Killing the Shadows (2000) (30 page)

“She’s right,” Kit confirmed. “Most of us, we get a bad review, we kick the cat, we swear at the computer screen, we hurt. Even if we pretend we’re far too manly for that. But Georgia, she gets a bad review, she sends the reviewer flowers and a note saying she hopes they’ll be better soon.”

Steve snorted with laughter. “You’re making that up.”

“Swear to God, it’s a true story. Georgia could no more top herself than wear a shell suit.”

“So there’s only one alternative, is that what you’re saying? If she hasn’t staged this disappearance as a publicity stunt, then she’s been abducted?” Steve put into words what Kit and Fiona had been avoiding.

There was a long moment of silence. Then Kit tipped the diced chicken into the pan with the shallots. Steam rose in the air, carrying the cooking smells across the room. “I suppose that’s what we’re carefully not saying,” Fiona said.

“Which doesn’t mean you’re not thinking it. I would be, in your shoes. After Drew Shand and Jane Elias, it’s got to be in the front of your mind,” Steve said.

“But there’s no connection between those two murders,” Kit protested. “The Garda have arrested a local man for Jane. And you told me they haven’t found any threatening letters among her papers, which put the damper on my nerves a bit.”

“It doesn’t matter that there’s no connection,” Fiona said. “Psychologically speaking, that is. What we know is that two thriller writers have been murdered. So when a third goes missing, it’s inevitable that we start wondering if the same thing has happened to her. It’s the mind playing tricks, Kit. Subconsciously we always look for sequences. Even when they’re not there. So although your conscious mind is denying that Drew and Jane’s deaths could have any connection to Georgia, at a lower level, you can’t help picturing it as a sequence and worrying about it.”

“Nevertheless,” Steve interrupted, “and speaking purely as a copper, I couldn’t rule out the possibility that Georgia has been abducted.”

“And of course, if she has been, and there’s been a ransom note, then the police would have made sure that was kept quiet,” Fiona said thoughtfully. “They would be playing it exactly as they are. Making out they’re not unduly worried, acting like they’re treating it as nothing more than possibly suspicious.”

“I’d say so, yes,” Steve confirmed.

“So what you’re both saying is that it’s pointless to speculate,” Kit said.

“Pretty much, yes.” Steve inhaled deeply. “This smells wonderful, Kit.”

“It will be,” he said confidently. “I hope wherever Georgia is, she’s getting something half as good.”

Fiona smiled ironically. “I hope so too. Because if this turns out to be a put-up job, she’s going to be on bread and water for a very long time to come.”

THIRTY-ONE

T
he clock read 3:24. Fiona had no idea what had woken her, but her eyes had snapped wide open, her brain firing on all cylinders. No point in trying to get back to sleep, she knew that. Insomnia seldom afflicted her, but when it struck, she knew the only answer was to get up and keep her mind occupied until sleep felled her again.

She slipped out of bed. Kit grunted, turned over and began breathing rhythmically again. Fiona padded across the carpet, taking her dressing gown off its peg and moving out on to the landing. The distant hum of traffic was the only sound. She had no sense of another presence besides her and Kit. As she mounted the stairs, she looked out of the window to the garden below. The dim light of a three-quarter moon turned it into an eerie conglomeration of monochrome shapes. But none were unfamiliar. Whatever had disturbed her sleep, it wasn’t a stranger in either house or garden.

In her office, Fiona turned on the desk lamp and took a can of Perrier out of the tiny fridge by her desk, one of Kit’s more bizarre birthday presents. She’d been less than thrilled at the time though she hoped she’d disguised her disappointment but she’d come to appreciate its benefits since. He was good at that, coming up with things she’d never have imagined she needed. She popped the top of the can. It was so still in the soundproofed attic that she could hear the bubbles ping as they broke against the metal.

She switched on her computer and waited for it to boot up. Then she went straight on line. America was awake; there would be plenty of people up and about in the chat rooms to keep her amused. As she logged on, she remembered it was the night once a month when Murder Behind the Headlines had an on-line discussion that ran from ten till midnight. She pointed her browser at their site and waited to be connected.

Fiona scrolled through the subjects up for debate and clicked on Jane Elias. She came in on the middle of what seemed to be a heated exchange about the Garda Siochana. Offered the chance by the browser to backtrack on the conversation, she opted for that.

What she read gave her a physical chill in her chest. According to three separate posts, the word locally on the lane Elias murder was that the guards had arrested the wrong man, and they knew it. Allegedly, they’d been railroaded into bringing in John Patrick Regan by senior officials in the Serious Crimes Unit, in spite of the reluctance of local officers. Now, in the absence of any early forensic results linking Regan to the crime, it appeared that the local cops were getting jittery about the arrest and his lawyer was fighting for him to be set free. According to one post, everybody in Kildenny who knew John Regan was adamant that the man didn’t have the brains to organize an abduction, never mind the balls to kill a woman and mutilate her corpse.

That was the point where the discussion had degenerated into a slanging match over the police. Fiona couldn’t have cared less how good or bad the Garda Siochana were in an obscure corner of County Wicklow. She had more important things to think about.

She logged off, turned off her computer and stared at the blank screen. Regan’s arrest had been a far greater reassurance than she had been prepared to admit to Kit. Without him in the frame, the picture looked very different indeed. It wasn’t a matter of the subconscious forcing connections; it became a logical conclusion.

Normally, the murders of two people working in the same field on opposite sides of the Irish Sea would be so insignificant it would pass unnoticed. But when they were both public figures; both award-winning thriller writers; both writers whose work had been adapted successfully for film or TV; and both murdered in styles that followed elements in their work more or less slavishly, it stretched coincidence to a point where notice had to be taken.

Fiona weighed the elements of her knowledge in the balance of her experience. Yes, there were such things as copycat killers out there. And Jane Elias’s killer was as likely to be a copycat as a serial murderer at the start of his series, given the physical distance between the victims and the apparently very different manners of their death.

Fiona, however, had never liked coincidence.

She got up from her desk and ran downstairs to the spare room, where Kit’s vast library of crime fiction covered the walls from floor to ceiling. Nothing as straightforward as alphabetical order, Fiona sighed to herself.

She scanned the shelves, looking for one of Georgia’s books. The first one she found was Last Rights, the final part of a trilogy of legal thrillers she’d completed a couple of years before. Fiona turned to the inside back flap and read the author biography there.

Several of Georgia’s books had been adapted for TV, including the legal thrillers. Only one, a stand-alone psychological suspense novel whose graphic violence had shaken many of her traditional audience to the core, had been made into a movie. And Ever More Shall Be So had been a low-budget British film, made with sponsorship money from Channel 4. Fiona vaguely remembered reading about its success. Something in the film had captured the attention of a mass audience and it had become a surprise hit on both sides of the Atlantic. The haunting, ethereal theme tune of an unaccompanied boy soprano singing ‘Green Grow the Rushes-O’ as a lament, a plangent counterpoint to the nightmares of the film, might have had something to do with it. For some reason, she’d never seen it, though Kit certainly would have done.

Now all she needed was to find the book. One among two or three thousand couldn’t be so hard, could it? Methodically, Fiona made her way along the shelves, pausing whenever she encountered Georgia’s name. How the hell did he ever find anything in here, she wondered? And why was he incapable of ever throwing away a book, no matter how crap he pronounced it to be?

About halfway along the second wall, Fiona found what she was looking for. The first edition of And Ever More Shall Be So, a personal dedication on the title page in Georgia’s surprisingly neat handwriting. “To darling Kit, already il miglior fabbro. With lashings of love, Georgia Lester.” How very Georgia, Fiona thought with a sardonic smile.

Fiona turned out the light and made her way back up to her attic. She settled down on the futon, pulling the throw over her legs so she wouldn’t get cold. Then she began to turn the pages. But what she read there put all thought of normal comfort out of her mind.

THIRTY-TWO

S
teve thrust his arm out to prevent the lift doors closing. They opened fully and he stepped in, coming face to face with DC Joanne Gibb. “Morning, Joanne,” he said.

“Morning, boss. Am I allowed to ask how the grovelling went?”

Steve pulled a face. “Let’s just say we’re heading in the right direction. Dr. Cameron is putting me in touch with one of her graduate students who will do the analysis. If I can find some money to pay for it.”

“But we could be making real progress here,” Joanne protested. “Surely Commander Telford’s going to see the sense in following up this lead?”

Steve smiled. “I think I can persuade him to share our view.” The lift shuddered to a halt at their floor. “Wish me luck. I’ll see you and Neil in my office in fifteen minutes.”

He turned down the corridor, walking past blank-faced doors until he came to his immediate superior’s office. Steve knocked and waited for the invitation to enter. Commander David Telford was sitting behind what Steve would have bet was the tidiest desk in the building. Not a single scrap of loose paper blemished its polished surface. Pens clustered in a metal holder, a pad of paper sat by the phone, and that was it. The walls were blank save for Telford’s framed commendations and his business studies degree from Aston University. “Sit down, Steve,” he said, his face stern. He was determined to obliterate from the collective memory of the Metropolitan Police the notion that anyone other than Steve Preston was to blame for the Francis Blake fiasco. Steve understood that, and knew it was the reason why Telford or Teflon, as he was known to the lower ranks continued to treat him as if he brought a bad smell into the office with him.

“Thank you, sir.” Sometimes playing the game was a killer, but Steve cared too much about catching criminals ever to consider seriously the alternative.

“Still no progress, then?” Telford’s question implied the answer he wanted to hear. He cared more about image than justice, Steve knew. Finding Susan Blanchard’s killer was not at the top of Tenon’s agenda. Better that his team never found the real killer so the world could go on thinking the Met had been cheated of Francis Blake by the trial judge rather than their own maverick operation.

“On the contrary, sir. I think we’ve opened up a new line of inquiry.” Painstakingly, Steve went through the fresh evidence about the cyclist and what Joanne’s trawl of records had produced. “Now I need budget authorization to commission a geographic profile based on this cluster of cases so we can develop viable suspects,” he concluded.

Telford frowned. “It’s all a bit tenuous, isn’t it? Nothing in the way of hard evidence, is there?”

“The problem with this case all along has been the absence of hard evidence, sir. The lack of forensics at the crime scene, the relative lack of witnesses, the lack of apparent relationship between killer and victim. It’s obvious that the killer has some experience in covering his tracks, and that suggests he’s committed sexually motivated attacks before. This is the most promising line of inquiry we’ve had since we began the investigation, sir.”

“Clutching at straws,” Telford complained.

“I think it’s rather more than that, sir.” The words, ‘with respect’ hovered on Steve’s lips, but he held back, unwilling to utter that particular lie. “It’s a valid investigative strategy. Sooner or later, we’re going to come back under the spotlight over this case if we don’t resolve it. When that happens, I’d like to be able to say we left no avenues unexplored.”

“I thought Dr. Cameron had publicly refused ever to work with us again?” Telford was off on another tack, unsettled by Steve’s subtle threat of publicity.

“It wouldn’t be Dr. Cameron doing the analysis, sir. We would be commissioning another member of her department.”

Telford cracked a smile. “One in the eye for her, then.”

Steve said nothing. Perhaps malice would win where common sense had failed.

Telford swivelled in his chair and appeared to study his degree certificate. “Oh, very well, do your analysis.” He turned abruptly back to Steve. “Just don’t screw up this time, Superintendent.”

Steve walked back to his office, his hands fists. How sweet it would be to find Susan Blanchard’s killer, he thought. OK, Telford would take the public credit, but everybody inside the force would know the truth. Justice served, in every possible way.

He pushed open the door of his office, where he found DC Neil McCartney and Joanne waiting for him. Neil was a large untidy man in his mid-twenties. Steve had never seen him look anything other than mildly dishevelled and he was incapable of sitting in a chair without looking as if he was sprawling. He often wondered what the lad had looked like in uniform. His appearance alone would probably have guaranteed that he’d be booted up to CID at the earliest possible opportunity. It also hadn’t hurt that he was a good policeman; shrewd, thoughtful and tenacious to the point of bloody-mindedness.

“All right. We’ve got the go-ahead for the geographic profile,” Steve announced as he squeezed round Neil’s awkwardly arrayed legs. “I’ll take the material over to the university personally as soon as we’ve finished up here. So, Neil, what’s Blake been up to?”

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