Silence. ‘Are you waiting for me to guess what it says, Colin?’
Oh … fuck. ‘Did they say how much and where?’
Logan tapped his knuckles against the car window.
‘What are you doing about it? You printing it?’
Consequences.
Shuggie Webster, you silly, silly bastard. Did he actually think they were going to fall for that one? Kidnap his own girlfriend, send a note to the papers, ransom her for enough to pay off their drug debt and set the pair of them up on the Costa del Sol for the next couple of years.
‘I’ll get someone over to pick up the note.’
Logan hung up.
‘Boss?’
Logan looked up from the stack of interview forms. PC Guthrie was standing in the doorway of the little office, one hand behind his back, the other stroking his trouser leg as if it was nervous and needed comforting. Logan went back to his paperwork. ‘You’ll go blind if you don’t stop doing that.’
‘Got that note from the
Logan closed his eyes. ‘No, I don’t
‘Already done it. They lifted prints off the envelope and the note: Bill’s running them now. Blood’s off to the lab, for analysis.’
‘Already?’
A nod. ‘Rennie said you needed it urgently, so…?’
‘They got prints?’
‘Three partials and one beauty from the note, Bill says it’s a near-perfect right thumb.’
See, that was the difference between professionals — like the ones who snatched Alison and Jenny — and idiot copycats like Shuggie Webster and Trisha Brown.
‘Good, thanks Allan. Do me a favour, go chase up the GSM trace on Shuggie Webster’s phone. Who knows, we might actually get a result for a change.’
Soon as Guthrie waddled off like a happy penguin, Logan finished typing up his interview notes. Then checked them against the ones DI McPherson had done. From the look of things McPherson had taken over the campus canteen and arranged for a team of DCs to go through all of Alison’s classmates in alphabetical order. Which meant whoever interviewed Beatrice ‘Single White Female’ Eastbrook had no idea about the stalker’s shrine on her bedroom wall.
The one thing McPherson’s team
Logan read to the end, then flipped the form over again. McPherson’s team didn’t seem to have checked for criminal records.
Logan logged onto the PNC and ran a search against her name. Just in case.
Three warnings for vandalism, one for sending threatening letters. According to West Midlands Police, Beatrice had taken exception to a mother of two asking her to stop bothering her family. There was talk of a restraining order and that seemed to put an end to it. So Beatrice wasn’t new to the creepy stalker game.
Maybe she’d decided it would be a lot less effort to kidnap Alison and Jenny than follow them about the whole time? And Alison was going to be more famous than ever when she finally got released… Maybe it was all some twisted attempt to help her?
Beatrice Eastbrook wasn’t really the gang-leader-criminal-mastermind type, but Logan picked up the phone and got a patrol car organized to bring her in to ‘help with their enquiries’ anyway. Maybe get Goulding to sit in on the questioning? A bit of steamy psychologist-on-psychologist action.
Then he went back to the list of Alison McGregor’s classmates.
The PNC check on Tanya ‘Tiggy’ Marsden came back clean, even if she had lied about being Bruce’s girlfriend.
According to his lecturers, Stephen Clayton was a straight A student, but his name returned a list of petty crimes from when he was eight all the way up to the age of fourteen. Nothing serious, probably just enough to give mummy and daddy ‘look-at-me!’ palpitations. Which would explain the carefully-crafted rebellious cliche appearance and attitude.
Logan ran PNC checks on everyone in Alison’s class, then added the results to his interview notes.
Rennie grunted and dumped a file box on top of the pile. ‘And that’s the lot…’ Frown. ‘Oh poo.’ He wiped at the dust greying his shirt and trousers. ‘Emma’s going to kill me.’
Their little makeshift office was starting to look a lot more professional — if you ignored the dusty plastic sheeting covering the bare walls, pipes, and conduits. They now had three desks and a trestle table, the latter beginning to sag under the weight of Rennie’s file boxes. Three phones, two laptops, and a printer that sounded like a creaky floorboard every time they sent a file to it.
Logan swivelled his seat around. ‘Kidnappings?’
‘Five years ago.’ He pointed at a small stack of pristine files. ‘Ten years ago, fifteen, and these dirty old sods are twenty. But that’s just the north-east — be months before we get stuff that old from everywhere else.’
‘Probably more than we need anyway. Now go see if they’ve got that GSM trace done yet.’
The constable flounced over to his desk, sank into his chair, and grabbed the phone.
‘Sergeant?’
Logan looked up from his screen. Finnie was standing in the open doorway, his rubbery lips turned down at the edges, eyes narrowed. He looked like a constipated frog.
Green must have been moaning again. ‘Afternoon, sir — I was just about to go looking for you, we-’
‘I understand there’s another ransom note come in.’
‘Trisha Brown, she’s the one involved with Shuggie Webster. Looks like-’
‘And may I
‘I did.’
Finnie frowned. ‘I think I would’ve noticed if-’
‘Emailed you as soon as we got back to the station. I think you were in with Superintendent Green at the time. The kidnapping’s probably a hoax — Shuggie and Trisha’s way of wriggling out of a drug debt.’
‘Oh.’ Finnie swapped the folder under his arm from one side to the other. ‘Yes, well, in that case,’ he held the folder out. ‘I was going to give the investigation to Acting DI MacDonald, but you can keep it.’
‘Thank you, sir.’ Logan took the folder and peered inside.
It was the fingerprint report. ‘I’ve requested a firearms team. If you can approve it, we’ll get Shuggie Webster picked up as soon as the GSM trace comes in. He isn’t exactly-’
‘Just make sure I have a complete risk analysis on my desk before you do anything. And by the book, understand? The last thing we need is Green getting the idea we can’t do