Authors: Luca Veste
He knew everything was going to crumble soon. That his world would change forever. His future would be altered and malformed. All the work he had put in to make his life better would ultimately
be for nothing.
He would end up in a cell, he thought. Maybe even next to his old friend Tim Johnson. That would be karma right there.
He should have said no. He should never have helped her.
How could he have let her do it all on her own?
Sam was dead. Others were too. And it was his fault. He was to blame for the whole thing.
There was no way around it. It was his responsibility.
They all deserved it. Every last one of those eight men in that club deserved exactly what was happening to them.
‘Why do you feel guilty then?’ Vincenzo whispered to himself, the smoke filling the car around him. He slid the window down a touch, allowing it to drift out into the night.
There had to be a better way than this, he thought.
A way out.
The scene was almost exactly as it had been two days earlier – an open car boot revealing the bloody contents within. Any other time, it was possible that it would have
ruined Murphy’s day, but it was almost as if he’d been expecting it.
Now, there was another dead body to deal with. It was becoming sickeningly normal. The sight of the blood, gore and guts; he felt like he could become immune to it all. The horrors of the wider
world had already been on his doorstep for the previous few years. Each time, it was supposed to horrify and disgust, but it was now becoming . . . expected.
Secretly, wanted. Needed. The easiest way to stop a killer was for them to make a mistake. Another corpse increased the possibility they may have made one.
‘At least he’s had the decency to leave us something this time.’
He didn’t respond to Rossi, instead reading the note which had been passed to him. It was in a plastic see-through sealed bag. Block capitals, neat and precise.
I AM A DIRTY RAPIST KILLER
Then, in smaller script underneath.
FIVE DOWN – THREE TO GO
‘Who’s the other one?’
‘Other one what?’ Rossi said, looking back at him. ‘Going to have give me more than that.’
‘It says five. If we count the guy in prison, Sam, this guy and the one who committed suicide, that’s four. Total. This says five.’
‘Got me. One of the ones we haven’t tracked down yet, I suppose. We hadn’t tracked down James Morley, Paul Wright or Matthew Williams when we left last night, from
memory.’
‘I wonder if this is one of them,’ Murphy said, walking away from the boot to the front of the car. ‘Another nice car. Fifteen plate, so can’t have been cheap given the
make.’
‘They all seem to have been doing well for themselves.’
‘Until recently.’
‘The body hasn’t been cut up this time.’
‘You’re right,’ Murphy replied, moving backwards slowly and taking in the entire scene. ‘Easier to move.’
‘What’s that?’
‘The car is closer to where the murder took place. Didn’t have to move the body very far at all. Sam Byrne was dismembered for ease of transport.’
Rossi was pulled aside by a uniform. The scene around them was becoming more crowded. Tape had been strung up around the area, but it did little to stop people coming up to look, including the
local media.
A throwback to its era as one of the main shipping docks in the country, there were warehouses lined up further out of the city centre, often disused and abandoned. Some attempts had been made
to make use of some of them, but there were many which were left to ruin. Large, red brick buildings which loomed over the Mersey, dotted along Regent Road. A throwback to another era. Whereas
some, like the Stanley Dock tobacco warehouse, had been earmarked for regeneration projects. Destined to become home to yet another apartment block, unaffordable to most in the region probably.
Others weren’t so lucky.
Murphy stood with his hand against his forehead, shading his eyes from the sun which had decided to make an appearance that morning. He glanced across at the car outside the warehouse again and
shook his head. The boot was horrific, but the bloodier scene inside the building said much more.
‘We’ve got an owner for the car.’
Murphy turned to find DC Kirkham standing behind him, one hand in his pocket, the other hanging limply by his side.
‘It’s Matthew Williams. I’m guessing it’s probably not a coincidence.’
‘I wouldn’t imagine so, no. So that’s the connection. We were right to have the suspicion.’
‘I guess so. I’m not sure what we do with it, though. It doesn’t seem like it’s much to go on.’
Murphy sighed, wondering if there was ever going to be a time when people around him would be more imaginative.
‘Think about it,’ he said, taking DC Kirkham to one side, away from the uniforms milling about. ‘We’ve got a list of eight men, all part of the same group at university.
They’ve been involved in things we’re not yet aware of, but we know at least one woman who showed up at Sam Byrne’s parents’ house saying she had been raped. We already know
what this sort of university club can be capable of, don’t we?’
‘Well, if that pig story was even half correct, with the prime minister–’
‘Yeah, exactly,’ Murphy said, cutting in before DC Kirkham got any more graphic. ‘So, let’s say these men have done something which leads to someone wanting revenge. Is
it not possible that’s what we’re seeing here?’
Murphy showed Kirkham the note he was still holding, the words sketched on the paper. ‘We need to find the girl who went to Sam Byrne’s parents. I can’t see any other reason
for that message to be here, can you?’
DC Kirkham opened and closed his mouth.
‘Good, glad you agree,’ Murphy said. ‘Take Hale and put everything you can into finding the girl. Go back and check reports, which I guarantee won’t mention any of their
names. Just look for reports of sexual assault and rape involving university students around that time. Hopefully that information will still be on file. Laura and I will go for a little
visit.’
‘Who to?’
‘Our man in prison. I think it’s time we heard what he has to say.’
* * *
Whilst Matthew Williams’s broken body was being removed from the scene of his discovery, Murphy and Rossi were on yet another motorway, on the way to meet Tim Johnson.
‘Surprised he wasn’t in Walton.’
‘They seem to ship our murderers out to Manchester these days,’ Murphy replied, shifting in the passenger seat as Rossi drove. ‘And we get their ones, of course. It’s
like a shit exchange programme.’
‘Didn’t have a problem with getting in there. Tim was eager to speak to us, apparently.’
‘Good, let’s hope that bodes well for what we’re going to be asking him.’
Rossi shaped as if to speak, then stopped herself. She paused a few seconds, Murphy waiting for the words to come out.
‘What is it we’re going to be asking him, exactly? Only, I can’t imagine a convicted murderer will cooperate with people like us.’
‘Depends if he still wants to say he’s innocent,’ Murphy replied, trying to read the file containing information on Tim Johnson and his conviction as Rossi speeded up and
passed another car on the motorway. ‘He might want to be seen as helping us out, to make himself look better or whatever.’
‘I don’t know. Seems like a long way to go for probably not very much. Feel like we should be back at the scene. The body probably hasn’t even got to the morgue yet and
we’re not even in the same bloody city as it.’
Murphy had stopped listening, reading the notes on Tim Johnson’s case instead. ‘Convicted without a body, which isn’t very usual. Especially as it was apparently only a year
ago that the victim went missing . . .’
‘Missing kid or something, wasn’t there?’
Murphy hummed in response. He was trying to remember the case himself, but it had been dealt with by another division in Liverpool. ‘I remember bits of this, but it’s not very clear.
Guy reports a baby being kidnapped in Sefton Park, claimed it had been snatched with the pram he was pushing. It was big news for about two days, then it just disappeared. Next thing you know, the
guy – who I’m presuming is Tim Johnson – was arrested and charged with murder. He had moved over to Liverpool in the week prior, from over the water. Some woman over there was
killed or something.’
‘So, the murder takes place over on the Wirral?’
‘Apparently so.’ Murphy continued to read, shaking his head more vigorously with each turn of the page. ‘This is crazy, even for here.’
‘What’s that?’ Rossi replied, glancing across at him.
‘It’s a bizarre story,’ Murphy said, trying to work out where to start. ‘It gets really weird from the time he was charged with the murder. Turns out the baby
didn’t exist. He’d made the whole thing up: the kidnap, the fact he had to escape the mother . . . everything. They were working on the theory that guilt over him killing
this woman had sent him over the edge.’
‘
Mannagia
. . . that is bizarre. I remember him being up in court, but missed that. Surprised it wasn’t bigger news.’
‘I imagine his family managed to keep most of it out of the papers. According to this, his father worked on Fleet Street for a long time. Some favours being called in there
maybe.’
‘Still, it’s a juicy story. So, no body?’
‘No, just a lot of blood, which indicated that there was a catastrophic event, in which survival would be almost impossible. They could pinpoint movements, place Tim at the scene with DNA,
all kinds of stuff. Looks like they’re not expecting a body to turn up, though. They reckon it was ditched into the sea.’
‘Top end then, rather than the Mersey?’
‘Exactly,’ Murphy replied, turning over another page of photographs. ‘They said he had access to a boat of some sort. Took it out from Moreton shore a couple of miles, weighed
down her body and dumped it over the side into the Irish Sea. Unlikely they’ll ever find it.’
‘These things don’t usually stay hidden forever,’ Rossi said, her knuckles on the steering wheel turning white. ‘I’m surprised he didn’t end up in Ashworth,
with all that talk about making up a baby.’
‘Huh, yeah, you’re right. How did he think he was going to get away with that kind of lie?’
‘Does it say anything in there? What’s in his statement?’
Murphy leafed through the pages, finding the initial statements and reading through them. He opened the window a little as the motion of the car and reading at the same time kicked off his
motion sickness. Fresh air blasted into the car, as Rossi speeded up in the fast lane.
‘First interviews he spent most of the time asking about “Molly”,’ Murphy said, swallowing back saliva. ‘Then he went to no comment as soon as his solicitor
arrived . . . Christ . . .’
‘What?’
‘Nothing. Just read who represented him at trial. It was Jess.’
‘Small world,’ Rossi said, shaking her head. ‘Not a conflict, is it?’
‘Probably not. Will mention it just to make sure.’
Rossi nodded, going silent as Murphy continued to read. He looked away from the pages every few seconds, wishing he’d read it all before getting in the car. ‘Surprised she lost this
one, actually. With no body, it’s usually a very difficult prosecution. Bet it pissed her off royally.’
‘It sounds like it would have been dealt with properly for CPS to get that far. Must have been a load of evidence against him.’
‘Does look that way. Thing is, if he hadn’t made up the kidnapping thing, it’s unlikely he would have been caught for it. He called attention to himself by doing that.
Although, I suppose guilt can make you do some crazy things.’
‘Who was the victim?’
Murphy went back a few pages and found the page he wanted. ‘Irenka Dubicki. A Polish-born woman, came over to the UK about a decade ago. Lived alone, had no family over here. It seems
there might have been a relationship with Johnson, but the police were never sure.’
‘So, we have one guy dead, who liked to hire prostitutes and abuse them. We have another who killed a woman he may or may not have been in relationship with. It’s not exactly a great
advert for that club they were all in.’
‘What’s the chance all of the eight men on that original list have had similar issues in their past?’
‘I’d say quite high,’ Rossi said, slowing down as a lorry crossed into the middle lane and tried to overtake another lorry going three miles an hour slower in the inside
lane.
Murphy sat back in the passenger seat, closing the file on his lap and staring at the back of the lorry in front. He began to feel normal again as they approached Manchester and the prison that
held Tim Johnson.
It also contained the man who had killed Murphy’s parents, but he tried to put that fact to the back of his mind.
There was something broken about the man in front of them. It wasn’t apparent if that was because he’d spent a year in jail or if the weight of his guilt had
suddenly crashed down upon him. The grey flecks in his stubble and dark rings under his eyes spoke of more going on under the surface. He had gained weight since he had been photographed on his
first arrest, his face rounder and his stomach extending over the jogging bottoms he was wearing.
Murphy studied Tim Johnson without speaking, half-listening as Rossi explained why they were there. There was something familiar about the man – not him exactly, but his demeanour. He had
seen it before, but couldn’t place it. Johnson’s eyes flitted between the pair of them, his breaths coming hard and fast.
‘Do you understand that, Tim?’ Rossi said as Murphy tuned back in. ‘We just want your help with an ongoing investigation.’
‘Have you found Molly?’
The eagerness with which it was asked unsettled Murphy. The lie was still there, slipping easily out of Johnson’s mouth. It didn’t bode well.
‘We’re not here to discuss that,’ Rossi said, Murphy watching as Johnson’s shoulders dropped. ‘We want to know about the club you were a part of at
university.’