Authors: Brian McGilloway
âWhat he had done. What he done to me.'
She shuddered now and she spluttered into sobs. Lucy moved from her seat, round to where Sarah sat, put her arms around the girl and held her while she cried.
âSsh,' she said finally. âHe can't do anything to you any more.'
She looked up at Robbie, who was sitting, his hands folded in his lap, his expression studiously neutral. âLet's take a break, shall we?'
A
s they sat again after a toilet break for Sarah, Lucy sensed that something had changed about the girl, that in the telling of what had happened, and perhaps in the knowledge that âSimon Harris' â as she knew him â was dead, the girl had found some degree of comfort, a modicum of solace in knowing she had been heard and believed.
âWill I start where I left off?' the girl asked, sitting.
âPlease,' Lucy said.
She brushed her hair from her face. Her cheeks were dry now, but the skin still flushed, the eyes red rimmed with crying, the whites of her eyes threaded with veins. She looked somehow younger than her fifteen years.
âIt happened a few times after that,' the girl said. Lucy realized that far from Sarah feeling relieved at what had passed, she had instead simply been steeling herself for the rest of the story. âHe'd invite me to a party. He'd pick me up with some other girls and we'd get drunk. Most of the time it was in the same house. A couple of times it was somewhere different. A bit nicer. Further away, though. Near the sea, I think. There was a room with an old pool table in it. We'd all hang around in there until he came back with more drink and ... whatever it was.'
âDid he always rape you?'
The girl hesitated a moment before answering. âI didn't know if it was rape or not. Because I'd had the cider and that. He said I'd agreed.'
âYou can't agree, Sarah,' Lucy said. âYou're too young. He knew that.'
The girl flushed, her eyes brimming again. She inhaled, held the breath a moment, then let it go. âSometimes others did it. I woke one time and there was someone leaving the room that I didn't know. It wasn't “Simon”. But I knew what he'd done.'
Lucy pulled a handful of tissues from the box on the table. Sarah took them and rubbed at her nose. She raised her head a little, as if to stymie her tears.
âHow often did this happen?' Lucy asked.
âEvery week,' Sarah said. âWe'd go every week.'
âAlways to the same house?'
She shook her head. âTwo different places. It was like taking turns week about week; one week in the smelly house, the other in the place with the pool table.'
âWere the men there always the same?'
She shook her head. âSome.'
âAnd what about your mum? Did she not wonder where you were all night?'
Sarah shrugged. âShe'd be out of it when I got home. She'd not even know I'd been out to start with.'
Lucy paused as she considered how best to word the next question without sounding accusatory. âI don't want you to take this the wrong way, Sarah, but I need to know. Why did you meet with him again, after the first time he raped you, Sarah?'
âHe said if I didn't, he'd hurt my mum.'
âDid you ever try telling your mother about what was happening?'
The girl shook her head. âHe said if I told her, they'd kill her. He said he knew who she was. They'd ... he said he'd ... shoot her.' Though the girl paused as she spoke as if to give the impression that she was too upset to speak freely, Lucy wasn't wholly convinced.
âWhat did he really say, Sarah?'
The girl stared at her, her mouth hanging a little open. âHe said he knew who sold her stash to her. That they'd put something in it if I told. She'd just not wake up again, he said.'
âBut you told Seamus? Your mum said you didn't get on.'
âWe didn't,' the girl conceded quietly. âI didn't mean for him to find out. I just wanted to hide in the van. But I'd no choice. He wanted to take me back to my mum, but I knew Simon'd think I'd told her when I hadn't answered his messages and that.'
Lucy considered what the girl had said. âDid Seamus ever try anything on with you?'
âGod, no,' she replied. âHe made me up my own room. I didn't know he'd another house.'
âDid he tell you why he lied about going to Manchester?'
Sarah shrugged. âHe said Mum's using got to him. She was fun to be about for a while, then she started all that shit and he needed to get a breather from her for a few days. I know how he felt.'
âWhy now?'
Sarah rubbed at her nose, balled the tissues in her hand and buried it deep in the pocket of the hooded top she wore. âWhat?'
âWhy leave now? What happened? Why not run away weeks ago?'
Immediately, she saw the girl glance at the doorway, as if to reassure herself that there was a way out. She licked at her lips. âCan I get another Coke?' she asked.
âWhy now?' Lucy persisted. âTell me that and we can take another breather if you need to.'
Sarah Finn seemed to consider the offer. âThe girl the first night. The one with the cider. I saw her a few times after that. At the parties. She was a nice girl. She looked after some of the others when they were hurting after ... you know. She took care of them. Even when she was being hurt herself.'
Lucy could feel something gnawing at her insides, sensing already where the conversation was headed.
âThere was a party at the weekend. All weekend. I was there just on Saturday night. But she was there. She'd been there for a few days. She was out of it, completely. It was like she didn't know where she was or what was happening. Well, I saw her again after the party.'
âWhere?'
âShe was the girl they found dead on the train tracks. Karen was her name, I think.'
T
hey left Sarah to have her Coke while Lucy went to the main office and called through for the Strand Road to fax through pictures of both Karen Hughes and Carlin himself. Though the quality of the faxes wasn't ideal, both were still recognizable. âIs this the girl you met?' Lucy asked, handing Sarah the image of Karen Hughes as she re-entered the room.
The girl looked at the image, her eyes flushing once more. She nodded. âThat's her.'
âOne more question, Sarah,' Lucy said. âThis man.' She handed Sarah the page with Carlin's picture on it.
âI know him,' the girl said, dropping the page on the desk as if it had scalded her simply to hold it. âHe was one of them. He was at the parties.'
âOne of them?' Lucy said. âHe was “Simon Harris”.'
Sarah Finn's eyes widened, her face paling under the harsh fluorescent glare of the strip lighting in the room.
âThat's not “Simon Harris”. That's nothing like him. Is he the man who died? This man?'
Lucy glanced at Robbie, before nodding lightly.
âJesus Christ,' Sarah Finn keened, backing into the corner, balling in on herself, wrapping her arms around her knees. âJesus. He's going to kill me.'
âNo one's going to kill you, Sarah,' Lucy said, moving to the girl. âI promise.'
The girl looked up at her from where she sat, her face a mask of disbelief. Lucy could think of nothing to say that might convince her otherwise.
D
espite their best efforts, neither Lucy nor Robbie could convince Sarah Finn that she was safe from âHarris'. Eventually Robbie agreed that her mother be allowed to spend some time with her in the interview room, though under his supervision, in the hope that her presence might help settle the girl a little. Lucy took Sinead Finn's arrival as an opportunity to check how the interview with Seamus Doherty was developing.
Burns was leading the interview with Doherty in Interview Room 2. He glanced round with some irritation when Lucy first tapped on the door, but upon seeing who it was, rose and came out to her.
âHas she said anything we can use on him?' he asked. â
He
's saying nothing.'
Lucy shook her head. âShe claims that she hid away in his lorry. She got out when she felt it stop, thinking she was on the ferry. Instead, he was parked up at the house. She was at a party with Karen Hughes the night before she died, during the time Karen was missing.'
âDoes she know if Carlin killed her?'
Lucy shook her head. âShe says Carlin wasn't “Harris”. He was one of the others.'
âWhat others? Maybe she's confused. Give her a breather and try again.'
Lucy raised a hand to silence him, then realized the inappropriateness of the gesture to her superior.
âShe was groomed by “Harris”. They met up a few times in town. He eventually gave her the phone with some music on it, made a show of saying it was nothing too big. After a while he invited her to a party. He got her drunk, slipped her something in a drink and raped her. She says it happened several times after that, at other parties. Then, when she was passed out, she thinks other men raped her too. She recalls seeing at least one leaving her room as she came round from whatever “Harris” had given her.'
âWas Carlin one of the ones who raped her?'
Lucy nodded. âHe was at the parties. We can assume if he was there, he was involved in some way. I need to get pictures of Gene Kay, too, to see if he was there. But she says “Harris” definitely isn't Carlin. I think we're looking for someone younger.'
Burns swore softly under his breath. âWe
need
to connect Kay. After the prick burning to death over it.'
Lucy said nothing for a moment, guessing that his need to connect Kay had more to do with expediency than justice. âShe says Karen had been at the last party for most of the weekend. She saw her there on the Saturday. I think she went missing on the Thursday because she was taken away to a house party for the weekend.'
âWhy did they kill her?'
âMaybe she recognized someone she shouldn't have,' Lucy suggested. âBut if she'd been there all weekend â been at the parties before â she'd presumably have encountered whoever it was before that.'
âShe was seen alive on the day before her death? On the Saturday?'
Lucy nodded.
âThen what happened on the Sunday that would have caused someone to kill her?'
Lucy thought about it. She had done the press releases about her being missing, but that had been on Friday and had been in the Saturday press.
âHer father,' she said suddenly. âThe Sunday papers â one of them ran a story about her father. They'd connected her with Eoghan Harkin somehow.'
âWhoever had her knew her father then?' Burns offered.
âMaybe,' Lucy said. âOr maybe they were just afraid of what he'd do if he found out. Sarah said that “Harris” said he'd kill her mother if she told. That threat might have been a little harder to use about Eoghan Harkin.'
âIt couldn't have been a message to him? Retaliation in some way?'
Lucy shook her head. âThe body was set up to look like she'd killed herself on the train tracks. If someone wanted to send a message they'd want him to know she'd been murdered. In this case, they wanted to kill her and cover it up. Make it look like suicide.'
âWhich would only be believable if she was the type to kill herself.'
âShe was depressed,' Lucy said. âShe was struggling with self-esteem issues. She was the perfect candidate for it. And the perfect candidate for grooming, too. Lacking in confidence, open to flattery, unstable home life.'
All of which applied equally to Sarah Finn, Lucy reflected. âThe question is, how did the groomer know that they were perfect candidates for it?'
âAsk the girl, see if she knows. See if he gave her any hints about where he first saw her. And get a description.'
L
ucy stopped at the main office again to phone through for a picture of Gene Kay. It took all of thirty seconds for Sarah Finn to confirm for her that Kay was not âSimon Harris' either, nor indeed had she ever seen him at any of the parties.
âYou're sure?' Lucy asked. âLook again at the image. He might have been dressed differently.'
The girl studied the image, examining the eyes and mouth, covering part of the face with the flat of her hand to better focus on particular features. Finally she shook her head. âI've never seen him before. I'd remember any of the people there if I saw them again. He wasn't there.'
âAnd the other man I showed you earlier, he was there but wasn't “Simon Harris”?'
Finn nodded her head. âI remember his face. Simon was younger than them, in his twenties maybe. Thin faced. Short dark hair. He wasn't an old man.'
âBut this guy was definitely not involved?' she asked, pointing to Kay's picture.
âI never saw him. Not once.'
If that was the case, Lucy realized, then how had the collection of images, taken from the parties, ended up in Kay's house, after Fleming had checked it and found nothing there the day before.
R
obbie eventually agreed that Sarah Finn be allowed home with her mother, though only with the understanding that they would be visited daily and that Sinead Finn was to agree to enter an addiction programme. The woman announced that Seamus Doherty was no longer welcome in her home, having lied to her and kept her daughter from her for so long. Having been the only person Sarah felt able to confide in, Doherty now found himself excluded from the girl's life.
Lucy drove back to the PPU struggling to make sense of all that had happened. Gene Kay had clearly been used as a distraction, a scapegoat on whom could be pinned the killing of Karen Hughes. The fact that he had died in the house fire prevented him being able to argue his innocence.
When she reached the unit, instead of going into her own office, she cut across to Cooper in Block 10. He was working on a laptop, scrolling through a series of spreadsheets, when she came in, one of his colleagues having allowed Lucy into the block as he was leaving.