Jenni Oglesby was full of crap. She was no fan of Chloe Mercer's or anyone else's or she would have known that despite coming close a few times, Chloe had never won a race.
Jenni recovered her composure. âYou're going to pay for what you did and it's going to cost you more than the damage to my car. You'll be finished by the time I'm through with you.'
I could see where Jenni was coming from. If she got away with this, it would cost me and not just financially. No team in the world would want me. She'd kill my racing career stone dead. I couldn't let her do this to me, not when I was on my way to making a name for myself in this sport.
âYou'll probably go to prison for this,' she said. âYou won't like it there. No foreign travel. No TV interviews. No star of the future there.'
âStop,' I said. âJust stop.'
She'd closed the gap between us. There was real pleasure in her expression. She was enjoying her victory too much. I resisted the urge to shove her away. I couldn't give her any more ammunition to use against me.
âIt hurts, don't it?'
âLook, it's time to end the game. You win. There's no one here listening. It's just you and me, so there's no need to keep pretending. We both know what happened that day and we both know you made it up. I can't prove it, but it doesn't matter. I just want this to end.'
âIs that right?'
Jenni's look of triumph looked unbreakable, but I knew it wasn't. It was time to disappoint her.
âYeah, as I see it, you've beaten me. But I'm not so sure about the cops.'
A twitch pulled at the corner of her mouth.
âThey've been by to investigate. They haven't found any evidence to back up what you've said. I still don't know where I supposedly ran you off the road, but I wonder if the skid marks back up your account? The analysis of skid marks is an accurate science. Did you know that? Worst of all, you don't have a witness.'
âSo you say.' A tremor had entered her speech.
âI do say because if the case was iron clad, the police would have charged me by now.'
I was finally getting through to Jenni. The leer was gone and her confidence was waning.
âWhen the truth comes out, and it will, the cops are going to come for you and not me.'
Jenni was silent now.
I had her. As much as I enjoyed seeing the tables turned, it made her dangerous. She could lash out just as Steve feared and drop me in a bigger and darker hole. She wouldn't though, if I gave her a way out.
âIt doesn't have to be that way,' I said. âY'know? We can work this out.'
âHow?'
âWhat do you want? It's pretty obvious that you've gone to a lot of trouble, so you must want something. Are you really only interested in smearing me?'
The word âyes' slipped between her lips, but fell short before completion.
âWhat do you want, Jenni? What do I have to do to make this mess go away?'
A light returned to her face. I'd given her hope, which I prayed would lead to greed. She didn't disappoint.
âI want money.'
âHow much?'
âH
ow much is she asking?' Dylan asked.
Steve, Dylan and I were in the situation room. We met most nights after Dylan had gotten back from Ragged to discuss what we had learned. Tonight, I had what I'd learned from Jenni Oglesby to share and Dylan had called me all excited to say he had some hot intel. Tonight was also going to be a little different because I'd invited Carrie Russell. I had a couple of questions for her.
âFifteen grand,' I said.
âShit,' Dylan said. âHow much do you have left from the sale of the Van Diemen?'
âAbout eight grand.'
âI can use Gates' upfront money to cover the rest,' Steve said.
âSo you're going to pay her?' Dylan asked.
âYes and no. I just need the money for show. I have to catch her in the act of taking it.'
âShe's going to be sorry she crossed us,' Dylan said.
âAnd her partner,' I said.
âPartner?' Dylan said.
âShe says she's Chloe's number one fan, but she doesn't know anything about her. That means someone is feeding her the lines. That also means this reckless-driving scam was set up by someone else.'
âChloe?' Dylan asked.
âIt feels like it. If she disgraces me, she's in line to take my
Pit Lane
title by default.'
âIt's a hollow victory to win it by default,' Steve said.
I shrugged.
âSo what's the plan?' Dylan asked.
âMake the payoff, document it, then hand it over to Sergeant Lucas and let him do the damage.'
âI hope it's that simple,' Steve said.
So did I.
Dylan stood up. âOK, who wants to hear what I've found?'
âThe floor is yours,' I said.
Dylan grabbed a marker and stepped up to the murder board. âOK, a couple of interesting titbits. Kurt Haulk went through a difficult teen phrase. He grew up in a not-so-great area of Rotterdam. Don't ask me to pronounce it. He ran with a rough crowd. He's got form. Nothing heavy. He was caught up in a couple of assault charges that never went anywhere because of lack of evidence. Interestingly enough, one was an assault involving a knife. Make of that what you will.'
I could make quite a bit out of it.
âHow'd you find all that out?' Steve asked.
âSome of it popped up on Google. I also joined a few Dutch motorsport forums and struck up a couple of conversations.'
âThat's all fine and dandy,' Steve said, âbut what's his motive for killing Jason?'
I shrugged.
âWe need more than a shrug,' Steve said. âWhat else have you got, Dylan?'
âOne for the timeline. I went back through Ragged's results over the last few years. The team was a pack runner until five years ago.'
âWhat changed?'
âMike Whelan.'
Whelan was a big touring- and sports-car driver. He'd won touring-car championships in Britain, Germany and Japan.
âHe won the ESCC title for Ragged that year and dominated the series, but instead of defending his title, he walked away from the team at the end of the season to drive a Corvette for some ropey team in the ALMS.'
âThat's around the time Rags started taking money from Gates,' I said.
âNow that I'm one of the lads at Ragged, people are confiding in me,' Dylan said. âThe word is that Rags paid big to have Whelan for the team so the money would have had to come from somewhere.'
âBut why leave a winning team?' Steve said.
âWhy don't we ask him?' Dylan said. âWe've got the Norisring race this weekend and Whelan is going to be there for the Porsche Cup.'
The doorbell rang.
âThat'll be Carrie,' I said.
I went to the back door and let her in. I took her into the situation room where Steve and Dylan introduced themselves. She went up to the murder board and timeline. She put a hand to her mouth while she read our conclusions. It was a long time before she turned to face us.
âYou're serious about finding Jason's killer?'
âYes,' I said.
âAndrew has threatened to take it out on Steve if we don't,' Dylan said.
I shot Dylan a look.
âAndrew is a shit bag,' she said.
No one disagreed with her, but he was a grieving shit bag.
âHow can I help?' she asked.
âYou told me that Jason broke things off with you three months ago to protect you. Can you think of anything that might explain that?'
Carrie shook her head.
âYou also told Aidy that he'd been collecting evidence and hiding it in a picture,' Steve said. âWhat started him on that road?'
âI don't know.'
âDid anything out of the ordinary happen? It could have been something seemingly small.'
âI've been racking my brain and the only thing I remember is Jason spotting Ragged Racing's cars once. We'd been shopping in Milton Keynes and as we were driving back, we passed this old service garage. The Ragged Racing truck was there with the cars.'
âDoing what?' I asked.
âI don't know, but Rags was there. Jason wanted to stop, but I didn't want to.'
âDo you know if he went back?'
She shook her head. âI don't.'
âDo you know the address?'
âNo, but I could show you the place.'
This could be Jason's ground zero. This was a lead too good to put on the back burner. âDo you mind showing us now?'
The question surprised her. âI suppose. It's on the way back home.'
âYou're going to have to count me out,' Dylan said. âI'm setting off with the team for the Norisring first thing in the morning.'
Carrie led the way while Steve and I followed her in my car. It took less than an hour to reach Milton Keynes where we pulled into the parking area of a disused accident-repair garage. I grabbed the torch from my glove box and we got out of my car.
I aimed the torch at the faded sign over the front of the building that said, Rudolph Repair.
Carrie stood next to us. âThe transporter was down the side and they were loading the cars into the back.'
âWas the place in business back then?' Steve asked.
âNo. It was like this. I think that's what caught Jason's eye. Rags had that nice workshop in Banbury, so what was he doing bringing his cars here? I thought maybe he was downscaling and taking the place over. I hope this is of help because it's the only thing I remember.'
âIt definitely helps,' I said. âI'm going to dig around some more, so it's best you get off. I don't want to get you into trouble. It's a talent of mine.'
I smiled. She didn't.
âAre you sure? I don't mind staying.'
âI am.'
âOK. Just be careful. If I remember anything else, I'll call.'
Steve and I watched her go before we went around to the rear of the building, away from prying eyes. The windows were boarded and the doors padlocked. Steve got the crowbar from the boot of my car. I always kept a toolbox with me. It helped to be prepared. He popped the lock off the door and we let ourselves in.
I tried the light switches and the fluorescents blinked on, but I switched them off. We didn't need to let the world know we were poking about.
I searched for the bathroom and found it had running water. As Steve wandered around the garage, he picked up a compressed air-hose line and air came hissing out until the compressor kicked in.
Interesting. Why would a defunct business still have the power and water going?
The place had yet to be cleared out. It still had operational hydraulic lifts, a tyre-changing machine and most of the equipment a repair centre needed. I was surprised that this kit hadn't been sold off when Rudolph Repair went under. This gear was still worth a lot of cash second-hand.
I aimed the torch at the ground. There should have been a thick layer of dust on the floor, but it was pretty clean except for a couple of discarded newspapers. I picked them up and examined them.
âThere's been a recent visitor,' I said. âThese papers are only two weeks' old.'
âThis place is active,' Steve said. âTime to go before they come back.'
We let ourselves out. As Steve was putting the crowbar back, I noticed I was being watched. A boy no more than fifteen was staring at me from his front garden across the street.
âShit,' I murmured. âWe've got company.'
Steve followed my gaze across the street. âWhat do you want to do?'
Decision time. Stand my ground or run away. I decided to stay.
âWait here,' I said.
I raised a hand and jogged across the road. As I got close, the kid backed up a step.
He was weedy and just a couple of inches shorter than me.
I jerked a thumb over my shoulder. âYou know much about this place?'
âA bit.'
âYou see this place every day. Is it in business?'
He took a step forward and cast a suspicious eye over me. âWhy do you want to know?'
âI'm in the car trade. I thought it might make for a good location.'
âBollocks.'
Yeah, I wouldn't have believed that line either. It was the best I could come up with on the spot.
âYou with that other bloke?'
I jerked a thumb at Steve. âYou mean the old guy?'
âNo. This other guy. A bit older than you. He gives me fifty quid a week to watch this place and call him every time someone comes here. He hasn't called me back in over a week.'
So Jason was having this place watched. âYeah, I'm with that guy. He won't be around anymore. Jason, right?'
The kid nodded.
I regrouped by taking out my wallet. I had eighty-five quid, which was a lot for me to be riding around with under normal circumstances. I pulled the cash out and held it in my hand.
âI hear some fancy cars come in and out of there.'
The teen stared at the cash. âYeah, racing cars.'
âYeah? What kind?'
The boy described Ragged's Honda Accords.
âSweet.'
âNot sweet if they catch you over there. The wankers gave me a kicking for just looking. They won't like it if they find out you broke in there.'
âHopefully they won't. There aren't any racing cars in there now.'
âNo, they just use the place now and again. They bring the cars in, work on them for a few hours then leave.'
âThey do this during the day?'
âNo. Always at night.'
âHow often are they here?'
âThey usually come every few weeks or so.'
âReally, that often? When'd you see them last?'
âA couple of weeks ago. Look, you going to give me that cash or what?'
The second he snatched the money from me, he stormed back towards his house.