‘Yes. Everyone — but then some had two. Lots of people take spare towels. So that’s no mystery.’
They all looked along the beach. Shaw was right; the nearest couple were lying on two wide coloured towels but they had others drying from a parasol stuck in the sand.
‘We examined the towel thoroughly but it yielded nothing but bloodstains — a match for the victim. There were several layers of footprints at the spot — too many to be of use. But given the progress being made in forensic science at the time, especially in DNA analysis, it was thought wise to keep the towel in a secure environment in the long term. .’
‘What kind of
Shaw’s temper, never that far from the surface, flashed briefly. ‘A secure one.’ That was the problem with his temper: it came and went so quickly hardly anyone noticed. He swigged some water, letting the lack of control recede, then pressed on. ‘Fresh tests, undertaken in the last six weeks at The Ark, West Norfolk’s own forensic laboratory, using the?400,000 Home Office grant the chief constable has, I think, told you all about, and later under contract at the Forensic Science Laboratory, have revealed several skin cells on the towel from which a DNA profile has been drawn. It is not the victim’s DNA profile. We can assume, I think — an assumption we’re confident a court would accept — that the person whose cells are on the towel shed the cells as they cleaned the victim’s blood from their own skin. The DNA sample — Sample X — is that of a man. It has no direct match on the National DNA Database. We believe, with some confidence, that Sample X belongs to the killer of Shane White.’
Shaw ducked as a seagull flew under the awning.
‘Of the seventy-four original suspects eight have died. We have invited the remaining sixty-six to St James’ tomorrow. The majority will be travelling some distance — most of the boatload that day were here on holiday. Thirty of those sixty-six are men, and they will be asked to give a voluntary DNA sample — cheek cells by swab. Then, they will join the thirty-six women in being invited to read their original statements given in 1994. If they wish they can amend those statements. Each will be re-interviewed. Of the eight who died between 1994 and today five were men and their DNA has been determined with the cooperation of family members. All the samples will be analysed and compared to our scene-of-crime sample — Sample X. All seventy-four original witnesses are accounted for; all those alive have agreed to attend.’ Shaw smiled at Smyth, the man from
Smyth coughed, and Shaw could see a glint of real excitement in the soft eyes. The reporter undid a button on the green cloth waistcoat. ‘So, Inspector. Let me think this through, if I may. The chances are — given that seventy-five people went out on the boat and seventy-four came back plus our victim’s corpse — that when you complete these tests you will know the identity of the killer. You will have a DNA link to the towel, a blood group link to the victim, and the original statements of the seventy-four that they didn’t recognize the towel. Right?’
Shaw inclined his head in recognition of the summary.
‘And the lifeguard’s towel?’
Shaw glanced at Valentine, because it was a good question and he didn’t know the answer.
‘Recovered on the day,’ said the DS. ‘From up by the dunes. Along with water, biscuits, sun tan lotion, a book. .’ Valentine closed his eyes. ‘
Shaw had to remind himself that George Valentine had been on more murder inquiries than he’d had skinny dips. Behind the cynical, antagonistic exterior there lurked a first-class brain, even if he didn’t always know how to use it.
‘How, exactly, do you know the skin cells were not Shane White’s?’ asked Smyth.
‘We took a sample from White’s brother, care of Sydney CID and Interpol.’
Shaw swigged fizzy water. ‘Which brings us to motive,’ he said, moving quickly to regain the initiative. ‘And that camera that DS Valentine has just helpfully mentioned.
When we developed the film in the camera we found some disturbing images. Shane White took pictures of couples in what we like to refer to as compromising positions.’
Forbes started rifling through his briefing pack.
‘None of which are in your press pack,’ said Shaw.
Some of the reporters booed.
‘Mostly they were taken in the woods and sand dunes along the coast, a few on East Hills. When you think about it he was well placed. He spent his time looking through binoculars. He’d spot a couple slipping off somewhere private. Then he’d follow, get his snaps. The real question is what did he do next? We considered the possibility at the time that he may have tried to blackmail some of the people he photographed.’
Forbes’ eyes widened. Violence, death, and now sex. ‘Did you put any names to the pictures?’ he asked.
‘A few, but as far as we could see at the time none of the people pictured were among the seventy-four survivors that day on East Hills, or indeed, related to them in any way. As I said, the vast majority of the trippers were on holiday. Not locals.’
‘Other rolls of film?’ asked Smyth.
‘We turned over his digs and found a makeshift dark room and developing gear. CID in Australia confirmed he’d done a photography course at school. But there were no photographs like the ones in his camera, or negatives. The answer may be in a detail — White’s neighbours insisted Shane had been burgled a week or so before his death. Door broken in, bit of a mess. He told the neighbour he’d report it. He didn’t. So maybe that was the killer’s first stop. He stole the pictures. Then decided to seek a more permanent solution, deliver a warning, in person. Scare him off.’
‘Burglary suggests premeditation,’ said Smyth.
‘To some degree,’ conceded Shaw. ‘But it’s always dangerous to think that one premeditated act leads to another. Life’s like not like that, or death.’
Smyth scowled, unhappy at the public lecture.
‘If the killer’s alive he’ll just run. .’ cut in Nikki Taylor. ‘Surely?’ She looked at her colleagues for support, but they were all looking at Shaw. ‘He’s not going to walk into a police station. .’
‘The Home Office funding is?400,000 — not four million,’ said Shaw. ‘We can’t watch them all. But if they run — well, that kind of answers our question. All the surviving witnesses were given the invitation to attend at St James’ in person. All were asked to stay in the country until the results are processed, so we collected passports. We understand from the FSS that processing will take approximately forty-eight hours, although, clearly, if they get a match in the first batch they’ll let us know. But you’re right. We are prepared for a no-show tomorrow. In fact, I think it’s odds-on. So we’ll be ready.’
‘And you’ll let us know, of course, if that happens?’ Smyth again, closing his notebook, smiling to himself.
‘That’s an operational matter,’ said Shaw, thinking on his feet. ‘But I can’t see why not.’
It wasn’t an answer and the reporter knew it. Smyth carefully unscrewed the top of a small hip flask and drank.
‘Questions,’ said Shaw. For the next ten minutes he fielded their queries, while Valentine texted DI Craxton, telling him they’d be back up at The Circle in an hour. He didn’t have the exact statistics in his head but he knew that the chances of finding a missing eighteen-year-old six hours after they’ve gone missing are a lot shorter than after one hour. If there was still no news then the dismal prospect of another self-inflicted death became ever more likely.
The tourist ferry boat turned away from East Hills, packed — literally — to the gunwales. ‘OK. Let’s head home too,’ said Shaw. ‘Unless anyone’s desperate for a dip.’
The skipper of