“
“Then come up with something useful,” Bimsley suggested.
“We break in,” said Renfield.
“What?” It was Bryant’s turn to stare.
“We break into the house in the square. Just smash a window and storm the place. Put the fear of God up them. We’ve got legal grounds. You reckon somebody there is arrogant enough to think they’ve got away with it – they won’t be expecting a surprise visit.”
“Apart from the fact that Dan already took the house apart looking for evidence, ransacking the students’ rooms while they’re still asleep is not an option I want to consider. First you suggest torture, now burglary. Why don’t we just go out and shoot them all?”
“You come up with a better idea,” muttered Renfield.
“Mr Bryant, you’re sure it’s one of the housemates?” Bimsley asked.
“I know it is.” Bryant smoothed his hand across his desk, which was still littered with playing cards. “The proof is shape-shifting right here in front of me. I can see it – I just can’t identify it.”
“Then we stick to them like napalm for the rest of the morning, until one of them makes a mistake.” Bimsley looked to the others for confirmation. “What difference is it going to make? We can’t do any more here, and it’s our last day. There’s nothing else left to do.”
“Can I just say that in the entire history of the Unit, this has been the most disastrous investigation you lot have ever attempted?” Raymond Land spoke up finally, adding his opinion in the most unhelpful way possible. “It’s like something out of
Everyone booed and threw paper cups at him.
? Off the Rails ?
41
The Trench Effect
DS Longbright was taken by surprise when Georgia Conroy called; she had not been expecting to hear from Pentonville Prison’s former history teacher again. “You told me to call if I remembered anything else,” Conroy explained. “It’s only a little thing…”
“That’s fine,” replied Longbright, searching for a pen. “Right now I’ll be grateful for anything.”
“Well, you know I said Lloyd Lutine wanted me to go with him to visit Abney Park Cemetery?”
“Yes.”
“I thought it was odd at the time, because he’d given me the impression that he’d hated his father. He asked me to accompany him because he’d just discovered where he was buried.”
“How did he find out?”
“I don’t know. Maybe he checked the council records. As I said, I turned him down because it seemed a bit creepy. Then he mentioned something odd. That his father wasn’t supposed to have been buried there. It wasn’t allowed, there had been a mistake, something like that. I’m sorry, it’s not much…”
“No, I’m glad you called.”
Longbright thought it through. If Mr Fox’s father had also been raised in King’s Cross, Abney Park would not have been his local cemetery. But people could be buried more or less wherever they wanted, so why should it not have been allowed? Thanking Georgia Conroy, she rang off and took her notes into Arthur Bryant’s office.
“I know we’re supposed to be concentrating on the Mecklenburgh Square case, but can you spare a minute?”
Arthur peered up at her over the tops of his bifocals. “Is it urgent?”
“You’re doing a jigsaw, Arthur.”
“It helps me to think.” He gave up trying to fit a piece and sat back, turning it over in his fingers. “Queen Victoria’s funeral procession. Two thousand pieces. I wonder how many mourners in the crowd travelled by tube that day to watch it pass? Dan Banbury thinks someone chose to murder Gloria Taylor in the underground system because of the sheer volume of people passing through it. He says it’s difficult to solve a crime in a public place because the site always gets contaminated.”
“He’s got a point.”
“I thought the killer might be re-enacting some kind of historical event connected with the tunnels – after all, they’ve been there for a century and a half. All three deaths are connected to the railway. Even Tony McCarthy was attacked underground. Despite my insistence that everything has been premeditated, John has a theory that we’re looking for someone who’s acting out of sheer panic. I can’t see the sense in that myself. Meera thinks it’s a man who hates women, and Matthew Hillingdon just got in the way. Bimsley and Renfield think we should be looking for an escaped lunatic. Raymond’s right – in all my days with this Unit, I’ve never had such a disagreeably confused investigation on my hands – and yet I know there’s an absurdly simple answer we’ve all overlooked. It tantalises and terrifies me to think that someone else may die because I can’t see something that’s right in front of me.” He threw the jigsaw piece down in annoyance. “What’s your opinion?”
“I need to talk to you about Mr Fox.” She told him about Georgia Conroy’s phone call.
“Perhaps it wasn’t about the location of the cemetery, but the grave itself,” said Bryant, rolling up the jigsaw and sliding it into his desk drawer.
“What do you mean?”
“The only people who aren’t allowed to be buried on Christian sites are those of different faiths, and suicides. Could Mr Fox
“I suppose it’s possible.”
“Suicides happen all the time in the underground system. Mr Fox had a photograph of a London Underground bench on the wall of his bedroom.”
“Some kind of sentimental souvenir?”
“One way to find out. Give Anjam Dutta a call at North One Watch.”
¦
Longbright eventually got through to the King’s Cross security headquarters. “Can you do me a favour?” she asked. “I need a list of all the one-unders you’ve had at King’s Cross, going back as far as records allow.”
“That would be about thirty years,” Dutta told her. “We never transferred anything older than that to the new data system.”
“How difficult would it be to get me those?”
“Not difficult at all. Every suicide has been logged in. Give me a few minutes.”
While they waited for the email, Longbright and Bryant followed the theory. “Mr Fox asked a virtual stranger to accompany him to his father’s grave, and he still visits the site,” said Janice.
“So the death of his father could have been the turning point in his life.”
Bryant’s laptop pinged. Longbright didn’t have the patience to wait for Bryant to fiddle about trying to open his emails, so she leaned across him and opened the document, quickly running down the list of names. Most of the suicides were marked with ancillary files containing brief police statements. It didn’t take her long to find what she was looking for.
“There you go.” She tapped the screen with a glossy crimson nail. “Albert Thomas Edward Ketch went under a train on November eighteenth at four P.M., on the Piccadilly Line platform of King’s Cross station, the third suicide that year. Hang on, there’s a witness statement.” She clicked through to the attached page. “Witness told attending police she had spoken to a boy who she thinks was named Jonas. She insisted he had been sitting with Albert Ketch, waiting for a train, but the child was never traced.”
“No child traced,” mused Bryant. “A key witness. It shouldn’t have been that difficult.”
“It looks like they didn’t even try to find him.”