Authors: Cath Staincliffe
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Women Sleuths
‘Not the same though,’ said Shap. ‘She knew this place was off the books, maybe even knew that Harper was running it. But if Andrea had known Harper was going with Rosa and then seen him deny it when she’d been killed, she would have shopped him.’
Janine thought he was right. ‘OK, so Rosa and Harper kept their affair under wraps at the club but, more to the point, why did he keep quiet about his relationship with Rosa when he spoke to us?’
‘’Cos she was illegal and he was up to his neck in it, managing the brothel, sex slaves near enough,’ Shap pointed out.
Richard raised an eyebrow.
‘They were hardly at liberty,’ Janine agreed.
‘Or he kept quiet because he killed her,’ Richard said simply.
Shap looked from one to another, the question plain on his face.
‘I don’t know,’ Janine answered. ‘That’s for us to find out, isn’t it? No harm in giving him the impression we favour him for it. He’s been mucking us about for long enough. Let’s shake him up.’
Richard looked at her with interest.
‘We’ll arrest him for her murder. That should loosen his tongue. And while we’re about it, you,’ she said to Shap, ‘can have another of your little chats with Andrea.’
There was quite a crowd at the club when they got there; Friday afternoon and men starting the weekend off early. Groups of office workers or sales reps, be-suited but already dishevelled, their jackets discarded and ties loosened or removed. The crowd looked particularly young, early twenties Janine guessed, and half-drunk. Probably not stop boozing till Sunday night. Weekends spent smashed in an attempt to escape the stress of the working week. Could be a stag night, she thought.
Andrea was dancing, though her eyes flew to them as soon as she realised they’d come in. Harper was seated at a table, playing host to a couple of customers. He made an apology to his companions and stood up to meet Janine and Richard.
‘Not again,’ he thrust his hands in his pockets.
Janine smiled; there was no warmth in it. ‘James Harper,’ she said, ‘I am arresting you on suspicion of the murder of Rosa Milicz.’ A wave of disquiet travelled round the club as people sensed the change in atmosphere. Andrea stopped dancing. ‘You do not have to say anything. But it may harm your defence if you do not mention something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence. Is there anything you would like to say?’
‘You’ve got it all wrong.’ Harper was pallid with shock. Tremors worked in the muscles round his jaw line. He spread his arms out, palms up; look no tricks. ‘I don’t know anything about it.’ He turned to the tables behind him as if recruiting them to his side, ‘This is complete lunacy.’
*****
Shap followed Andrea through to the changing room. She looked shaken. Understandable. Not a nice thought that your boss might be a murderer.
‘We’ve been to the brothel,’ he said. ‘You know much about it?’
‘Nothing,’ she said flatly.
‘They’re all illegals – girls from Poland.’
She bit at her lip, looking anxious.
Shap slid his backside onto the corner of one of the tables. ‘Andrea, you told us Rosa didn’t have a boyfriend.’
‘She didn’t.’ She looked confused. ‘Not that she told me about anyway.’
‘What if I told you Harper and Rosa had a thing going on.,
She gave a sharp laugh, humourless. ‘They didn’t.’
Shap nodded slowly. He saw the disbelief alter Andrea’s face. She blinked a couple of times, laughed again. ‘Honestly? You really think he …’
‘We don’t know yet but we have our suspicions.’
‘The bastard,’ she whispered. ‘How could he do that?’
‘Allegedly,’ Shap said. He offered her a cigarette, lit one himself.
She sighed.
‘That surprise you?’
‘I thought he was an OK bloke, you know? Fair. Turns out …’
‘… he’s just like the rest of us?’
She glared at him, her eyes fierce.
‘We’re not all the same,’ he said. He studied her for a moment, took a pull on his cigarette. ‘What about you?’ he tried to sound casual. ‘You seeing anyone?’ He smiled.
‘Only my husband,’ she retorted.
Shap’s face fell. He liked Andrea, young and pretty, with a bit of a gob on her – but husbands he could do without.
Shelley bustled into the room, peeling off a tight, white leather jacket. ‘What’s going on?’
‘They’ve arrested Jimmy.’
‘What for?’
‘Rosa.’
‘’Kin ‘ell.’ Shelley stared at Shap. ‘That right?’
He nodded.
‘God!’ she exclaimed. ‘That is really creepy. That’s horrible, that is. What about this place? What’ll happen?’
‘We haven’t charged him,’ Shap told her.
‘But you’ve taken him in,’ Andrea said.
‘Just think, could have been any of us,’ Shelley said dramatically to Andrea. ‘Working with him, day in day out. Turns my stomach. That poor girl.’
‘Don’t hang your boots up just yet,’ Shap said crossing over to the door. ‘Innocent until proven guilty.’
The looks they gave him, full on and cynical, said it all.
‘Yeah,’ Andrea folded her arms, ‘you’re just saying that in case you can’t pin it on him.’
‘You wouldn’t arrest him if you hadn’t something on him,’ Shelley added.
Shap held up a hand. ‘Happens all the time. He lied to us, we don’t like that.’
‘And he was sleeping with her,’ Andrea told Shelley.
‘He never was.’
Andrea nodded.
‘They’re always prime suspects,’ Shelley said knowingly.
‘The bastard,’ Andrea said quietly and a silence settled between them.
At the station, Harper immediately demanded his own solicitor. While arrangements were made, Richard and Janine caught up with other events, taking reports from officers staffing the incident room.
‘All known haunts covered for Stone – no joy,’ Richard summarised.
‘Someone must know where he is,’ Janine complained. The man’s face had been plastered the length and breadth of the country ‘Any more sightings in Warrington?’
They looked at the log. Nothing had been added in the last few hours. ‘Did you speak to them?’ she asked Richard.
‘Butchers did. But maybe …’
They might get more cooperation from the neighbouring force if a request came from a more senior rank. Janine nodded. ‘I’ll call – though it looks like he’s moved on going by that log.’
‘Boss.’ Another detective constable had brought them coffee and biscuits. Janine took a cup and chocolate bourbon; she bit into the biscuit and took a sip of the drink. Drinkable. Just. She had her own coffee maker in her office but when things got crazy like this there wasn’t time to stop and make a decent brew. So much for her fond imaginings of relaxed child-free coffee breaks.
Richard was handed another folder. ‘From Poland, sir,’ the young DC explained.
Richard riffled through the faxes.
‘Let’s see.’ Janine moved closer. She wondered how long Sulikov had been smuggling women. How many Rosas and Marta had left family, home, friends and country to wash up in sleazy suburban brothels at the whim of men like Harper? ‘Do Poland know he’s into this?’ Janine asked Richard.
‘No reference here, but this is all history,’ he said dismissively. ‘They’re still collating further data.’ He scanned the document. ‘Started out as a teenager in gangs – smuggling alcohol and cigarettes.’
‘More money in human cargo these days,’ Janine observed. She was forming an image in her mind of the Pole: broad Slavic face, high forehead and wide cheekbones, a balding head, perhaps a scar. A cliché, she realised, a stereotype conjured up by the fearful reactions of the young women when his name had been mentioned, married to a clutch of corny images from Second World War films. She, of all people, should know that killers came in many guises: the bland and the attractive just as likely to be perpetrators as the wild or ugly-looking.
And a trafficker like Sulikov could rely on the silence of the people he transported. Living beyond the law, the illicit workers and their associates forfeit any protection from it. Unable to get help if they were robbed, beaten, starved or forced to work in dangerous situations. The death by drowning of nineteen Chinese cockle pickers in Morecambe Bay had sounded a wake-up call to government, but while the underlying cause of poverty and desperation remained there would always be people prepared to take a risk. And people making money from that need.
She looked at the clock. It was three-twenty. ‘What’s the time difference, here and Poland?’
‘They’re an hour ahead. I’ll get someone onto it now.’
‘Tell them it’s urgent. We don’t want to be hanging around waiting for them to get on board.’
‘I’ll ask them to take a look at his place. See if he’s there.’
‘Yes, but emphasise we don’t want him tipped off. And ask them for a photo. I’m trying to fix a meeting with Immigration – see how we handle it.’
‘Their way.’
‘Usually.’
There was often disagreement between local teams like hers and the immigration service on how over-stayers or illegal entrants were handled. Immigration, bound up in their own numbers game, favoured speedy deportations enabling them to tick boxes, though many acknowledged that the approach severely limited attempts to gather intelligence on the bigger players behind the scenes. For detectives it could mean watching while suspects or victims of other crimes were bundled away leaving a case in tatters.
‘Is The Lemon in?’
Richard nodded and she went to see if her boss could be of any help.
‘I’ve arrested Harper on suspicion, sir,’ Janine told DCS Hackett. ‘I need to begin interviews with him soon as his brief arrives. He was seeing Rosa Milicz as well as managing the brothel where she lived.’
‘And Stone?’ Hackett’s shrewd eyes scrutinised her.
‘He’s implicated too. He drove the van, bringing the women in. I’m hoping the women can tell me more about both men – and about Sulikov; we’ve still very little on him. Can we keep them here until I have a chance to talk to them, properly?’
‘Sorry, I’ve already had Immigration on, they want them at the removal centre near Leeds as soon as possible.’
‘I don’t want them deported.’
He leant forward, his head tilted to one side. ‘There’s not much chance of that – this is a murder enquiry. I’ve made that quite clear. Will the girls talk?’
‘Probably not – especially as we’re treating them like criminals. They’ve been falsely imprisoned to all intents and purposes; no passports, no outdoor shoes or clothing. They signed up for dancing or waitressing, not prostitution.’
‘Are we talking murder or trafficking here?’ He was warning her to stick to the case.
‘The two may well be linked.’
‘Don’t lose your focus.’
‘No, sir. But I won’t get much chance to find out, will I?’
‘Not unless you get a move on. Though there is a road network between here and Leeds, Janine, if push comes to shove.’
Sarky git.
She got up to leave.
‘And your leak?’ he said sourly.
As if it was some fault in her own plumbing. ‘Plugged,’ she told him.
He waited.
‘Ian Butchers. He was too close to the case, had a young brother killed in a hit and run.’
He gave a weary sigh, made as if to speak, hesitated. Then, ‘You disregarding procedure?’
‘Chris Chinley has been exonerated.’
‘Nevertheless. Can you imagine …’
‘But it didn’t, sir.’ She blushed as she interrupted him, aware that this was dicey ground. Never interrupt a senior officer. Hanging offence; drawing and quartering too with a boss like Hackett. But she ploughed on, ‘We’d gain nothing from launching a formal disciplinary – we’d lose a decent copper with over twenty years’ service.’
‘I don’t know that I can approve that decision.’
She felt an edge of anger that he would dismiss her arguments. And an eddy of anxiety as she prepared to tackle him. Her skin felt slightly clammy. ‘I don’t think you need to, sir. It’s sorted.’
He glared at her, gimlet-eyed. She could tell it was touch and go but she didn’t volunteer anything more. She’d had plenty of run-ins with Hackett in the past and had come to learn that he appreciated it when his officers stood their ground and confronted him head on. She felt heat crawl up her back as she waited, her mouth dry.
He gave a crisp nod of dismissal. Her legs felt weak when she got out into the corridor, as if she had been running uphill.
She found Marta in the yard, having a cigarette, waiting to be transported to the removal centre. It was cold out there; the grey sky promised rain; Janine thought she felt a spot of drizzle in the air. The miserable light signalled the end of the afternoon. Janine shivered and buttoned her coat.
‘What was going on with Rosa?’ Janine asked her.
Marta took a breath, began to speak, then tried again as her words caught and emotion flushed through her face. ‘She wanted to go home. She was having a baby, she wanted to keep the baby. I told her; don’t be stupid, they’ll stop you. It’s dangerous,’ she spoke animatedly. ‘Sometime she tells me maybe she can turn herself in to the police. Crazy. What about us, then where would we all be?’ She shook her head. ‘But Rosa was going home. Once she makes up her mind.’ She blew air out of her lips, ‘pouf.’ A gesture of exasperation.
‘Who killed her?’ Janine asked quietly.
Marta looked away, smoked her cigarette. ‘I don’t know.’
‘Who do you think killed her?’ Janine continued to watch her, forcing her to make eye contact. When Marta finally spoke Janine had to strain to hear.
‘I’m very afraid to tell you this.’ She rubbed at her upper arms, turned her head from side to side as though checking for eavesdroppers. ‘Very afraid.’
‘Please, Marta.’
She shuddered. ‘Sulikov, I think – his bully boys. Now no one else will think of trying to get away.’
Janine felt her pulse kick and quicken. Suspects, and a motive. Now they’d found the brothel, now they’d found Marta, things were opening up. Some cases were like this; you’d batter away for days, weeks even, and then the first crack would appear. It was always a liberating moment no matter how grim the circumstances.