cameras – and the moment he turned his back and jolted to the right was the moment he yanked Sam to his feet again. Unseen by CCTV. Unseen by me.
I imagined what came next: if anyone had paid any sort of attention – and most people hadn’t because most people were disembarking protesters, half watching a fight at the other end of the platform – he’d claim Sam had fainted. He’d have taken his jacket off, pretending that he was trying to get him some air. Then, as the drug kicked in, he would have made Sam put the T-shirt on, helped it on to him, knowing he was pliant. Putting a protest T-shirt on him, even as he lay there semi-conscious, would have looked odd, but it wouldn’t have looked odd
The Snatcher.
It had to be him.
But why take Sam? Why deviate from the plan? I let the questions go for the time being, moving the slider back to the moment they stepped off the train. And in the second they were both visible – Sam, drugged, looking down at the floor, the man next to him turning away and trying to protect his identity – I finally saw the face of a killer. I saw the man who had taken Sam Wren. I saw the man who had taken Steven Wilky from a flat half a mile from Paddington; Marc Erion from an apartment in King’s Cross; Joseph Symons from his home north of Farringdon station; and Jonathan Drake from his flat in Hammersmith.
All homes close to the Tube stations.
All stops on the Circle line.
He was using it as his hunting ground, watching the men, following them, getting to know their routines and then moving in for them. He knew the Underground stations.
Because he worked them.
I’d looked right at him so many times in the footage as he’d moved around inside the carriage, his face a blur behind the glass. I’d watched so many times as he’d stepped out onto the platform, the sign shielding him and his victim from the cameras – and not once had I put it together.
But I knew why I had today.
His clothes were different from the uniform he should have been wearing on a Friday morning, and maybe he’d thought that was what would make him blend in. But, ultimately, it was the change of clothes that had given him away. Because now I saw why this time, of all times, I’d been drawn to him: a red T-shirt with checked sleeves. The same top I’d seen in his gym bag earlier in the day.
The Snatcher knew the Circle line because he worked it.
The Snatcher was Edwin Smart.
69
As I drove, I jammed my phone into the hands-free and dialled Healy’s number. It rang and rang, with no answer. Finally, after half a minute, it clicked and went to voicemail.
‘This is Healy, leave a message.’
‘Shit.’ I waited for the beep. ‘Healy, it’s me. Everything’s changed. It’s not Sam or Pell you should be looking for, it’s a guy called Edwin Smart. He’s a ticket inspector on the Circle line. He took Sam. He took all of them. You need to tell Craw right now.’
I killed the call, my mind turning over.
I dialled the station that the Snatcher task force were working out of, then asked to be connected to Craw. ‘She’s out in the field at the moment, sir, and I’m afraid I can’t –’
‘Wherever she is, she’s at the wrong place.’
‘Well, sir, I can’t –’
‘No,
A pause. Then the line connected.
It rang ten times with no answer and then went silent. A click. And then it started to ring again. She was redirecting my call. On the third ring, someone picked up.
‘Davidson.’
‘Davidson, it’s David Raker.’
A snort. ‘What the fuck do you want?’
‘Sam Wren isn’t the Snatcher.’
‘
‘Just listen to me –’
‘No, you listen to me, you weaselly piece of shit. You and that fucking sideshow Healy are
‘Do what you have to do, but you need to hear this.’
‘I
‘Sam Wren isn’t the guy you need to be looking for, it’s a –’
‘No,’ he said. ‘We’re done.’
And then he hung up.
I smashed my fists against the steering wheel and looked out into the rain.
‘How can I help you?’ she asked.
‘I’m looking for a revenue control inspector.’
‘You’d be better off calling the depot at Hammersmith.’
‘His name’s Edwin Smart.’
He could have been at any station on the line, not just Gloucester Road. But I’d found him twice there and he seemed to know the people who worked in and around it. They liked him, he liked them – or, at least, he pretended to. But he could put on a show, and he could manipulate those around him, starting with Sam Wren and Duncan Pell.
‘Do you know him at all?’ I pressed.
‘Edwin Smart?’
‘Yes.’
She paused. ‘What did you say your name was, sir?’
‘Detective Sergeant Davidson.’
I could sense a change, without any words even being spoken. Most people, even people who knew they had a duty to protect people’s privacy, started to get nervous when the police came calling. ‘Uh …’ She stopped again. ‘Uh, I’m not really, uh …’
I recognized the voice then: Sandra Purnell. The woman I’d spoken to in the staffroom, and the woman who had hugged Smart as I’d been about to approach him.
