Simon Kernick - The Crime Trade
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- Название:The Crime Trade
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‘Have they caught the gunmen?’ asked Stegs.
Woodham turned to him with a look of suspicion. ‘I think one, or possibly more of them, might have been shot, but, yes, they’ve all been apprehended.’
‘Good.’
I let go of Stegs’s arm, and watched him carefully. He stared back at me, his expression asking me to believe him, but something in it wasn’t right. Something said that he knew much more than he was letting on.
‘I’m telling you the truth, John. I promise.’
I wondered how he’d react when I told him we knew about Trevor Murk. Act surprised, and continue to keep to his story, I thought. Stegs Jenner was a born liar. He’d been doing it for a career for the past ten years, and I reckoned he’d been honing his trade for a lot longer before that. I decided then that it wasn’t worth mentioning Murk just yet. Best to spring it on him in an interview, where any silence or spluttering denials would be recorded.
But something was bothering me. You see, the thing was, parts of his story made sense. Vokes hadn’t been there at the first meeting with O’Brien. He’d also been on the raid from which the murder weapon had almost certainly been lifted. He hadn’t wanted to be left in the room back at the hotel, had tried to insist that it wasn’t him. Vokes Vokerman could answer a lot of questions.
Except he was dead.
I sighed, continuing to fix my gaze on Stegs Jenner. ‘Wherever we go, Stegs, and whatever we uncover, things always seem to keep coming back to you.’
‘You’re getting paranoid, John,’ he said, the beginnings of a smile on his face.
Just that little bit too cocky for my liking.
Which was when all the frustrations and fears of the day got the better of me and I punched him hard in the face. For just one second, it was the most satisfying blow I’d ever landed, and it knocked him spark out.
‘I’ll pretend I didn’t see that,’ said Woodham, a faint smile appearing beneath the big moustache.
Afterwards
Life, it seems, never goes quite the way you want it to go, and what you think might happen often never does. DCS Noel Flanagan, the head of SO7, was uncovered as the leak to Neil Vamen. There’d been some canteen talk in the dim and distant past centring on the fact that he wasn’t quite as straight as he’d have the Brass believe, but no one ever expected him to have been responsible for providing information that led to the death of an officer from his own unit, and that came within seconds of collapsing the case he and SO7 had been working on for years. Not only was it out of character, it was always going to be impossible to do without being found out. It was the police equivalent of a suicide note. Rumours abounded as to why he’d done it, and there was even talk that Vamen’s operatives had kidnapped his daughter and used her to extract the information from him, but no-one ever knew for sure, and neither father nor daughter ever said a word about it. Neither did we find out who the anonymous caller was who’d given Malik those few minutes’ warning that an attack on Jack Merriweather was imminent. Again, rumour suggested it might well have been Flanagan, perhaps suffering a fit of guilt (although it seemed a little strange, him incriminating himself), but no-one ever found out for sure.
Initially, Flanagan was not only suspended but also charged with perverting the course of justice. However, the charges were later quietly dropped due to lack of evidence, and he left the police, having denied any wrongdoing. He now lives in France with his wife, while his daughter continues her studies at university in the UK.
Stegs Jenner also left the Force. He was questioned at length about a number of crimes emanating from the hotel and their aftermath, but he too denied everything and the evidence against him remained weak. When confronted about his relationship with Trevor Murk, who’d been confirmed now as the shooter in the O’Brien/MacNamara killings, Stegs expressed shock. He admitted to having had a long and well-documented relationship with Murk, but claimed to be wholly unaware that his erstwhile informant was also a killer with not only the deaths of O’Brien and MacNamara to his name, but also the earlier murder of the garage owner Paul Bailey, as well as the strange killing of Hans Rieperman, otherwise known as Tino Movali, a small-time Dutch porn actor whose body was found two days later in the same building where Murk had been killed. He’d been shot with the revolver Murk had been carrying when he’d died, and it was surmised that he had been the one responsible. Intriguingly, Stegs admitted to meeting both men in the days leading up to their deaths, but explained that the reason for this was that Murk had introduced him to Rieperman, who was a drug dealer, in order to set him up and claim a financial reward. Stegs said that, even though he’d been suspended at the time, and it went against all the police rules to have unofficial contact with informants, he’d gone along to the meeting out of curiosity. It had, he said, been the last he’d seen of both men. As for his visit to Vamen’s solicitor, the reason for this, apparently, was to let Carroll know that Stegs was on to him and his client, and that he was going to make them pay for almost getting him killed at Heathrow.
An unlikely story, but somehow it left me thinking, not for the first time, that some parts of this case will forever be shrouded in mystery. Sadly, that’s often the way it goes. Endings in the real world are never usually neat.
One interesting little question that was answered, though, was how Murk had got into the building where he’d murdered O’Brien. We’d assumed that Kitty MacNamara had let him in, but the truth, or the most likely version of it anyway, turned out to be far more interesting. Apparently, he’d had a brief affair in the weeks leading up to the shooting with the married woman living in one of the ground-floor flats. She’d been away on holiday with her husband and young son while the investigation had been going on, but on returning had heard about what had happened, seen Murk’s photograph, and approached us discreetly to say that she thought he might have copied her key and used it to gain entrance. The affair, she’d said, had been ended abruptly by him a week before the killings, and she’d been so nervous that he might break in during her absence that she’d left her jewellery in the hands of her mother. Whatever else you said about Murk, he’d been professional to the end.
During the course of this tale, more than one person has alluded to the cunning of Mr Stegs Jenner and whether or not what he was telling us was true (and most of us thought it was far too coincidental to be the truth), but he was sticking to his version of events and, as a result, he was eventually released from police custody without charge. Since then, his wife has sued for divorce, and the last I heard he was dividing his time between London and Spain.
Neil Vamen suffered badly as a result of his attempt to tip the scales of justice in his favour. The Law Society began an investigation into claims that his solicitor, Melvyn Carroll, was acting as his mouthpiece and had had a part in setting up the safe-house attack on Merriweather, and the investigation is still going on. Merriweather himself was moved to another safe house, reputed to be within the British naval base in Gibraltar, where he is guarded round the clock by armed marines and where the chances of anything happening to him range from somewhere between slim and none, but veering towards the latter. As for Vamen himself, such was the public outcry at news that a supposed crime lord could strike so blatantly at those ranged against him that the prime minister himself made a statement claiming that such lawlessness could not, and would not, be tolerated. He sounded like he meant it as well.
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