Claire Fielding’s flat checked for groceries. And see if we can find which supermarket he was in beforehand. Check their CCTV.’
They returned their attention to the screen. The figure was moving briskly but unhurriedly round the side of the building and away down the street. They watched as he faded from view.
‘We got any more footage?’ asked Phil.
Jane pointed the remote at the screen once more. ‘This. Taken from the camera on Middleborough, just past the roundabout.’
They all looked at the screen as the same figure hurried past on the pavement.
‘Now watch.’ She pointed the remote again, slowing the picture down. ‘He turns round. Here.’ She stopped the image.
They all leaned in closer to the screen. Phil, like the rest of them, stared hard at the image. Willed it to take shape as Brotherton, assume Brotherton’s features, close their case for them. But it was grainy, indistinct. He sat back. Tried not to sigh aloud in frustration.
‘Can we get this sharpened up?’ he asked.
‘We can try,’ said Millhouse. ‘Might take some time to do it properly. And money.’
Adrian turned the TV off.
‘Thanks for your hard work,’ said Phil. ‘Appreciate it. What about phone records? Claire Fielding’s? Brotherton’s?’
‘We’re still waiting,’ said Jane Gosling.
‘Right.’ Phil rubbed his chin, noticed where he had missed an area shaving this morning. ‘Well it’s not conclusive, ’ he said, ‘but-’
The doors opened. Fenwick entered.
34
Phil stopped talking, stared at his superior officer.
‘You’ve seen the CCTV, then?’ Fenwick said, not moving forward.
‘Just now,’ said Phil.
‘Then you should be in no doubt. You know what to do next. So get a move on.’
Marina stood up, turned to him. ‘It’s not Brotherton,’ she said. All eyes were focused on her. The room held a collective breath.
Fenwick gave a bitter smile. ‘Well it bloody well looks like him. Maybe he’s got a twin brother. Has that shown up in the profile?’
Marina’s face burned. ‘I’m sure a few interesting things would show up in your profile.’
Fenwick took a step towards her. Phil moved between them.
‘Sir, I’m the CIO here. Not you. Please leave.’
Fenwick didn’t hide the anger in his eyes. ‘Don’t order me around.The Super wants Brotherton brought in. And so do I.’
‘Brotherton is a liar and a manipulator,’ said Marina, anger in the ascendant now. ‘He’s a bully who preys on women weaker than himself. But he is not a killer. He wants his victim alive so he can keep hurting her. And he would never kill his own child.’
‘Really?’ said Fenwick, shaking his head.
‘Really,’ said Marina. ‘You want reasons? Here they are.’ She spoke quickly, getting as much information out as she could in as short a time as possible. ‘As I said before, and clearly you didn’t listen, this type of abuser is essentially narcissistic. And childish. On the one hand he would resent the fact that his woman, or object or property or however he likes to think of her, is carrying something that will take the focus and attention away from him. But on the other hand, he wouldn’t harm it because it’s a part of him. And by extension, he wouldn’t hurt the woman while she is carrying it.’ She looked round at the faces staring back at her. ‘Check with Claire Fielding’s friends. I’m sure you’ll find that the abuse stopped once she was pregnant.’
‘Well perhaps he killed her accidentally,’ said Fenwick.
‘And what about the other three murders?’ said Marina. ‘Did he accidentally commit them too?’
Fenwick stared at her. Phil stepped forward, ready to physically remove the senior officer if necessary. Or to get in his way if he made a move on Marina.
Instead Fenwick managed another smile. ‘We’ll ask him when we bring him in.’
‘He’s speeding up. The time in between murders is getting shorter.’
‘All the more reason to get a move on, then.’
Marina moved over to Fenwick, stared him right in the eyes. Fenwick flinched but remained where he was. ‘So if there’s another murder while you’ve got Brotherton in here, that’s all right is it? You’ll take responsibility for that?’
‘Psychology’s one thing, Marina,’ Fenwick said, his voice as patronising as possible, ‘physical evidence is another. Get him.’
He turned and left.
The silence that followed was louder than their arguing.
‘And while that’s happening,’ said Marina, her voice thrown into the silence like a rock down an abyss, ‘the killer’s still out there.’
Her voice died away but it was clear her anger remained. All eyes turned from her to Phil. He was aware of their stares, knew he had to do something. Regain charge.
‘Let’s bring Brotherton in,’ he said.
Marina turned to him. ‘But Phil…’
‘We’ve no choice. We’ve got reservations, but we’ve got nothing else at the moment. We bring him in.’
Marina turned away from him.
‘But I want you working on him with me, Marina. If it’s not him, I want him eliminated as soon as possible.’
Her back still to him, she nodded.
Phil sighed. Ignored the band round his chest. ‘Right,’ he said. ‘Let’s go get him.’
35
Hester looked round the house, pleased with what she saw.
She had tidied away the tools, hung the scythes on their wall hooks by the double doors, polishing and oiling their blades before doing so to keep them keen. She had then swept the living area and put the old tin bath central to the room so it was the first thing the baby saw when it entered its new home. She had done the dishes and tidied the kitchen area too. She had even got up on the ladders and restapled the black plastic sheeting over the rotten wood around the front corner of the house, to stop the wind and rain from getting in. Everything was in readiness.
She sat down on one of the old armchairs.
‘A woman’s work is never done,’ she said, smiling to herself.
Everything was going to be fine. Her husband would be out soon, finding the next surrogate. Then he would bring her new baby back home. She giggled. Wasn’t that a song? Sounded like a song. If it wasn’t, it should be.
She put her hands in her lap. She didn’t think about the baby that had died. Didn’t allow herself to. It was buried now, out in the garden beside the pigs. She hadn’t marked the grave. Didn’t want anything to remind her. That was the past. And it didn’t pay to dwell on the past. She knew that from bitter experience. Every time she started to think of the past, she started to feel sad. If she thought about the dead baby she might feel sad for it too. And once she started to feel sad for that, who knows what she would start thinking about next? Herself before