FOUR

W hen Kathy got back to Queen Anne’s Gate she again found Brock with Zack and another analyst in the new computer suite, heads down, checking maps.

‘We’ve been tracking the motorbike on CCTV cameras. They headed north, Park Lane, Edgeware Road, then east to Camden Town, where we lost them.’ Brock took Kathy over to a screen with an enlarged map and pointed out the route.

‘So far, none of the camera sightings we’ve got give us a clear view of the bike’s number. We were tracking a yellow bike, possibly a Kawasaki Ninja, with two riders, and it took a while to see what happened.’

Zack typed in a command and a film began to play.

‘This is on the A503 heading north out of Camden.’

Kathy said, ‘He’s dropped the pillion passenger.’

‘Yes, we think somewhere near Camden Town tube station. The bike continues north with the single rider through Finsbury Park to Seven Sisters, where we lose him again. We’re pretty sure he’s ended up somewhere near by.’

‘Tottenham Green.’

‘Looks like it.’

‘So what do we do now?’

Brock said, ‘They must have been in touch by phone down in Chelsea, so they knew how to meet up after the murder. Then after they reached their destinations, in Camden Town and Tottenham Green, odds are they’d have been on their phones again, don’t you think? So if we could trace two mobile numbers that are used in those areas at the critical times, we’d have them.’

‘Big job,’ Zack said.

‘That’s what computers are for,’ Brock replied. ‘And I’ve got a stack of paperwork on my desk. That’s what humans are for.’

It was late afternoon when Zack found it. A mobile phone had made a call from Chelsea soon after the time that Nancy and Emerson had left the flower show and begun walking up Sloane Street, and then fifty-two minutes later, shortly after the last sighting of the single rider, from Tottenham Green in North London. The number was registered to Captain Marvel.

‘A comedian,’ Brock said.

‘Yeah,’ Zack agreed, ‘but we know where he lives. The Quarry Estate. That’s where the call came from.’

Brock put a call through to CID at Haringey Borough Operational Command, covering Tottenham Green. It didn’t take long to get an answer.

‘Sounds like Danny Yilmaz,’ the inspector at the other end said. ‘He’s used the name before. Drug courier, get-away driver. Murder’s a bit out of his league though. Want us to pick him up?’

‘Wait till we get there,’ Brock said. He grabbed his coat and turned to Kathy. ‘Come on.’

As well as Kathy, Brock took Mickey Schaeffer, a detective sergeant who had recently joined the team at Queen Anne’s Gate. He had an excellent record and seemed tough and intelligent, but Brock hadn’t yet watched him in action and wanted to see how he’d perform. He left Kathy at the Tottenham police station to liaise with their inspector and went on with Mickey and two cars of local men to the Quarry Estate, a collection of three-storey walk-up housing blocks spread out around the base of a pair of towers. Danny Yilmaz lived on the top floor of one of the walk-ups. There was no sign of a yellow motorbike in the parking areas outside, and they went up the stairs to Yilmaz’s front door. Before ringing the bell, Mickey crouched at the letter flap and peered in. They heard the faint sound of a cough, the flush of a toilet, and Brock nodded to the copper beside him, who rang the bell. There was silence.

‘Come on, Danny,’ Mickey called loudly through the slot. ‘It’s the police. Open the door, please.’

He repeated this, then nodded to a uniformed man who raised the ram he was carrying and swung it against the door, which burst open with a crash.

A cigarette was burning in an ashtray on the floor beside a rumpled sleeping bag. There was the sound of something breaking-crockery clattering to the floor. In the kitchenette at the back they were presented with the spectacle of a man’s rear end struggling to squeeze through the narrow window above the sink, his flailing legs kicking plates off the draining board.

‘Stupid bugger,’ Mickey roared. He grabbed the legs and heaved. For a moment there was no movement, but then the man shot backwards into the room. He gave a shriek as his face connected with the window frame. Blood spurted from his nose as Brock caught him and they lowered him, howling, to the floor. Brock wiped a hand across his face, tasting the metallic tang of blood in his mouth.

Mickey said. ‘You all right, Chief?’

‘Yes, I’m fine.’ Brock went over to the sink and ran the tap while one of the local cops behind him said, ‘This isn’t Danny Yilmaz.’

According to the Ugandan driver’s licence they found in the man’s pocket, he was Peter Namono, a resident of Kampala, though he seemed unable or unwilling to confirm this as he sat moaning on the floor, clutching his bloody nose. One of the locals took a call on his radio and turned to Brock. ‘Our lads have picked up Danny Yilmaz. They spotted his bike outside the Haringey Sport and Social Club. They’re taking him to the station.’

Brock dabbed at the bloodstain on his shirt with a grubby cloth. ‘I’m getting too old for this. Next time I’ll leave the exciting bits to you lot.’

They all laughed.

Danny Yilmaz was waiting in an interview room when they arrived at Tottenham police station.

Kathy conducted the interview with one of the local detectives while Brock watched on a screen in an adjoining room. Danny was small, wiry, dark, with curly black hair that covered much of his face, which appeared prematurely aged. He appeared to be mystified by why he was there. Kathy cautioned him and asked him if he had given a lift to a man in Sloane Street the previous day. Sure, Danny said, it was all perfectly straightforward. He had his own courier services company, Shazam Limited.

‘Shazam,’ Kathy repeated.

‘Like in Captain Marvel, yeah?’

‘Go on.’

‘This bloke hired me to give him a lift. Said he’d need me to be available for the whole day Thursday, from Chelsea, to run him around. I spent the day hanging out down by the river, waiting for him to call, dead boring, but he’d paid in advance. Then, about four he gives me a ring, tells me where to wait for him on Sloane Street, and to call him when I get there. Soon after he comes running out of nowhere, hops on the bike and tells me to get going, up to Camden Town tube station, where I drop him off. That was it.’

‘What did he look like?’

‘Couldn’t tell you. He had his own helmet in his backpack. I’d brought one for him, but he didn’t need it.’

‘What else?’

‘Um, dark grey shirt, jeans… oh, and gloves. He was wearing black gloves.’

‘But you’d seen him before, when he hired you, gave you the money.’

‘No, no, that was somebody else.’

Something changed in Danny’s posture and appearance. His expression of helpfulness became brighter.

‘Who?’

‘No idea. I only spoke to him on the phone. He said he had a friend coming to London, needed someone to drive him around for the day. Offered me twice my going rate, so I wasn’t complaining.’

‘What name did he give you?’

‘He didn’t.’

‘How did he know about you?’

Danny looked mildly offended. ‘I have a website, don’t I?’

‘So you made yourself available for a whole day on the strength of a phone call from a man who didn’t even tell you his name?’

‘He paid in advance, didn’t he? What else could I do? The cash came round by courier that afternoon.’

‘When did this happen?’ Kathy asked.

Danny ruffled his hair, pondering. ‘Monday? Tuesday? Tuesday, I think.’

‘Two days before the job.’

‘Yes, that’d be about right.’

‘And you had a contact number for this client?’

‘Yes, sure!’ All eagerness, Danny pulled a phone out of his pocket and handed it over.

‘This is bullshit.’ The CID detective at Kathy’s side glared at Danny. ‘You’d better wipe that smile off your face and start telling us the truth, Danny. Who set this up? Was it your cousin Barbaros?’

‘No, no, it’s nothing to do with Barbaros. What’s this all about anyway? What’s this guy supposed to have done?’

The two police stared at him for a moment, incredulous, then Kathy spread some photographs of Sloane Street out on the table. ‘Whereabouts did you wait for the man yesterday afternoon?’

Danny looked at the pictures, then pointed at one, builder’s scaffolding erected on the footpath. ‘That would be the place, I reckon. I pulled in between the poles.’

‘And how long were you waiting there?’

‘Ten, fifteen minutes?’

‘So you witnessed the murder.’

‘Murder?’

Kathy leaned across the table. ‘Not a hundred yards from where you were waiting, your mystery client grabbed a woman and threw her under a bus. That murder.’

Danny looked shocked. ‘You’re kidding me.’

‘And then he ran up to you and jumped on the back of your bike and you drove him away from the scene, making yourself an accessory to murder. That murder, Danny, the murder that’s going to put you inside for twenty years.’

Danny’s jaw dropped, he shook his head. ‘Swear to God… I had my helmet on, didn’t hear or see nothing.’

The CID man gave a snort of disgust and half turned away, as if he couldn’t stand much more of this.

Kathy said, ‘Who’s the man in your flat?’

Danny shrugged. ‘Dunno. Friend of mine asked me to let him sleep on my floor for a couple of days, till he gets a lift up north.’

‘What do you know about him?’

‘Nothing. He doesn’t say much. I reckon he’s African, the way he talks.’

‘He doesn’t seem to have any papers.’

Danny rolled his eyes. ‘I don’t know nothing about that.’

‘Give me the name and address of this friend.’

He wrote it down and Kathy took this and his phone out to Brock. ‘What do you think?’

‘He’s giving us a highly edited version. He’s scared, don’t you think? More scared of his client than of us. Keep at him, Kathy. Charge him as an accessory to murder, that should focus his mind. And meanwhile, let’s hope we can lift some of his client’s DNA from his bike.’

On their way back to the interview room the CID man told Kathy about Danny’s cousin Barbaros Kaya, a more serious villain with a web of local connections. ‘I reckon he’s got to be involved.’

They charged Danny under the Accessories and Abettors Act and explained that, under the terms of the act, an accessory is liable to the same penalty as the perpetrator.

‘Murder, Danny, that’s what you’re up for.’

Danny demanded a brief.

The solicitor came quickly, almost as if he’d been waiting for the call. He had a short conversation with his client and they resumed the interview, going back over the ground, point by point, detail by detail.

‘You said the man on the phone was arranging this for a friend coming to London,’ Kathy said. ‘Coming from where?’

‘Dunno, he didn’t say.’

‘What were his exact words?’

He couldn’t remember, not really. The money? In used twenties, gone now to pay off some debts. The bag they were in? Who knows.

Four weary hours later Kathy brought the interview to an end. Danny had made only one slip, when Kathy pressed him about his passenger’s exact words. Hard to say, Danny said, they were hard to make out, what with the helmet and his accent. He blinked as the word came out, realising his mistake. What accent? Kathy pressed. British? Foreign? Danny shook his head but she detected a flicker on the second option. Foreign then, she insisted, and saw him go a little paler. What kind of foreign? But he blustered. He really couldn’t say, it might have been Irish, Welsh, Pakistani, he had no idea.

He had given them nothing more of substance. The client’s number on his phone proved to be unlisted and inoperative. Peter Namono was unknown to UK databases and there was no record of him entering the country. The local detectives were trying to trace the man who had arranged his stay with Danny Yilmaz and promised to talk to Danny’s known friends and associates. Phone records for Danny and for Barbaros Kaya would be obtained. A team was checking CCTV cameras on all the stations of the Northern underground line serving Camden Town station.

Later, towards eight, back at Queen Anne’s Gate, Brock put his head around the door of Kathy’s office.

‘Time to go home,’ he said. ‘Fancy a drink?’ The fact was that he couldn’t get rid of the taste of that man’s blood. He’d brushed his teeth and swallowed numerous cups of strong coffee, but it was still there, a faint noxious taint. Maybe Scotch would clear it.

The Two Chairmen at the end of the street was quiet when they arrived, a couple of women on stools at the bar and a lone drinker in the far corner. Kathy sat at a table while Brock went to order, returning with a Scotch for himself and a glass of white wine for Kathy.

‘Cheers.’ He felt the cleansing spirit burn down his throat and sank back into his chair with a sigh.

She wrinkled her nose in disgust.

‘Wine no good?’

‘Oh, it’s fine, just what I needed. But I should have nailed Captain Marvel.’

‘Whoever he’s protecting is a lot more scary than you or me, Kathy.’

‘It’s frustrating.’ She looked up and noticed the single drinker in the far corner get to his feet and head towards the rear door. She had a brief glimpse of his face before he was gone and she frowned. He looked very like the Canadian from the hotel.

Brock, seeing her expression, said, ‘Had an idea?’

‘No, I just… No, it’s nothing.’

Later, when she got home, still troubled by the thought of the man in the pub, she phoned the duty officer at headquarters and asked for a check on the Police National Computer and the Interpol databases. He rang back as she was reheating a Thai takeaway in her microwave. John Greenslade was not a name known to either system. She asked him to check the Home Office UK Border Agency. This time she did get a result. John Greenslade, a Canadian citizen with a Montreal address, had entered the country through Heathrow ten days previously as a visitor. His occupation was given as ‘university professor’.

Restless now, she played with her meal without really tasting it and turned on her laptop. There was only one email of interest, from Guy, a short message that looked as if it had been written in a hurry. Hi Kathy, Hope all goes well with you. I’m okay, but the job has gone pear-shaped. Work has stopped, and they’re moving me on, to Shanghai would you believe, where we’ve got a big project on the go. Sorry about the trip. Maybe we can meet up on the Bund. I think of you a lot. Stay safe. Love, Guy

She looked up at the envelope that had been sitting on her mantelpiece for quite a while now, containing a first-class air ticket to Dubai, and felt sad, thinking of lost opportunities and roads not taken. Then she roused herself and got up to take a shower. It would never have worked out with Guy anyway.

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