Read The Verdict Online

Authors: Nick Stone

The Verdict (37 page)

 

May

Back at the office the next day, my colleagues arrived together, which they’d never done before. Adolf and The Other Two. All smiles and jokes, extra-friendly with each other. They didn’t look at me. Not so much as a glance in my general direction.

Michaela announced a tea-making rota. They picked their slots. She wrote it down and it went up on the corkboard. I wasn’t asked.

The message was simple: I no longer existed.

Nothing I could do about it, but ignore it by staying busy.

I called Swayne. I wanted to talk to him about the Wingroves and the White Ghosts. He’d brought them up for a specific reason. He knew more than he was letting on – a lot more.

He didn’t answer. I left a message.

Then Janet emailed and asked me to write a full report about Fabia and run off four copies. We had a client meeting at Belmarsh to go to.

 

‘Well, at least it proves my defence, doesn’t it?’ VJ said.

I’d been spared regurgitating the Southend nick debacle. Janet played narrator this time. Because she told it chronologically, VJ’s face went through a time-lapsed sequence of hopes raised and dashed expressions – exhilaration to disappointment to sick, quaking shock at the conclusion.

It took him a few moments to regain his composure. He got up and paced and took deep breaths. He’d lost so much weight, his clothes were barely staying on him; his sweatshirt slipped and slid towards his shoulders, his tracksuit billowed about his legs like oversized sails.

‘To us, yes,’ Christine said.

‘Can’t you put Terry on the stand?’ VJ asked.

Christine shook her head.

‘That’s a minefield. Legally, Terry is a “Bad Character” – a witness who committed an offence in obtaining evidence. Franco Carnavale would destroy him.’

It was a good call on her part. Besides the pitfalls she’d mentioned, I would have to admit my past relationship with VJ, and that would make what I’d done look even worse than just some overeager underling getting in over his head. None of the defence team – nor anyone at KRP – knew about us.
If the truth came out reputations would take a hit.

‘What about the police? They know the truth.’

‘They know what Terry said, but there’s no one to back it up.’

‘How’s their investigation going? Are they close to catching someone?’

‘We don’t know. They’re under no legal obligation to tell us, unless it directly affects you and the trial. For now, to them, it’s a separate matter,’ Christine said. ‘And I wouldn’t get your hopes up that they’ll catch Fabia’s killer. It was a professional hit. Professionals don’t get caught.’

VJ groaned and rubbed his temples. I saw new greys there.

‘But you
will
bring Fabia’s murder up in court, right?’

Christine and Janet exchanged a look that told me they’d already discussed this and agreed what they were going to tell him in advance. Janet gave her a nod.

‘We can’t so much as
hint
at it,’ Christine said.


Why?

‘Without a signed statement from Fabia it’s inadmissible. Hearsay.’

‘Doesn’t the prosecution know what happened?’

‘Probably. But that’s not the point, because, legally – so far – it doesn’t affect the case. As I said, we cannot enter Fabia’s conversation with Terry into evidence. Therefore it’s not part of our defence, and not part of the trial,’ Christine explained.

‘The bottom line is that unless the police catch Fabia’s killer and get a confession out of her, the fundamentals are unchanged. Evelyn Bates was murdered in your room. Even if Fabia was still alive and talking to us, it wouldn’t prove you didn’t kill Evelyn. You’d still have a case to answer. The trial would still go ahead.’

 

The following morning, Redpath came down to the office with his and Janet’s Belmarsh notes and asked me to type them up, run off three copies, email another to Christine, and put the spare in filing.

No problem there, exactly, but him and Janet both had PAs for that, and I wasn’t a trained typist. I was a one-finger seek and peck keyboardist. But all I said was:

‘Sure.’

‘Looks like you’re coming full circle,’ Redpath said as he left.

 

And that pretty much set the pace for the rest of the month.

Overnight, my job became simple and undemanding. Basic clerical work – typing and filing.

I’d arrive in the mornings to find a small heap of badly scrawled notes and dog-eared legal pads in my in-tray. By late afternoon I’d have turned them all into typescripts. They also got me covering for the receptionist when she took her lunchbreak.

Demotion did have its upsides. The pressure was suddenly off. I didn’t have to come up with anything that might turn the trial around.

I stopped spitting in my sandwiches.

I started taking all my lunchbreaks. And I also got to leave the office dead on six, so I saw much more of my family. I was home well in time for dinner every night and my weekends were free again. I made up for the last few weeks, by helping the kids with their homework and hanging on their every word. I read to them at night.

I mended things with Karen in a big way. One Friday we got a babysitter and had our first date in God knows how long. We went to dinner on Battersea Embankment and spent most of the night holding hands across the table and looking into each other’s eyes, me apologising for ever putting the case before them, vowing it wouldn’t happen again.

Unfortunately, I didn’t mean it.

Really, I was bored stiff. The prospect of going to work and knowing exactly what I was going to be doing from day to day began to gnaw at me after the second week.

I tried to look on the bright side. I hadn’t been fired. I’d been given a three-month grace period to get my act together and have a job to go to when this one ended. And I was luckier still. It could have been even worse. I could have gone to prison. Yet that’s the thing about luck: you never know you’ve had it till it’s run out.

But mostly, I couldn’t stop thinking about the case.

I didn’t have a clue what was happening because I was shut out. Janet and Redpath weren’t keeping me in the loop at all – and I knew better than to ask them.

I kept trying to reach Swayne. The first two weeks, straight to voicemail. Then, on the third week, an automated voice told me I couldn’t leave a message because his inbox was full. By the end of the month his number was no longer in service.

I called DCI Reid to find out how the investigation was going. Her response was predictable: ‘I can’t discuss ongoing police affairs. If anything relevant to you or your client comes up, we’ll be in touch.’

There’d been nothing on the news about Fabia’s murder. Nothing at all. Even on the internet. Like it had never happened. Maybe it was too embarrassing, or maybe there was something else afoot, something bigger than a dead prostitute.

 

And as for what I now thought about VJ:

Well…

I won’t lie.

I wished he was guilty. That had been easier to accept, and easier still to believe.

I was disappointed he was innocent. The tag didn’t suit him. Good people were ‘innocent’. Not him. He wasn’t ‘good’. He wasn’t even blameless in the fate that had befallen him. If anything, he deserved it. Actions have consequences.
You can’t cheat karma
, and all that.

But, now, above all, what I really wanted to know was who was behind it. And – especially – why? What had VJ done to them?

 

June

Another month of pure drudgery. I didn’t leave the office at all.

It was sunny, then it rained, then it was sunny again.

 

I got my CV together and sent it out to law firms and recruitment agencies. I had no response from the former, and a few introductory meetings with the latter. Those all ended the same way – nothing for someone with my skillsets at the moment, but they’d call me back if they had anything.

So – when the verdict was rendered, irrespective of how it went, my law career was looking over.

What was I going to do?

Karen suggested I retrain, pick a trade specialising in something people would always need, that I didn’t need to be young to do, or lie my way into; something it wasn’t too late to start.

Like what?

‘Plumbing,’ she said. ‘There’ll always be a future in shit.’

 

Friday, July 8th, 2011

With the trial starting in just over two weeks, I was finally let out of the office to do some real work. Christine and Redpath were prepping VJ for the witness stand. They needed me to sit in as a notetaker and soundboard.

 

VJ had aged another half-decade since I’d seen him last. His face was seemingly held together by wrinkles and an untamed black-and-white beard covering his neck and creeping up his cheeks in a patchy spread.

‘You look tired,’ Christine said, diplomatically.

Not that she could talk. Her eyes were pink-rimmed and glassy. She’d dozed off on the train over and filled the carriage with phlegmy and hissy breathing, occasionally punctuated by a heavy cough that exploded midway in her chest.

‘Haven’t been sleeping much,’ VJ said. ‘I keep having these dreams. Nightmares, really.’

‘You need to focus,’ she said, gently.

‘I know.’

He ground his teeth and rubbed his chin. I noticed he’d chewed his nails to the quick.

‘You’re going to have to give evidence. The jury will want to hear you say you didn’t kill Evelyn Bates. We’re going to make you convincing. You need to work on everything, from what you say to how you say it. Voice, attitude, posture, eye contact.’

‘Will that make any difference?’ he asked.

‘The British jury system is inherently flawed. It’s based on the assumption that an ordinary member of the public is intelligent enough to follow hours of complex legal argument delivered by men and women in powdered wigs, spouting a version of English last spoken in 1811. The assumption’s wrong. Nine out of twelve jurors don’t understand what’s going on. So they look at things they can understand. Simple things. Do they like the accused? Does he look guilty? Does he sound guilty? Could the victim be their daughter? At the end of the day, a trial is nothing more than a high stakes reality show, a popularity contest where your fate gets voted on by idiots.

‘You’re going to have to be ready for Franco Carnavale in a way you’ve never been ready for anything and anyone in your life. He not only possesses a fine legal mind, but he has that special thing too – he has a performer’s sense of audience. He knows how to work a jury, how to get them on side. But if you get through one of our sessions, you’ll make it through ten of his.’

VJ looked around the room, at those now very familiar four pale-yellow walls, pausing at the panic button.

‘OK,’ he said. ‘Let’s have it.’

‘Carnavale’s going to wind you up,’ she said. ‘He’ll come at you from all angles. He’ll do everything to unsettle you. His objective will be to make you angry, to provoke you into losing your cool. Fall for that and the jury will see a man who lacks self-control, a man who could kill in anger. So, the first rule is to stay absolutely calm. Don’t ever raise your voice.’

‘OK.’

‘Next, when answering questions, always remember the word “squid”.’

‘Pardon?’

‘S.Q.U.I.D. Squid,’ she said. ‘Keep your answers:

 

Simple – Answer yes and no at all times. If you have to say more, use as few words as possible.

Quick – Don’t hesitate. If you do, it means you’re thinking. And if you’re thinking, it means you’re inventing.

Unambiguous – Stick to your version at all times. Don’t go off statement.

Informative – Answer the question asked. Tell him exactly what he wants to know.

Decisive – Be firm when answering. Remember you’re telling the truth.

 


SQUID
. Got it?’

‘Got it,’ VJ said.

Christine leaned in.

‘Now we can begin. Terry, ask the first question, please.’

I hadn’t been briefed on any of this, but I knew what she wanted. Something that would put him on edge and get a rise out of him. I had quite a few of those – not all of them relevant. Like ‘Who really stole your diary?’ and

‘When did you first cheat on your wife?’

VJ tensed up immediately.


What?

Christine jumped in.

‘Never answer a question with a question, Vernon. It looks like you’re playing for time. And watch your tone. Keep it flat. Emotionless. Ask him the question again, Terry.’

I did.

‘We weren’t even married the first time,’ he said, scowling at me.

‘So why get married at all?’

‘It was her idea,’ he said. ‘We both wanted children, a family. I thought she’d make a good mother.’

‘But not a good enough wife?’

‘Melissa’s a perfect wife,’ he said.

‘But you’re an imperfect husband?’

‘Yes,’ he said.

‘Excellent!’ Christine said. ‘Remember that, Vernon. You’re an “imperfect husband”.’

‘I will,’ he said, giving me a cutting look.

‘Good. Let’s carry on.’

 

Monday, July 11th, 2011

I got into the office early, buzzing from Friday. I was renewed, determined, primed. I really wanted to be a lawyer. I was going to
fight
for it.

And then, the instant I saw my desk, I deflated faster than a balloon colliding with a hedgehog. There was the now habitual pile of to-be-typeds teetering in my in-tray, but two box files had been left on my chair, with a Post-it note from Janet on top: ‘For archiving.’

‘Archiving’ was a fancy euphemism for one of my other tasks – filing.

Both boxes related to VJ’s case. I went through them, sorting bills, invoices, copies of Janet’s correspondence and unused CPS material. There was plenty of the latter – evidence Carnavale had discarded.

I went through it, just in case. Plenty of crime-scene and post-mortem photographs, statements from witnesses who wouldn’t be called or used, lab reports about carpet fibres.

And then…

This:
 

VJ’s bill from the Blenheim-Strand.

There were only two things listed. The cost of the room – £2011 – and a bottle of Grey Goose vodka for which he’d paid £275. That was about ten times what it cost in a supermarket.

But where was the champagne he’d supposedly ordered?

I opened my case file and found the list of evidence the police had taken from the suite.

1 bottle Cristal champagne 75cl (unopened) in a bucket, two glasses.
 

Rudy Saks told me he’d entered the order into the office computer as soon as he’d taken it, ‘so it would be billed to the room’
.

In his statement to the police, Saks hadn’t mentioned doing that. His witness account focused on delivering the champagne to the room before 1 a.m., and seeing Evelyn Bates on the couch.

From Fabia’s account, I knew that Saks was in on the set-up.

How to prove it?

First up, if VJ really ordered the champagne, how come it hadn’t appeared on his bill?

The CPS had entered the phone log from Suite 18 into evidence, showing that a call was made to room service at 12.47 a.m.

Second, there were no signs of forced entry. The CPS had included a print-out of the log from the suite’s keycard lock.

The log was a simple table:

 

S18 – Door Lock

Day
 

 

Time
 

16.3.11:

 

17.38pm (gk040973)

16.3.11:

 

20.52pm (pk15t)

16.3.11:

 

23.57pm (gk040973)

17.3.11:

 

08.03am (pk15t)

 

gk – Guest Key

pk – Passkey

 

Conundrum:
 

17.38 p.m. – VJ entered the suite.

23.57 p.m. – VJ entered the suite with Fabia.

The door to Suite 18 was not opened from the outside again until the maids went in at 8.03 a.m. the next day.

So how did Evelyn get in the room?

 

Theory
:

Someone let Evelyn in, someone
already
inside the room.

Not VJ. He was unconscious on the couch.

Then who?

Fabia was supposed to call room service for champagne – that was to let Saks in.

Saks could have killed Fabia alone, but there was always the risk of something going wrong – Fabia fighting back, or getting away, as she had.

So there must have been at least one other person in the room, to make sure everything ran smoothly.

When had the second person come in?

The answer was right in front of me.

 

I took out the crime-scene pictures and went through them until I came to the shots of Evelyn in the bedroom; the close-ups of her head resting on the crisp, unruffled pillows with the Marquis chocolates still on them.

I rang Albert Torena at the hotel.

‘What time is the turndown service?’ I asked him.

‘Between 7 p.m. and 9.30 p.m.’

‘What’s the process?’

‘The topsheet and duvet are turned back and a mint is placed on each pillow.’

‘A mint? Not a chocolate?’

‘No, the chocolate’s for when the guests arrive. A little welcome gift.’

I
knew
it.

The photograph of the bed showed it hadn’t been turned down at all.

VJ told us a maid had knocked on his door while he was getting changed for the awards dinner. It was the turndown service, and he’d sent her away. She hadn’t come into the room.

Yet someone
had
entered Suite 18 at 20.52 p.m., after VJ had left, using the maid’s passkey.

And they hadn’t left. They’d stayed there the whole time.
 

Would this stand up in court?

No. It was pure speculation.

I needed evidence.

And I needed to find out what had happened to Evelyn in the last two hours of her life.

 

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Fabia had met Evelyn Bates once, in the bathroom near the Casbah nightclub. She’d then seen her in the corridor, talking to a man who looked like hotel security.

At some point after that Evelyn had returned to the room she’d shared with Penny Halliwell and left her a note on the side table:

@
Private party @ Suite 18. Evey x

Penny hadn’t noticed it until she left the next morning.

Timeframe:

Evelyn left the nightclub at 11.13 p.m.

Went to the bathroom. Seen by Fabia (
circa
11.15 p.m.).

VJ left the club at 11.19 p.m.

Met Fabia in the corridor (
circa
11.22 p.m.).

Evelyn talked to hotel security man in the corridor (
circa
11.22–11.25 p.m.)

VJ and Fabia went upstairs to the Circle bar (
circa
11.30 p.m.)

Evelyn was murdered between 12 and 3 a.m.

Slightly over an hour and a half for her to:

 

1)  

 

Accept an invitation to Suite 18.

2)  

Go to her room, leave Penny a note.

3)  

Get drugged with Rohypnol – which starts to take effect within ten minutes of ingestion.

4)  

Go to Suite 18.

There were two ways up to Suite 18 – via the fire escape, which was alarmed and would have sounded if the door had been opened; or the VIP lift, which was only operable with the right keycard – either a room key or a staff passkey.

Where to start?

Here:

Talk to the security guy.

Get keycard info for Evelyn’s room for March 16th and 17th.

 

Back to Torena I went.

‘Do you have someone working for you who’s well built and has a shaved head?’ I said, after I’d got him on the phone.

‘That’s most of them. Even the girls,’ he quipped.

‘I need a list of all security personnel who worked the night of March 16th. And I’ll also need the keycard data for Room 474 on the same date. Can you help with that?’

‘Sure. I’ll have the information for you in a couple of days. Give me your personal email.’

 

Back on reception duty.

The Gang of Three went out to lunch in formation, led by Adolf.

Edwina left ten minutes later.

The office was quiet.

At times like these, when I had nothing better to do, I thought about my future. If I wanted to be a lawyer, I’d need a degree. I didn’t need KRP for that. There were plenty of courses for mature students. I could apply for a loan. I had a fair chance of getting one too, seeing as I’d once been good enough to get into Cambridge.

I looked up courses on the internet.

The phone rang.

‘It’s Edwina. I think I may’ve left my mobile upstairs. The trouble is, I don’t know where. If I call the number, can you locate it for me? You’ll recognise my ringtone. It’s “The Dambusters March”. I’ll hang up and call now.’

I trotted off upstairs.

I didn’t hear anything ringing around Edwina’s desk. I wasn’t even sure I’d recognise the theme from
The Dam Busters
. Hadn’t seen it since I was a kid.

I looked on the floor around her desk, tried the drawers. Had she even called the number?

And then I heard a faint sound.

It was coming from Kopf’s office.

I put an ear to the door.

A tune was playing. One I recognised all too well, but I remembered it better from an insurance advert. Or was it carpets?

Dam Busters.
 

Kopf obviously wasn’t in, but I knocked anyway.

No reply.

I tried the door. It was unlocked. I pushed it open a crack, enough to see his desk.

I walked in.

The ringtone was coming from deep in the room.

The phone was on top of the filing cabinet.

I picked it up.

I saw Adolf’s name on the screen.

‘Hello?’

‘Took your time,’ Edwina said.

‘It was in Mr Kopf’s office,’ I said.

‘Oh… Can you leave it on my desk?’

‘Sure.’

She hung up.

So, she’d gone out to lunch with Adolf and Crew: I’d never stood a chance here.

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