Clean Cut (29 page)

Read Clean Cut Online

Authors: Lynda La Plante

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Mystery Fiction, #Murder, #Women detectives - England - London, #England, #Murder - Investigation, #Travis; Anna (Fictitious Character), #Women detectives, #london, #Investigation, #Police Procedural, #Women Sleuths

BOOK: Clean Cut
2.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Lewis smiled. ‘Got some positive news from forensic though, Gov. Hairs and a partial fingerprint have been matched to Carly Ann North. There were also some
fibres that could be from wherever her body was kept before it was taken to the dismemberment site.’

The interior of the Range Rover had been given a thorough clean but, beneath the glove compartment, they had also found two clear prints belonging to Rashid Burry; a third print was being tested but was, as yet, unidentified.

Langton seemed to relax, perhaps because they were moving forwards, or perhaps because the herbal pills were working, if not on his leg, then his mood. He munched on one of the stale sandwiches and helped himself to tepid coffee from a pot.

Esme was quietly unpacking her box of equipment: the rubber guard for Eamon’s mouth, the electrode plungers and suction caps. She laid them all out very neatly on a piece of white cotton and used a disinfectant cloth to wipe them all down.

She looked up at the clock on the wall and gestured with her forefinger, moving it round in a circle. ‘Time is ticking. We should check on Eamon Krasiniqe.’

Anna recalled seeing the same gesture made by the dying boy in the prison cell. ‘You know, that was the only gesture that Eamon made.’

Esme gave a small shrug. ‘You mentioned it before; it’s just a habit, you know, to indicate time. Some of the patients we have are illiterate and cannot tell the time, so I often use this as a sort of indication.’ She pointed again to demonstrate. ‘When the large hand is back to twelve, you come in to see me.’ She gave a soft smile. ‘When we put the clocks forwards or backwards, that causes confusion: they believe they have lost an hour as punishment!’

‘Did Camorra see you do this?’

‘Possibly.’

‘Did you ever see the Krasiniqe brothers?’

‘I would have to check my books, but you know many use assumed names and give false addresses.’

‘Come and have a look at him,’ Anna said, then hesitated, looking at Langton. He gave a small nod of his head.

He watched them both leave the anteroom. ‘Should have thought of that myself,’ he said, reaching for another sandwich.

 

Whilst Dr Salaam examined Idris Krasiniqe, Anna led Esme into his brother Eamon’s room.

He lay completely still, eyes open and staring at the ceiling, his body rigid, his breathing very shallow.

Anna stood by the door as Esme moved to the sick boy’s bedside. She leaned over him and, with one hand, she gently soothed his head with soft strokes. He showed no reaction; she rested the back of her hand against his cheek.

‘Poor boy; my poor boy.’ She held onto his hand, all the time making soft hushing sounds, as if to a baby.

‘Do you recognize him?’

‘No, I don’t–but you know, we have so many patients, and over so many years. He might have been to see us, but I don’t honestly know. I’m sorry.’

They left the room and went back to where they had left Langton.

Esme seemed upset; she asked Anna why, with all the equipment here, they didn’t use any of it. Anna was surprised; with all her herbal remedies, she wouldn’t have thought that Esme would approve of intravenously feeding him or attaching him to a heart monitor.

‘When he was first taken to the prison hospital, they tried to help him, but he refused to have any treatment. He even signed the documents.’

Esme shook her head. ‘He wouldn’t have known what he was doing.’

‘But we have to take it as that being what he wants. When they had IRA prisoners who went on hunger strike, the prison officers were not allowed to feed them or give any form of resuscitation if they collapsed.’

Esme rested her hand on Anna’s arm. ‘Those people were using their bodies as weapons against authority; that poor boy probably didn’t even know what he was signing.’

Anna felt irritated; Esme seemed to be accusing her. ‘Well, if that is the case, you won’t have any reason not to give him ECT.’

Esme pursed her lips. ‘That will not be my decision.’

No, Anna thought to herself, it will not be. The person who would be making the decision was Langton and he, as they saw when they re-entered the room, was fast asleep, lying on a trolley.

Chapter Eighteen

I
dris Krasiniqe was zipping up his prison jeans. He had lowered them to his knees so that Dr Salaam could check his genitals for possible puncture-marks. There were none. He asked Idris whether he often felt that his mouth was dry; he replied always–the officers in the prison got pissed off with him forever asking for water.

When asked if he also felt that his face was red, Idris had managed to smile, shaking his head. ‘I’m partly black–so I dunno if my face goes red or not! It feels hot sometimes, but I dunno about it being red.’

Dr Salaam bent down. There was a small tattoo on Idris’s right wrist.

‘Wait one moment; how long have you had this, Idris?’

The young man looked down and shrugged. ‘When I first got to Wakefield, months ago. Bloke in the cell I shared, he used to tat all the prisoners. Since Eamon got sick I been in solitary, I don’t mix with nobody.’

Dr Salaam peered closely at the tattoo. ‘When did your dry mouth start?’

Idris hesitated, trying to recall the exact date. ‘Maybe a few months back?’

Dr Salaam used his small pen torch to examine the rather crude small star: it was not even filled in but was just a dotted outline.

‘I was gonna have a bigger one done, but this hurt like hell. It’s like Eamon’s, but he got a moon–well, that’s what he told me.’

‘Your brother does not have a tattoo, Idris. I would know, as I have examined him–but this is how you might have been injected.’

Idris gaped. ‘Shit, man! Oh fuck, man–you gotta help me!
Can
you help me?’

 

Langton clapped his hands. ‘Brilliant! The more he’s shitting himself, the better.’

‘I think it would now be beneficial for him to know the condition his brother is in before I give him something that will help,’ said Salaam.

‘You going to give the electric shock treatment?’ Lewis asked.

They all waited. Esme took her husband aside and whispered to him.

He nodded his head. ‘My wife is doubtful it will have any effect at this late stage.’

‘Fuck that. Let his brother watch: now he’s given us permission, we can get Eamon on a heart monitor, put him under an oxygen tent–anything to show us in a good light. If he dies, he dies; it’ll be even more of an incentive for Idris to talk. If he won’t talk, we withhold his own medication.’

Langton was so aggressive that no one argued. His energy levels back to normal, he then set the wheels in motion for Idris to be brought to see Eamon. Anna suggested they allow Esme to be with him, saying that
she had a very calming influence; she knew that if Langton took Idris anywhere, he would scare the living daylights out of him.

 

The monitor was bleeping, indicating Eamon’s erratic and slow heartbeat. He also had an oxygen mask on; the respirator pumped on behalf of his weakened lungs. A doctor from the hospital had been brought in and was quietly sitting to one side, talking in hushed tones with Dr Salaam.

Anna, Langton and Lewis watched from behind the one-way glass.

‘How did you swing this?’ Anna asked Langton.

‘He’s in private practice–just does the odd visit here, so we got lucky. About time, but he’ll cost. And he’s African, so that also helped.’

They fell silent as the door was opened and Idris, accompanied by Esme, walked in. The uniformed officers who had led them down there locked the door behind them.

Idris was obviously shaken; seeing his brother in such a state, and after so long, made him weep. Esme did her gentle whispering to him, taking his hand and drawing him closer to the bedside. He moved to stand beside his brother and then, like Esme, he began to stroke Eamon’s head, as he wept.

‘Eh, bro, it’s me, just come to see you. Can you hear me?’

There was no reaction. Idris leaned closer and repeated that he was there, then he kissed his brother’s forehead. The heart monitor bleeped and Idris turned to look at it, then back at his brother, who remained motionless.

‘I love you, bro–I love you.’

The monitor then bleeped louder and the red zigzag flatlined.

‘Fuck, he’s gone,’ Langton said.

‘Do something, man! Do something to help him!’ Idris shouted.

Electrodes were connected and a tube placed into the dead boy’s mouth, as rubber pads were put on his chest.

Anna had to look away. It was the panic in Idris she hated to see; he was flailing his hands and weeping. Esme tried her best to control him as the first jolt of electricity went through his brother.

The dead boy’s body jerked and then lay still; three more times, they watched his body being moved by the electricity. Then there was an almost unanimous sigh of disbelief: the heart monitor reconnected, like a miracle. The beat was strong, though erratic.

‘He’s alive, he’s alive!’ Idris shrieked, trying to get closer to his brother.

‘I want you to leave now,’ said Salaam. His voice was firm and loud.

Idris looked at him like a helpless child. ‘Is he gonna be okay now?’

‘Let’s pray, brother, let’s just pray.’

Esme almost had to drag Idris from the room, banging on the door for it to be unlocked.

Dr Salaam came to the window. He could not see them through the one-way mirror, so just stood there, not sure where to look. ‘The reaction you are seeing is a false hope. It is the electricity that has started the machine and maybe allowed his heart to beat for a fraction, but he’s gone. I thought it best that your prisoner had some hope, but there is none. He’s dead.’

Langton got up and closed the blind. Both Anna and Mike remained silent, not sure how to react.

‘Doctor Salaam is something else, isn’t he?’ Langton said.

He turned as Esme walked in. She seemed very tired. ‘Idris wants to see DI Travis, no one else. I think you should go to him as quickly as possible.’

Anna looked to Langton.

‘Go do it.’

If he had felt any degree of irritation that Anna was the one to talk to Idris, he didn’t show it; instead, he shook the coffee pot and handed it to Mike Lewis.

‘Get us a refill, will you?’

Lewis took the pot and walked out.

Langton waited until the door closed before he spoke. ‘Your husband…Whatever my own feelings are about his practice, about what the pair of you do, I think your husband is a very special man.’

‘He is,’ she said quietly. ‘He has very special powers and works only towards the good. If he wished, he could unleash a darkness, but he would never even contemplate doing so.’

‘Like I said, he has my admiration. He’s worked hand in glove with us and I am very grateful.’

‘Thank you. I hope you get a successful result.’ She hesitated. ‘May I talk to you on a personal level?’

Langton was slightly taken aback. ‘Sure. In fact, I was going to ask if you had any more of those herbal painkillers.’

‘You need so much more,’ she said softly. ‘You carry a big open wound.’

‘Yeah, I do. I got cut through the abdomen, chest and was almost sliced through my heart.’

Esme counted out four more painkillers. ‘Well, I didn’t know about that. My reference is more esoteric. We all carry scars.’

‘Really?’ He was not interested.

‘Yes. Mine is the child I lost.’

He nodded, not wanting to get into any of her so-called esoteric mumbo jumbo or, even worse, her private life.

‘Someone left you with such pain,’ she murmured now.

‘Ma’am, I was almost sliced in two. There’s nothing esoteric about it, just a brutal bastard who almost killed me.’

Esme placed her hand on his heart. ‘In here,’ she stated.

He could feel incredible heat from her hand. He gasped, not wanting her to take her hand away. He didn’t understand. Her hand remained on his chest and he felt an overwhelming need to weep, but he tensed up. ‘It’s my knee joint,’ he said lamely.

‘You never released the pain.’

‘I don’t know what you are talking about. I’m taking every pill I can lay my hands on to release the pain. I want you to stop this.’

When she withdrew her hand, he felt a terrible emptiness; it was indescribable.

‘My wife died.’ His voice sounded distant. ‘She was young, she was beautiful, she was clever, and I loved her. We wanted to have a family; our children would have been the light of our lives, because we wanted more of each other. She died of a brain tumour. One moment, she was laughing, so full of life and energy, then it had all gone;
she
had gone. I could never believe
it could be over; that she wouldn’t walk back into my life.’

‘But you have buried it; you have never released her light.’

‘There was no light after she died.’

Esme touched his hand. ‘You have to let her go. You need the light now. You need it, because you are moving downwards.’

‘Well, maybe I’ll be with her. You think I’m going to die?’

‘No, no. She is the light–she is forever a light. I feel her and know she is a vibrant force that you must embrace. There is no guilt, there should be no remorse, and you could have done nothing to save her. Let her go, or you will never get well.’

‘I’m doing okay,’ he muttered, angry with himself. No one knew what anguish he had lived with when he lost his beloved, and he didn’t understand why this tragic part of his life was being opened up now.

‘I can’t deal with this now,’ he said quietly.

‘I understand, but you must one day. Don’t leave it too late.’

She gave him some water to take the painkillers. He joked again that she was feeding him Jimson weed. She gave a soft laugh, but neither was amused.

‘Come and see me when this case is over,’ she said, packing up her packets and bottles.

‘Right, will do.’ He had no intention of keeping in contact and wished he’d kept his mouth shut. He stood beside her as she checked her medical case.

‘What does this Jimson weed look like?’ he asked curiously.

Esme touched a bottle with a red cross on the label.
‘This is the tincture, and these are the tablets; they can be crushed into a powder. My husband brought them to show you. Usually both are kept in a locked cabinet; it’s obvious why.’ She turned as Mike Lewis walked in with the fresh pot of coffee.

‘Just to let you know, the firearm section guys outside are getting impatient and want to know when we’ll be through.’

‘When I say so,’ Langton rapped out. He gestured to Mike that they should go and see how Anna was doing. He was keen now to get out and away from Esme.

Esme opened the viewing blind. Her husband had removed all the equipment from Eamon and packed it away. He was now washing the body down.

Esme closed her eyes in prayer. She then locked her medical case and placed it on the floor beside her chair. She sat with her hands folded in her lap, watching Elmore finish washing Eamon and then reverently place a sheet over the dead boy’s body.

 

Anna had taken it very slowly with Idris. He was in a state of shock and grief. While he believed that his brother was still alive and that there was some hope, he was also terrified that he, too, had been poisoned. He constantly drank water, his mouth dry, and repeatedly asked Anna if the doctor could help him and Eamon. Anna had repeated just as often that she was certain he could. Calming him had taken over ten minutes; now she knew she would have to put the pressure on.

‘I am going to tape our interview,’ she said.

‘Okay, okay, but what about me being returned to Wakefield? I mean, if this gets out that I’ve been
talking–I mean, this bastard that did the tattoo, will he be taken care of?’

‘Yes, and we will arrange for you to serve out your sentence in another prison.’ She could not be sure they would get permission, but it was now imperative they get some answers.

She had only just switched on the tape when Idris blurted out, ‘He loved her.’

Anna looked up, unsure that she had heard correctly. ‘I’m sorry–what did you say?’

‘My brother–he loved her. He was crazy about her. I mean, he was supposed to just be sort of looking out for her–you know, like a bodyguard.’

‘Can you just explain to me who—’

He interrupted her. ‘Carly Ann–my brother and her. He loved her.’

Anna sat back. This didn’t make sense. ‘I don’t understand. If you knew that, then why were you found with her body?’

‘It was set up.’

‘What was set up?’

Idris sighed. He slumped, clenching his hands tightly. ‘
He
found out–found out they were going to run off together–so he punished Eamon. He said anyone who ever crossed him would live to regret it. He was acting crazy, all dressed up in this white robe with crosses and shit, and they held Eamon down while he ranted and raved at him. That’s when he must have injected him.’

‘Who was this?’

Idris looked at her as if she was stupid. ‘Camorra–who the fuck do you think I’m talking about?’

Anna swallowed. She then said that she did know but,
for the benefit of the tape, she had to hear him say the name.

‘Carly Ann was Camorra’s meat. He’d seen her on the street, liked the look of her and got two of his guys to pick her up and bring her to him. He had her washed–and I’m not kiddin’–in milk. He then got all this gear for her, clothes and shit, and said she was his woman. She had these blue eyes, man, like clear sea; yet she was black. It was a sign to him that she was special. He then got my brother to be her sort of keeper, to make sure she didn’t get back on the junk. It was Eamon’s job to take her out, when she went shopping and stuff. She was buying gold bracelets and necklaces, ’cos Camorra gave her all this money. Eamon was with her round the clock. Camorra had to go do his business, so they was alone a lot together.’

Idris lowered his head. ‘He fucked her.’ Idris wiped his eyes. He said his kid brother was dumb; he didn’t know the place had hidden cameras. It was all on film, so it wasn’t difficult for Camorra to find out.

‘Where was this?’

‘He had a big house in Peckham, but he’s got places all over London. The guy has so much money, all cash.’

‘Did he own a white Range Rover?’

‘Yeah, he’s got a lot of cars. He’s got BMWs, Mercedes–you name it–even a Ferrari.’

‘Where does he keep these cars?’

Other books

Willow Grove Abbey by Mary Christian Payne
Battle of Lookout Mountain by Gilbert L. Morris
Lovestorm by Judith E. French
Yours for the Night by Samantha Hunter
The League of Sharks by David Logan
Watchdog by Laurien Berenson
Relentless by Ed Gorman
The Rose of York by Sandra Worth
The Fall of the Imam by Nawal el Saadawi