‘What’s happening? Where am I?’ he croaked.
Brook went to the bed and looked down at him. ‘You’re in hospital, Jason.’
Jason sat up and blinked at his surroundings. He rubbed at the tube inserted in his forearm then looked up at Brook.
‘I’m thirsty,’ he said in that whining voice children use to ask for something without the bother of having to ask. Brook poured him some water from a jug and he drank it down in one, occasionally darting an eye at his impassive visitor. The wariness of the guilty conscience was the first defence mechanism to be revived. He thrust the glass back at Brook for a refill and drank again, more slowly this time.
Thinking time, thought Brook. Eventually Jason cracked.
‘Who are you?’ he asked.
‘Detective Inspector Brook.’ The answer didn’t seem to surprise Jason.
‘Fuck do
you
want?’ he snarled. The routine fear of authority, accepted in Brook’s distant youth, was now a faded memory–a museum piece of a reaction. Today the obligatory response of youth was contempt. Contempt
for those who couldn’t stop them doing exactly as they pleased. Parents, teachers, coppers.
‘I can’t talk to you without an adult present. The social worker…’
‘What you on about?’
‘I can’t talk to you without another adult present. Those are the rules, Jason. I’m sure you know the procedure by now.’
Jason leered at Brook. ‘Oh I get it. It’s that fuckin’ teacher been spreadin’ her lies again. I told you lot before, I never laid a finger on it. Get my dad in here.’
‘That would be difficult.’
‘You can’t interview me without an adult.’
‘I just told
you
that.’
‘Then stop hassling me.’
‘I’ve gotta say, Jason, you’ve got this whole performance down perfectly.’
‘Fuck off! And who the fuck are you?’ demanded Jason looking past Brook.
‘My name’s Carly Graham, Jason. I’m a social worker.’
Brook turned and smiled at her. ‘Detective Inspector Brook.’ She was young and slim with long brown hair, attractive in a pale, mousy kind of way. She wore a tight brown sweater and a brown corduroy skirt down to her calves, where fur-lined brown suede boots took over. Jason looked her up and down, thinking what to say next.
‘Inspector. You shouldn’t be interviewing Jason without at least one adult present. He’s under age and vulnerable.’
‘I keep fucking telling him,’ spat Jason.
‘No I keep telling you, Jason. I’m not interviewing him, Miss Graham. I just got here and Jason just woke up and I’ve told him repeatedly I can’t speak to him on his own.’
‘It’s against the rules,’ she continued, to establish her firm grip on procedure.
‘That could’ve been me talking, Miss Graham,’ replied Brook, a half-smile on his lips.
‘I don’t feel too good,’ wailed Jason, holding his recently pumped stomach.
‘Under the circumstances, I don’t think you should be taking things so lightly, Inspector.’
‘No, I suppose not,’ replied Brook, making no effort to take things more seriously.
‘What circumstances?’ moaned Jason.
‘It can wait until…’ began Carly Graham.
‘No it fucking can’t. I want to know why he’s here so keep your mouth shut, bitch, until I tell you to open it.’
Carly Graham glanced at Brook. She didn’t show a flicker of emotion. Like Brook, she’d probably seen Jason’s expression of scorn and hatred a thousand times. Finally she shrugged and waved her palm from Brook to her client.
‘I’m here about a murder, Jason,’ began Brook.
‘What’s that got to do with me?’ Jason sneered. This conversation had a well worn path and Brook wondered whether he could see it through. The Jasons of this world went out of their way to alienate. Unless they were spraying their scent over everything and everyone they weren’t happy and Brook, in his fatigue, was tempted to jettison the script and give it to him straight.
He fought the urge and tried to find his most sympathetic tone.
‘We’ve got bad news,’ he said.
‘Oh yeah. What is it?’
Brook smiled at Carly Graham. This was her field.
She sighed and took up the baton. ‘Jason, I’m afraid your father and mother are dead, your sister Kylie too. I’m sorry for your loss.’
They both looked at Jason’s uncomprehending face. After a moment Jason’s face broke into a wide grin. ‘You lying bitch,’ he finally said. ‘That’s bollocks.’
‘Jason…’ began Brook.
‘What are you trying to pull, you lying bastards? What do you take me for?’
Brook removed a crime scene photograph of Jason’s father from his pocket and held it in front of his face. Jason’s eyes widened then squinted in confusion. He made to grab the photo but Brook returned it to his pocket.
‘They’re dead. They were murdered last night.’ A tear began to dampen the corner of Jason’s eye. The baby had returned. Brook wondered whether to be sorry for his loss but was unable to dredge up any sincerity.
Jason seemed unable to take it in. ‘Fuck off, will yer. You’re doing my head in.’
‘Their throats were cut. The baby was unharmed. I’ve got more pictures if you don’t believe me.’
‘Inspector!’ warned Carly Graham.
He’d gone too far but knew in his heart that the longer he dealt with this boy, the more he’d be glad he was able to affect him, to hurt him, to reach behind that curtain of aggression and find the heart of a child.
Jason’s features crumpled and, like all but the newest men, he tried to hide his tears. Brook was pleased with the reaction despite the gnaw of guilt on his conscience.
‘Me mum and dad?’ he quivered.
‘Yes.’
‘Kylie?’
‘Yes.’
‘I don’t believe you.’
‘Yes you do.’
Now the tears began to fall. He sobbed for a minute, Carly Graham’s hand patting his, before getting control of his emotions. ‘What’s going to happen to me?’ he sniffed.
Brook stared at the boy, then at Carly, trying to hide his disgust.
‘Don’t think about that now, Jason,’ cooed Carly. ‘Your aunt will be in to see you later. You should get some rest.’
‘And rest assured you’ll be fully protected.’
Carly Graham flashed Brook a warning look.
‘Protected?’ said Jason, almost to himself.
Brook wasn’t proud of his satisfaction at seeing Jason squirm but knew it was the best guarantee of cooperation. ‘If you’d been home a little earlier last night we wouldn’t be talking to you now. And it’s possible whoever did this may see you as unfinished business.’
Jason looked up, saucer-eyed. ‘Me?’
‘Inspector. What good is this doing? Can’t this wait?’
‘Not if we want to catch the murderer quickly. Particularly as Jason may have been the main target.’
‘What you talking about? This is so gay. Fuck off and leave me alone.’
‘I’m talking about you, Jason. You’re the celebrity in the family. There’s a chance whoever did this was after you.’
Jason began to sob again. A tear for his butchered father, a tear for his butchered mother, perhaps a couple for his torn sister and a bucketful for himself.
‘We need your help,’ continued Brook.
‘I don’t know nothing,’ he snorted, managing to resurrect a little aggression.
‘That’s a pity because the longer this man is free, the greater the danger to you.’ Brook’s reassuring smile had the desired effect.
‘You’re doin’ my head in. I don’t know nothing,’ he insisted.
‘So where were you last night?’
‘Hanging.’
‘Where?’
‘Around.’
‘Who with?’
‘Some mates.’
‘I want names.’
‘Fuck that. I’m no grass.’
‘Where did you get a hundred pounds?’
‘I won it on a horse,’ Jason sneered with the standard and-you-can’t-prove-otherwise leer.
‘Really Well as you’re too young to legally place a bet, that money will have to be confiscated.’
‘You can’t do that…’
‘And the Ecstasy?’
Jason’s triumphant manner subsided. ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about. You’ve planted that on me. I’ve been out cold. Anyone…’
‘Look,’ began Brook then paused for a deep breath to compose his thoughts, ‘I’m not interested in your…habits, Jason. If you want to pop a few pills to brighten your drab existence, who am I to care?’
Jason prepared to protest but was unsure how to go about it.
Carly Graham eyed Brook with concern. ‘Inspector, I don’t think…’
‘Under the circumstances, I can overlook possession. If you co-operate,’ said Brook, making an effort to keep to the script.
Jason withdrew his unformed objection and stared down at the bed, sullen but yielding. ‘What do you want to know?’
‘Take me through what happened when you got home.’
Brook took a few notes although it wasn’t really his forte. Jason told him little that he didn’t already know so he didn’t have much to record. But he confirmed that his parents had ‘won’ a competition at the local Pizza Parlour and that he’d nearly stayed in. He had no idea what time he got home, though he had a feeling it was after closing time–he was self-absorbed enough not to worry about admitting he’d been in a pub. He’d got home starving and headed straight for the kitchen. He tucked into the first pizza to hand. And then…nothing. Until now. No, his parents didn’t drink wine and no, they didn’t listen to any of that classical bollocks.
‘But did
you
hear it when you got in?’
‘Don’t know, alright. I don’t remember.’ Jason lowered his head in despair at the thoughts and images crowding
in. He sighed and looked up at Brook. ‘I don’t think I heard no music. Okay.’
‘Fair enough.’ Brook flipped his notes shut and stood up to go. Jason was leaving a lot out but it could wait.
Suddenly the patient seemed animated, as though Brook’s imminent departure left unfinished business. Then his face brightened. ‘What about the telly?’
‘Telly?’ asked Brook. ‘It’s still there.’
‘No, you know. An appeal for witnesses and stuff. They can interview me and I can ask people for help to catch the bastard. I can handle it.’
Brook stood motionless for a second, unable to think of a suitable response. He could see Carly Graham open-mouthed. ‘I bet you can,’ he said, and walked away.
Brook passed Jones at the coffee machine. ‘What happened about Jason’s clothes?’
‘Bagged up with his shoes and sent to Forensics, sir.’
‘Good. And you’ve booked in the money and the drugs?’
‘Yes sir.’
‘Which means we’ve got Wallis on possession, possibly dealing. We’ll leave out suspicion of triple homicide.’
‘Sir?’
‘He’s a suspect, Constable. Possibly dangerous. Cuff him.’
‘The doctor said…’
‘Never mind the doctor. It’s procedure. Cuff him.’
The press conference started promptly at four in the revamped media centre of D Division. Brook hadn’t been in there since McMaster had been promoted. He knew she’d refurbished the place but hadn’t realised how much. The last time he’d taken part in a press briefing, he’d sat at the end of a long table by the door, facing the window. The sun had slammed into his eyes throughout and he’d become bad-tempered and impatient with the stupidity of a local reporter, who took his dismay out on the Force in print the next day.
Being a consummate politician, Evelyn McMaster had spotted this handicap and had set about changing the layout of the room. The harsh colours were gone, the acoustics had been improved but, most significantly, the officers now doing the briefing sat with their backs to the windows and the journalists had any sun shining in
their
eyes.
The police had another advantage; the psychological benefit of a raised platform, boxed in to afford a view of head and upper torso only. They could now look down on the journalists literally, as well as metaphorically.
Brook sat stony-faced throughout McMaster’s briefing-by-numbers, allowing his eyes to wander round the room at all the unfamiliar faces. A chord had obviously been struck with the nation’s editors, because all the nationals were here, as were the BBC, ITV and other TV crews. The local media were all present, including Brian Burton from the
Derby Telegraph
, whose nose Brook had so firmly put out of joint a couple of years back. He was also the reporter who’d splashed important details of the Plummer rape case the year before, causing a great deal of damage to the prosecution, not to mention arousing suspicions between officers at the station about who’d provided him with key information.
McMaster drew to a close and invited DI Brook to add his own observations.
‘I can only reiterate the comments made by Chief Superintendent McMaster,’ Brook began. ‘From the brutal nature of these murders, we know this man is extremely dangerous. Any information, relating to his movements in Drayfin last night, or any other suspicious occurrences, that could help us catch this man, will be gratefully received. All such information will be treated in strict confidence and will be followed up, no matter how insignificant it may seem.’
‘What progress have you made so far, Inspector?’ ventured one reporter, squinting to counteract the glare from the setting sun.
‘Our enquiries are under way and no stone will be left unturned but at the moment we are awaiting the results of forensic and post mortem examinations. Until
that information is available, it would be inappropriate for me to comment further.’
‘Have you found the weapon?’ asked an attractive young woman with a microphone.
‘Not yet.’
‘But you do know what type of weapon was used?’ she said.
‘As I say, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time.’
‘Could somebody be shielding this man?’ asked a man with a BBC microphone.
‘It’s possible,’ Brook nodded, unsure of the relevance of the question.
‘You don’t seem too sure,’ jumped in Brian Burton.
‘I’m sure it’s possible, Brian.’ Brook winced from a warning tap on the ankle bone from McMaster–another benefit of the enclosed panelling
‘I’m
sure that most normal people, Inspector, find it hard to imagine that anyone could knowingly shelter such a monster.’