crime inflicted on the British public than the
M62? The bloody thing’s always chocker – usually some jackknifed lorry. If they wanted to keep
Lancastrians and Yorkshiremen apart, they could have just built a wall instead of a hundred-mile-long
traffic jam.’
Niall glanced up from his newspaper. ‘I was warned not to go in a car with you.’
‘Who by?’
‘What’s the name of your desk sergeant? The portly fellow.’
‘Pat?’
‘He said – and this is a direct quote: “I hope you’ve made a will”.’
‘Bastard.’
‘There were a few others too.’
‘It’s a myth!’
‘Your friend with the spiky hair—’
‘Dave?’
‘He had some article from the
Herald
about how the number of cyclists on Manchester’s roads had
fallen by fifteen per cent in the past four months. He pointed out that the number coincided almost
exactly with the length of time since you returned to work.’
Jessica started to speak but it wasn’t coherent phrases that were coming out, more a long stream of
previously unrelated swear words that had now been linked together to form entirely new
descriptions of her colleagues. ‘I’m not that bad,’ she eventually managed.
Niall peered around the lorry at the blue sign on the side of the road. ‘I have to say that in the fifty minutes it’s taken us to move fewer than ten miles, you’ve been perfectly fine.’
‘Thank you.’
‘There was that incident on the roundabout but—’
Jessica’s eyes flashed sideways and the former DSI stopped mid-sentence. How was she supposed
to know the other driver was going the entire way around the roundabout and not getting off at the
junction? That’s what indicators were for.
‘I’ve had to take a holiday day for this too,’ Jessica grumbled.
Niall folded his paper away as the traffic picked up again. Jessica eased into the outer lane to
overtake, only to see the lorry zoom away from her as the cars in front crawled. Finally the other
vehicles started to move and Jessica managed to get the car into fifth gear for the first time in a while.
She could feel Niall watching her.
‘I’ve been meaning to ask why you invited me,’ he said.
‘You’ve seemed a bit bored around the station over the past week or so and I thought you’d be able
to give me a hand.’
‘But this isn’t official business?’
‘No.’
‘Are you going to tell me?’
‘We’re visiting the parents of someone I know. He’s got himself into trouble and I’m wondering if
they might be able to help.’
Niall didn’t reply instantly but must have sensed there was a lot more to it than that. Sometimes
when you did this job, you learned not to ask.
Wherever Anthony and Sylvia Farnsworth lived, it was remote. When they finally got off the
motorway at the Huddersfield junction, Jessica’s sat nav seemed intent on taking her along narrow
winding roads that seemingly went nowhere. The wintry weather had taken more of a hold on the
wrong side of the Lancashire–Yorkshire border, snow clinging to the tops of the bushes, frost lining
the edge of the roads, but the sun was at least out. The bright blue sky felt like a stranger, with the
fields steaming as the temperature gradually crept above freezing. Compared to the endless cloud that
had been hanging over Manchester, this was practically the Caribbean.
Jessica’s car hopped over a humpback bridge and she rounded a corner that narrowed into a
single-track road. Three more miles and one terrified cyclist later and Jessica pulled up next to a
thick stone pillar and pressed the buzzer. The heavy metal gates swung inwards and she accelerated
along the wide, long, straight driveway. With the frosty white-green expanses of lawn on either side
and the trees in the distance, Jessica couldn’t help but be reminded of the other big house she had
spent time in.
Niall noticed it too. ‘Everything all right?’