Crossbones Yard

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Authors: Kate Rhodes

BOOK: Crossbones Yard
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CROSSBONES YARD
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kate Rhodes
 
 
 
 

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For all the women who lie buried at Crossbones Graveyard
Your mother is holding your hand too tightly. You whimper and cling to her dress, because you know what will happen next. She stares at you, as if she’s forgotten how to blink. There’s one last glimpse of her face before she bundles you into the cupboard under the stairs. ‘Don’t make a sound,’ she hisses, ‘don’t even breathe.’ Darkness smothers you as the key twists in the lock. There’s a chance that he won’t find you, cowering on the floor, between the broom and floor mops, a stack of wellington boots.
Your father is closer now. Even his footsteps are angry, thudding too hard on the worn lino, while he looks for someone to hurt. He’s so close, you can smell him. Whisky mixed with the sickliness of the sherry he hides in the garage, and something else, bitter and hard to identify. Splinters of light needle you through cracks in the door. There’s dust everywhere. When you stand up the black skirt of your school uniform will be grey with dirt. Tomorrow he will shout at you when you come down to breakfast. You already know what he’ll say. He will tell you you’re filthy, you should be ashamed.
The footsteps move further away and you let yourself exhale. Through a knothole in the door you can see into the living room. Your mother is keeping her mouth shut while your father waits
for her to move or argue, looking for his excuse. Your mouth is full of dust. You close your eyes and try to swallow. When you open them again your mother is trapped. He’s caught her by the tops of her arms, hands flapping against her sides. Your brother is trying to melt into the flowered wallpaper. It’s hard to tell what he’s thinking, his face frozen in a grimace or a smile. Your father lands punch after punch on your mother’s arms and ribs and belly. Tomorrow she will put on lipstick, go to work as usual, the neighbours will never know. But one day, he might go too far. An ambulance will take your mother away and no one will remember to set you free.
Your brother’s expression is the thing that frightens you most. Relaxed, as if he’s watching his favourite programme on TV. The cupboard is shrinking, in a few seconds the air will have been used up. You want to run into the light, but you must stay there, for as long as it takes. You listen to the dull beat of your father’s fists. Your mother is trying not to cry, but sometimes she can’t help herself and a breathless moan escapes her. Your brother leans back, making himself comfortable, storing your father’s actions in his memory.
The beating sound has stopped, and you know what will happen next. Your father’s footsteps are returning. There’s no point in crying, because he knows every hiding place. He has stolen the key from your mother’s pocket and he won’t care how hard you beg. Tears are for cry-babies he says, and when he hits you, it will be harder than before.
I peered into the metal box without stepping inside. It had the familiar smell of all hospital lifts, handwash and antiseptic, an undertone of urine and fear. I had only managed the twenty-four-storey journey to the psychology department once, with my eyes closed, holding my breath. It wasn’t the speed that got me, just the space itself. Tiny and airless, no windows to escape through. I forced myself over the threshold, keeping the door open with my hand, but panic kicked in immediately, a surge of adrenalin just under my ribcage. My reflection stared at me from the mirrored back wall. My face was white and pinched, eyes glittering with anxiety. I looked like a small blonde child dressed up in her mother’s smartest clothes. I backed out of the lift and the doors snapped shut, almost catching my fingers. My only option was to take the stairs, all two hundred and seventy-eight of them. By now the signs on every landing were imprinted on my memory: oncology, urology, orthopaedics, X-ray. But at least the daily climb was keeping me fit — at a steady pace the ascent took less than six minutes.
I was out of breath by the time I arrived at my consulting room, with just a few minutes to spare before the first appointment of the day. I changed out of my running shoes into a smart pair of heels. One of the unwritten rules is that psychologists must be well dressed, to convince their patients that the world is safe and orderly. But I needn’t have bothered.
There was a handwritten note on my computer, informing me that my morning appointments had been cancelled, and a police officer would collect me in an hour’s time. For a second my legs felt weak. I pictured my brother locked in a holding cell, just like last time, swearing his head off at anyone who tried to question him or bring him a cup of tea. Then I remembered that my name was on the rota for Met duty that week, and my heart rate slowed again.
My inbox was crammed with new emails: an invitation to speak to the British Psychological Society in April, eight GP referrals, dozens of circulars from drug companies offering extravagant bribes. I should have worked on my case notes, but my eyes kept drifting towards the window. The sky was a dull January white, threatening to snow, but the view was still staggering. London Bridge Station laid out like a train set, with half a dozen miniature engines arriving or leaving, and to the east the Thames curving past Tower Bridge to Canary Wharf. Red lights were blinking on the roofs of banks, while the money men cheated at sums. In the opposite direction office buildings lined the river, almost as tall as St Paul’s. To a girl from the suburbs it was still the most glamorous view in the world.
Switchboard called just after ten to say that a visitor was waiting for me in reception. When I reached the ground floor an enormous man was standing by the entrance. He was wearing a pale grey suit, and from a distance he looked almost completely round.
‘Dr Quentin?’ He walked towards me with surprising grace for a man carrying at least twenty stone. ‘DCI Don Burns, from Southwark police. Thanks for giving me your time.’
His accent was an odd hybrid of raw south London and genteel Edinburgh. Behind his thick black-rimmed glasses, his eyes were small and inquisitive in the pale moon of his face.
I offered a polite smile in reply, but felt like reminding him that I had no choice. The department was obliged to carry out assessments for the Met whenever a request came in. Any other work, no matter how important, was put on hold.
When we reached the car park, DCI Burns took several minutes to squeeze behind the steering wheel of his drab blue Mondeo. The car smelled of stale coffee, cooking fat and smoke. He must have stopped at McDonald’s on his way to work, followed his breakfast with a quick fag.
‘I could have walked to the station,’ I commented, ‘saved you a trip.’
‘We’re not going there. I’ll fill you in on the way.’
He drove south, swearing under his breath at the traffic on Borough High Street. He seemed to have forgotten he had a passenger, completely absorbed in the journey, until we reached the embankment.
‘Detective Chief Inspector. That’s top rank, isn’t it?’ I asked.
He kept his eyes fixed on the road. ‘Not far off. I look after most of the borough.’
‘Quite a responsibility. Couldn’t one of your underlings take me?’
‘I didn’t want them to.’ We drove past Battersea Power Station. It looked like a massive table lying on its back, concrete legs pointing at the sky. ‘We’re going to see Morris Cley. Have you heard of him?’
‘Vaguely. He killed someone, didn’t he?’
‘That’s him,’ he frowned. ‘A prostitute called Jeannie Anderson in Bermondsey four years ago. He gets out of Wandsworth tomorrow because some hotshot lawyer got his sentence cut in half.’
‘How come?’
‘Unsafe evidence,’ Burns sighed, ‘which is total bollocks. He managed to con the judge into thinking Cley’s got learning difficulties.’
‘And he hasn’t?’
‘No way.’ He scowled at the traffic jam ahead. ‘Slippery little bastard pretends to be simple, but he kept us running round for weeks. I want to know how closely to watch him when he’s out.’
‘Sounds like he’s not your favourite client.’
‘Not exactly. The bloke’s as dodgy as they get.’ Burns gave the indicator an angry flick, like he would have preferred to snap it off and hurl it through the window. ‘Guess who his mum’s best mates were?’
‘Who?’
‘Ray and Marie Benson.’
I couldn’t think of a reply. I knew plenty about the Bensons because a friend from the Maudsley had been consultant psychologist during the court case, and Ray and Marie had kept the tabloids happy for months. Pictures of the girls they killed appeared on every front cover, as if they were movie stars. Some of them were found under the patio of the hostel the Bensons ran off Southwark Bridge Road. One in the garden, another sealed inside a disused chimney, and a few more dumped on waste ground. Anyone who could read or owned a TV knew more than they wanted to about the couple’s grisly recreational activities.
Wandsworth Common appeared in the car window. Women were pushing prams along the footpaths, joggers running slow laps round the perimeter, like there was all the time in the world.
‘Ever visited Wandsworth before?’ Burns asked.
‘I haven’t had the pleasure.’
‘Paradise,’ he muttered. ‘Sixteen hundred blokes, high as kites on every drug under the sun.’
The prison looked like a cross between a Gothic castle and a Victorian workhouse, with filthy windows and a gate big
enough to drive a juggernaut through. It was so vast it blotted out most of the sky.
‘Welcome to England’s biggest clink.’ Burns flashed his ID at the entrance and we were waved inside.
The interview room was miles along a corridor that must have been white once upon a time. I was beginning to regret the clothes I’d chosen that morning. My skirt was too tight to take a proper stride, and my high heels clattered on the tiled floor like a pair of castanets. Rivulets of sweat were pouring down Burns’s face.
‘He’s in the Onslow Centre,’ he puffed, ‘for his own protection. The bloke won’t be getting many bon voyage cards tomorrow.’
‘How did he kill the girl?’ I asked.
‘There’s no nice way to put it.’ Burns wiped his face with a large white handkerchief. ‘Basically, he shagged her, then smothered her with a pillow.’
‘They were in a relationship?’
‘Christ, no.’ He looked appalled. ‘He says they were, but you’ll see why not when you clap eyes on him.’
‘I can hardly wait.’
Burns pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose with a stubby index finger. ‘She looked a bit like you, actually.’ His gaze rested on me. ‘Petite, green eyes, shoulder-length blonde hair.’
‘You mean, I’m his type?’
‘I’m afraid so, yeah.’
 
Footsteps grew louder in the corridor. I’ve always hated prisons. Everything about them makes me want to run for the door, especially the way sounds carry. You can hear keys twisting in locks half a mile away. When Morris Cley was shown into the interview room I could see why he had to pay
for sex. Grey hair jutted from his skull in awkward tufts, and everything about his face was slightly wrong. Heavy eyebrows lowered above eyes that had sunk so deep into their sockets that I couldn’t tell what colour they were. From the dullness of his skin I guessed that he hadn’t been outside for weeks. When we shook hands he held my fingers for a few seconds too long. His touch was clammy, and it made me desperate to run outside, find somewhere to scrub my hands.
‘Afternoon, Morris,’ Burns barked from his seat in the corner of the room.
Cley’s thin shoulders were hunched around his ears, his eyes flitting from the floor to the window and back again. He lowered himself on to the plastic chair cautiously, as if it might be booby-trapped.
‘I hear you’re going home tomorrow,’ I said.
‘No home to go to.’ His voice was high-pitched and breathless.
‘Rubbish,’ Burns snapped. ‘You’re going to your mum’s.’
‘She’s dead,’ Cley frowned.
‘How long ago did you lose your mum?’ I asked.
Cley looked confused for a minute, then did a slow calculation on his fingers before answering. ‘Five months, one week, two days.’
‘I’m sorry to hear that,’ I told him.
He studied the backs of his hands, thin fingers twisting into knots.
‘What about you, Morris?’ Burns’s voice was cold enough to freeze anyone in listening distance. ‘Are you sorry for what you did?’
The question had an immediate impact. Cley’s head slumped over his knees, as if someone had cut the string that held him upright. ‘It wasn’t me,’ he whispered. ‘I never touched her.’
‘Shut up,’ Burns hissed in disgust. ‘I’m sick of your rubbish.’
I kept my peace. It was easier to learn about Cley from watching his reactions than asking questions. His whole body was trembling, face still turned to the ground. A tear splashed on to the dirty lino.
‘Don’t give us any more play-acting, Morris,’ Burns groaned. ‘I had a bellyful the first time.’
When Cley eventually lifted his head his expression was a mixture of fear and resentment. He looked like a child who would rather run away than face another beating.
‘Tell me what happened to you, Morris,’ I said quietly.
‘Jeannie was my friend, I gave her money sometimes. I wanted her to have nice things.’ Cley’s falsetto relaxed to a lower pitch as he remembered her.
‘How long did you know Jeannie for?’
Cley considered the question carefully before answering. ‘A long time. I saw her every week. I asked her to be my girlfriend.’
‘And what did she say?’
His head lolled forward again and another fat tear landed on the knee of his grey prison-issue tracksuit. ‘She said she wasn’t good enough for me.’ Cley struggled to regain control, rubbing his eyes with his balled fists.
‘But you didn’t agree?’
He shook his head violently. ‘She loved me. I know she did, because she let me sleep in her bed sometimes.’
Burns gave a loud sigh and Cley’s mouth sealed itself. There was a rime of dirt around the collar of his grey top, and I wondered how often he risked using the communal showers. No wonder he was being kept in the secure wing. There might as well have been a neon sign over his head spelling out the word victim. When we got up to leave, his eyes lingered on my face.
‘Alice Quentin.’ He repeated my name slowly, as if he was doing everything in his power to commit it to memory.
 
On the way back Burns stopped at a greasy spoon on Wandsworth Road.
‘He took a serious shine to you,’ he commented. ‘You handled him well though. Some of my girls wouldn’t stay in the same room, said he gave them the heebie-jeebies.’
He was slugging down a large black coffee and I fought the urge to tell him to lay off the caffeine. The last thing his heart needed was a chemically induced workout. Beads of sweat had gathered on his forehead, as though sitting down was just as exhausting as standing up. The exchange at the prison had taught me more about his personality than about Cley’s. Obsessive, struggling to empathise, stress levels hitting the roof.
I stirred sugar into my cappuccino. ‘What’s Cley’s IQ?’
‘Less than fifty, but that means bugger all. Playing dumb’s his party trick.’
‘You told me he didn’t have learning difficulties.’
Burns shrugged. ‘The little shit probably cheated in the test.’
‘But you’re positive it was him who killed the girl?’
Burns nodded vigorously, double chins rippling. ‘Open and shut: his semen inside her, and bob’s your uncle, unanimous guilty verdict.’
‘Was there any other proof?’
‘He was her last punter.’ Burns gave me the long unblinking stare that liars always favour. ‘Trust me, it’s all there.’
‘Right.’ I watched him drop his gaze.
‘Okay, the case was a bit light on forensics but Cley had no alibi, nothing to defend himself with.’

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