After Langton had slammed the front door closed behind him, Anna bolted it, top and bottom. She stood in her small hallway, feeling angry. Not at Langton this time but at Alan Daniels, who had used her so expertly, as if she were just a pawn in his game.
Chapter Sixteen
John George McDowell had a police record, a long one, with many different charges: living off immoral earnings; two years for assault; another eighteen months for dealing in stolen property. After the nightclub closed down years ago, McDowell had spent more time in prison for aggravated burglary. Then the trail went dead and Mike Lewis was having a hard time tracing his present whereabouts. He waited for the Midlands police to get back to him.
Barolli was also on the phone. He had been assigned to check out their Cuban witness which resulted in a big run-around because he had been fired from the transvestite club for stealing. Barolli eventually discovered that he was working at a restaurant in the same area. Now Barolli was at his desk, having problems tracing their second witness. Jean joked with him that to lose one witness was unfortunate; to lose two was flipping careless. He was not amused.
Yvonne Barber, the deep-voiced prostitute, had moved from her last address and no one seemed to know where she had gone. A roommate said she might have gone to Brighton, but she hadn’t heard from her in over a week. Barolli cursed. It was very frustrating, especially as she had been warned to keep the police informed of her whereabouts.
Anna was finishing off her report on the previous evening when Lewis yelled over to Barolli to ask if they’d any luck with Daniels’s fingerprints. Barolli shook his head.
‘They’re waiting for that woman to come down from Nottingham and do the digital enhancing trick again.’
Anna looked up at Barolli. ‘What did you just say?’
‘What about?’
‘The fingerprints. I thought there had been a match.’
Barolli shook his head. ‘That’s news to me. Like I said, she’s coming down from Nottingham.’
Anna printed out her report, clipped the pages together and headed for Langton’s office. Not waiting for a reply to her knock, she walked in and slammed the door shut behind her. When Langton looked up in surprise, she dumped the report on his desk.
‘You are a bastard, you know that?’ She put both her hands on his desk. Her face was red with anger. ‘You said the prints were a match. You bloody lied.’
‘Maybe I had a reason.’
‘Like what? To scare the living daylights out of me? Make me frightened to be alone in my own flat?’
‘Maybe I did it because I felt you needed a kick up the arse.’
‘You bastard. You had no right!’
He pushed his chair back. ‘I had every right to make you see sense; you let the son of a bitch into your place.’ To her rising fury, he began to mimic her. ‘“I don’t know if he’s guilty. I just really liked him.”’
‘I did not say that.’
‘How about that tragic diatribe he gave you about his wretched background? He suckered you in, Travis. You could have been his next victim. It was lucky I came round when I did. I only came because the surveillance team had lost him!’
‘So, you frighten the life out of me?’
‘You needed to realize the danger you were in.’
Before she could reply, Mike Lewis knocked and entered. ‘Can I see you for a minute, gov?’
Langton looked at her. ‘You all done?’
She went out, this time closing the door quietly. She was shaking with anger. Every time she thought she knew the man, she found she was mistaken. She was no closer to knowing Langton, but she had learned one thing: to make damned sure not to put a foot wrong where he was concerned, because now she knew he would cut her down and perhaps even damage her career.
Inside the gov’s office, Lewis pulled at his collar. ‘Listen, gov — Alan Daniels might have done us a favour. This McDowell character is being held in Manchester City police station; he’s been there all night. They hauled him in for beating up a prostitute and her pimp and then taking out two of their officers who were trying to arrest him.’
‘He’s a regular customer, I understand.’
‘He’s been inside off and on, lots of short stretches.
He’s a fucking nightmare. But he was out of the nick for our victims, I’ve checked.’
‘Manchester?’
‘Yep. Daniels told Travis that McDowell knew Lilian Duffy. He could easily have known the other women. Plus, he drives a 1987 cream four-door Mercedes-Benz.’
‘Can they hold him until we get there?’
‘I’d say so. They’ve been waiting to question him once he sobers up.’
Langton and Mike Lewis were preparing to head up north when the Sussex police called in the discovery of a bloated female body found below the old pier legs in Brighton. The pier was under orders for demolition; it had been cordoned off from the public. The woman had been strangled with a leather belt, drawn so tightly round her neck that the skin by her jugular had broken under the buckle. Could it be their other witness? She had extensive bruises and jagged cuts, which the post mortem report said could either have been from the rocks around the pier, or from the body banging against the pylons. The body had no identification; it might never have been found, except for a very high tide, which floated it closer to the shore.
Langton ordered Anna to go down to Brighton and verify whether or not it was their witness. They would also need an estimated time of death, which would allow them to check if their suspect, Alan Daniels, would have had time to make the trip there.
Anna was disappointed not to be going to Manchester to interview McDowell, but, after their last interaction, she doubted if Langton would let her accompany him as far as the station car park.
Langton had already left the station with Lewis. She waited for Moira to co-ordinate a driver and patrol car for her. From her desk, Moira glanced at Anna.
‘You OK? Seem to be in a bit of a dark one today.’
‘I am.’
‘If you want to talk about it?’
‘I don’t.’
Nearby, Jean gave a raised eyebrow to Moira.
‘You’re getting to be quite a prima donna,’ Moira said good-naturedly. ‘What with surveillance at your home, the Opera House and now a private car to Brighton!’
‘Just get them to allocate a car for the day please, Moira.’
A short while later, Moira informed Anna that the driver would be waiting in the car park in fifteen minutes.
‘Thank you.’
‘Think nothing of it.’ She raised her voice slightly so that Jean could hear. ‘I was a bit surprised you weren’t with the gov on the train to Manchester. He usually takes you with him.’
‘I won’t be going anywhere with him, in the near or distant future,’ Anna said grimly. ‘In fact, the sooner I am off this case, the better.’
Moira pursed her lips. ‘I thought you two got along?’
‘Well, I’ve had enough; I don’t know how you all stand him.’
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’
Anna burst out: ‘He’s a two-faced bastard, that’s what it means. He’s a selfish, egotistical control