“I think,” Jack Whitaker said slowly, “that we might be charging Janet Taylor with murder.”
“What?” Annie couldn’t believe what she’d just heard. “She acted as a policewoman in pursuit of her duty. I was thinking justifiable homicide, or, at the very most, excusable. But
Whitaker sighed. “Oh, dear. I don’t suppose you’ve heard the news, then?”
“What news?” Annie hadn’t turned on the radio when she drove down to Leeds, being far too preoccupied with Janet’s case and her confused feelings about Banks to concentrate on news or chat.
“The jury came back on the John Hadleigh case just before lunch. You know, the Devon farmer.”
“I know about the Hadleigh case. What was the verdict?”
“Guilty of murder.”
“Jesus Christ,” said Annie. “But even so, surely that’s different entirely? I mean, Hadleigh was civilian. He shot a burglar in the back. Janet Taylor-”
Whitaker held his hand up. “The point is that it’s a clear message. Given the Hadleigh verdict, we have to be
“So it is political?”
“Isn’t it always? Justice must be seen to be done.”
“Justice?”
Whitaker raised his eyebrows. “Listen,” he said, “I can understand your sympathies; believe me, I can. But according to her statement, Janet Taylor handcuffed Terence Payne to a metal pipe
“She didn’t necessarily mean to kill him. There was no intent.”
“That’s for a jury to decide. A good prosecutor could argue that she knew damn well what the effect of two more hard blows to the head would be after she’d already given him seven previous blows.”
“I can’t believe I’m hearing this,” Annie said.
“No one’s sorrier than I am,” said Whitaker.
“Except Janet Taylor.”
“Then she shouldn’t have killed Terence Payne.”
“What the hell do you know? You weren’t there, in that cellar, with your partner bleeding to death on the floor, a dead girl staked out on a mattress. You didn’t have just seconds to react to a man coming at you with a machete. This is a bloody farce! It’s politics, is all it is.”
“Calm down, Annie,” said Whitaker.
Annie stood up and paced, arms folded. “Why should I? I don’t feel calm. This woman has been going through hell.
“Is that all you’re concerned about? How it makes you look?”
“Of course it’s not.” Annie lowered herself slowly back into the chair. She still felt flushed and angry, her breath coming in sharp gasps. “But it makes me look like a liar. It makes it look as if I tricked her. I don’t like that.”
“You were only doing your job.”
“Only doing my job. Only obeying orders. Right. Thanks. That makes me feel a whole lot better.”
“Look, we might be able to get a bit of leeway here, Annie, but there’ll have to be a trial. It’ll all have to be a matter of public record. Aboveboard. There’ll be no sweeping it under the table.”
“That’s not what I had in mind, anyway. What leeway?”
“I don’t suppose Janet Taylor would plead guilty to murder.”
“Damn right she wouldn’t, and I wouldn’t advise her to.”
“It’s not exactly a matter of
“Excusable homicide.”
“It wasn’t self-defense. Not when she crossed the line and delivered those final blows
“What, then?”
“Voluntary manslaughter.”
“How long would she have to serve?”
“Between eighteen months and three years.”
“That’s still a long time, especially for a copper in jail.”
“Not as long as John Hadleigh.”
“Hadleigh shot a kid in the back with a shotgun.”
“Janet Taylor beat a defenseless man about the head with a police baton, causing his death.”
“He was a serial killer.”
“She didn’t know that at the time.”
“But he came at her with a machete!”
“And after she’d disarmed him, she used more force than necessary to subdue him, causing his death. Annie, it doesn’t matter that he was a serial killer. It wouldn’t matter if he’d been Jack the bloody Ripper.”
“He’d cut her partner. She was upset.”
“Well, I’m certainly glad to hear she wasn’t calm, cool and collected when she did it.”
“You know what I mean. There’s no need for sarcasm.”
“Sorry. I’m sure the judge and jury will take the whole picture into account, her state of mind.”
Annie sighed. She felt sick. As soon as this farce was over she was getting the hell out of Complaints and Discipline, back to real police work, catching the villains.
“All right,” she said. “What next?”
“You know what next, Annie. Find Janet Taylor. Arrest her, take her to the police station and charge her with voluntary manslaughter.”
“Someone asking to see you, sir.”
Why was the fresh-faced PC who popped his head around the door of Banks’s temporary office at Millgarth smirking? Banks wondered. “Who is it?” he asked.
“You’d better see for yourself, sir.”
“Can’t someone else deal with it?”
“She specifically asked to see someone in charge of the missing girls case, sir. Area Commander Hartnell’s in Wakefield with the ACC, and DCI Blackstone’s out. That leaves you, sir.”
Banks sighed. “All right. Show her in.”
The PC smirked again and disappeared, leaving a distinct sense of smirk still in the air, rather like the Cheshire cat’s smile. A few moments later, Banks saw why.
She tapped very softly on his door and pushed it open so slowly that it creaked on its hinges, then she appeared before him. All five feet nothing of her. She was anorexically thin, and the harsh red of her lipstick and nail polish contrasted with the almost translucent paleness of her skin; her delicate features looked as if they were made out of porcelain carefully glued or painted on her moon-shaped face. Clutching a gold-lame handbag, she was wearing a bright green crop top, which stopped abruptly just below her breasts – no more than goose pimples despite the push-up bra – and showed a stretch of pale, bare midriff and a belly-button ring, below which came a black PVS micro-skirt. She wore no tights, and her pale thin legs stretched bare down to the knee-highs and chunky platform heels that made her walk as if she were on stilts. Her expression showed fear and nervousness as her astonishingly lovely cobalt-blue eyes roved restlessly about the stark office.
Banks would have put her down for a heroin-addicted prostitute, but he could see no needle tracks on her arms. That didn’t mean she wasn’t addicted to
“Are you the one?” she asked.
“What one?”