extracted from the files held in the locked cabinet in the room behind the altar at the Sacred Heart. ‘He lives in the hostel on Erebus Street. One-time addict, now clean, but a serious supplier. Due up in court next month on his third charge — pleading not guilty. He’s escaped going to jail twice before, maybe it’s third time unlucky.
‘Our victim — Judd — pays for his stuff by helping
DC Fiona Campbell, standing at the back, put up both hands.
Over six foot, flat shoes, shoulders rounded to make herself look shorter. A career copper from a family of coppers — her father was a chief super at Norwich. She’d come out of school with enough qualifications to do anything she wanted in life — and this was it. Not just a bright girl, she had street cred too, earned the hard way. The scar from an eight-inch knife wound ran from below her ear down the side of her neck. A chief constable’s commendation had been her only reward for trying to save the life of a violent man who didn’t want to live.
‘I don’t get it,’ she said. ‘He helps this Holme character get a haul worth thousands in return for a bottle of the green stuff worth — what — a couple of hundred?’
‘Good point. But it does work if the only role our victim plays is simply to look the other way. And there’s no evidence Judd was ever on crack, tabs, poppers, heroin — anything like that. Green Dragon is highly addictive, but it’s nothing like the usual cannabis derivatives we pick up off the streets. It’s a middle-class drug, and we all know we don’t even get close to that trade. I think this was a deal Judd just fell into. For minding his own business — maybe little else — he gets a supply of what he
Shaw took a deep breath, aware that adrenaline was making his heartbeat pick up. ‘Evidence? Neil Judd’s statement provides us with the basis for motive. At the moment we don’t know anything about opportunity because we don’t know where Holme was at the relevant times — that’s a priority. Forensics are pretty thin. Holme’s house is all ash and smoke damage, so don’t hold your breath. We have the rice at the scene of crime, which might be a link to the church where Holme ate. But it’s pretty flimsy evidence.’
Two hands, DC Campbell again.
‘Sorry,’ she said, amid laughter. ‘I still don’t get it. If Holme’s not using drugs himself, but he’s got this supply line through Judd, why’s he eating at a church kitchen? Why’s he living in the hostel? Why does the arse hang out of his trousers?’
Laughter again. ‘My guess is that this is early days,’ said Shaw. ‘Neil Judd says his brother had been working the scam for a year, maybe less. The hostel’s a brilliant cover.
DC Campbell folded her arms. She’d got her answer, but she wasn’t happy.
‘Now,’ said Shaw. ‘The things that don’t fit. We’ve got human tissue waste on the incinerator next to Judd’s body which is not traceable to any operation or procedure on the ward marked on the metal tag which survived the furnace. What’s that about? An admin mistake? Unlikely. We need to drill down on this… Judd died with this yellow bag of human tissue under his body. Is it what he died for?
‘Then we’ve got the arson on Erebus Street in the power sub-station. Unlike the arson at the hostel, this
Shaw took a marker pen and wrote CONCENTRATE in red on the board. ‘It’s that simple. First twenty-four hours keep focused. Don’t disregard anything. Be thorough, don’t cut corners, and don’t keep anything to yourself. If I find anyone’s tried to steal the
They all laughed, happy to be a team, thankful that so far no one had earned Shaw’s disapproval.
‘There’s something early from CSI,’ said Twine. ‘Tom said to say they’d got a fix on the blood-soaked rag used in the Molotov cocktail at the power sub-station. Pig blood. But there’s an abattoir on the corner. So maybe a link with the workforce?’
The store door banged open and Valentine came in, carrying a copy of the
‘Sorry,’ he said, walking forward. The rest of the team watched the chemistry, knowing there’d be sparks. Everyone knew the story of George Valentine’s career: he’d come back from the coast to reclaim the rank they’d taken off him thirteen years ago. And they knew he’d been Jack Shaw’s partner in that last disastrous case. The question was whether he could really shake off the cynicism, the bitterness, and principally the booze, for long enough to impress the brass.
‘It was worth it,’ he said to Shaw, flapping his notebook.
‘OK. Tell ’em,’ said Shaw, noting his DS had picked up a fresh charity lapel sticker: Wood Green Animal Shelter.
Valentine gave them the story of Norma Jean Judd — the one he’d rehearsed on the fire escape that morning. It was a faultless performance, delivered without a trace of either nerves or self-doubt. What they didn’t know was why he’d rehearsed it — not just to impress, but so that he
‘Wilf Jackson remembers the case well,’ said Valentine. ‘He said one disturbing facet of the inquiry was our victim Bryan Judd, Norma’s twin. Always “Bry”, by the way — never anything else,’ he hauled in some extra air. ‘They had all the family in to check out Andy’s story. Wilf said Bryan was lying — holding something back. He said he’d been drinking on the rough lots behind the houses that day and that when he’d gone home he’d met his dad coming out the house. He’d checked upstairs to see if Norma Jean was there because he wanted to speak to her — he didn’t remember why. Wilf said they didn’t believe that — and he still doesn’t.’
Valentine fished a packet of Silk Cut out of his pocket and put a cigarette between his teeth. ‘Bryan said her room was empty. Bathroom too. He says he went back out ’cos he had a date that evening. Odd thing was there was a neighbour — the woman who helped Marie Judd run the launderette — and she said she’d gone home about 6.30 and she’d heard Bryan out on the waste ground calling Norma Jean’s name. So — question: why was Bryan looking for his sister at least an hour before anyone thought she was missing? When they asked him he came up with some crap about wanting to find her, that they were close, and he thought she needed him. Wilf said they put a surveillance unit on the family for ten days -
‘So they went back to Orzsak. Anniversary came round in ’93 so they leaked a story to the
Valentine took a seat, trying to make it look like it wasn’t a relief to do so. ‘One coincidence worth mentioning: Orzsak lived at number 6 — the house that’s now the hostel that was firebombed last night.’
There was silence in the room. ‘Thanks, George. Pictures?’
Valentine got out the copies Timber Woods had made of the originals in the file.
First, Norma Jean Judd. Dark Irish looks. ‘Look familiar?’ Valentine said, pinning it next to their victim’s face, scanning the room, for once the deep-set grey eyes catching the light. Shaw examined the faces of the twins. The bone structure was similar, the colouring identical, and there was something about the withdrawn intensity of the dark eyes which marked them out as twins even now.
Second, Jan Orzsak. A child’s face sunk in a full moon of white flesh. A double-chin obscured his neck,
Third, Ben Ruddle, the father of Norma Jean’s child. The resemblance to his girlfriend was uncanny; the same Celtic colouring, the street-urchin’s face with the delicate bone structure. The difference was in the eyes: Ruddle’s were small and lifeless. There was something cynical about the look into the camera, something knowing.
‘George,’ said Shaw, standing. ‘Great work.’ He let that sink in; the squad needed to know that despite their personal issues George Valentine had been given this last chance to save his career because he’d once been a first-rate copper.
‘We need to keep all that in here,’ said Shaw, tapping the side of his skull. ‘At the very least it gives us an