Behind Closed Doors (17 page)

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Authors: Susan Lewis

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary Fiction, #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary

BOOK: Behind Closed Doors
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Penny’s problems had all stemmed from believing her father didn’t love her.

Mindful of needing to draft a new statement for the press, she took herself off to a nearby empty office where she could think more clearly as she pulled it together. For some reason she always found it easier to write drafts by hand; once done she’d type it into an email and send it over.

She was only a couple of lines in when her mobile bleeped with a text.

Told Grandma, think she’s OK, but give her a call when you can. Ax

Immediately connecting to her mother, Andee said, ‘Hi, it’s me. Are you all right?’

‘Yes, of course,’ Maureen replied. ‘It’s very worrying news though, and I’m not sure you should be the one handling . . .’

‘I’m fine, Mum, honestly, and I couldn’t sit on the sidelines while the search went on. You must understand that.’

‘Yes, I suppose so. I’m just afraid for the toll this is going to take on you.’

‘You know it isn’t the first misper I’ve been involved with. I’ve survived the others, and I’ll survive this one too.’

‘But if you don’t find her . . .’

‘We will. This is different, Mum. Sophie wasn’t depressed, at least not in the same way as Penny was, and we’ve got good reason to suspect that she went off with someone willingly. All we need to do now is track those people down.’

‘I see.’

Able to picture her mother’s troubled eyes, while sharing the devastation of never finding anyone who might have led them to Penny, Andee injected more tenderness in her tone as she said, ‘I’m sorry, I have to go now, but I’ll be home later. We can talk again then.’

As she rang off she checked to find out who had texted during the call.
Hi, just to say landed on time. Is 7 this evening good for you? Gx

Reminded of how much she wanted to see him, she quickly tried to think what to do. It should be fine, unless there was some kind of breakthrough with Sophie that would obviously have to take precedence. But there was also her mother whom she’d just promised to see later, and Martin, though she certainly wouldn’t see him tonight.

Texting back, she wrote,
Complications with a case, so can we say 8? Might not be able to stay for dinner. Really sorry, but very much looking forward to seeing you. Ax

A moment later he texted back,
Whatever works for you. x

Loving him for being so understanding, she put her phone aside and continued her notes for the press release, hastening back to the incident room as soon as it was done where she found Gould sitting at her desk.

‘CCTV,’ he stated.

‘It’s interesting.’

‘So I’ve been hearing . . . Do you want to get that?’

Checking her mobile and seeing a number she didn’t recognise she quickly clicked on. ‘DS Lawrence,’ she announced impatiently.

‘Hello, it is Kasia Domanski speaking.’

Andee’s eyes widened in surprise. ‘Hello Kasia,’ she said, as much to let the others know who was on the line as to try and sound friendly. ‘How can I help you?’ As Gould waved for silence in the room she switched the call to speaker.

‘I am ringing,’ Kasia began, ‘to ask if you have heard from Tomasz yet?’

Receiving a shake of the head from Leo, Andee said, ‘No, we haven’t, I’m afraid. Have you?’

‘Yes, yes, he called me about an hour ago from Poland. He says he is going to call you.’

‘Did he say when?’

‘No, but his mother is not well. He is at the hospital with her. I think he will be in touch with you today. I just want to let you know this.’

‘Thank you. I very much appreciate it. Do you know which hospital he’s at?’

‘I am sorry, he did not tell me, but I have a number for him. He lost his mobile, so he has a new one now.’

Grabbing a pen, Andree scribbled down the number and noted the country code. So he was in Poland. ‘Thanks, I’ll try contacting him,’ she said.

‘If he does not answer, it will be because he is not allowed to have phone on while in the hospital,’ Kasia warned.

‘Of course.’ Realising Kasia was about to ring off, Andee quickly said, ‘Before you go, can I ask you to confirm the time Tomasz came home on the night of the seventeenth?’

There was a slight hesitation before Kasia replied, ‘Um, yes, I am sure it was his usual time, around quarter past twelve. Maybe a few minutes after.’

Andee’s eyes met Leo’s. Kasia wasn’t sounding as certain as she had when they’d first asked her. ‘Is there a chance you might have been asleep and not actually noticed the time?’ she suggested.

‘I – uh, I am sure it was then.’

No longer convinced, Andee said, ‘Just one more question. How long has Tomasz had his laptop computer?’

‘Only two days by the time you take it. We need a new one for a long time, and at last Tomasz get round to it. Please, when can we have it back? I need to use for my emails and accounts.’

‘I’m sure we can release it in the next day or so,’ Andee replied. There was no point keeping it when it had turned out to have next to nothing on it. ‘Do you still have the old one?’

‘No, Tomasz take it to Curry’s so they can transfer everything we need, then I think he throw it away.’

Guessing Kasia hadn’t had time to realise that only her personal information was on the new laptop, Andee thanked her again and rang off. ‘We need to find the other computer,’ she told Leo.

‘On it,’ he responded.

‘OK,’ Gould addressed them all, ‘let’s find out when/how Sikora arrived in Poland, given he wasn’t on the flight out of Bristol.’

‘I’ll check this morning’s passenger list,’ Jemma responded, as Andee dialled the number Kasia had given her.

‘Include flights that left from other airports yesterday,’ Andee instructed. ‘Whether to Krakow or Warsaw.’ Unsurprised to find herself going through to a voicemail box, she left a message urging Sikora to ring back as soon as he could, and said to the room at large, ‘I’m sure we’re all asking ourselves the same question: is Sophie over there with him?’

‘I’ll get some pictures through to the locals,’ Jemma piped up.

‘Can we ping his phone from the UK, to get an actual location for him?’ Leo wondered.

Gould shook his head. ‘I don’t know if it’s technically possible, but even if it is we’d have to get all sorts of clearance.’

‘But if we believe she
is
there?’ Andee pressed.

‘We’d have to offer up some pretty compelling evidence to say she is,’ he reminded her, ‘and right now we don’t have it.’

‘So what do we do?’ Leo demanded.

As Andee started to answer her mobile rang again, and she blinked with astonishment at the incoming number. ‘It could be him,’ she announced, and quickly setting the call on speaker she said, ‘DS Lawrence.’

‘It is Tomasz Sikora here,’ he told her. ‘I received the message that you want to speak to me.’

‘That’s right.’ Andee was looking at Gould. ‘Thanks for getting back to me. I think you’re aware that we’re concerned for the whereabouts of Sophie Monroe . . .’

‘Yes, I am, but I do not understand why you think I would know where is she. She is not someone I know very well.’

‘But you do know her?’

‘Of course, but she is not a friend or anything like that.’

Since he was hardly going to admit it if she were, Andee said, ‘Can you tell me if you gave her a lift from the campsite on the night of August 17th?’

‘No, I did not, because I have never given her lift from campsite.’

‘What about Gary Perkins?’

‘What about him?’

‘Did you leave the campsite with him on August 17th?’

‘No, I did not, because I have never left campsite with him.’

Andee’s eyes were still fixed on Gould. ‘Can you tell me, Mr Sikora, why Kasia thinks you were on the Bristol flight to Krakow yesterday morning?’

Sighing, he said, ‘This is because I tell her it is the flight I am taking, but it was full when I tried to book, so I drive here instead.’

Andee blinked. ‘You drove all the way to Poland?’

‘That is correct.’

‘So when did you arrive?’

‘In the early hours of this morning.’

‘Is Sophie with you?’


No
, she is not.’

‘What about Gary Perkins?’

‘I came alone and I go straight to the hospital to see my mother. I stay with her until I go out to buy a new phone today. This is when I call Kasia.’

‘What happened to your other phone?’

‘I don’t know. I lost it. Or someone stole it.’

‘Could it perhaps be with your old computer?’

‘What?’

‘I think you understand the question.’

After a moment he said, ‘I recycle the computer with a company who does these things. The phone I had with me after that, so it is not with the computer.’

‘Which firm did you use for the recycling?’

‘I do not know who it was. The man, he approach me as I leave the store and say he recycle computers to make them good for children with learning problems. So I give him our old one and he take it away.’

How convenient
. ‘Which store was this?’

‘Curry’s on Wermers Road.’

Andee’s eyes went to Dan, a silent instruction to check out this mysterious recycling man. ‘Why is none of your data on the new computer?’ she asked.

‘I have here, on USB. I am going to upload when I get back, but I ask them to do for Kasia.’

‘OK. Tell me, which hospital is your mother in?’

With no discernible hesitation he replied, ‘She is at the University Hospital, in Krakow.’

Nodding to Leo to get on to it, she said, ‘Going back to the night of August 17th, do you remember seeing Sophie at the Entertainment Centre?’

‘Yes, she was there.’

‘Did you speak to her?’

‘No. Or maybe I tell her thank you for the nice things she say about the show.’

‘Is that all?’

‘Yes. That is all.’

‘Did you see her when you were driving out of the site?’

‘No.’

‘Why did you turn left on to the main road instead of right, which would take you a more direct route home?’

He sounded confused. ‘I – sometimes I go the longer way round to wind down a little after the show.’

Andee’s eyebrows arched. ‘And what time would you say you arrived home that night?’

‘It was probably around twelve fifteen, or twelve twenty. I did not check.’

Glancing up as Shona from the press office came into the room, Andee said, ‘OK. When are you intending to return to the UK?’

‘I hope in the next few days. I can come to the police station to speak to you if that would be helpful.’

Surprised, she said, ‘Yes, it would. One last thing before you go, do you remember someone who worked at the camp by the name of Tania Karpenko?’

Sounding wary, he replied, ‘Yes, I remember her.’

‘Do you happen to know why she left?’

‘No, I do not.’

‘What about Michaela Reznik? Is she someone you know?’

‘I did when she was at the camp.’

‘Do you know where she is now?’

‘I am afraid I do not.’

Unable to tell on the phone if he was lying, she said, ‘OK. Thanks for being in touch, and please let us know when you’re back in the country.’

After ringing off she met Gould’s stare with one of her own.

‘There’s no point releasing the CCTV footage at this stage,’ he decided. ‘It’s not conclusive enough.’

‘It is as far as Perkins is concerned,’ Andee reminded him. ‘We see her going into his flat, coming out again around forty minutes later and they’ve both been picked up going into the club. OK, they’re not actually together, but there’s only one flat at the top of those stairs.’

‘Right. Get Yaz to sort it,’ he said to Leo, and vacating Andee’s chair he held it out for her to sit down. ‘Copy me in on the statement,’ he told Shona as she joined them.

‘Of course,’ Shona replied.

‘Dan, get in touch with the police in Krakow to fill them in on what’s happening,’ Andee instructed. ‘They’ll need visuals of Sophie
and
Perkins, and the registration number of Sikora’s van. Can anyone tell me if the Monroes have a FLO yet?’

‘Apparently Lauren Mitchell’s there,’ she was told.

‘Good. Sir, I think I should talk to the Monroes about broadcasting an appeal.’

He appeared thoughtful as he nodded. ‘Sure, provided they’re up for it.’

As soon as Shona had returned to the press office with the information she needed, Andee rang Gavin Monroe.

‘Not news, exactly,’ she replied regretfully when he asked, ‘but there have been some developments. CCTV footage from the camp shows Sophie going into and coming out of Gary Perkins’s apartment that night, so we know for certain now that she was with him. Later footage shows her leaving the club alone, but Sikora’s van leaves the underground car park soon after. Unfortunately, the camera covering the entrance wasn’t functioning that night, so the van isn’t picked up again until it’s outside the camp.’

‘So are you saying . . . You mean . . . You think she got into the van?’

‘It’s certainly possible. We’ve spoken to Tomasz Sikora and he’s claiming he has no idea where she is.’

‘And you believe him?’

‘Not necessarily, but until we can prove she was with him . . .’

‘You know she was with Perkins. Where’s he now?’

‘We’re working on finding out.’

‘He could be with Sikora.’

‘It’s possible.’

‘So where’s he?’

‘We have good reason to believe he’s in Poland.’

When there was only silence at the other end she knew exactly what was going through his mind, and wished there was a way she could make this easier.

‘Are you still there?’ she asked gently in the end.

‘Yes, I’m here.’ His voice was higher, threaded by the strain he was under. ‘If they’ve done anything to her I swear I’ll . . .’ He choked back a sob.

‘I understand how you feel, but if they do have her, I can promise you this, we’ll find her.’ Why had she said that when she was in no position to offer such a guarantee? Had her father been told the same when they’d been searching for Penny? What the hell did you say to a parent when you had no proper answers to give?

‘We’re about to issue another statement to the press,’ she continued. ‘There won’t be any mention of Sikora again, only of Perkins.’

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