Read The Keeper Online

Authors: Luke Delaney

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense

The Keeper (23 page)

‘Perfectly,’ said the receptionist, partially recovering his smile. ‘But it’ll take a few days to get the results, particularly if there’s no match between the two sets of exhibits. Our library of cosmetics isn’t vast. We might have to outsource it.’

‘Do the best you can, but make sure the urgency of the situation is understood.’

The receptionist made some notes on the lab submission form and stamped it with a red marker that said urgent. He handed Sean a copy of the form by way of receipt. ‘Good enough?’ he asked.

‘I hope so,’ replied Sean, taking the form and heading for the exit.

Thomas Keller left work shortly after four p.m., passing through the gates of the sorting office still dressed in his uniform, walking fast with his head down, praying he would not be recognized or accosted by any malevolent colleagues who would unwittingly ruin what for him was about to become a very special day. A day he’d been planning for months. He knew her name and where she lived. He knew she lived alone. He knew the shape of her house and that the front door could not be seen from the quiet road. He knew that she banked with NatWest and worked as a nurse at St George’s Hospital in Tooting. He knew she had electricity and gas from On Power, satellite television from Virgin, that her bins were collected on Thursdays, that she drove a red Honda Civic that she insured with the AA, that most months she was overdrawn, that she shopped at ASDA in Roehampton, that she’d been single for a long while but now had a boyfriend, that if she wasn’t working she went out most weekends with some of her apparently many friends. Above all, he knew she was the one. They’d poisoned her mind and made her forget, but still she was the one and soon he’d rescue her from her state of ignorance and make her alive once again and then, then they could be together as they were always supposed to be: he and Sam together for ever.

The journey to Tooting Common passed in a blur, making no impression on his memory at all until he realized he’d arrived at the small car park near the swimming pool. Surrounded by trees, it was quiet at this time of day, most people choosing the morning to walk their dogs through the woods. He noted there were a few cars parked close by, but was sure they would either be gone by the time he returned or abandoned for the night by owners now too inebriated to drive them.

Making sure his car was locked, he headed for the pathway that would take him across the common, keeping an eye out for CCTV cameras he might have failed to spot on the many occasions he’d walked this route in preparation for today. Passers-by also came under scrutiny, in case they might be a cop in plain clothes looking for prostitutes or small-time drug dealers. It hadn’t crossed his mind the police might be looking for him now.

It took him more than ten minutes to walk from the car park to the street – her street, Valleyfield Road. As he turned off the busy thoroughfares and into the narrower residential streets there were far fewer pedestrians around and the sounds of traffic fell away, the murmur of a big city mixing with the hypnotizing sound of the gentle, tentative spring breeze stirring virgin leaves on the largely barren trees.

He enjoyed the peaceful sounds and the warm air that surrounded him, still fresh from the cold of winter, unspoilt by the coming heat of a London summer. He breathed in deeply, reassured by the calmness he felt, his fears fading with every step. Occasionally he walked up to one of the houses that lined the street to post junk mail through the letterbox, just in case he was being watched by suspicious eyes. As he drew ever closer to number 6 he felt calm and in control, the experience of taking the other two helping him now as he began to mentally rehearse what would happen the minute he stepped inside the hallway of the newly built townhouse close to the end of the road.

Finally he reached the end of her driveway and paused, searching through his postal bag, apparently looking for the letters addressed to 6 Valleyfield Road. But his bag contained no such letters. The only contents were a squeezy bottle of chloroform, a clean fold of material to apply it to, a roll of masking tape and, most importantly, a stun-gun.

Deborah Thomson was tired after coming off a twelve-hour early shift at St George’s, but her mood was buoyant. The rest of her day was full of things she was looking forward to. First she needed to change out of her uniform and go for a quick run across the common, then home for a long, hot shower. After that she’d take her time getting ready for a night out with friends in a local gastro-pub. No men tonight, just the girls. She was looking forward to telling them all about her new boyfriend, who she’d be seeing tomorrow. A whole Saturday with her new love, and the entire weekend off. It didn’t get any better.

Humming to herself as she tugged off her sensible work shoes and tossed them to one side, she broke off when the sound of the doorbell ringing interrupted her preparations. ‘Bollocks,’ she swore, and set off downstairs vowing to be rid of the interloper as quickly as possible.

She bounced across the hallway to the front door, pausing to look through the spyhole. Having been brought up in New Cross, a south-east London neighbourhood where poverty went hand-in-hand with criminality, she never opened the door unthinkingly. There was a man in postman’s uniform on the doorstep. He stepped back a little so she could see almost all of his body, and reached into his bag, pulling out a parcel the size of a small shoebox, too large to fit through the letter slot.

Deborah opened the front door, the smile returning to her face. ‘Hi,’ she chirped, expecting him to confirm her name and hand over the parcel, but he said nothing. Too late she sensed danger as the hand not holding the parcel whipped out of the bag at lightning speed clutching a strange-looking object. As it moved towards her, she reacted, slamming the door into his shoulder, but the stun-gun had already made it through the gap between door and frame and buried itself in her stomach. She flew backwards as if hurled by an invisible force, what little air she had left in her chest knocked out of her lungs as she lay convulsing on the hallway floor.

The man staggered and dropped to his knees alongside her, then reached into his bag. She stared from her frozen state of purgatory as he took a squeezy bottle and a fold of material, followed by a roll of black heavy-duty tape. She tried to speak, to beg him to leave her alone, not to hurt her, but could make only unintelligible guttural noises. He placed one finger to his lips.

‘Ssssh,’ he urged her. ‘Everything’s going to be all right now, Sam. I’ve come to take you home.’

Sean checked his watch as he pulled up outside the home of Douglas Levy, the Neighbourhood Watch coordinator for Louise Russell’s street. For a moment he sat looking across the road at her house, seeing DC Cahill’s car parked at the end of the drive. He knew he should look in on Cahill and John Russell, show his face and offer support and encouragement, but he couldn’t find it in himself. He’d come here in the mood for harassment, not empathy.

Breathing the cool air through his nose, he approached Levy’s front door and pressed the bell. He heard firm footsteps approaching from within, locks on the other side of the door turning and eventually the door opening, Levy standing tall and proud.

‘Me again,’ Sean announced before he could get a word in. ‘I have a few more questions for you if that’s OK.’

‘Well, yes, but I wasn’t expecting to have to speak to the police again.’

‘This won’t take long,’ Sean assured him. ‘May I come in?’

Levy hesitated for a second before stepping aside. ‘Of course.’

‘Thanks.’ Sean stepped past him and walked briskly into the neat interior. He still couldn’t sense a woman’s presence inside and couldn’t help wondering when and why Levy’s wife had left him. He began to wander around the downstairs of the house, deliberately making Levy feel uncomfortable and challenged. Sean wanted him off-balance, flustered, answering questions without stopping to think; that way he would give true answers, not the ones he thought he should or the ones he thought Sean wanted to hear.

‘It occurred to me,’ Sean began, ‘after the last time we talked, that whoever took her must have been here before, in this street. He would have wanted to watch, to study her movements so he could plan when and how to take her, don’t you think?’

‘Maybe,’ Levy stumbled, ‘I suppose so, I mean, I don’t really know. Why are you telling me this?’

‘I was just thinking about you being in all day, most days anyway, and how a man like you, Neighbourhood Watch coordinator and all that, would have noticed someone hanging around.’

‘I would have, but I didn’t,’ Levy answered, the little patience he had failing, exactly as Sean had hoped. ‘And I’m not in all day, every day.’

‘No, of course not,’ Sean patronized him, walking along the corridor to the lounge at the rear of the house, Levy pursuing him closely. ‘I see your lounge is at the back of the house, not overlooking the street, so even if you were at home, you’d be in here all day watching telly and wouldn’t have seen anything.’

‘I’m a very busy man, Inspector. I can assure you I do not waste my time watching daytime TV. I have the Neighbourhood Watch to see to and I’m a local councillor too – and have been for many years.’

‘So where do you work?’ Sean asked. ‘Where do you attend to all these important matters?’

‘Here, of course. In my office upstairs.’

‘Really?’ Sean strode past him and up the stairs, searching for Levy’s office and finding it – a converted bedroom that had an excellent view of the street outside. He entered the room and walked to the window, sensing Levy’s presence close behind. ‘Nice view,’ he said, without turning away from the window.

‘I don’t work in here for the view,’ Levy replied.

‘No,’ Sean agreed, ‘but if someone was hanging around out there, someone you didn’t know or recognize, you’d have noticed them, wouldn’t you?’ He turned to Levy and then back to the window to make the point. ‘How could you not?’

‘I don’t spend all day spying on my neighbours.’

‘I never said you did.’

‘I mean I don’t spend all day staring out of the window – I have work to do.’

‘But if someone was out there, you’d sense the movement and look up, wouldn’t you?’

‘I suppose so, possibly, I don’t really know.’

‘But this is a Neighbourhood Watch area, isn’t it? You know that better than anyone – you’re the coordinator, after all. You did say you were the coordinator?’

‘Yes, I did … I mean, I am.’

‘Then you must be a vigilant man, yes? A more than vigilant man if you’re responsible for the success or failure of the local Neighbourhood Watch. So you would have noticed a stranger in the street below. Maybe you would have even called the police, or at least made a note of it somewhere? Maybe you’ve just forgotten? Maybe you’re embarrassed that you forgot to mention it to me last time we spoke?’

‘No,’ Levy protested. ‘None of what you’re implying happened.’

‘So you’ve never seen anyone suspicious in the street? You’re telling me you never looked out of this window and saw someone suspicious?’

‘Well, yes, of course I—’

‘And what did you do about it?’

‘I can’t remem—’

‘You can’t remember? The Neighbourhood Watch coordinator can’t remember what he did when he saw someone suspicious in his own street?’

‘Maybe I reported it to the police, I’m not sure.’

‘When did you report it?’

‘I don’t know. I can’t remember. You’re confusing me.’

‘Can you remember anything?’

‘There’s nothing wrong with my memory.’

‘What does your local Home Beat Officer look like?’

‘Excuse me?’

‘What does your local Home Beat Officer look like?’

‘Well, I …’

‘What’s his name?’

‘It’s … I have it written down somewhere.’

‘When do the bins get collected?’

‘Pardon?’

‘When were there last roadworks in the street?’

‘I’m not—’

‘What does the guy who comes to read the meters dress like?’

‘I …’

‘What does the local postman look like?’

‘He’s, well he’s—’

‘Do you know anything, Mr Levy? These are the things you see every day, but you can’t remember any of it.’

Levy looked crushed. ‘Why are you doing this?’ he pleaded. ‘Why are you doing this to me?’

At Levy’s words, Sean froze. For a moment he stood in a daze, as if only now returning to himself, bewildered and afraid of what his alter ego might have done in his absence, like a drunk waking the morning after, unable to recall the events of the previous night. What worried him most was the fact he’d enjoyed being cruel to Levy. Was that why he’d come back to interview him for a second time, so he could be cruel to him? Was that why he’d come alone, so no one would witness his cruelty or try to stop him? He decided both were probably true, and in the pit of his soul he knew why – he was drawing closer to the killer he would one day be face to face with. Across a street, across an interview-room table? He couldn’t be sure where their confrontation would take place, but he knew it would happen soon. Already he was beginning to think like him and feel what he could feel.

At the same time, he’d felt sure Levy had some vital piece of the puzzle locked away in his uncooperative memory, something he needed to squeeze out of him, no matter what. Now he was less certain. He forced himself to speak: ‘I’m sorry. I was just trying a new witness interview technique,’ he lied. ‘It’s supposed to distract the witness by making them feel angry, allowing suppressed memories to be freed subconsciously.’

Levy studied him, deciding whether or not to believe him. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘it doesn’t seem to work, does it?’

‘No,’ Sean pretended to agree, still feeling numb. ‘I’m sorry. I’ve wasted enough of your time.’ He almost pushed past Levy in his haste to leave the neat little office and escape his house and all the pointlessness it stood for. He began to descend the stairs with Levy in close pursuit, hell-bent on haranguing him all the way to the front door.

‘And just for the record, I do know what the local postman looks like, now I’ve had time to think about it.’

Other books

Perfect Cover by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Wild Child by Boyle, T. C.
Liesl & Po by Lauren Oliver
Spore by Tamara Jones
At Swim-two-birds by Flann O'Brien
Deadhead by A.J. Aalto
The Kingdom by Clive Cussler
The One I Left Behind by Jennifer McMahon