Page 26
chapter twenty-six
“He’s not here.” Hartridge rounded the side of Ronny Tanner’s house, shaking his head. “No lights, car’s not in the garage. I think he’s done a runner.”
James forced himself to admit that that was the only play Tanner had left, after drawing a firearm on a police officer. “I want a warrant to search his house,” he said, although he didn’t know if he had enough cause for one. “But we will definitely alert the port authority, in case he decides to leave the country.”
He probably wouldn’t, though. He’d find somewhere to hunker down and wait them out.
“His office is about ten minutes from here. Let’s go there next.” He yawned on the last word. It was already one in the morning, but he didn’t want to leave it until tomorrow.
Hartridge didn’t complain, and they were soon parked in front of a row of houses converted into businesses in a quiet street.
“Nice,” Hartridge commented. “He wasn’t scraping the bottom of the barrel, was he?”
“No.” James had had the impression the client who’d hired him had money, especially if she owned the green Jaguar, and she would have chosen a reputable investigator, probably through a recommendation.
They looked around, but the firm was locked up and there were no lights on here, either.
“It’ll be easier to get a warrant for the business than the house, so let’s get on that first thing tomorrow.” James turned back to the Wolseley just as he heard a car come up the street.
The headlights illuminated him and Hartridge, and there was a sudden squealing of tires as a black Mercedes sped away.
Tanner.
“He was coming back for something,” Hartridge said. “And we got here first.”
“Yes.” James felt a sudden lift in his spirits. “Let’s get a few uniforms to stand front and back here until the warrant’s issued. I don’t want him getting in for whatever it was he came for.”
It meant there was something here he wanted. And now he couldn’t get it.
The energy of that fueled him enough to get home before he crashed into bed. As he lay, looking at the ceiling, he remembered the silent tears dripping down Gabriella’s cheeks as they’d eaten dinner, and admitted he might have to take a step back when they took Tanner in. Because he wanted to hurt him.
Very, very badly.
* * *
“Where the hell were you, yesterday?” Detective Inspector Whetford loomed in James’s office, blocking the way out.
James slung his coat over his arm, the warrant he’d been waiting for finally in his hand, and considered his boss.
“Sir?” he asked.
“I came past at least three times, and you were never once in your office.” Whetford waved a hand in the direction of Hartridge’s cubby hole. “Neither was your bagman.”
He was shaking a little, and James could see he was working himself into a rage.
It could be manufactured, a way to build up a head of steam in order to punish James for his failure to fall in line on the weekend, but James thought the shakes were genuine.
“As I mentioned in the report I put on your desk last night,” James said, sure—beyond sure—that Whetford had not checked a single file on his desk for weeks, “we’ve managed to link the four murders over the last two months to murders that happened during the Blitz. Given that every day this bastard goes undetected, more women are at risk, I’ve literally worked between sixteen and eighteen hours a day since I caught the first case.”
“What?” Whetford took a step back as if James had struck him. “What case?”
“The one I’ve been involved in since before I went on leave, sir.” James had gone around Whetford to get the case, but he’d covered himself later by giving the details to the pool secretary who worked for four DIs, Whetford included.
She would have entered it into the system and Whetford would have assumed it had been a random assignment. If he’d even looked.
“You went on leave during this?” Whetford grabbed onto the one thing that was a bad look.
“Dr. Jandicott couldn’t say how that first victim died, sir, who she was, or even how long she’d been dead before she was found. It was only after I returned and the second body turned up that we established the link.” James studied Whetford, and thought his hands might be shaking a little.
“Jandicott?” The pathologist’s name seemed to take the wind out of Whetfor’s sails. “And he thinks the same person is responsible for four deaths in the last two months?”
“We both do, sir. Our reasoning is in my report.” He had used the pretext of dropping the hastily drawn-up report to Whetford’s office last night as a way to get in and set up his plan to discredit his boss, before he’d headed over to Gabriella’s. He’d slid the report under a few other files, so it looked as if he’d dropped it off earlier than he had. He’d known Whetford wouldn’t be at work. He preferred to do his business in a noisy pub, where no one could see who he talked to and hear what was said. “Have you had time to read the report yet, sir?” James asked. “If we’re right, he’s responsible for a lot more than just four deaths.”
“My God, man.” Whetford stared at him in horror. A multiple murderer was so rare as to be major news in the Met. “Why haven’t you briefed me before now?” Whetford’s neck was red.
“Sir, I went to your office a number of times, and eventually left the report when I couldn’t speak to you personally.” James rubbed a hand on his brow. “I’ve been burning the candle at both ends to catch this monster, sir. Along with Dr. Jandicott and DS Hartridge.”
Again, Jandicott’s name gave Whetford pause. He might have power over James, but Jandicott was the head pathologist and had access to far more ears than Whetford did. “Give me the short version, right now, so I can brief the Commissioner.” Whetford pulled his collar away from his neck, and James felt a quiet satisfaction at the display of nerves. Because no DI should be this out of the loop with his subordinates’ cases—and Whetford knew it.
James spelled it out in simple terms, wondering if Whetford would realize that he would fall short of even the most basic questioning by the Commissioner, but Whetford was too focused on getting the broad strokes committed to memory.
Whetford fiddled with his collar again, and the flush moved up from his neck to his cheeks. He took out a handkerchief and wiped the sweat off his brow.
“You coming down with something, sir?” James asked.
“Maybe.” Whetford coughed into the handkerchief. “Maybe I am.” He stepped back into the passageway and then finally focused on James’s coat. “You’re off again?”
“I’m afraid so, sir.” James decided not to tell him he was busy on a different case this morning. The smog had come in heavily in the early morning hours, and he felt a rising sense of pressure, that lives hung in the balance.
But after they went to look through Tanner’s office, they had three visits connected to the current case lined up. First, a meet-up at a library with the ladies who were friends with Hatty Clark, the missing wife of Larry Clark, which Hartridge had set up through the librarian, and then they had the names and addresses of the two victims during the Blitz who might be survivors of their killer’s first attempts at attacking women. James hoped they still lived at the addresses they’d given during the war.
And they had also put in a request to the Air Force to get back to them about the origin of the glove that had been recovered from one of the scenes, and were waiting to find out if any fingerprints on the evidence the police had gathered back then were a match to a current, known offender.
“As long as you keep me informed, Archer. A briefing once a day, no exceptions.” Whetford’s gaze flicked away from him.
He would know how difficult that would be for James, given the negligible time he spent in the office.
“Certainly, sir.” James stepped out into the corridor with him, and closed his door. Hartridge was lurking just inside his own office, unwilling to make himself known. James couldn’t blame him.
He pretended Hartridge wasn’t there. “Are you off to speak to the Commissioner now?”
“Yes. And I mean it, Archer. Daily updates.” Whetford walked to the staircase and disappeared.
James looked after him, and wondered if it was stress, or whether his boss was hitting the bottle. Whatever it was, it didn’t look good on him.
“We off to Tanner’s office?” Hartridge asked, finally stepping out into the corridor.
“Yes. Let’s see if we can find whatever it was he was after last night.”
Table of Contents
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- Page 9
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- Page 23
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- Page 25
- Page 26 (Reading here)
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