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No Lovelier Death
No Lovelier Death Read online
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
Dedication
Chapter one - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 02.29
Chapter two - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 04.23
Chapter three - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 08.15
Chapter four - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST, 2007. 11.31
Chapter five - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 16.03
Chapter six - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 18.19
Chapter seven - SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 19.02
Chapter eight - MONDAY, 13 AUGUST 2007. 09.12
Chapter nine - MONDAY, 13 AUGUST 2007. 10.59
Chapter ten - MONDAY, 13 AUGUST 2007. 13.10
Chapter eleven - MONDAY, 13 AUGUST 2007. 17.25
Chapter twelve - TUESDAY, 14 AUGUSTt 2007. 10.47
Chapter thirteen - TUESDAY, 14 AUGUST 2007. 15.57
Chapter fourteen - TUESDAY, 14 AUGUST 2007. 19.35
Chapter fifteen - WEDNESDAY, 15 AUGUST 2007. 10.13
Chapter sixteen - WEDNESDAY, 15 AUGUST 2007. 15.39
Chapter seventeen - THURSDAY, 16 AUGUST 2007. 03.55
Chapter eighteen - THURSDAY, 16 AUGUST 2007. 11.52
Chapter nineteen - THURSDAY, 16 AUGUST 2007. 18.56
Chapter twenty - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 08.46
Chapter twenty-one - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 10.31
Chapter twenty-two - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 11.47
Chapter twenty-three - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 15.35
Chapter twenty-four - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 21.35
Chapter twenty-five - FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2007. 22.31
Chapter twenty-six - SATURDAY, 18 AUGUST 2007. 06.49
Chapter twenty-seven - SATURDAY, 18 AUGUST 2007. 11.43
Chapter twenty-eight - SATURDAY, 18 AUGUST 2007. 15.41
Chapter twenty-nine - SATURDAY, 18 AUGUST 2007. 21.34
Chapter thirty - SUNDAY, 19 AUGUST 2007. 07.26
Chapter thirty-one - SUNDAY, 19 AUGUST 2007. 14.28
Chapter thirty-two - SUNDAY, 19 AUGUST 2007. 20.39
Afterwards
Also by Graham Hurley from Orion
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT OF ENGAGEMENT reaper
THE DEVIL’S BREATH
THUNDER IN THE BLOOD
SABBATHMAN
THE PERFECT SOLDIER
HEAVEN’S LIGHT
NOCTURNE
permissible limits
AIRSHOW (non-fiction)
Detective Inspector Joe Faraday Investigations
TURNSTONE
THE TAKE
ANGELS PASSING
DEADLIGHT
cut to black
BLOOD AND HONEY AND HONEY
ONE UNDER
THE PRICE OF DARKNESS
No Lovelier Death
GRAHAM HURLEY
Orion
www.orionbooks.co.uk
An Orion ebook
Copyright © Graham Hurley 2009
All rights reserved
The right of Graham Hurley to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
First published in Great Britain in 2009 by Orion
An imprint of the Orion Publishing Group
Orion House, 5 Upper St Martin’s Lane,
London wc2H 9ea
An Hachette UK Company
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
eISBN : 978 1 4091 0691 3
ISBN 978 0 75289 906 0 (Export Trade Paperback)
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
www.orionbooks.co.uk
This ebook produced by Jouve, France
That England, that was wont to conquer others,
Hath made a shameful conquest of itself
Richard II, William Shakespeare
Acknowledgements
My thanks to the following for their time and patience: Rory Beard, Klone Boams, Dorothy Bone, Theo Chadna, Martin Chudleigh, Dr Debbie Cook, Nigel Crockford, Shirley Dinnell, Robert Doolan, John Hamer, Mark Harper, Martin Harrison, Jack Heasman, Barry Hill, Jack Hurley, Cheryl Jewitt, Neil Keeping, William Lambert, Terry Lowe, Tina Lowe, Jane Moody, Simon Parker, Lara Pechard, Jennifer Pollitt, Kevin Prior, Dave Sackman, Katie Sage, Christine Searle, Danielle Stoakes, Tony Tipping, Scott Whiffing, Nathalie West, Jessica Wretlind and Charles Wylie.
Bruce Marr and Paul O’Brien from the Portsmouth Preventing Youth Offending Project gave me valuable insights into Pompey youth culture while James Priory, Headmaster of Portsmouth Grammar School, was extremely generous with the temporary loan of a handful of his sixth-formers.
Viv Firman shared her poolside coaching secrets and introduced me to the awesome world of high-performance swimming. Dedication, at this level, is too small a word.
For D/I John Ashworth, a special mention. Along with Roly Dumont and Steve Watts, he’s been with Faraday from the beginning. If the series has won a reputation for authenticity, then much of the credit should go to their collective experience, wisdom and trust.
The usual bouquets to my editor, Simon Spanton, who has piloted the series into extremely challenging fictional waters, and to my wife, Lin, who is - as ever - in charge of the survival gear.
To Jack and Hannah
with love
Chapter one
SUNDAY, 12 AUGUST 2007. 02.29
Craneswater is the best address that money can buy in Portsmouth. Tucked away at the bottom of the island, with a Southsea postcode and regular calls from the Waitrose home delivery service, it offers privacy, neighbourliness and a certain peace of mind. Handsome Edwardian villas behind high brick walls. Ample space for the Volvo Estate and the wife’s Porsche. Invitations to tennis tournaments, with the promise of a poolside barbecue afterwards. Craneswater, Faraday had always believed, was the one corner of Pompey that somehow belonged to another city. Respectable. Civilised. Safe.
Faraday pulled his rusting Mondeo to a halt. It was half past two in the morning. Beyond the No Entry tape at the end of Sandown Road, he could see a line of white minibuses. On the other side of the road, two uniformed patrol cars and three white Ford Transit vans. Two of the vans, with their heavy metal grilles, belonged to the city’s Police Support Unit. The third, an incomer, was badged with the logo of the FSU.
The presence of the Force Support Unit was the clearest possible evidence that Detective Chief Inspector Gail Parsons hadn’t been joking. On the phone, summoning him from a hard-won sleep, Faraday’s immediate boss on the Major Crime Team had sounded shaken, even alarmed. Something substantial had clearly kicked off.
There were coppers everywhere: FSU guys in the full ninja gear, little knots of officers staring up at a big house on the left, an obviously harassed uniformed Inspector muttering into a mobile. Further down the road, a guy with a boisterous Alsatian was locked in conversation with a couple of blokes in forensic suits from Scenes of Crime.
Faraday produced his warrant card for one of the uniforms behind the tape. As he lowered the window, the music engulfed him, hammer blows of drum and bass, loud enough to make his bones ache. The uniform bent to the window. Parking was already tight. There might be spaces round the corner. Faraday nodded, still gazing at the scene in Sandown Road. The big house on the left, he thought. Party time.
The car parked, he found DCI Parsons round the corner in a huddle with Jerry Proctor. Proctor was a Crime Scene Coordinator. He rarely attended for anything less than homicide. The music, this close to the big house, was deafening, the shuddering bass line overscored with the drunken yells and whoops of partying adolescents.
‘What’s going on?’ Faraday mouthed. Windows in the house were all curtained, occasional chi
nks of light framing a glimpse of faces peering out.
Proctor spared Faraday a nod of welcome, then bent again to catch something Parsons was trying to say. She was a small squat woman with a huge chest and a definite sense of presence. Faraday had yet to draw his own conclusions but she’d arrived in the Major Crime Department with a reputation for ruthless self-advancement. Thirty five was young to have made Detective Chief Inspector.
He stepped back into the road. An investigator from the Scenes of Crime team hurried past with a couple of lamps on lighting stands. Faraday watched him as he disappeared into a driveway further down the street. This property, equally grand, was next door to the party house and something familiar about the heavy metal gates snagged in Faraday’s memory. He stared at them a moment, blaming the lateness of the hour and a lingering befuddlement that went with the best part of a bottle of Côtes-du-Rhône. Then he had it.
‘Bazza. Our old mate. Wouldn’t believe it, would you?’
Faraday, recognising the gruffness of the voice, turned to find a familiar looming presence beside him. Jerry Proctor was a big man, slightly intimidating in his sheer bulk, a veteran of countless crime scenes. Faraday rated him highly, trusted his judgement. DCI Parsons had disappeared.
‘So what’s the score?’ Faraday shouted. ‘What’s going on?’
‘Bunch of kids. Hundreds of the little scrotes. The party kicked off early and it’s got worse ever since. If it was my house, and you came back to that, I’d be suicidal.’
‘Who owns it?’
‘Some judge. He’s away on holiday, poor bastard.’
‘And that’s it?’ Faraday was looking at the line of police vehicles, the suited SOC guys, the heads bent to mobiles. Even a riot didn’t merit a response like this.
Proctor shot him a look. ‘No one’s told you? About Baz?’
‘No.’
Proctor studied Faraday a moment, then gestured down the road towards the still-open gates. Somewhere quieter. Somewhere they could have a proper conversation.
Faraday fell into step beside him, picking his way between the mill of officers. Bazza Mackenzie was a career criminal who’d turned his monopoly on cocaine supply into a major business empire. On one famous occasion Major Crime had tried to bring him down. Operation Tumbril, largely covert, had been blown to pieces by Mackenzie himself and Faraday was one of the CID officers who’d been hurt in the subsequent post-mortem.
Since then, years down the line, Bazza had gone from strength to strength. Twenty million quid’s worth of washed narco-loot had given him a portfolio of businesses from tanning salons and seafront hotels to property developments in Dubai and Spain. Faraday had never believed in the inevitable triumph of virtue and justice but Bazza Mackenzie, in his new incarnation, was the conclusive evidence that crime paid.
They were standing across the road from number 13, denied access by more tape. The Crime Scene Investigator must have set up his stands in the garden because the back of the house was washed with a hard bluish light. Faraday looked up at the rooftop balcony with its apron of smoked glass. The beach and the Solent were barely half a mile away. From his Craneswater chateau, Faraday thought, Mackenzie was King of the City.
‘He’s still living there?’
‘Yeah. Though just now he’s down at the Bridewell.’
‘We’ve arrested him?’
‘Too right, we have.’
‘What for?’
‘Sus homicide. Two bodies. Both beside his pool.’
Winter was asleep when his mobile began to trill. He groped on the floor beside the bed and struggled up on one elbow to check caller ID. Sweet Marie. Bazza’s missus.
‘Paul? Are you there? Speak to me.’
‘It’s two in the morning.’ Winter rubbed his eyes. ‘What’s the matter? ’
‘It’s Baz, Paul. He’s been arrested. In fact we both have.’
‘Where are you?’
‘The Bridewell. I haven’t seen him yet, not to talk to, but he’s definitely here.’
‘The Bridewell?’
Winter had a sudden vision of the custody suite at the city’s central police station. On a Saturday night, about now, the evening’s mayhem would be coming to the boil: drunks from the clubs, infant drug dealers nicked on supply charges, predatory psychos who’d handed out a beating to some passer-by. Most weekends the queue for the Custody Sergeant stretched round the block. Where did his new employer fit into all this?
‘It’s complicated, Paul. Baz has phoned Nelly. She’s coming down from Petersfield. We need you here too.’ Nelly Tien was Bazza’s solicitor, a ferocious Hong Kong Chinese.
The tremor in her voice told Winter she meant it. The best part of a year working for her husband had, to Winter’s surprise, cemented a real friendship. Marie was a strong woman. Coping with Bazza Mackenzie, you’d be nothing less. Whatever had taken the pair of them to the Bridewell deserved Winter’s full attention.
‘I’ll be there in ten.’ He tried to raise a smile. ‘Put the kettle on.’
Old times, Winter thought. He parked his new Lexus in front of the Magistrates Court and sauntered the fifty metres to the adjacent police station. A white minibus had just arrived and a couple of uniforms were shepherding a line of preppy-looking adolescents across the tarmac and into the station itself. One glance told Winter that most of them were pissed. He watched until the last of them, a gangly youth in surf shorts and flip-flops, disappeared inside, wondering what might have brought middle-class kids like these to the attention of Pompey’s finest. They didn’t look violent. They’d didn’t look sullen. Since when did an evening on cheap lager get you nicked?
Winter gave the kids a minute or two to clear the front desk before making his way inside. He hadn’t been inside a police station for over a year, not since the night they arrested him on the drink-drive charge, but the moment the door closed he felt his former life close around him. The same smell of unwashed bodies and over-brewed coffee, the same queue for the fingerprint machine, the same lippy drunks shouting their innocence from the cells along the corridor, the same waste-paper bins, overflowing with copies of the News and grease-stained all-day breakfast boxes. An informant of his, an old lag with loads of previous, had once told him that the custody suite on a Saturday night was your first real taste of life inside, and one look at the sweating turnkey beyond the desk told Winter he’d been spot on.
The Custody Sergeant was a forty-something veteran called Frank Summers. The last time Winter had seen him was up in the bar when one of the Major Crime D/Is had scored a big result and was shouting everyone a drink.
‘Well, well.’ It might have been a smile but Winter wasn’t sure. ‘Can’t keep you away, can we?’
Summers stepped across to the PC on the desk and it was a second or two before Winter realised he was about to be booked in.
‘Not me, Frank.’
‘No? Shame. What can we do for you, then?’
Winter explained about Marie Mackenzie. He understood she’d been nicked. He was here to lend a hand.
‘In what respect?’
‘Legal representation.’
‘But you’re not a brief. Not last time I checked.’
‘Friend, then. Appropriate adult. Any fucking thing, Frank. Just give me a break, let me see her. Couple of minutes and I’ll be out of your hair.’
‘Can’t do it, Mr W. As you well know.’
Winter held his eyes for a moment, knowing it was true. The last thing these guys would do for him was any kind of favour.
‘That’s a no, then?’ He said at last.
‘Afraid so.’
‘Has their brief turned up? Nelly Tien? Chinese lady?’
‘On her way down, as I understand it.’
‘So what’s the story? Why the drama?’
Frank Summers shook his head, dismissing Winter with a wave of his hand. Behind him, emerging from an office used by the duty solicitors, Winter recognised another face.
‘Jimmy …’ he cal
led.
D/C Jimmy Suttle paused. In his late twenties, he was tall with a mop of ginger hair and a dusting of freckles. He was carrying a couple of files and looked preoccupied. Spotting Winter, he stepped across to the front desk. Like the Custody Sergeant, he assumed the worst.
‘Not another DUI?’ Driving Under the Influence.
‘Very funny.’ Winter nodded towards the street. ‘You got a moment?’
Suttle frowned and glanced at his watch. Then, aware of the Custody Sergeant’s eyes on his back, he accompanied Winter towards the door.
‘Good lad.’ They were out on the pavement, walking towards Winter’s car.
‘That yours? The Lexus?’
‘Yeah.’
‘Legal, are you?’
‘No problem. We took the disqual to appeal, got it reduced to a year.’
‘Luck?’
‘Money. Shit-hot lawyer. Chinese woman. Work for Baz and you get the best.’
‘So I see.’ Suttle was looking at the Lexus. ‘What’s this about then?’
Winter took his time. As a working detective he’d taught Suttle everything he knew, and when the scan came through on the brain tumour, three long years ago, the boy had repaid him in spades. Working with Jimmy Suttle had been the closest Winter could imagine to having a child of his own and one of his few regrets about joining Mackenzie was the loss of a relationship he regarded as precious.
‘You doing OK, son?’ He put his hand on Suttle’s shoulder. ‘Life been good to you?’
‘I’m doing fine.’ He looked, if anything, impatient. ‘How can I help?’
‘Baz and Marie are in there.’ He nodded towards the Bridewell. ‘They got nicked tonight and I need to know why. Is that a problem for you?’