Drysdale, methodical, waspish and impassive, was able to tell him little he didn't know already. Death due to manual strangulation and the stab wound probably self-inflicted as her attacker tried to wrest the knife from her.
Frost was puzzled that there were no traces of the assailant's skin under the long, unbroken fingernails. 'Surely she would have tried to scratch the bastard's eyes out, doc?'
Drysdale lifted the head and indicated the swellings at the back of the skull. 'Her head was banged several times against the wall with considerable force. This could have caused concussion at which point she would have been incapable of defending herself.' He pointed to the livid yellow patch near the left eye. 'She was punched.'
'We've got the bloke who gave her the black eyes, doc, but we don't think he was her killer.' His stomach rumbled noisily. 'I need to get some stomach contents myself, doc… a bacon sandwich — so unless there's anything else you can tell me?'
There was nothing else. 'A name would be a convenience,' said Drysdale.
'As soon as we find out who she is, you'll be the first to know,' Frost assured him. Flaming hell. Bad enough it was a murder inquiry without having to waste manpower trying to find the victim's name.
'Did you see the big fight on the telly last night?' the mortuary attendant asked as he made his way out.
'No, I bleeding well didn't!' snapped Frost.
4
He sat on the corner of the desk in the murder incident room warming his hands round the mug of tea Morgan had brought him. He chewed the last morsel of the bacon sandwich, wiped his hand down the front of his jacket, then nodded at the group of six men who formed his murder squad. Manpower was in short supply since Mullett had generously agreed to loan eight uniforms and a DC to County to help in their drugs bust operation. 'Anyone seen Detective Inspector Maud?' he asked. All heads shook. 'Ah well, we'll carry on without her.' He lit up a cigarette. 'We have one dead tom. Anyone found out who she is yet?' He looked up hopefully, but again heads were firmly shaken.
'I chatted up a couple of the girls last night,' said Jordan. 'One of them, had a room in the same block. She said the dead girl hadn't been there very long, a few weeks at the most. They hadn't spoken, so she didn't know anything about her.'
'Very bleeding helpful. Have we checked the landlord?'
Detective Sergeant Hanlon raised a hand. 'They're a limited company registered in the Cayman Islands. That block in Clayton Street is handled over here by local agents but they don't open until ten. I'm on my way there as soon as this briefing is over.'
Frost nodded. 'We want her name and home address — I presume they take up references.'
'Odds are they don't bother,' said Hanlon. 'As long as the girls can pay a month's rent in advance, plus a hefty deposit, they're satisfied.'
'Then find out how she paid them — cheque, credit card or greasy fivers red hot from the sweaty palms of her clientele.'
I'll check,' said Hanlon.
'OK,' said Frost, standing up. 'Let's just run over what we do know. We know she had a row with this drunk who welted her one in the eye. He finds his wallet's been pinched and comes to us. While he's away, someone else calls and kills her.'
'Gladstone could have killed her himself,' put in Jordan. 'I don't think we should have let him go.'
'He could have done it, son, but I don't think he did. Anyway, we know where he lives in case we run short of suspects. Let's proceed on the assumption it was someone else — and someone who followed hard on Gladstone's heels because she hadn't had time to get dressed.'
'Couldn't she. have got dressed, gone out and picked up her killer then got undressed for him?' asked Hanlon.
'Gladstone had given her a black eye,' said Frost. 'If she went out again to tout for trade, she'd have slapped some make-up over it; but she didn't. So, if she didn't go out to pick him up, he came to her. He knew where she worked… he'd been there before.'
'Any fingerprints?' asked Simms.
'Fingerprints going back to the year dot,' said Frost. 'Every flaming client she's ever had, but we're checking them all out. Mullett went as white as a sheet when I told him.'
'Is there any connection with this one and the murdered tom Inspector Allen was working on?' Jordan asked.
Frost patted the file on the desk. 'Linda Roberts was tied to a bed by her wrists and ankles, gagged, then tortured, her stomach burnt with a lighted cigarette.' He pulled the cigarette from his mouth and sizzled it to death in his mug. 'For good measure she was raped and suffocated. Last night's tom was killed standing against a wall, strangled and no sign of torture. So unless he was fussy about stubbing out his fags on a bloodstained stomach, I don't think there's a connection, but we'll keep our options open.'
He turned to the full-face photograph of the dead woman which had been pinned to the wall. 'So what do we know about her? She hadn't been on the game long, by all accounts. We don't know if she's a local girl or not. Let's get her photograph circulated to the media… someone must recognize her. In the meantime, where does she live? Why hasn't someone reported her missing?'
'She could have lived where we found her, guv,' said Morgan. 'She had a bed, a phone, heat…'
'… a sink and a toilet,' continued Frost, 'which gave the punters two places to pee down; but no fridge, oven, pantry, crockery. This poor cow had to eat. She lived elsewhere and she works late, so how does she get home?'
'She could live within walking distance,' offered Jordan.
'Then why rent a flat? Why not take her clients to her house?'
'Perhaps her family would object.' 'So what does her family think she's doing, working late at night, coming home with her handbag stuffed with tenners? A slight possibility she lives within walking distance, but what if she doesn't?' 'She's got a car?' said Morgan. Frost jabbed a finger at the DC. 'That's what I reckon, Taffy. So where is it? It's going to be parked near the knocking shop. There were cars nose to tail last night. This morning most of the owners will have driven off to work. I want — someone to go and check all cars still standing and find out who owns them.' He snapped his fingers as another thought struck him. 'She might have come by cab. Check with all the local cab firms. Did they drop her off there last night — if so, where did they pick her up?'
Bill Wells came into the incident room. 'Got a woman for you in the lobby, Inspector.'
'She'll have to wait,' grunted Frost. 'I never have intercourse immediately after a bacon sandwich.'
Wells grinned. 'You'll want to see this one. She's a tom… and her flatmate has gone missing.'
Frost's eyes lit up. 'Hold it, everyone. We might be getting a name.'
The pungent smell of the perfume she was wearing fought a losing battle with the pine disinfectant that had been sloshed down on the interview room floor after the ravages of the night before. She was in her late thirties, but without make-up looked a lot older. Straw-blond hair, skin darkly tanned, and fingers that matched Frost's for nicotine staining. She was sucking heavily on a cigarette as he entered. He sat opposite her and put the file with the dead prostitute's photograph inside on the table in front of him. He smiled. 'Your flatmate's gone missing? Since when?'
'I don't know.' She snatched the cigarette from her mouth and flicked ash all over the floor. 'I've been away for two weeks' holiday in Spain with my boyfriend. I came back last night expecting to find her in the flat. No sign of her.'
'What does your flatmate do for a living?'
She glared at him, smoke streaming from her nostrils like an angry dragon. 'You bloody well know what she does… same as me… we're on the game. She's had some weird clients in her time. I reckon one of them's done her in.'
'Where did she take her clients?'
'A room in those flats in Clayton Street. We shared it.'