Depth of despair, p.24

Depth of Despair, page 24

 

Depth of Despair
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  Nash coughed. ‘I’ll wait outside.’

  As he returned to the first part of the garage Nash kicked savagely at an empty cardboard box. Twenty minutes later Zena and Jackie emerged with the child. Each had a protective arm around her. ‘Mikhail, this is Lyuba,’ Zena told him, adding, ‘perhaps her name is a good omen. It means love.’

  Nash smiled and said hello. The little girl stared back with wide, frightened eyes that Nash knew would haunt his dreams for a long time. ‘It is alright,’ Zena told the child in Russian, ‘Mikhail is a good man. He made it possible for you to be set free.’

  Nash saw the look of fear lessen and disappear, to be replaced with a sweet, shy smile. Maybe there was hope after all. ‘Lyuba was kidnapped from the streets of Kiev two months ago,’ Zena continued. ‘On her way home after gymnastic class. A van pulled up and the driver asked for directions. As she was telling him another man crept up behind and threw her into the back. He injected her arm and she fell asleep. She awoke in that place,’ Zena gestured behind her. ‘She has been here ever since. Lyuba is eleven years old.’

  It was late afternoon when Nash returned to Helmsdale. He left Jackie and Zena to escort Lyuba to the rape suite and to take her statement. Nash told Pearce about the developments and the discovery of the child.

  Pearce shook his in head disbelief, ‘Poor kid. It makes me want to …’ He found it impossible to give voice to his fury.

  A few moments later Clara walked in. ‘Zena phoned; she promised to stay with Lyuba tonight. The police surgeon’s going to check her. There’s a problem with counselling, though. None of our counsellors speaks Russian, so Zena will do the translation. I’ve promised I’d help when I’m free. That’s all we can do until some decision’s made about her returning home. Zena’s spoken to Lyuba’s parents and the police in Kiev. She didn’t tell them everything, just that the child was safe and well. They were overjoyed, as you’d expect. One good thing, if you can call it that; Lyuba told them it was only Butler who touched her. She hadn’t been hired out like the rest.’

  ‘I suppose that was to come,’ Nash said.

  Nash took the confessions into a meeting with Tom Pratt, the Chief Constable and Zena plus his own team. He handed out copies of the three statements together with those of Vatovec and the pilot. ‘That’s the lot. All we have to do is follow the trail of Wardle’s contacts as we retrieve them from his computer. It’s already shown us names and addresses throughout Britain and the Continent. We should be able to roll up the entire network.’

  The Chief Constable beamed with pleasure. ‘Well done, everybody. That sounds like game, set and match.’

  chapter nineteen

  Nash reached his flat in a somewhat deflated state of mind. He’d been working on adrenalin for so long that now he felt immeasurably tired. He checked with the hospital on Stella’s condition, to be told there was no change. Now all he wanted was sleep, but first he had a call from the leader of the team enquiring into the death of DS Thomas. Nash confirmed he’d be available for interview the following day.

  He’d just put the phone down when the doorbell rang. He muttered something vaguely impolite and went to answer it. Zena was standing on the doorstep, a bottle of champagne in her hand. ‘I’ve come to say goodbye. I fly to St Petersburg tomorrow. I’ll start mopping up the Russian end of this operation. For me, this is only one battle in the war. I was asked to deliver you this.’ She held up the bottle. ‘I have a message. It is from Sergei and Anna Svetlov. They asked me to say that it’s in gratitude for recovering Katya’s body. Now they can take her home, bury her and mourn her. This is something for you to remember them by.’

  ‘Come on in. There’s far too much for me to drink.’

  Nash went into the kitchen and put the bottle in the freezer to chill. When he returned to the sitting room Zena had removed her coat. Nash stopped in his tracks. Zena was wearing nothing but a smile. ‘I also wanted to give you something to remember.’

  ‘From the information we got out of Wardle’s computer we’ve already secured the release of five more youngsters in Britain,’ Nash told Pratt. ‘A further thirteen men are in custody. We’ve sent paperwork to seven countries in Western Europe, plus a shipload to Zena’s office. There have already been over two hundred arrests.’

  ‘What else is left to do?’

  ‘Not much. I delivered the papers to the CPS. One of their men looked through them whilst I was there. I thought he was going to wet himself with excitement. He told me he’d heard that Wardle’s solicitor has approached three top barristers and all three had refused the brief. They pleaded pressure of work, but the word is nobody wants to touch it.’

  Pratt smiled, ‘Barristers with principles, now there’s a first. I’ve got news for you. They’ve finished the investigation into Thomas’s death but Armistead’s disciplinary hearing opens tomorrow. They’ve booked a hotel in Cheshire, close to Manchester airport. You’re to report there tomorrow. You’ll be needed for a couple of days. Here are the details.’ He passed Nash a fax.

  Nash stuffed the paper in his coat pocket.

  Back in Helmsdale, he called Clara into his office. ‘I’m going away for a couple of days. It’s that disciplinary hearing. If you need me urgently I can be contacted at …’ He rummaged in his pocket and unfolded the fax. He gave a low whistle of surprise.

  ‘What is it?’

  ‘Talk about coincidence. The hotel I’m booked into. Lauren works there.’

  ‘Lauren? The girl who used to be receptionist at The Square and Compass? The one you were sha … I mean seeing.’

  ‘Shagging, was what you were going to say? Yes is the answer to both questions.’

  Nash gave evidence the following afternoon but was asked to stay the night in case the enquiry needed further information. His testimony centred on the bugging of his office and the pilfered phone records. He made it clear throughout that he considered both acts to be the work of Armistead and Thomas alone. That there was nothing to suggest DCI Fleming had been involved or had prior knowledge of the irregular conduct.

  He decided to dine in his room. It had not been pleasant testifying against a fellow officer, despite his loathing for Armistead. Added to that, there were over a dozen other officers in the hotel. Events at Helmsdale had hit the headlines; the grapevine had done the rest. Nash was well on the way to celebrity status, which was something he didn’t particularly relish.

  About 9 p.m. there was a knock on his door. ‘Room service.’ The trolley was set out with his order.

  He stood aside to let the woman wheel it in. She pushed the trolley to the middle of the room and turned to face him. She looked at him with amusement and something more. ‘Where would you like it, sir?’

  ‘Lauren! I wondered if I might see you. I wasn’t sure whether you still worked here.’

  ‘There was I thinking you’d arranged the whole thing just so we could get together. When I saw your name on the reservation sheet I couldn’t resist the temptation to surprise you.’

  ‘You certainly did that. I haven’t heard from you since you left Helmsdale.’

  ‘I haven’t had much time with all the training and I’ve had a lot to worry about. My father died last month and mother’s taken it hard.’

  ‘I’m sorry.’

  ‘What I need is something to cheer me up.’ Lauren walked up to him and put her hands on his shoulders. He caught a whiff of her scent, remembered the light fragrance. His pulse began to race. ‘And I think you’ve got the very thing,’ she continued. One hand slipped from his shoulder and reached towards his groin. ‘I thought so,’ she whispered.

  He’d removed her blouse and skirt when there was another knock at the door. He zipped up his trousers and padded across the room. ‘Whoever it is, send them away. Tell them you’re doing something important. Tell them you’re doing me.’

  From the doorway Jackie Fleming’s gaze went straight past him to the sofa. She lowered the champagne bottle. Her face flushed with anger. ‘I was going to suggest we celebrate but I see you have company. Of a sort.’

  Nash stared after her as she flounced down the corridor.

  ‘Mike?’

  He turned. Lauren was standing in the bedroom doorway. ‘I’m coming,’ he told her.

  ‘Oh I hope not,’ Lauren laughed. ‘At least, not yet.’

  *

  The following lunchtime, Clara was alone in the CID suite when Nash returned. She looked up as he walked in. She looked distraught. Her eyes were red with crying. ‘Clara! What’s wrong?’

  ‘Mike, I’m sorry. I can’t … I had a phone call … I don’t know how …’ Clara gulped and took a deep breath. ‘There was a phone call this morning. I’m so sorry, Mike. Stella died last night.’

  afterword

  Christmas was approaching when Nash received an envelope bearing a Russian stamp. The letter expressed the gratitude of the Russian government. It took Nash a few seconds to decipher the signature of the President. He read it before placing it in a drawer. Somehow it all seemed meaningless.

  A few days later he received another envelope with a similar stamp. It contained a Christmas card. He studied it in silence. Clara had entered the room. ‘What is it, Mike?’

  He passed the card to her. Instead of a traditional Christmas scene, it depicted a smiling family group, consisting of a handsome middle-aged man, an attractive woman and a pretty teenager with the joy of life blazing from her eyes. The signatures were Sergei, Anna and Milla. ‘About the only Christmas present I could have wished for.’

  Author’s Note to Depth of Despair

  All authors approach writing a book differently. Some think up the whole plot before they set a word down. Others sit in front of either a blank screen or sheet of paper. If I had to say which of those is closer to my approach I’d say the latter. Depth of Despair is a fair example of what I mean. I started with only the idea of an angler fishing a skull from a tarn. I even had a stretch of water in mind. But that was all. The rest of the plot was organic, if you’ll pardon the pun.

  At the beginning of every work of fiction there’s a disclaimer about the characters and events being purely fictitious. Well, that’s certainly true of the characters in Depth of Despair. Unfortunately, the incidents described are based on fact. Okay, so they didn’t happen in Yorkshire; or at least I hope not.

  When I was researching Depth of Despair I was horrified to find that every one of the crimes perpetrated by the villains in the book was mirrored by events in real life. In fact, I shrank from portraying worse deeds. Everything is there for anyone to read: the trafficking, the prostitution and the organ removals.

  When Zena quotes statistics regarding the scale of human trafficking, those figures came from official reports. When she cites individual cases, they are from real life.

  I wish it were otherwise. If that had been so, this book would never have been written. I would have willingly paid that price for the events not to have happened. But they did, and once I’d learned it, I was compelled to continue. If you think that was easy, think again. Whilst I was writing some of the more harrowing passages, particularly those relating to the ordeal of the victims, I found myself unable to sleep. Nash’s nightmare about being attacked by scythe wielding surgeons stems from a nightmare I endured.

  Bill Kitson

  2009

  Copyright

  © Bill Kitson 2009

  First published in Great Britain 2009

  This edition 2011

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9514 9 (ebook)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9515 6 (mobi)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 9516 3 (pdf)

  ISBN 978 0 7090 8849 3 (print)

  Robert Hale Limited

  Clerkenwell House

  Clerkenwell Green

  London EC1R 0HT

  www.halebooks.com

  The right of Bill Kitson to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

 


 

  Bill Kitson, Depth of Despair

 


 

 
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