‘T
he Garden didn’t die,’ said Fennell. ‘It continued.’
‘No it didn’t,’ said Don. ‘We searched for it everywhere. We hunted down the properties owned by the Garden, looked there. Checked them all out. We couldn’t find it anywhere. They sold the house, made it into a hotel.’
‘It kept going,’ said Fennell, brooking no argument. ‘And it’s still going now.’
‘Yeah,’ said Donna, ‘it is. Faith escaped from it. She wrote about it. That’s what’s in the book. She got away from them. Someone she’d been hired out to bought her off them. And Ben.’ Donna shuddered. ‘An’ he was just as bad. So she took Ben and ran. That’s how she ended up with me. Well, eventually.’
‘And she was trying to make a bit of money by selling the book to Glass,’ said Clemens. ‘The stupidest thing she could have done.’
Donna said nothing. Just glared at him.
‘So where is it, if it’s still going now?’ asked Phil.
‘We’re not exactly sure,’ said Fennell.
‘But it does still exist,’ said Clemens. ‘And in a lot of respects, it’s the same as it used to be. They still pimp out the communists.’
‘Except they’re not really communists any more,’ said Fennell. ‘More like prisoners.’
‘But they’re still sold and hired.’
‘You don’t know where from, though?’ said Phil.
Clemens shook his head. ‘We know it’s somewhere in the area. But we don’t know any more than that.’
‘And,’ said Fennell, ‘it’s still run by the Elders.’
‘What,’ said Don, ‘the same ones?’
‘No,’ said Fennell. ‘Not exactly. Tricky Dicky Shaw disappeared after the raid. June Boxtree was never heard of again. The first Missionary never went back. We don’t know what happened to him.’
‘What about the others? Robert Fenton?’ asked Phil.
‘Resurfaced eventually,’ said Clemens. ‘Retrained as a solicitor. Opened a practice in Colchester.’
‘I didn’t know that,’ said Don. ‘Wasn’t he arrested or anything?’
Fennell shook his head. ‘Some kind of deal was struck. You know the kind of thing.’
Phil looked at Don. He could tell his father wasn’t happy about that.
‘And the rest of them?’ said Don, bitterness showing in his voice.
‘Like I said, Tricky Dicky was never found. Paul Clunn disappeared too.’
‘Mind you,’ said Clemens, ‘he was so addled and mind-fucked by that time that he could have wandered off a cliff and not noticed. Probably thought he could fly.’
‘They didn’t replace Clunn when he went. Didn’t need to.’
Phil was thinking. The tramp. Paul? Hadn’t that been his name? ‘I think I’ve met him,’ he said. He told them of his encounters with the tramp. Most of them. Not what he had discussed with him.
‘I let him go,’ he said eventually. ‘Didn’t think he could have done it. Like you said, brain completely addled. But he did have moments of lucidity. Few and far between.’
‘What about Gail Banks?’
Phil could tell Don wasn’t taking the news well. He didn’t blame him. Something that had obsessed him all his working life – and beyond – reduced to these prosaic terms. He hoped that kind of thing wouldn’t happen to him. But knew it probably would. It happened to every decent copper.
‘Gail Banks?’ said Clemens. ‘Died of an Aids-related illness back in the nineties.’
‘So who are the Elders now, if the original ones are all dead or retired?’
‘Their titles are more code names now, really,’ said Fennell.
‘Something they use in case we’re listening in.’
‘And were you?’ asked Don.
‘When we could,’ said Clemens.
‘But that’s inadmissible in court.’
‘Which is why we want to catch Glass in the act,’ said Fennell.
‘Besides,’ said Clemens, ‘the names were something they could use in court anyway. Claim they weren’t really pimping and selling people to rich perverts, just playing at secret societies. Pathetic.’
Phil thought for a moment. ‘So how did you find out about all this? You were watching Glass.’
Fennell and Clemens both looked at him.
‘Oh,’ said Phil.
‘Exactly,’ said Clemens.
‘He’s one of them,’ said Don, the fact piling bitterness upon bitterness for him.
‘He’s their new Lawmaker,’ said Fennell. ‘That’s how we found out about them. Robert Fenton’s son, Michael Fenton … ’
‘Of Fenton Associates,’ said Phil.
‘The very same,’ said Clemens.
‘… is the new Portreeve,’ finished Fennell.
Don shook his head. He looked like he was broken, thought Phil. Like he had been betrayed by his memories.
‘What about the rest of them?’ said Phil. ‘The Missionary? All those.’
‘The Missionary, we think, was Adam Weaver,’ said Fennell.
‘Going out into the world, bringing back rich people. Or in his case, investors,’ said Clemens.
‘Until recently, obviously,’ said Fennell.
‘The Gardener,’ said Phil. ‘He’s still out there. Still going.’
‘We don’t know anything about him. Apart from his old name. And that won’t help us now.’
‘True,’ agreed Fennell. ‘Doesn’t matter, though. He’s not central to this investigation.’
‘But he’s still torturing and killing children,’ said Phil. ‘Doesn’t that count for anything?’
‘Yes, it does,’ said Fennell. ‘But not as part of this investigation. We’re after bringing down Glass and his people-trafficking scheme. That’s the main objective.’
‘Anything else,’ said Clemens, ‘is secondary.’
Phil said nothing. But he knew he had to do something.
‘What about the Teacher?’ said Don. ‘Used to be Gail Banks. Who is it now?’
‘Well,’ said Fennell, ‘Gail Banks had a daughter … ’
L
ynn Windsor didn’t look happy to be there. In fact she looked furious.
Mickey watched her from behind the two-way glass of the observation room. Marina stood next to him.
‘I can see what you saw in her,’ she said.
‘Saw being the operative word. I think our relationship’s dead in the water.’
They both studied her once more. She was sitting behind the desk in the interview room, hands clasped before her on the table, back rigid. Anger and indignation keeping her upright.
Mickey had gone down to the offices of Fenton Associates, phoned her first, asked to meet her outside. He was hoping she would think it was something to do with the previous night, something he didn’t want her work colleagues to hear. She did. Came to the front of the building.
‘Hi,’ she had said, eyes as bright as her smile.
He imagined her preparing that smile while she walked down, checking in the mirrors to see that it had the correct wattage.
He had brought her straight down. ‘I need you to come down to the station.’
The smile had wavered. ‘Why, what’s wrong?’
‘Can’t say. I just need you to come with me straight away.’ He had pointed to his car.
The smile disappeared completely. He watched her face closely, saw calculation. Knew what would come next.
‘I think there’s a mistake,’ she said.
‘No mistake, I’m afraid. We need to talk to you at the station. Straight away.’
He wouldn’t let her go back inside the building, wouldn’t let her get her jacket, bag or phone. ‘Someone’ll call work, tell them where you are.’
The drive to Southway had been silent. He hadn’t even looked at her. Couldn’t bear to. He knew she would be hating him. He could tell by the way her chest rose and fell in his peripheral vision.
He had put the radio on to fill the silence. Radio One.
‘Love a bit of Lady Gaga,’ he had said, after attempting to sing along. ‘But I still don’t know what she really looks like. You see her with that many disguises on, when you actually see what she looks like, you just can’t recognise her, can you?’
Lynn hadn’t answered.
And now he was observing her. Beneath the anger he sensed fear. She looked isolated, cut off. Good. That was how he wanted her. Suffering. And it had nothing to do with the way she had played him the previous night, he told himself. Oh no. Purely professional.
‘Marina,’ said Mickey.
She waited.
‘Don’t tell Anni about this.’ He kept his eyes on the glass.
‘About you and Lynn Windsor?’
Mickey nodded. ‘Yeah. I don’t want her to … think less of me. She’s a good friend.’
‘Right. I won’t.’
‘Thanks.’ He sighed. ‘I phoned the hospital. She’s doing OK. Sleeping. I’ll try to get to see her later.’
‘She’d like that.’
‘So would I.’
They stared at Lynn Windsor some more.
‘Right,’ Mickey said, ‘how are we going to play this?’
‘Same as usual. I’ll be in here watching her. You get the questions going. I’ll chip in as and when.’
Mickey nodded. Placed his earpiece in. ‘Wish Phil was here. He’s better at this than me.’
Marina gave a smile. Mickey sensed a sad, faraway quality to it. ‘You’ll be fine. You always are.’
He nodded. ‘Right. In I go.’
He left the observation room. The door closed silently behind him.
Marina watched through the glass. Checked her mic. Everything was fine. She took a seat at the desk. As she did so, her phone rang.
She looked down at her bag, mentally chastising herself. She’d thought she had turned it off. Sighing, she picked it up, ready to kill it. Saw the readout. Phil. She looked at the window, saw Mickey enter the room. Looked at the phone.
Answered it.
‘It’s me,’ said Phil.
‘Hi,’ said Marina, distracted by watching Mickey sit down. Lynn Windsor stare at him with undisguised hatred. ‘How are you?’
‘I’m fine. Listen, I’ve got some things to tell you.’
Marina felt torn once more. She wanted to talk to him – needed to – but he had picked a terrible time. She had to tell him that. He would understand. He was a professional.
‘Can we do this later? I’m sorry, but Mickey’s just got someone in the interview room and I’m working the obs.’
‘Who?’ Phil said. ‘Who’s he got?’
‘Lynn Windsor. The solicitor.’
She heard him cover the mouthpiece, say something she couldn’t catch. There was someone else in the room with him. He came back to her. ‘That’s good. Keep her there. I’ve got some stuff to tell you. And I’ve got to tell you now.’
‘Does it have to be now?’
‘Yes. It concerns Lynn Windsor. And Brian Glass. How they’re connected, and how dirty he is.’
‘Stay on the line,’ she said, heart suddenly racing. ‘I may need you.’
‘Pleasure to be back in business,’ he said.
M
ickey sat down opposite Lynn.
‘Well,’ he said, ‘this is nice.’
‘Is this how you repay all the women you’ve slept with?’ said Lynn, with barely suppressed anger. ‘Haul them in for questioning?’
‘Not all of them. Only the special ones.’
‘What d’you want to know? Who else I’ve slept with? Did I use protection? Have I had a check-up recently? Bit late for all that now.’
‘Yeah,’ he said, ‘too late.’
She looked at the machine next to her. ‘You going to record this? Because the first thing I’m going to say is that you slept with me. That anything I say consequently will be considered tainted testimony. That nothing will stand up in court.’
She sat back, pleased with herself.
Mickey smiled. ‘Absolutely. I wasn’t going to do this interview under caution, but if you’d prefer it that way, then fair enough.’
‘I would.’
Mickey readied the recorder.
‘You’re doing great, Mickey,’ said Marina in his ear. ‘Keep her like that. Keep her angry. She thinks she’s superior to you. Cleverer than you. She thinks she’s going to beat this. She’s so arrogant she hasn’t asked for a solicitor. Thinks because she is one she knows it all. Even criminal law. Keep her that way.’
Mickey gave a small nod, hoped Marina caught it.
‘Interview commencing at … ’ He started talking for the benefit of the recorder. He gave his name, Lynn Windsor’s name, cautioned her, stated the time. Got her to say she had turned down the offer of a solicitor. Then he was ready to start.
Her lips were curled at the edges. Ready for battle, thought Mickey. Ready to defeat him. He swallowed. Hoped that wouldn’t be the case.
‘Lynn, I—’
‘Can I just stop you there, Detective Sergeant,’ she said. She smiled. ‘I realise I’m under caution and this is a formal interview. I should also like to state, for the recording, that last night you came round to my flat and had sex with me.’
She sat back, knowing what the repercussions of her statement would be, waiting for his response. She smiled. Mickey took his time.
‘Yes I did,’ he said eventually. ‘I should say it was at your invitation. And that the sex was entirely consensual. And, I should add, highly enjoyable.’
She sat forward. That wasn’t what she had expected him to say. Her eyes darted around the room.
‘In fact,’ continued Mickey, ‘it was last night I wanted to talk to you about. You see, when I accepted your invitation to come over, I didn’t consider you to be involved in the investigation I’m currently working on. However, as a result of spending the night with you, I’m not convinced of that at all.’
He reached into his pocket, brought out her business card. He had put it in a plastic bag. Thought it looked more official that way. He placed it on the table between them.
‘Do you recognise this?’
She looked at it, looked back at him.
‘Do you?’
She nodded.
‘Can you speak up, please? For the benefit of the recording.’
‘Yes,’ she said croakily, her mouth suddenly dry.
‘And what is it?’
She cleared her throat. ‘My business card.’
‘Right. Your business card. And could you look at that card for me, please?’
She bent over, looked at it.
‘Could you confirm that’s your mobile number on it?’
‘Yes.’ Fear began to dance in her eyes.
He knows
, her expression said.
Mickey suppressed a smile, fed off it, became more confident. He was circling, closing in on her. But he didn’t want to get cocky, didn’t want to lose the interview and her too. So he kept it controlled.
‘Now, this is my mobile phone.’ He took his phone out, placed it on the table. ‘Could you tell me why your number appears in the address book?’
She shrugged. ‘You must have put it there. Intending to see me again. It’s not going to happen now.’
‘All right, I’ll rephrase the question. Can you tell me why your number is in my phone next to the name of one of my informants? And why the text message he sent me yesterday never got through? And why I received a different one instead with entirely different information in it? Can you explain any of that?’
Lynn Windsor said nothing. Just stared at him. Hatred burning in her eyes.
His mind flashed back to the way she had been the night before. It was hard to believe it was the same woman. He put the image out of his mind, concentrated.
‘So you don’t know how my informant’s text was intercepted and changed.’
‘No.’
‘And your number substituted for his.’
‘No.’
‘Sure?’
She sighed. Aiming for irritated, unable to suppress the fear beneath it. ‘This is ridiculous.’ She was trying to inject strength into her voice, but it was too shaky. ‘This is pathological. You’re just … just … taking out your own guilt for sleeping with me on … on … like this.’
Mickey gave a pantomime frown. ‘I don’t feel guilty about what we did. Do you?’
Her eyes darted about the room once more, like sparrows trapped in a barn.
‘If you’re … if you’re quite finished, I’ll … I’ll go … ’
Her hands on the table, trying to stand. Wanting to walk out. Wanting it all to end.
‘Sit down, please, Lynn.’ Mickey’s voice strong, authoritative.
She sat down.
He heard Marina’s voice in his ear.
‘Right, Mickey, you’ve got her. Now. Trust me on this. Ask her about the Gardener.’
Mickey frowned.
‘The Gardener. Just ask her where the Gardener is. And how you can find him. Trust me. Do it.’
Mickey leaned forward across the table. Hands together, voice low, as if in conspiracy.
Us against the world
, his body language said.
You’re in trouble but I’m the one who can get you out of it.
‘Lynn … ’
She looked up at him. Up close, he saw the depth of fear in her eyes. He was glad he wasn’t scared of whatever it was that was scaring her.
Or whoever.
‘Lynn … where can I find the Gardener?’
And the fear he had just seen in her eyes was nothing compared to the fear that was there now.