Authors: Nick Oldham
Jenny was going to spend a few hours with her grandmother, reports from the hospital being positive. Leanne would take over later and Henry planned to be there around teatime for a few hours, too . . . not planned â intended. Lisa would do her bit somewhere along the line, too, Henry had decided.
Today, he also decided, other people were going to do the work. He was going to do what a superintendent was supposed to do: delegate. Apart from anything else, he just didn't have the energy to get strangled or shot at again.
Not that he had many staff to play with or order about.
Which meant that today â still, unbelievably, Boxing Day â would be a day of consolidation and forward planning.
The crime scenes needed to be sorted properly, both at the hospital, on Shoreside and at the club in South Shore. That would be the focus of the day, together with working out which relatives needed to be informed and when the post-mortems would be carried out. Tomorrow, when there were more staff, he would think about tracking down Terry Cromer and his mate and getting the bastards arrested â unless something came to light today which required immediate action. He wasn't really pleased by this because he would have liked to go hunting for Cromer, but without staff it wasn't an option. So, all in all, it would be a day of boxing off some of the fundamentals before the investigations really got going next day.
He briefed his handful of staff at FMIT, then retreated to his office and opened the murder book.
Rik Dean appeared a few seconds later and sat down, uninvited, across from him. The two men regarded each other.
Henry said, âYou OK?'
Rik's face broke into a wide beam. âMore than OK, pal.'
âGood,' Henry said and looked down at the empty pages of the murder book that needed to be filled. He picked up a pen.
âYour sister has one helluva hotâ'
âWhoa!' Henry threw the pen down and held up his right hand, palm out. The police stop sign. âCertain things I do not wish to know.'
âOh, yeah, yeah,' Rik said awkwardly. âSo, anyway â thanks, H.' Then his eyes glazed over and he said, âOh, mama.'
âShe just needed a nudge in the right direction.'
The door opened and this time Jerry Tope appeared, a thick manila file tucked under his armpit. Henry waved him in and pointed to the spare seat.
âWhat are your plans for the day, Henry?' Tope asked.
Henry pouted. âThis' â he pointed to the blank murder book â âcrime scene revisits, liaison with the pathologist, see my mum, then I'm going to get a curry at my favourite pub in Kendleton, with my favourite landlady.'
âIn that case, what do you want me to do about the original reason we were all summoned together? Something that's been a bit lost with everything else that's happened.'
âThe Twixtmas Killings?' Rik said.
âOh yeah . . . have we had any other missing persons who fit the victim profiles?'
âNot had the chance of a proper sift yet,' Tope admitted. âHad a quick chat with the FIM, but there's nothing he can see.'
Henry churned it over. He had intended to do nothing that day, apart from direct others, but something nagged at him faintly. âI might go and have a chat with Freddy Cromer . . . he's sort of a bridge between both incidents, isn't he? That is, the murders and last night's shootings. I wonder how lucid he is today? He might inadvertently give up Terry's whereabouts with a bit of careful questioning.' If Henry had had a handlebar moustache, he would have been twirling it. âTalking of which, Jerry, can you pull everything together we have on the Cromers and the Costains?'
Jerry nodded. Henry looked at Rik. âYou sort out the crime scenes, will you? And the post mortems . . . I'll follow up Freddy, see what he has to say.'
Henry realized he didn't have Janine Cromer's phone number, but he had a brainwave. When Freddy was released into her custody she had to give the custody officer her mobile number. A quick internal call got him the number and he dialled it from his office phone. It went straight onto voicemail, so he left a short message. He wasn't too concerned.
What had happened overnight was complicated and far reaching, so he took the opportunity to make himself a filter coffee, settle down behind a closed office door â which would remain closed â get the murder book up to date, as he had already tried to do, and put together an investigative strategy. It was invaluable time, an opportunity to step above everything for an overview. The thing was many stranded, a bit like dealing with an excitable octopus, and even if a quick arrest was made, it wouldn't stop there. Because Henry had decided that once and for all, he was going to dismantle the crime empires of the Cromers and the Costains â and have great fun doing it.
It would be his pièce de résistance before retiring. Kind of a swansong. He would do it brick by brick. He would go for everything. The clubs. The supply lines. The protection rackets. The finance. The bank accounts. He was sure it would just be like pulling a thread on a woolly jumper.
Clearly it wasn't something he would achieve on his own. It would take many agencies and departments and would require them to pool their knowledge, information and resources.
And probably, he guessed, the first tug of that metaphorical thread was to arrest Terry Cromer and get into his ribs. The threat of a murder charge hanging over the head of even the world's meanest gangster was a very effective bargaining tool.
Then the Cromers would start to crumble.
At the same time he would lean heavily on the Costains. With their head man and two of their hard men lying in mortuaries, this was an ideal time to move in on them and crush the bastards whilst they were running around with no family head to steer them.
Energized by the thought of this little project, Henry spent two solid hours and four coffees planning, from the strategy downwards. (God, aren't I good at this leadership and management stuff, he thought at one point.) He wrote down what he wanted to achieve and how he would go about it â strategy to tactics. (Oh yes, I'm good.) Plus he had an urgent run to the toilet, because the coffee had a less than desirable effect on his bowels.
He knew he would have to pitch his idea to the chief constable. If he could get FB's backing, it would be a goer.
He sat back smugly, placed his pen down and rubbed his hands together, wondering what he could call the operation.
His phone rang to interrupt his thoughts.
âMr Christie, it's Janine Cromer. You rang, left a message.'
âThanks for calling back.' Henry sat upright, focused.
Immediately she said, âI hope you're not going to ask me any awkward questions about my family, because I won't drop them in it.'
âAssuming you know what happened last night in Blackpool, it would be remiss of me not to ask about your father's whereabouts, for obvious reasons. So where is he?'
âI don't know,' she said shortly, âand even if I did . . .'
âPoint taken . . . that said, I do need to speak to Freddy. That's a given. He alleges he was kidnapped last night and he ended up assaulting a nurse â and me.' Henry rubbed his neck. âHow is he today?'
âHe's fine. He slept quite well and at the moment, he's content.'
Henry screwed his nose up at that description.
Content?
âI want to see him. I could have kept him in custody very easily last night, but I didn't.'
âI know, I know, and I'm grateful you didn't. When and where?'
âBlackburn nick, one hour.' Henry had already decided to see Freddy on home turf. âI want to interview him, get a statement from him and process him properly. I won't re-arrest him unless I have to. He won't be seeing the inside of a cell unless he has to. Do you get my meaning? He behaves â and that is me being very generous.'
âSo we have to play along with you, otherwise you'll become a bully?'
âYep.'
She sighed.
Henry said, âYou can have a solicitor or social worker, or both, present if you wish. And I'll let you stay in the interview, too.'
âHow very generous,' she said caustically.
âYep. One hour, Blackburn police station. If not, I'll come and lock him up.'
Interview rooms in police stations are sparse. A table bolted to the floor, jutting out at ninety degrees from a wall. A cassette tape recorder, affixed to the table because in the early days of tape recording interviews, a lot of less acquiescent prisoners tried to brain officers with the machines if the interviews weren't going their way. Up behind a mesh grille in one corner of the room was a video camera to record particularly important or sensitive interviews, or to allow other officers to watch and listen to interviews through an A/V feed. Henry didn't plan on starring on the small screen that day. Audio tape would suffice.
The Cromers were on time and Henry started the interview quite quickly in the presence of a duty solicitor he knew well, a guy called Richmond who made a great living defending crims. But he was an upright operator, simply playing his part in the criminal justice system.
And Freddy was lucid, friendly, open and quite charming.
Except he claimed he could not recall what happened the night before. The last thing he remembered was going to the club in Knuzden, having a drink there, and walking out of the place. Then nothing. Until he was thrown into a cell. Everything in between was a blank and Henry could not budge him. Freddy had his head bowed and simply shook it as Henry probed until finally sitting back with a despairing glance at Janine, sitting in the corner of the room. He drew the interview to a close and said he now needed to take Freddy's fingerprints, DNA and descriptives.
âI thought you said he wasn't under arrest,' Janine complained.
âHe isn't, but whether he recalls it or not, he committed some serious offences last night and I need to process him.' Henry looked at Richmond for support.
Richmond got the message and looked at Janine. âIt's just procedure.'
âI'm not happy with it.'
âBe that as it may,' Henry said.
Richmond said to Henry, âAre you going to charge my client?'
âI'm going to report the circumstances, let CPS make the decision.'
âOK, that's fine.'
âFreddy â you need to come with me . . . have you had your DNA taken before?'
He shook his head. âWill it hurt?'
âNo . . . it's just a swab to get some spit from your mouth.' Henry collected his paperwork and stood up, as did Freddy. Henry moved to the door of the interview room and Janine stood in front of him, a concerned look on her face.
âHenry, is this really necessary? The DNA and all that? And reporting him? Can't we just let it go? Look â I'll make sure that nurse gets compensated . . . a grand, eh? And you â how about a donation to the police widows and orphans fund?'
He shook his head. âHe has to go through the works, Janine. That's how it is. But if you offered up some compensation anyway, that would be a good thing.'
âYou're pretty heartless.'
âNo I'm not . . . and nor do I believe he can't remember anything.'
Freddy submitted to the processing and Henry quite enjoyed it. Taking fingerprints, a DNA sample, descriptives and a photo were usually things that more junior officers did. It had been a long time since Henry had rolled someone's fingertips in fingerprint ink and admired the result. There was certainly a skill to it and he was glad to see he hadn't lost it â but the size of Freddy's dabs, large enough to fill each square on the form from edge to edge, top to bottom, made Henry realize just what big fingers the man had. Great for strangulation.
Whilst he did it, Henry made small talk.
âDo you remember junior school at Belthorn, Freddy?'
âUh?'
âDid you enjoy it? Do you remember any of the kids you went with?'
âSorta . . . some,' he said.
âHow about David Peters? He was your age, wasn't he?'
âDunno.'
âHow about Christine Blackshaw? She was your age, too. Or Ella Milner?'
âI don't know . . . I don't know . . .'
Henry detected a hint of panic in Freddy's response.
âPlonk yourself there,' Henry said and pointed to a chair. They were in the fingerprint room in the custody suite. Freddy sat. Henry rifled through a drawer and found a DNA kit, basically a cotton wool bud in a sealed tube. He completed the name stickers before putting on a pair of latex gloves, twisting the cap off the tube and holding up the cotton bud. âJust open your mouth and I'll take a swab from inside your cheeks and that's it.'
Freddy complied. Henry leaned towards him and started to take the sample.
âDo you know that David Peters and Christine Blackshaw and Ella Milner have all been murdered? There, done.' He stood back, slid the swab into the tube, sealed it, then placed it in the clear envelope which he also sealed. âSo â do you know that? About those murders?'
Freddy shook his head. âWhy are you asking me questions? You're not allowed to.'
âJust having a chat, Freddy, that's all.'
âLiar.' Freddy's mouth clamped shut.
He led Freddy out to the foyer at the front counter where Janine was waiting, a severe expression on her face. The solicitor was nowhere to be seen.
âHe asked me questions,' Freddy blurted to Janine.
âYou're just like all the rest,' Janine snarled. âI'll be making a complaint.'
âFreddy is a witness to what happened last night, and maybe a victim, but so far he's conveniently forgotten everything. Now, call me a cynic, but I think that's bollocks, whether he's got some acute psychological condition or not. I think you told him to say nothing. That's what I think.'
âYes, you are a cynic, Henry. Something as traumatic as last night could easily have put up the barriers in his weak brain, so he blocked out the unpleasant, terrifying memory of it all.'