‘So perhaps you’d better take it from the beginning. Where exactly have you been?’ Bob’s voice wavered between relief and harshness as he confronted the pair on the sofa, Emily clutching her bearded young man’s hand as though joined to it from birth. They were both, he noticed, as grubby as a street couple but there was a radiant glow in his daughter’s face that made his heart sink.
‘Well, we’ve been at the protest, you see — we spent two nights there, on a platform. It was fabulous, Dad, you could feel the tree creaking around you, and see all the birds and squirrels that depend on it too! The whole wood is like that and they’re cutting it down just for a tacky shopping centre …’
‘No, hold on a moment.’ Bob raised both hands. ‘Who’s this young man, anyway?’
‘I’m Larry,’ the wispy beard and ponytail said. ‘You’re Bob, I guess.’
‘Yes,’ Bob admitted reluctantly, offended by the boy’s use of his first name. ‘Emily’s father, as I’m sure you know.’
‘Yeah, well, it’s because of me that it happened, you see. I mean about Emily coming.’
‘Coming where?’
‘To the protest, Dad!’ Emily burst in. ‘You’re not listening. You see, Larry phoned me, three days ago was it? — when I was pissed off with all this shit about the GCSEs …’
Bob registered the new foul language with shock. She had rarely used such words at home before, and never with such brutal new-found fluency. It was all of a piece with the dirt and the fleece-lined denim jacket which, he thought vaguely, was different, too. But then this glowing self-assured Emily was not someone he’d seen before, either.
‘ … so he said why not come down to the protest and so I did, Dad, and it’s brilliant. I mean it’s so much more real than anything else — there are people who’ve actually got the guts to stand up and do something to stop the fucking meathead bastards tearing the place to shreds. I mean do you know what they do? Some of those trees are more than a hundred and fifty years old and they just go in there with bloody great chainsaws and cranes and tear them down in a few minutes. And nobody gives a toss! It opens your eyes, Dad, it really does!’
‘So you spent two nights there?’ Bob managed, as she paused for breath.
‘Yes, and I’m sorry I didn’t phone, Dad, I really am, only I didn’t have my mobile and you can see I’m OK now, can’t you …?’
‘Have you any idea …’ Bob began, but then the front door opened and Sarah walked in with the detective, Terry Bateson.
When she saw Emily she stood quite still, trembling. To Bob’s surprise Bateson put an arm round her shoulder. Emily stood up, smiling nervously. ‘Hi, Mum.’
What’s happened, Bob wondered, she’s struck dumb. This is having an impact on her, at last. Why doesn’t she move?
Emily stepped forward, nervously, but Sarah stayed frozen and Bob thought oh no, it’s not relief or joy she’s feeling but anger. The cruel vindictive bitch — she’s going to punish the child for coming home! Then Sarah reached out and smothered the girl in an embrace that became a storm of tears. First no emotion and then too much, Bob thought. There were tears in Emily’s eyes, too, but her feelings seemed more like embarrassment and guilt.
After almost two minutes of weeping Sarah stepped back, shaking her head slowly.
‘Where in hell have you been?’
‘At the tree protest, Mum. With Larry. This is Larry.’
Sarah ignored the young man as though he were a log which Emily had dragged home and dumped on the sofa.
‘You have no idea, have you …? We thought you were dead!’
‘Oh Mum, don’t exaggerate. I mean I know I didn’t phone but …’
‘Why do you think I’m here with a policeman? I’ve just been to the mortuary, Emily. There was a body there. They thought it was you.’
In the stunned silence a flush of increasing embarrassment mottled Emily’s face. ‘But that’s just stupid, Mum! How could it be me? I’m just fine …’
‘It’s not stupid, Emily. The body was wearing your coat.’
‘My coat? Oh … Oh no.’ Watching, Terry thought he’d never seen anyone’s face go from red to white so quickly. She swayed, and he stepped forward to catch the girl under her arms and lower her to the sofa as Sarah continued, looking at Bob for the first time.
‘It was Jasmine. Jasmine Hurst. She’s had her throat cut.’
When Emily recovered Terry found out what he needed to know, for now. Numbly, with her new boyfriend’s arm around her shoulder, Emily explained how she had met Jasmine that first night, at the protest camp. They knew each other, of course, but according to Emily not particularly well; Jasmine had been Simon’s girlfriend, that was all. Emily didn’t see her brother often, didn’t get on with him that well. She shuddered and looked away.
‘Emily?’ Terry prompted gently. ‘Is there something else?’
The words were too quiet at first, so he asked her to repeat them. ‘Neither did Jasmine,’ she murmured defiantly. ‘She didn’t get on with Simon either. They quarrelled. She told me.’
‘Emily, for heaven’s sake!’ Sarah whispered.
‘When was that, Emily?’ Terry asked.
‘A while ago, I think. That’s why she left him. She isn’t … wasn’t his girlfriend any more. She had another bloke, one of the protesters. Dave, I think?’ She looked to Larry for confirmation.
‘Dave … Brodie, his name is,’ Larry agreed. ‘He’s a nurse, I think.’
‘Address?’
‘No, sorry.’ The young man scratched his wispy beard, then shook his head. Bob found himself having to suppress a deep, irrational hatred for this boy, as though all this were somehow his fault, and could be put right if he would leave now, and never come back.
‘Don’t worry, we’ll find it.’ Terry turned back to Emily. ‘So why did she have your jacket?’
‘We swapped. This is hers.’ Emily looked at the grubby fleece-lined denim jacket she was wearing with sudden horror, and almost took it off before hugging it tightly round herself instead. ‘She said she wasn’t going to sleep out and if I was this’d be warmer, and anyway I never really liked that red and blue jacket. Sorry Mum, I know you gave it me but …’
‘It doesn’t matter,’ said Sarah quietly.
‘When did you change the jackets, Emily?’ Terry persisted.
‘That same night. Wednesday, was it? Yes, Wednesday.’
‘And where was Jasmine going?’
‘Back to her boyfriend’s, I suppose. I can’t remember.’
‘Did you see her again?’
‘No.’ Emily began to cry and Terry got up. ‘That’s all for now,’ he said to Sarah and Bob. ‘I’ll need proper statements later, for the inquest, but that can wait. At least your daughter’s back. I’ll let myself out.’
‘So what have we got, doc?’
To Terry’s irritation, Will Churchill was cleaning his teeth with a match. His very presence at the initial post-mortem report was an implied criticism, without that.
‘As you see the cause of death is obvious. Massive haemorrhage due to the fact that someone’s had a go at cutting her head clean off. Severed the neck right back to the vertebrae.’
‘Anything you can tell us about the weapon?’
Dr Jones shrugged. ‘Big, sharp. Possibly serrated.’
‘Serrated? You can tell that?’ Terry asked.
‘Can’t be certain yet, but it’s a possibility. Look at these marks on the bone, here. I’ll know more when I’ve had them under a microscope. Maybe a bayonet, hunting knife, something like that. A long blade anyway, six inches at least.’
‘So he went prepared,’ Will Churchill said.
‘Unless he needed a six-inch knife for self-defence, by the river,’ Dr Jones said wryly. ‘Have you found a weapon yet?’
Terry shook his head.
‘Well, if you do find one pop it in here. I’ll see if it matches the wounds. There’ll be bloodstains too unless it’s been thoroughly washed. On his clothes too almost certainly.’
‘What about the bruise on the face?’ Terry asked. ‘Did he beat her up beforehand?’
Dr Jones frowned. ‘Some time before, if he did. That bruise is a few hours old. Didn’t happen at the time of death. This did, though — or just before.’
He whisked away a sheet from the lower half of the girl’s body, and Terry looked at her hips and genital area, the focus of so much attraction in life, so waxen and meat-like in death. Once a lithe young woman, now a carcass on a butcher’s slab, defaced by their cuts and probes, prying into her most private place of all, sliced open now for ease of inspection.
‘Bruising to the external labia, here and here. Internal bruising too. These bruises aren’t very developed though. Must have been done within half an hour of death, I’d say.’
‘Any semen?’
Dr Jones actually smiled, and produced a microscope slide with a triumphant flourish. ‘Taraaa! Just a trace, but quite conclusive nonetheless — you find the wicked laddie, gentlemen, and I’ll send him down. No room for doubt.’
Churchill smiled. ‘That’ll make a nice change, at least. Now all we need is a suspect.’
When Terry left, the four of them sat silent for a while, staring at nothing, like survivors of a bomb blast. Bob was still taking in the fact of Jasmine’s death, and the horror of what he alone knew. Simon hadn’t been quarrelling with Emily outside the old man’s house — it had been Jasmine, it must have been! And that was hugely, horribly important. Why had hadn’t he told Terry Bateson just now?
And what would Sarah say if he had? She had always been protective of Simon. She was protecting him now. ‘You shouldn’t have said that, about Simon quarrelling with Jasmine,’ she was saying to Emily.
‘But it’s true, mum. She told me.’
‘Yes, but don’t you see? They’ll think he killed her!’ Sarah started walking nervously up and down. ‘That’s how the police work — any little hint like that sends them rushing off in the wrong direction — towards Simon, for God’s sake!’
‘Don’t be silly, mum — of course he couldn’t kill her.’
‘Of course not, no — but you see how important it is what you say.’ Suddenly her attention was distracted by the sight of Emily’s young man. What’s he doing here, she thought. We don’t need him. She attempted a polite, hostess-type smile. ‘I think you’d better go.’
‘Er, yeah, okay.’ The young man began to get up. ‘It’s a bad time.’
But Emily dragged him down again beside her. ‘No! I want him to stay. I’ve just come home and you’re thinking about Simon again, aren’t you, mum? At least Larry cares about me.’
‘And we don’t, I suppose? We’ve been looking for you for two days, Emily! And Jasmine’s dead!’
‘I do know that, Mum. It’s awful.’
‘You don’t know it, not really. I’ve just seen her body, wearing your jacket. Emily, I thought it was going to be you!’
‘So it’s all my fault now, is it?’ Emily shook her head furiously, tears in her eyes — of self-pity, Sarah thought coldly. Teenagers. As if she’s the one suffering here.
The young man put one arm round Emily’s shoulder while he stroked her hair with the other. ‘It must have been terrible, seeing that body, Mrs Newby,’ he ventured, to Sarah’s surprise.
‘Yes, it was.’ This mediation from a complete stranger who had caused all this trouble confused Sarah deeply. She struggled to remain polite. ‘Look, I’m sorry, I don’t remember your name.’
‘Larry. Larry Dyson.’
‘Well, Larry, since you’re here, do you mind explaining exactly why you asked Emily to go away with you to this … tree protest of yours for two nights? You can see the monumental amount of trouble it’s caused.’
Sarah’s sharp tone infuriated Emily further. ‘He didn’t ask me, I chose to go!’
Larry nodded. ‘Yeah, well, that’s right. You may not realise it, Mrs Newby, but Emmy really was very unhappy. She told me how she was feeling and when I said where I was going she asked to come with me. No one knew anything was going to happen to Jasmine. And direct action is important. Just as important as getting a few bits of paper from school.’
Emmy, Sarah thought. This ridiculous boy even wants to change her name. But before she could respond Bob took over, in headmaster mode.
‘GCSEs aren’t just bits of paper, young man — they can affect your whole life. You’d know that if you were a student.’
‘I am a student, thank you very much. At St John’s.’
‘Well, that’s something, at least. Doing what?’
‘Earth sciences. I do know what I’m talking about. I study the environment, as it happens, as well as actually trying to do something about it.’
‘You could have phoned, Emily,’ Sarah said. ‘Didn’t anyone have a mobile?’
‘Yes, but I thought if I phoned you’d just chew my head off — like you’re both doing now! Come on, Larry, we’d better leave.’ She stood abruptly, but Bob blocked her way to the door.
‘Oh no. You’re not going anywhere. Not again.’
‘Dad! Please — let me go!’
‘No.’ It seemed to Sarah that Bob was about to resort to physical restraint, which would be ridiculous, because he was the most clumsy of men. But of course he was right, Emily couldn’t possibly just walk out again. Not now, after all this. Sarah stood beside Bob for support. If he had no arguments, she had.
‘Look, we’ve all had a terrible shock, and walking out now won’t make it any better. Anyway, Emily, you’re not sixteen yet, so if Larry has had any kind of sexual relationship with you he’s committing an offence. You do realise that, don’t you?’
‘Yes, well it’s a bit late for that now!’
Silence. Mother and daughter stared at each other. ‘You mean, you have …’
Emily smiled. ‘There’s no need to look shocked, Mum, everyone does it! You did!’
‘That’s different,’ Sarah responded, weakly. ‘You know it is …’
‘No it isn’t. How old were you when Simon was born? Sixteen?’
‘You’re not pregnant?’ Bob burst in.
‘Oh come on, Dad! I do have some sense. More than Mum had, anyway. I brought Larry here for you to meet him. It’s important, Mum.’
And so it comes full circle, Sarah thought. Did my parents feel like this too, all those years ago? She tried and failed to make a pattern out of the kaleidoscope of emotions swirling through her mind — anger, regret, a piercing sense of loss, a sense of her own and Bob’s growing irrelevance in Emily’s eyes. But after the horror of Jasmine’s death it was hard to focus on this too. She was going to have to tell Simon about Jasmine soon, poor boy. But first there was this.
Sarah looked at the young couple standing defiantly in front of her and thought that’s how I was, that’s exactly how Kevin and I must have looked. She began to feel a strange joy, too, as well as enormous anxiety, and a growing curiosity about this intense skinny grubby young man who had sneaked into their house like a gypsy thief and stolen their daughter away. Succeeding all these was a desire not to get this wrong as her own parents had done; as she and Bob had done with Simon. We mustn’t fail with Emily too.
Bob was floundering too. ‘Look, Emily love, we’re not Neanderthals. If you want to have a boyfriend that’s fine. But you don’t have to move out, of course not. You’re far too young for that. This is your home, for goodness’ sake.’
Emily hesitated. ‘Yes, dad, that’s why we came here. But if you won’t accept Larry …’
Sarah found her voice. ‘We’ve only just met him, Emily. And we’ve been through the most terrible two days. But maybe it’s a blessing that you’ve found this young man, after all. We would like to get to know him, really. Please, don’t go.’
It was, Emily reflected later, very possibly the first time in her life that her mother had actually asked her to do something. She hesitated, not having learnt the appropriate response. Larry tugged her hand gently, pulling her back towards the sofa, making up her mind for her.
‘I’ll get some coffee,’ said Bob. ‘I think we all need some.’
‘I’m taking over this case, Bateson,’ Will Churchill observed casually on the steps outside the mortuary. ‘You’ve enough unsolved mysteries on your plate as it is.’
Terry was stunned. There was no way this decision was based on concern for his personal welfare. ‘May I ask why, sir?’
Churchill strolled towards his car. ‘Simple. This is a high profile case that’s likely to receive a lot of media exposure, so it deserves the best quality attention from our side.’
‘And you think I can’t provide that, sir?’ The insult had to be deliberate. Churchill put a patronising arm on his shoulder but withdrew it hurriedly at the look on Terry’s face.
‘What I think, Terence old son, is that your mind’s on other things. Even this morning, you were late at the crime scene …’
‘I was at my kid’s school when I was called, sir. It only took a few minutes but it was important for her!’
‘Well, exactly, there’s an example. We all understand your family problems but it doesn’t help your work. Look at this Harker case — the bugger gets off and why? Because his fancy knickers barrister catches you telling lies during interrogation! It was in the Evening Press — York detective lies to rape suspect. How’s that help public confidence in the police, eh? You tell me!’
‘It was a trick with words, sir. All lawyers do it.’
‘Only if we give them the chance. Plus she found an alibi witness you should have known about. So there we are, a public laughing stock. What’s tonight’s headline, do you think? Serial rapist strikes again?’
‘More than likely, yes sir.’ Terry nodded, remembering the string of such articles since the Clayton and Whitaker cases. ‘But this time we may have got him. After all, this girl Jasmine Hurst was killed in the same way as Maria Clayton — throat cut with a knife, out of doors in a lonely area — only this time he’s left some semen. So maybe her killer killed Clayton as well.’
‘Back to your serial rapist theory, eh, Terence?’Churchill laughed. ‘Didn’t you come to me, time and time again, claiming Gary Harker did all these crimes! Or did I dream that, perhaps? Tell me I dreamt it.’
‘No, sir, that’s what I said.’
‘Yet here he is walking the streets again with three crimes unsolved. Or four, if you include this one. And even you can hardly tell me that Harker killed that girl in there!’ His eyes widened in disbelief at the look on Terry’s face. ‘Oh come on, you can’t believe that!’
‘It is a very remote possibility, sir. As it happens he was free six or eight hours before she was killed. But there’s no motive, no other connection.’
‘No?’ Churchill looked at him pityingly. ‘Then I suggest you concentrate on the facts. Do you have any leads?’
‘There is one, sir, yes. I was intending to talk to him later today.’
‘Who’s that then?’
‘A lad called Simon Newby. Jasmine Hurst’s ex-boyfriend. They quarrelled, apparently, and she left him.’
‘Newby … Newby …’ Churchill pondered. ‘Don’t I know that name?’
‘His mother, sir,’ Terry admitted reluctantly. ‘She happens to be the barrister who defended Gary Harker.’
Churchill’s mouth widened in a slow, incredulous grin. ‘You’re kidding.’
‘No sir, I’m not.’
‘Well, there you are then!’ Churchill laughed aloud. ‘What’s his address?’
Terry told him, and Churchill got swiftly into his car and drove away, still laughing. Terry sighed, thinking of Sarah trembling beside Jasmine’s body, and the words of Dr Jones, the forensic pathologist, in front of Churchill later. Evidence conclusive — you find the wicked laddie gentlemen, and I’ll send him down. No room for doubt.
This was just the sort of case an ambitious Detective Chief Inspector would want, he thought, to make his mark in the media.