Read You Will Never Find Me Online
Authors: Robert Wilson
âI thought you said he was a big guy?' said Butler.
âHe was, but, as I understand it, being upended in a full bath is a very difficult situation to get out of even if you're his size.'
The phone rang, cutting Mercy dead. She stared at it. They all stared at it thinking, is this it? Chris Sexton cued Bobkov's lawyer, Butler. Kidd leaned over and pressed the speaker button, which started the recording and also triggered the triangulation equipment in the kidnap unit's Vauxhall HQ, which would locate the mobile being used.
âGive me Bobkov,' said a voice.
âI'm his lawyer. My name is Howard Butler.'
âWe will only talk to Bobkov.'
âHe isn't here. He's out raising the money. We need a proof of life before we can proceed with these talks. Can you put Sasha on the line, please?'
âNo. You ask your question. We get an answer. We call back later.'
âWhat is Sasha's favourite book?'
The phone went dead. Sexton looked at the screen of his mobile. âKing's Cross,' he said. âDisposable phone.'
Two minutes. No talking. Everybody waiting to see if this could possibly develop into the first negotiation of the kidnap or another long, fruitless wait.
The phone rang again. Kidd pressed the button.
â
How to Play Chess Openings
by Znosko-Borovsky,' said the voice, different this time.
Bobkov nodded. Sexton held up a finger, made the call sign.
âWe're just calling Bobkov to get confirmation.'
The phone went dead again.
âThat one came from Hyde Park,' said Sexton.
Two more minutes ticked past. Silence. They all looked at the phone, willing it to ring. Fed up with being endlessly sweated by the gang, not getting anywhere with them. Not enough contact.
Three more minutes.
The phone rang again. Kidd let it go for three rings. Pressed the button. Silence.
âHello,' said Butler.
âCan I speak to Tracey, please?'
âWho is this?'
âAli, from Tesco.'
âYou should be ashamed of yourselves,' said Butler. âShe's in hospital.'
Kidd rang off.
âBloody Tesco,' said Bobkov.
The phone rang again. Kidd pressed the button. Another voice. âYou bring seven hundred and fifty thousand euros, denomination fifty or less, instructions to follow.'
âWait a minute,' said Butler. âWhat's this for? We haven't discussed anything.'
âNo discussion. This is about trust. First we have to see if we can trust you. Instructions to follow.'
The phone went dead.
âCanary Wharf,' said Sexton, looking at his screen.
âI'll organise the money,' said Bobkov. âWe have to be prepared.'
Â
âI'll walk with you,' said Brito, who'd been standing outside the main gates to the Unidad CientÃfica, waiting for Carmen. âWhich way are you going?'
âTo the Pinar del Rey Metro, but I'm not going to tell you anything, Raul.'
âWhy not?'
âBecause I don't want to be one of your sources. There's not enough people involved in this investigation for me to get lost.'
âI can guarantee anonymity.'
âFrom your end maybe, but not from mine.'
âI can guarantee it from all ends because I'm not doing this for a story.'
Carmen stopped in the street, looked him in the eye.
âDon't bullshit me, Raul. When have you ever done anything that's not for a story . . . apart from watch Real Madrid?'
âO.K., there is a story involved, but it's not this one.'
âNow you're not even making sense.'
âIt's easy. If I deliver information on this story, I get a bigger story in return.'
âWho are you delivering this story to?'
âI can't tell you that.'
âHow did you know there were only six people in that room tonight?' said Carmen. âHow did you know the names of the two police officers involved? How did you know out of the four of us on the forensic team to come to me?'
âYou're the only one I know.'
âThat's not true.'
âO.K. I read in the newspapers that your pay scale in the Cuerpo Nacional de PolicÃa had just had the equivalent of a 40 per cent cut,' said Brito. âAnd
you
told
me
just before Christmas that you have a little girl and you split up with your husband at the beginning of last year.'
âRight, so you came to me because you know I'm desperate.'
âI don't like saying that kind of thing to people,' said Brito. âIt's not your fault; it's just the way life's going at the moment. I'll give you two hundred euros.'
âWe've found three bags so far,' said Carmen. âThe first one had a lower leg with foot attached and some clothes with a British passport belonging to a girl called Amy Boxer. We thoughtâ'
âI know what you thoughtâthat the body was hers.'
âThe second had two thighs with buttocks attached.'
âGruesome.'
âYes, it was. You try not to imagine the guy who's doing this or finding yourself anywhere near him . . . like on the Metro,' said Carmen. âThe worst of it is we reckon there's expertise. We can tell from markings on the ankle and two nicks into the carotid arteries that the body was hung upside down and bled out.'
âYou mean he's done this before?' asked Brito. âI don't remember anything like it, not in the last ten years.'
âHe could be a butcher,' said Carmen, âor someone who cuts up animals, like an abattoir worker, a farmer or a hunter.'
âAnd the third bag?'
âI haven't finished. The left buttock had a butterfly tattoo on it.'
âHow do you do this work, Carmen?'
âIt feeds me and my little girl.'
âSo . . . the third bag.'
âThe third bag had the head in it, two upper arms, a pair of shoes and a handbag with another passport in the name of Chantrelle Grant.'
âChantrelle? With an “r”?' said Brito, making notes.
âYes, her middle name was odd, too. Taleisha or something like that. The sub-inspector was on his smartphone all the time and told us they were Jamaican names.'
âDid the severed head match the passport photo?'
âWe think so, but the boss wasn't prepared to commit himself.'
âSo what's the story?' said Brito. âI hear the first girl, Amy Boxer, is a runaway.'
âThe cops told us that the runaway had given her passport to Chantrelle so that it would look like she'd gone to Madrid. Her parents are cops or something like that so she knows she has to be clever, send them off on the wrong trail.'
âWho?'
âKeep up, Raul. Amy Boxer.'
âSo she's still alive in London, while the double, impersonating her, was killed in Madrid by some maniac,' said Brito. âNow that
is
a good story.'
âChanging your mind now?' said Carmen. âJust keep me out of it. Don't even use the word “forensic”.'
âYou must have filed a report on the police computer by now. Anybody could have seen it.'
âNot anybody and not yet,' said Carmen. âI shouldn't think there's more than ten people with access to it.'
They arrived at the entrance to the Pinar del Rey Metro. Brito took out four fifty-euro notes he'd already prepared, added another fifty.
âDon't make me look like a whore,' said Carmen.
âThere's fifty extra. Get something nice for your little girl,' said Brito, slipping the rolled notes into her hand.
âA couple of other things,' said Carmen. âThe police are working an angle. All the bags were weighed down so they wouldn't float to the surface. The killer used five-kilo weights in each bag. You know, the circular ones you see in gyms.'
âI'm not a gym kind of person, Carmenâas you can see.'
âWeightlifters use them: discs of metal with a hole in the middle. These were painted blue with 5kg written in white,' she said. âI can't believe some of the knowledge blanks you have.'
âYou get to my age and there's only a certain amount of RAM available,' said Brito. âAnd the other thing?'
âHer mother's name and address were in the back of her passport,' said Carmen.
âYou didn't happen to remember what they were?'
She wrote them down for him.
âWere you going to tell me those last two things?'
âOnly if you were a nice guy,' she said and disappeared into the Metro station.
Â
The bell rang at the front door. Bobkov, who was still arguing with Sexton about strategy, veered off to open it. Kidd intercepted him.
âI'll take it,' he said, and checked the peephole.
A man in a black hat and mac was holding up a card: bobkov chemitrade ltd. Kidd opened the door. The man raised his hat.
âOnly Mr. Bobkov can receive this,' he said.
He had a small case chained to his wrist.
Bobkov stepped forward with a key to the handcuff, which he unlocked. He signed for the case, which had barrel combination locks. The man raised his hat again and withdrew to his car. They took the case inside and Bobkov opened the combination locks. They checked the money.
âIt's all here.'
âThere's no guarantee this money is going to bring you any return,' said Sexton. âThere've been no negotiations to establish what you're going to get. Normally, in a kidnap situation, we demand a demonstration of trust from
them
, not the other way round.'
âLook, Chris. You said in your introduction to this process that the idea was to get them talking, to involve them, embroil them, but they haven't given us a chance,' said Bobkov. âContact has been minimal. They've made a serious threat to Sasha. I don't want them sending me bits of my son because I wouldn't come up with some stupid money. I don't care who they are. If they're mafia or FSB they're capable of extreme violence, even to a small, defenceless boy.'
âWe've got to secure some sort of return or this could happen again and again.'
âBut if they won't talk,' said Kidd, âwhat can you do?'
âIf they call again with the instructions
I'll
speak to them,' said Bobkov. âI understand your strategy of putting someone between me and them, but in this case it hasn't worked. They want to talk to me direct. So I will speak to them.'
Another knock on the front door. Kidd left the room, looked through the peephole.
âTesco,' he said.
He opened the door to a young Asian guy in a Tesco coat.
âDelivery, sir.'
At his feet on a trolley were two boxes of Harvey's Bristol Cream.
âWe didn't order this,' said Kidd. âSomebody called and we told them that Tracey Dunsdon was in hospital.'
âWe have a record of that, but the order was later reinstated by Mr. Alexander Bobkov.'
âBring it in,' said Bobkov, appearing at the door.
The young guy wheeled the boxes in, unloaded them. Bobkov signed the order.
Sexton slit open one of the boxes. There was what looked like an order stuffed into one of the bottle compartments. He pulled it out.
âInstructions,' he said.
T
his story's a lot more interesting than I first thought,' said Brito, sitting at a small table in a cramped bar with Jaime and Jesús on either side of him. He ran them through the conversation he'd just had with Carmen, leaving her out of it as she'd asked and making it sound like his own brilliant research.
âSo how do you know the parents of this runaway girl, Amy Boxer, are in the police?' asked Jaime.
âI don't. I said “something like the police”. I heard the homicide cops talking about them. So, I've been checking it out. I went to the missing persons websites and I found posts about the girl with photos, but they keep it anonymous. You can't contact the family direct. You have to go through the website's helpline.'
âAnd the father?' said Jaime anxiously, wanting all the information now, immediately. âYou said you had a name for the father.'
âI got that from the Hotel Moderno. He stayed there in the same room as his daughter, or the girl he thought was his daughter. I looked him up on LinkedIn. He used to be in the army, then he was a homicide cop in London before he became a kidnap consultant.'
âWhat's one of those?' asked Jesús.
They ignored him.
âHe's white,' said Jaime, âso it's the mother who's black, and she must be the cop. Why isn't she using the surname Boxer as well? Didn't they get married?'
âI'll work on it,' said Brito. âDon't you worry. I'll get there.'
âThe girl that was killed and hacked up . . . '
âChantrelle Taleisha Grant,' said Brito. âI've got the name and address in London of her mother too.'
âHave they got any suspects for the killing?'
âNo, but they've got a lead,' said Brito and told them about the weights in the bags.
Jaime and Jesús just about managed not to look at each other, but Brito picked up on the tension bristling between them as they stared back at him without moving a facial muscle. The two had bought the weightlifting equipment for El Osito before he arrived, using cash in a sports store called Decathlon. Jaime couldn't remember if he'd ever talked about the Colombian's obsession in front of Raul Brito.
âWe're going to need all the documents,' said Jaime.
âI'm going to need some money,' said Brito. âThe expenses have been heavy and . . . '
âAnd what?'
âI'm a newspaper man,' said Brito. âThis is a good story. Runaway girl sends double to Madrid to fool cop parents and the unfortunate double gets killed and cut up. I'd like to run it.'