Authors: Kate Rhodes
T
he woman casts her gaze around the laboratory and finds it clean as an operating theatre. Walls, ceiling and floor are bleached white, the cold air reeking of iodine and fresh paint. There's little furniture except a cabinet and metal table. A strip-light fills the space with its harsh glare. She spent days here helping the man install soundproofing, pulleys and blackout blinds. Her gaze shifts back to Riordan's face; eyes swollen shut, a raw wound marking the side of her neck, dark hair losing its lustre. The doctor is still unconscious, her body strapped to a leather dentist's chair. The woman tests the ropes attached to the ceiling. Once she's satisfied the restraints will hold, she turns to the man.
âReady?'
He nods in reply. âGo easy on her. We just need the information.' Beads of sweat stand out on his forehead. She can tell he's weaker today, more afraid than before, although he'd never admit it.
âI still want the boy brought here.'
âWhat good will it do?'
Her eyes glitter. âShe'll crack faster when she sees him.'
âIt won't be easy to find him.' The man's arms fold tightly across his body.
âWhy are you worried? The others didn't bother you.'
âThey gave names straight away. She's fighting us.'
âNot for long. Help me turn her over.'
She watches him struggle, suddenly aware how much his illness has weakened him. The exertion of lifting the victim on to her side leaves him breathless as he secures the leather cuffs. She concentrates on her task, yanking a lever until Riordan's arms straighten. Now her body hangs suspended from the ceiling by her wrists, feet dangling above the ground, so heavily sedated that she only surfaces when the extraction needle plunges into her back. A dull scream echoes from the walls as blood gushes into the plasma bag. Once it's full, a last spurt flows on to the tiles. The thin red line is destined to be wasted. It follows the path of least resistance, snaking across the floor.
âThat'll loosen her tongue.' The woman extracts the needle slowly.
âHow do you know she'll talk?'
âShe'll have to eventually. The pain will be unbearable.' She leans down until her eyes meet Riordan's, hissing into her face. âYou'll blab like a child, Clare. All of you are going to suffer before we tell the press you're guilty.'
When she looks at the man again, something behind his eyes has flicked shut like a door slamming. Riordan's head lolls on her chest, but he keeps his face averted.
âAfter everything they did, you still hate seeing them die.'
âI can handle it,' he says quietly.
âYou don't have the stomach to hunt for the boy, do you?'
He shakes his head. âOf course I do. A child's life is nothing compared to everything I've lost.'
The woman is unconvinced, even though his voice sounds forceful. He plans the attacks and organises every detail, yet he's too squeamish to hurt the victims. Torn between anger and a desire to comfort him, she drops the needle into a jar of sterilising fluid, as Riordan's whimper rises to a scream.
T
he FPU was empty when I arrived at eight a.m. the next day. I'd slept badly, fretting about Mikey Riordan, restlessness driving me from my flat too early. I dumped my newspaper on the desk and studied the picture on the front page. His mother gazed back at me with a wide-eyed smile, as if she'd never performed a single bad deed. I sat at my desk and tried to focus. My head felt muzzy, but time alone in a calm environment was my best chance of forming an image of her abductor. I logged on to the Police National Computer, then typed key features into HOLMES 2, aware that there would be a long wait before it spat out facts. The Home Office's major incident software was in dire need of an overhaul. It held details of every recorded crime for decades, but moved at a snail's pace. The search category I chose was for similar fact evidence. The overarching theme was blood; a haematologist had been targeted, her own blood left as a calling card. My computer buzzed loudly as it sifted through past cases.
I stood by the window gazing towards St James's Park. Scarlet leaves on a distant copse of trees danced above the rooftops, a trick of the eye making it look like the entire terrace was on fire. So far my morning hadn't been a great success. Two consultants were holding a heated debate in the office next door, their outbursts filtering through the wall. I thought about Mikey Riordan, pining in a house without comforts. My determination to find his mother was rising steadily.
The printout spewed from my computer an hour later. One case was so grisly it would have been better to read about it on an empty stomach. Five years ago a man had killed a rent boy in Paddington, drinking some of his blood before sending samples to the victim's relatives. The senior investigating officer had been so traumatised by the murder scene that he'd had a breakdown. I rubbed my eyes, unwilling to burden my brain with more horror. Several other cases held similarities, although the perpetrators were already behind bars. I laid the report on my desk and compared details from previous attacks with Clare Riordan's abduction, but soon had to admit defeat. In the past twenty years there had been no direct parallels. Riordan's abductor had struck an original note by using her blood as his calling card, which made me wonder if he was motivated by posterity â maybe he didn't just enjoy hurting his victim, he wanted a place in the annals of true crime.
When I looked up again Christine was at my door. Her off-white dress gave her a ghostly appearance; even her smile was insubstantial.
âHow's the Riordan boy?' she asked.
âStill in the first stage of trauma: speechless with shock, prone to violent outbursts and panic attacks.'
âYou've done great work with child victims on previous cases.'
âMikey's under more pressure; everything hinges on what he saw. There's no family supporting him.'
Christine gave a slow smile. âHe's in safe hands, Alice.'
She vanished without another word. Her communication style was so cryptic that even her encouragement sounded threatening.
I sifted through the interview transcripts with Clare Riordan's friends and colleagues, but they yielded frustratingly little. Her CV showed a woman who had worked
tirelessly, becoming a consultant at thirty, serving on a dozen ethics panels and the drug advisory board. It intrigued me that there seemed to be no flaw in her glossy professional record. Her only known conflict had been with her younger sister, Eleanor. They had been locked in a legal battle for two years, cause unspecified. The blank space surrounding Clare Riordan's life needed to be filled before I could find the reason for her disappearance.
It was a relief to escape from the office at one thirty. I had arranged to visit the victim's house in Clapham, hoping the place would reveal details of her personality. I drove south through light midday traffic, my car slipping past Mayfair's upmarket shops and the mansions of Chelsea. The tone changed when I crossed the river to Battersea. Elegant Georgian squares were replaced by an ocean of glass, high-rise apartment blocks sprawling as far west as the eye could see, testament to the developers' belief that a river view was worth a king's ransom.
Stormont Road was a genteel row of Victorian semis, the green expanse of Clapham Common unfurling in the distance. A police cordon surrounded Clare Riordan's house and the road was a hive of activity, uniformed officers standing on doorsteps, still conducting house-to-house interviews. I wondered whether Mikey would ever return to the home his mother had maintained so carefully. Limestone steps climbed to a wrought-iron porch, the front door an elegant pale blue, sash windows gleaming. I was opening the gate when a woman of around sixty appeared at my side. She had a hard-eyed stare, the skin around her mouth deeply furrowed, suggesting that her first action each morning was to light a cigarette.
âAre you with the police?' she asked.
âMy name's Alice Quentin, I'm an advisor on the investigation. Do you need to see a detective?'
âOne came by yesterday; I didn't like his attitude. Disrespectful, I'd say.' Her small eyes blinked rapidly. âCan you spare a minute?'
She led me into the house next door to Riordan's. Her lounge was overfilled with furniture, the air too sweet, as if someone had spilled a bottle of cheap scent.
âI didn't catch your name,' I said.
âPauline Rowe. I've lived here forty years.'
âAnd you've got some information, Pauline?'
âIt could be nothing.'
âDon't worry â small things are often helpful.'
Her gaze drifted to the floor. âIt said on the news that Clare was single, but she was seeing someone. I heard them in the garden.'
âThey were talking?'
âIt was more like a full-blown row.' Her breath rattled as she inhaled.
âDid you hear what it was about?'
âClare was sobbing her heart out. She kept saying “it has to end,” but the bloke was having none of it.'
âWas this recent?'
âTwo or three weeks ago.'
âDid you see the man?'
She shook her head. âIt had to be her boyfriend. Arguments like that only happen when you've got strong feelings.'
âDo many other people visit her house?'
âNot really. I saw this couple on her steps a few times. The bloke was smartly dressed, but they could have been Jehovah's witnesses.' She paused to light a cigarette.
âNo one else she rowed with?'
âJust her sister, but she hasn't been round in a while. That girl's a headcase.'
âHow do you mean?'
âForever causing trouble, yelling, then slamming out the front door. Mental problems, if you ask me.'
âIs there anything else I should know?'
âMikey worships his mum. They're always together, except when she's at work.'
âThey sound very close.'
âHe's a sweet kid.' Her gaze locked on to mine. âIs there any news?'
âThe police are making good progress. Thanks for the information, Mrs Rowe.'
Pauline seemed reluctant to say goodbye, chattering as she walked me back to the front door, wafting cigarette smoke. I wondered about her lifestyle as I approached Clare Riordan's house: maybe retirement hadn't turned out like she'd hoped, boredom sending her outside to eavesdrop on her neighbour.
The first person I saw at Riordan's house was Pete Hancock, Burns's chief scenes of crime officer. My heart sank. He stood in the hallway scribbling on a clipboard as I donned my sterile suit, his expression unreadable.
âThis is the worst time to visit.' His words were delivered in a monotone.
âYou always say that, Pete. I know we're looking for different things, but it would help to compare notes. When's your next break?'
âI'm not taking one.'
âGive me half an hour, I'll buy you a cappuccino.'
âI don't drink coffee.'
âTea then.' I checked my watch. âAt three o'clock.'
Hancock looked stunned, but didn't refuse. For the first time in years he forgot to bark at me as I toured his crime scene. I took care to stay on the plastic sheeting, avoiding rooms that were still cordoned. My concern rose as I explored the ground floor. Everything about the decor spoke of an
exclusive mother-son relationship. A row of black and white portrait photos in the hallway had been taken at yearly intervals, starting when Mikey was an infant, cradled in his mother's arms. The boy grew taller in each image but the intimacy never weakened; in the final picture they stood arm in arm, beaming at the camera with identical smiles. Every room in the house confirmed my sense that few people had encroached on them. Maybe losing her husband had bonded Clare to her son so closely that no one else mattered.
The living room was an example of tasteful neutrality. Items stacked on the coffee table reflected both their interests: her interior design magazines and copies of
The Lancet
; his games console and dog-eared comics. Mikey's room seemed typical of an eleven-year-old boy: football trophies above his bed, a signed poster from the Chelsea squad. It was only on closer inspection that I realised soccer wasn't his only passion. Several large drawings had been tacked to the wall â exuberant landscapes, with an outsized sun almost filling the sky, breakers lapping a white line of cliffs, full of light and energy. Framed certificates showed that Mikey had won his school's art competition two years running. The space was unusually tidy for such a young boy; the air smelled of soap and fresh linen. His mother's room was orderly too. The contents of her wardrobe appealed to me: suits from Ghost and Karen Millen, jeans and silk shirts for the weekend. But her taste was wilder than mine. Tucked at the back were outfits only a femme fatale would choose: skimpy cocktail dresses, a leather skirt, agonisingly high stilettos. The clothes hinted at a woman with two lives. She was a hard-working professional, but confident enough to parade her attractiveness when the chance arose.
My frustration mounted as I reached the hallway. Sometimes a victim's home speaks volumes about the habits that made them vulnerable but, apart from Clare's choice of clothing,
her domestic life seemed easy to interpret. It revealed good taste, middle-class comfort, and a high degree of trust between parent and child. That intimacy made me even more concerned about how Mikey would fare if his mother never came home.
When I reached the porch, Hancock was standing there. He gave me a baleful stare as I peeled out of my Tyvek suit.
âThere's a café close by,' I said.
âOkay, if you're buying.'
He said little during the short stroll to Lavender Hill, giving me the chance to observe him from the corner of my eye. His combination of white hair and lowering black eyebrows made him look like a younger, more hostile version of Alistair Darling. My request for a double espresso clearly disgusted him.
âThat stuff'll give you a stomach ulcer.'
âIt's a gamble I'm willing to take. Where are you from, Pete?'
âTyneside, originally.'
âI recognised the lilt. So, do you dislike all shrinks, or is it just me?'
His frown deepened. âI spend my days on my knees, scooping up fag ends and bodily fluids, so people like you can pontificate about modus operandi. You even get paid more.'
âAnd that annoys you?'
âI solve the cases for you, but most shrinks show me zero respect.' He took a gulp of mineral water.
âThen they're missing a trick. Seeing what the killer touched or the shoes a victim wore tells me more than any photograph. I can't do that without your help.'
âYou want me to stop moaning when you drop by?'
âIs that possible?'
He cast me a shrewd glance. âBurns says you're good at your job.'
âI hear the same about you.'
âWhy aren't you in some swanky private hospital charging two hundred quid an hour?'
âI could be crazy, but forensic work trumps a big salary for me.'
The answer seemed to satisfy him. When we got back to Riordan's house, it was clear Pete's team had been working hard in his absence. Two white-suited SOCOs squeezed past us on the steps, carrying plastic evidence boxes bound for the lab. But my hour with Pete hadn't been wasted; for the price of a bottle of mineral water, I'd reversed some of his prejudices. He'd confided that he was a lapsed Catholic, married with two kids in their twenties, a passionate Newcastle supporter with a penchant for jazz. In exchange I'd revealed my desire for a motorbike and confirmed that I was in a relationship with his DCI.
âThat's old news, Pete. Didn't you hear?'
âI'm not one for gossip.' He was already slipping his feet back into plastic overshoes.
âHave you found much in there?'
âThe IT boys are checking her computers, but there's something you should see.'
I donned my sterile suit again reluctantly. I'd always hated the synthetic smell and feel of them, fabric crackling as we walked down the hall.
Hancock came to a halt in the kitchen. âNotice anything?'
âA lot of expensive kit.' I scanned the bespoke units, granite work surface and black and white floor tiles. It looked typical of a family with money: there was even a top-of-the-range juicer and Gaggia coffee machine sitting on the counter.
âLook again.' He shone a blue light on the floor and a shadow emerged, just over a foot wide. âSomeone's tried to scrub it away, but we sprayed the floor with Luminol. The UV light's picking up blood molecules.'
âIt may not be hers.'
âWhoever it came from, it would have been one hell of a wound. You'd need half a pint to spread that far.'
âCan the lab tell if it's hers?'
He nodded. âWe'll take a scraping from the floor. They'll cross-match it with her son's DNA, but they won't be able to date it.'