Read Blind to the Bones Online

Authors: Stephen Booth

Blind to the Bones (5 page)

‘Yes, I know,' said Fry.

‘Oh, of course you do.'

Fry could see the information from her personnel file gradually being dredged up into her DI's mind. The expression on his face changed as he remembered the awful details, became embarrassed for a moment, then resumed his professional manner.

‘You're from the Black Country yourself, aren't you, Diane?'

‘Yes, sir. That's where I'm from.'

The Black Country was the name given to the urban sprawl west of the city of Birmingham. Old industrial towns like Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Dudley, Sandwell and Walsall were in the Black Country. And many smaller communities, too – like Warley, where Fry had lived with her foster parents, a string of housing estates tucked between Birmingham and the M5 motorway. Right next door to Bearwood.

‘Anyway, the house the young people shared is in Darlaston Road, Bearwood. Emma's housemates say they left her in the house getting ready to travel home by train to Derbyshire for the Easter holidays. At least, that's what Emma told them she was doing, and they had no reason to doubt her.'

‘The housemates being Alex Dearden, Debbie Stark and Neil Granger,' said Fry, consulting the file.

‘They were all old friends, it seems. The two young men grew up in the same village as Emma, in Withens. Debbie Stark is from Mottram, a few miles away, but she was Emma's best friend at high school.'

West Midlands Police had sent copies of all their files to Derbyshire – there were reports of interviews conducted with Dearden, Stark and Granger, and with several others among Emma Renshaw's friends, neighbours, and classmates and teachers at the art school. Fry noted that the officer assigned to the missing person case had been based at the local Operational Command Unit headquarters in Smethwick – a place she knew well.

In fact, Fry could picture Darlaston Road, Bearwood, but wasn't sure at which end of the road she would find 360B, the address Emma Renshaw had shared. Bearwood possessed most of the local shops for the Warley area. She had been there many times.

‘I'm not clear on Emma's last-known movements,' she said. ‘Who was individually the last to see her? Or did the young people leave the house together?'

‘Neil Granger was the last to leave, by a matter of some minutes. He was on his way to work, but had overslept. He said he had been drinking the night before.'

‘Did Granger arrive at work on time?'

‘A few minutes late,' said Hitchens. ‘He had a car, which he drove into Birmingham. He claimed the traffic was heavy that morning, and it delayed him even more. The foreman at the site said it was unusual for Granger to be late for work, and he was normally very reliable. So he believed what Granger said, and didn't think anything of it. He said he had a lot more to worry about with his other employees.'

Emma had been nineteen when she disappeared, and the guidelines said that immediate enquiries should be made in the case of a missing female under twenty-one. They were considered vulnerable, and, if they went missing, statistically more likely to have been the victim of a crime.

So the police officer in Smethwick who had taken the case had followed the proper procedures. Mostly. He had enquired whether Emma had done anything similar previously, and had checked the information her parents had given him against the missing person files. He had confirmed that Emma wasn't involved in current criminal proceedings, in case she had left home to avoid prosecution for something her parents didn't know about. He had collected all the identifying details. He had recorded her full name, age, address and description, along with the two photographs provided by the Renshaws.

‘But if Emma was going home by train, how was she planning to get to the railway station?' said Fry.

‘By taxi – or so she told her housemates. West Midlands were unable to trace any taxi driver who picked her up from the house at Darlaston Road, or anywhere nearby. Nor was there a booking for that area where the passenger failed to appear. But I suppose she might have hailed a cab in the street.'

‘It's unlikely, in that neighbourhood.'

Hitchens nodded. ‘But West Midlands checked that, too.'

‘I wonder why Neil Granger didn't offer to give her a lift to the station, if he had a car?'

‘He said it was because he was already late for work, and he was afraid of getting in trouble. And Emma assured him she didn't need a lift.'

‘So he said.'

Fry turned back to the reports. Enquiries had been made at several pubs and clubs that Emma had been known to visit. Friends and classmates had been spoken to. The university had no indication that Emma had been having problems with her work, or emotional or financial difficulties, or had any intention of leaving the course. There was a note on the bottom of the officer's report that the parents of the missing person had agreed to any publicity.

It looked fairly comprehensive, at first glance. There was certainly a shortage of leads for West Midlands to have followed up, but all the usual enquiries had been gone through. No one had been able to suggest any reason why Emma should have decided to disappear, or anything she might have been worried about. No one had any idea where she might have gone – except back home to Withens.

‘So we need to talk to all the housemates again,' said Hitchens. ‘Alex Dearden lives and works here, in Edendale. Neil Granger moved out of Withens, too, but not very far – he's a few miles further down the Longdendale valley, in Tintwistle. Debbie Stark, I'm afraid, is still in the West Midlands. She got herself a job there after she graduated.'

‘Well, they could have scattered a lot further than that,' said Fry. ‘So we should think ourselves lucky.'

But to Fry's critical eye, the West Midlands reports had something missing. There seemed to be no air of urgency to them. Enquiries had taken place over a long period – several weeks, in fact. It was as if the officer assigned the case had been fitting it in between other jobs, when it was most convenient. And there was no mention of assistance being brought in from the local CID. No detective's name was appended to any of the enquiry reports.

It didn't really surprise her. In a huge metropolitan area, thousands of people were reported missing every year. Some priority was supposed to be given to women under twenty-one, but how many of those were there? And how many children and young people, too? The children were the biggest priority of all when it came to missing persons. Given a CID team already stretched to the limit by multiple murder cases, violent crime and drug problems, burglaries and car theft, how much attention could Emma Renshaw have expected, when there was no evidence that a crime had been committed?

Fry had been in that situation herself. She had worked in one of those CID offices. She guessed the officer had tried his best. But in the end, his sense of relief almost rose off the page as he concluded that the facts pointed towards Emma Renshaw having left the West Midlands, just as she had been supposed to do. He had passed the problem back to Derbyshire.

Fry shook her head, not sure whether she was puzzled, or whether she was trying to shake off the feeling that had been creeping up on her ever since she had taken the evidence bag in her hands.

‘You know, it's all too vague, sir,' she said. ‘It seems to me that none of Emma Renshaw's housemates was bothered enough about her to make quite sure that Emma could get to the station all right on her own. They
think
she was getting a taxi, but they don't know when, or where or how, or what taxi firm was coming to pick her up. And no one actually saw her leave the house.'

Hitchens shrugged. ‘Well, that's the way it is, Diane. You know it happens all the time. People just disappear through the cracks.'

She nodded. Hitchens was right, of course. Throughout the country, teenagers went missing all the time, and were never seen again. But Emma Renshaw had last been seen in Bearwood, in the Black Country, no more than a mile or two from her own childhood home. That made a difference.

‘And we have to consider the other possibility …' said Hitchens.

‘Sir?'

‘The possibility that Emma Renshaw may have lied to everyone – her parents, her friends and her housemates. She may never have intended coming home at all.'

‘Of course.'

Fry looked at the railway timetable attached to the reports. Emma had been due to catch a train from Birmingham New Street station a few minutes before eleven o'clock on the morning of Thursday, 12 April. Virgin Trains should have taken her to Manchester Piccadilly, where she would have had a quarter of an hour to change platforms and transfer to a local train. She had been expected to arrive at Glossop station at twenty past one, and her parents, Howard and Sarah Renshaw, had been waiting to collect her. But Emma hadn't got off the train. The Renshaws had tried to call her mobile phone, but had got only the message service. So they had waited for the next train from Manchester. And the next.

The schedule filled Fry with a sense of despair. No wonder the West Midlands officer had been glad to get the case off his desk. If Emma Renshaw had left the house in Darlaston Road as planned, there were two possibilities. Either she had disappeared in Birmingham, and had never made it to the train at all. Or she had vanished when she changed trains in Manchester.

Fry was looking at the names of two of the largest metropolitan areas in Britain, cities where a girl of nineteen could melt away so easily. A change of identity, and her family would never see her again, if she didn't want them to. Fry knew that all too well.

On the other hand, the evidence bag that she was holding contained a Motorola Talkabout with a bright blue inlay over the keys – a phone which Vodafone said had belonged to Emma Renshaw. Without a group of ramblers deciding it was time for a spring clean, the phone might have lain undiscovered for ever. If one of those ramblers hadn't been the mum of a teenager whose mobile phone had been stolen by muggers, it would have been sent to the council tip with the rest of the rubbish. And if it hadn't been for the police officer at Chapel-en-le-Frith who had taken the time and trouble to trace the owner of the phone, no one would ever have thought of submitting it for forensic examination.

But that's what they had done, and the result was in Fry's hands. Down the right side of the phone, the blue inlay was streaked with the dried residue of a dark brown liquid that had glued up the keys and trickled into the little hole where the lead for the re-charger should fit. According to the label on the bag, the stains had been confirmed as human blood.

Fry knew that she might be looking at the last remaining biological traces of Emma Renshaw. Her fingers might almost be touching the pathetic remnant of Emma's life, a desiccated dribble of her DNA.

And that was what opened up the tunnel of fear that she had already begun to slide down.

D
C Gavin Murfin had sandy hair and a pink face, and he always seemed to have dabs of tomato sauce on his lower lip. He was well past forty, yet he took no notice of any nagging about the condition of his heart. He had experience, though, and that was worth gold these days. Even Diane Fry had to admit it.

Fry found DC Murfin at his desk in the CID room, answering the phone with one hand and eating from a paper bag in the other. She waited impatiently until he put the phone down.

‘And I'll complain to the Chief Constable about
you
too, madam,' he said to the empty air. Then he looked up and grinned at Fry. ‘We're not providing the high quality of customer service the lady expects for her Council Tax.'

‘I hope you were polite, Gavin,' said Fry.

‘Polite? I charmed her so much that she's coming round straight away to have sex with me.'

But Fry wasn't in the mood for Murfin's brand of humour.

‘Gavin, what are you doing at the moment?'

‘Eh?'

‘Nothing much, by the look of it.'

‘I'm just having a minute, like.'

‘Well, your minute's up. There are crimes to be detected.'

‘I've already detected one this year, Diane.'

‘Well, it's time to get your average up. Let's see if we can make it one point five.'

Murfin sighed. ‘I'll just finish this sarnie.'

Fry looked at his sandwich more closely. ‘Gavin, is that what I think it is?'

‘Bacon and sausage.' Murfin licked a bit of the grease off his fingers, then wiped the rest of it on a forensics report.

‘There's half an inch of fat on that bacon, Gavin. Have you never heard of cholesterol?'

‘Yes, of course I have. Me and the wife went there for two weeks' holiday last summer.'

Fry breathed in slowly, suppressing an urge to begin screaming. She knew it came from the fear, not from anger at Murfin. It was something she would have to deal with later.

‘Get the jokes out of your system now, Gavin,' she said. ‘We've got a couple called Renshaw coming in.'

Murfin gave a muffled groan from behind a mouthful of sausage. ‘You're kidding! Not Emma Renshaw's parents?'

Other books

The Federalist Papers by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay, Craig Deitschmann
Attila by Ross Laidlaw
Solomon Gursky Was Here by Mordecai Richler
Where Earth Meets Sky by Annie Murray
Dante's Marriage Pact by Day Leclaire
Demons (Eirik Book 1) by Ednah Walters


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024