Authors: Brian McGilloway
âSo says the expert on commitment,' Lucy replied.
Wilson shook her head, as if appraising her daughter anew. âI've had my fill of the cheek, Lucy. And the chip on your shoulder.'
Lucy blushed in spite of herself, but did not respond.
âIf you really cared as much as you say, you wouldn't be putting other people at risk. If this comes out, about you stalking that family, what would happen to your boyfriend? Giving out details of foster families? Is that you caring deeply?'
âHe can fend for himself,' Lucy snapped. âI didn't ask for it.'
âI'm sure you didn't have to.'
âI wanted to make sure he was OK. Joe Quigg.'
âAnd when you did? The first time you went you must have seen that he's in a good home. A home vetted by people who actually know what they're doing. What took you back the second time?' she added scornfully.
âI don't know,' Lucy muttered.
âThey've reported your car registration number,' Wilson said.
âHow did it come to you?'
âNever mind,' Wilson said, glancing at her desk. Lucy knew that such a small matter wouldn't make it to the ACC unless she was keeping tabs on Lucy.
âAre you checking up on me?' Lucy asked suddenly.
âI'm your mother, Lucy. I've a right to be interested in how you're getting on. God knows, talking to you gets me nowhere. I worry about you.'
The baldness of the comment caught Lucy off guard. She shifted in her seat uncomfortably. âWell, you don't have to. I'm just doing my job. You were the one who put me in the PPU because of my “affinity for the vulnerable”, wasn't that what you said?'
âHaving an affinity with them doesn't mean becoming one of them,' her mother said. âI know how you feel. I used toâ look, Lucy, you can't take every case personally. Because some things don't get solved. Killers walk the streets every day â even ones we caught and jailed. We have to see them back on the streets because an agreement was made. Should we all
feel
that?'
âAt least you'd know you could feel.'
âDon't be so melodramatic, Lucy,' her mother snapped. âLook at where feelings got Tom Fleming.'
âHe's a good man.'
âHe's responsible for you!' Wilson said suddenly, standing now. âHe should be looking out for you. If he's drinking, he can't do that. His drinking puts you at risk and I won't tolerate that.'
âDon't pretend you're looking out for me,' Lucy said, standing, feeling suddenly unsteady, the room seeming to shift beneath her. She could feel her face flush with heat.
âOf course I am, Lucy,' Wilson said. âI worry about you.'
âLike you did when you walked out on me? Left me with a father who liked teenage girls? I preferred you when you didn't give a shit. At least then we knew where we stood.'
Her mother opened her mouth to speak, then seemed to swallow back her words. Instead she moved back behind her desk and sat, putting on her glasses again. âYou have one chance left, Lucy,' she said finally. âYou're making mistakes, putting yourself and others at risk. Your stalking the Cunningham house could be used against us if we ever do get him and try to convict. Police victimization. You should be taken off the case immediately. I'm giving you one last chance. Do the job you're expected to do. That's all. No personal vendettas. Before someone gets hurt.'
Lucy remained standing, struggling to find something to say.
âAnd leave that family in peace.'
âAlan Cunningham's or Joe Quigg's?'
âBoth,' her mother said.
T
ara Gallagher was sitting in the incident room working on a report at her PC. The remains of her dinner sat on the desk next to her: an empty crisp packet and an opened can of Diet Coke. She leaned close to the screen as she typed, stabbing one-fingered at the keyboard.
âThinking of someone?' Lucy asked.
Tara glanced up. âOh, hey,' she managed, then turned her attention to the screen, swore softly and deleted the mistake she had just made.
Lucy pulled across a seat and sat next to her. âEverything all right, you?'
âI'm stuck with bloody witness reports,' Tara said. âEveryone else is working on other things and I'm stuck writing up this crap. I can hardly read half of the notes.'
âWhere's the rest of the team?'
âReassigned. There's been a spate of beatings in the town. A young lad got a battering this evening on his way to his work do.'
âChristmas parties week,' Lucy said. She realized that she'd not given it much thought.
Tara nodded. âYou know. I thought you'd made the wrong choice, going with PPU. But at least you're working stuff. This is mind numbing.'
âBurns?'
Tara nodded again, lowering her voice as she spoke, glancing furtively towards his office door lest she be heard. âIt's like an old boys' network. Your face needs to fit. And mine doesn't.'
âThat's 'cos you're too good-looking,' Lucy said, laughing. âHow could this face be fitted in a frame?'
Tara laughed, thumping Lucy lightly on the leg. âBitch,' she said.
âYou know I mean it,' Lucy replied, glad that whatever uneasiness she'd felt over Tara reporting her to Burns following the scrapyard had been passed. She knew Tara was finding it hard to make her mark in CID. There was little point in holding a grudge. âSo what are you working?'
âDoor-to-door statements from the Finn abduction.'
âSure we've got her back now,' Lucy protested.
âTell that to him,' Tara said, sulkily. âAll Ts need to be crossed apparently.'
Lucy began shifting through the paperwork piled on the desk. âThe day we got Kay in Foyleside. Someone went round taking the names of everyone else in the restaurant afterwards. Do you have that here?'
âYou're messing it up,' Tara said, slapping Lucy's hand away. âIt's in reverse order.'
âReverse order? Do you want to feel challenged?'
Tara laughed. âI lifted it out of the box like that. The newest stuff went on top. The Kay arrest was before the house-to-house.' She sorted through the pages, eventually pulling out handwritten lists of names and contact details stapled to handwritten statement sheets.
âBingo,' she said. She laid them on the desk and began leafing through each page. âMickey did the checks,' she said. She read through the first brief statement, then flicked to the next. âJesus,' she muttered. âLook at the state of this.'
Lucy leaned across and began reading the statement. The first was taken from a fifty-five-year-old school teacher who had been in the restaurant with his wife and children for lunch.
The interviewee reported first being aware of the suspect's presence when the suspect assaulted an officer and fled the scene. The interviewee saw officers pursue the suspect along the central concourse of the shopping centre.
When Lucy turned the page to the next statement, she understood Tara's reaction, for that statement was exactly the same.
âLook at the time he recorded for each statement,' Tara said. Lucy glanced at the details on the bottom of the page. Each statement was separated by at most ten minutes.
âHe interviewed them by phone,' Lucy said. âAnd copied the same statement over and over.'
Tara beamed. âThe lazy bastard! Wait till I tell Burns,' she added, gathering the sheets.
Lucy raised a placatory hand. âWould it not be even better if we could show that the actual perpetrator had been interviewed by Mickey and he'd not picked up on it?'
She knew it was a low shot at Mickey, with whom she had no particular gripe. Nevertheless, having got this close to the list of names, the last thing she needed was for Tara to hand them over to Burns before she had a chance to look at them.
Tara hesitated, clearly torn between her desire to land Mickey in it straight away and the possible increased kudos she'd gain if she could only delay gratification for a few hours.
âLet's just take a look at the men he spoke with, eh? See if anything stands out,' Lucy suggested.
A little reluctantly, Tara sat again, laying the pages down flat.
âHave you the list of names first? We know that the possible suspect was sitting with a woman and child. Let's see if we have any groupings of three, with the man having a different surname from the woman and child accompanying him.'
It was not quite so simple, for the names were listed continuously, so that the size of each group could not be determined. Still, there were, in the end, only eight men listed who did not share surnames with any of the family groups.
âHave we statements for these eight?' Lucy asked. âWe can check their dates of birth, see if that helps eliminate some of them.'
Comparing names against statements, they were able to identify two of the men as being over forty-five. While it didn't exclude them completely, Sarah Finn had suggested that âSimon Harris', as she knew him, was in his twenties. Four of the men listed were, in fact, teenagers, ranging in age from fourteen to eighteen. The elder ones certainly would have to be considered. Of the final two â Peter Bell and Gordon Fallon â Fallon's date of birth put him at twenty-nine, while the other, Bell, did not have a date of birth listed.
âHe didn't speak to him,' Lucy said. âHe filled out the statement sheet without talking to him.'
Lucy could understand entirely. Kay had been caught, a paedophile with history. Why waste time taking witness statements from people who were all saying the same thing?
âLet's check the driving licences,' Lucy suggested. âSee if their pictures match the image ICS pulled from the CCTV footage.'
Tara contacted Licensing while Lucy made them both tea. By the time she'd come back, the images had been emailed through. Both men were in their twenties; Bell was twenty-five. Both were relatively slim in their picture, both had dark hair, though the shadows on the images made it impossible to tell whether this was natural or a trick of the light.
According to the addresses on the licences, Fallon was a local, born and bred in the Creggan, while Bell's address was actually listed for Belfast. Despite this, he had given the officer in Foyleside an address in the Waterside.
âDo you fancy a run out?' Lucy asked. âWe'll try Mr Fallon first, shall we?'
F
allon's driving licence details placed him in Westway, in Creggan. They took an unmarked car, planning on speaking to Fallon simply to ascertain whether he had remembered anything further following his initial interview with Mickey.
Fallon lived in a row of houses opposite the local boys' school.
Tara nodded across at the building as they pulled up in front of Fallon's house.
âSignificant?' she asked.
âAll the victims we know of were girls,' Lucy said. âThat doesn't mean we should dismiss it entirely.'
They knocked at the door of the house, aware that in both houses abutting Fallon's, neighbours had appeared at the living room windows, watching their approach, one more surreptitiously than the other.
The door opened to reveal a girl, in her late teens, standing in the hallway, a baby nestled against her hip.
âYes?' the girl asked.
âCan we speak with Gordon Fallon, please?'
âWho are you?' the girl demanded, hoisting the child from one hip to the other. The child watched them both with wide-eyed wonder, a baby's bottle of orange cordial clenched in her tiny fist.
âWe're with the PSNI,' Tara said. âWe'd like to speak to him about an incident he witnessed last week.'
âThe paedo in the Foyleside?' the girl commented. âCome on in, then.'
The house was small, the lower floor constituting a living area, giving way to a kitchen. The wall separating them carried a breakfast bar and a hatch in the wall through which food could be handed between one room and the next. The girl led them into the living area, then opened the hatch.
âThere's two cops to see you,' she called. âAbout the paedo.'
âWhat age is your child?' Lucy asked.
âFourteen months,' the girl replied. âShe should be walking by now but she's too lazy. She wants to be carried everywhere.'
Fallon appeared at the doorway, looking in. âAll right?' he asked. âDo youse want a drink of something before I sit down?' he added to Lucy and Tara.
âI'll have a can,' his partner said.
âI'm already in,' Fallon replied. âI was asking them.'
âI'll take some of yours, then,' the girl commented.
Fallon scowled, moving into the room, handing the girl his beer can and taking position in the armchair opposite the TV. âWhat's up? I already talked to the guy on the phone about this. I told him I didn't see anything.'
âMaybe you'd talk us through it again,' Lucy offered. âJust in case something had bubbled to the surface of your memory between then and now.'
Tara glanced at her, incredulously. For his part, affecting an air of boredom, Fallon ran through a description of the incident that was, in fairness to Mickey, very close to the cut and paste job he'd done on all the witness statements.
âDo you drive?' Lucy asked, when Fallon was finished.
âWhat's that to do with anything?'
âI'm just wondering,' she offered, nonchalantly. âI noticed there's no car outside, even though you have a licence.'
âGot repossessed, didn't it,' Fallon said, glancing across at the girl who stood watching proceedings, sipping from the beer can while the child hefted against her side reached out to try to take it from her.
âI told him not to buy it. It was too dear for us. Now I have to take the bus everywhere, wi' a pram and everything.'
âWe'd have kept it if you'd stayed working,' Fallon snapped.