Take No More Read online
Take No More
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Part One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Part Two
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Part Three
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Part Four
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Part Five
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Next in Series
Copyright
Part One
London
Friday August 29th to Sunday August 31st
Chapter 1
Friday August 29th
I could not have known that this day, of all days, was the one that would change my life so much for the worse.
I was walking down the steps at the side of Southwark Cathedral. I’d left work in time to get to Borough Market while it was still open. Julia was away in Florence working on a project for her conservation studio, absorbed in her work restoring paintings and we hadn’t seen each other for over a month.
The old Market had been transformed in recent years with the arrival from all over the world of so many young workers in London. Now almost every taste and every cuisine was catered for at the bustling stalls wedged beneath the Victorian overhead railway, its cast iron supports forming an ornate roof.
It was still a wonder to me how much I loved Julia. And how much she loved me. We were soul mates. It was as simple as that. Nor could I believe how lucky we’d been to buy the apartment overlooking the Thames.
As I left the Market, the view across the river, taking in the Embankment and with St Paul’s dominating the opposite skyline, was magnificent. The Thames was always in flow, turbulent and full of interest, a working river with craft of all shapes and sizes.
Turning onto the riverside walk, popular with tourists but still retaining enough of the character that for centuries had made it a mysterious place, I walked on through a low brick walled tunnel where a busker, no doubt a young musician from one of the London orchestras, was playing Brahms. I walked past the terrace restaurant at the base of our apartment building, typed in the security number on the touchpad, pushed open the door and walked up the flight of stairs that led to the apartment.
Something was wrong. The door to the apartment was open; not ajar, but open just four or five inches.
We never left the door open no matter how good the security system of the apartment building was supposed to be.
I approached the door, trembling. I pushed against it. It would hardly give; there was something behind the door, stopping it from opening. I pushed harder until it gave. I forced my way inside.
It was Julia. She’d collapsed against the inside of the door trying to escape the apartment. There was blood everywhere.
I felt for a pulse – at her wrist, at her neck – but there was none.
I felt the deepest sadness welling from the base of my soul. It began with a scream that progressed to a howl of bitter regret followed by tears that shook my whole body.
Someone had killed her. Her body was still warm. It must have happened not many minutes before.
Chapter 2
The police arrived quickly after my call.
I hadn’t been allowed to remain in the apartment for long. While a forensic team set to work analysing the scene, it was politely suggested it would be better if I gave as much information as possible at the station to allow them to track the killer.
The inspector – his name was Hendricks – had been very persuasive.
I’d been with a female police officer in a small room in Euston police station for over an hour, nominally receiving grief counselling. But there was something false about her manner, as if she was stalling while elsewhere in the building enquiries were being made – about what I did not know.
And now I was sitting on an uncomfortable chair in an adjacent interview room that smelt of sweat and corruption, answering questions. I’d been through the immediate events: Name – James Blake. Age – thirty-one. Occupation – radio producer. Height – 6’ 1”. Eyes – hazel green.
Where had I been that day? Why had I returned to the apartment? How I had found Julia? Why had I not expected her return?
Nothing I said was flagged up as out of place.
“Mr Blake, can you think of any reason why your wife should have been killed?”
Hendricks, who shaved his head on the assumption that no one would then notice his pattern baldness, had eyes that were slightly far apart. There was a look in those eyes that told me if we were the last two people alive I would not have wanted to trust him.
My mind was not functioning. The shock had been too great.
Why would anyone want to kill her? It made no sense.
“Can you think of any threats made to her? Any enemies?” Hendricks continued.
“No, nothing, I mean… no one.” It was all I could bring myself to say.
What was the point? She was gone. That was the inescapable, saddest fact.
“Your wife; it’s almost certain she knew her attacker,” Hendricks said. “There was no forced entry, either at the main entrance to the apartments or at your door.”
Eighty per cent of murders are carried out by persons known to the victim. So, was it any surprise the police often looked as close to home as possible?
“I just can’t imagine anyone who would want to do harm to Julia.”
“We’ll just have to follow up on all her contacts,” Hendricks said with an underlying note of resignation. “If you can’t help, that is.” Why did it feel they were already thinking of fitting me up? Whatever happened to the grief counselling?
What did they know that they were not telling me? How did they think I would be able to help them when I was so distressed?
“She kept an address book in her bedside drawer.”
“We have it.” Hendricks looked disappointed. “It will take quite some time to work our way through that list. And we have the computer from the apartment. We’ve taken it away for examination. Your computer?”
“Yes, that’s mine. Julia uses a laptop.”
“Which is where?”
“At her work. At the conservation stud
io.”
“So there’s nothing unusual you know of about your wife’s recent contacts?”
“I don’t know what you expect me to tell you.”
“You could begin by telling me about your wife’s affair.”
There was no compassion in Hendricks’ voice.
Chapter 3
I didn’t want to think about it.
Someone had told me, I couldn’t quite remember who it was. It could have been my brother Miles who had been working as a journalist for over ten years now. The police know how to lie to get a result.
Why else would Hendricks be saying Julia had been unfaithful? Was it no more than a trick to help them to pin Julia’s murder on me?
Or had they found something in Julia’s possessions in the hour they’d kept me waiting?
“I have no idea what you mean,” I said. My thoughts were beginning to clear enough for me to face up to what the inspector had told me.
“Your wife, Mr Blake, she was an attractive woman.” Hendricks was warming to the task. “She spent time away in her work; she must have been hit on by any number of men trying their luck. You don’t think she would not have finally given in to the charms of one of the Italian gigolos she was bound to have met on her art conservation travels?” He almost made art conservation sound like a perversion. “Florence, wasn’t it?”
I could feel my anger rising. It was emerging despite the weight of the grief I felt. Hendricks was deliberately playing with my fears. Hoping to get lucky, hoping I would break down and, if there had been an affair, he could develop this as a motive.
“Look, my wife has been killed, I’m in a state of shock, and you’re making insinuations she was being unfaithful. Tell me what you know. Or leave me alone.”
“I know what you must be feeling.” There was a note of compassion in the inspector’s voice that I didn’t buy. “But you know we have to get at the facts as quickly as possible. We found this.”
Hendricks passed across the table a postcard sealed in a transparent evidence bag. It was a typical tourist scene, showing the Ponte Vecchio in Florence resplendent at night, straddling the Arno.
“Turn it over.”
I read the words in the message with growing fear and anguish. The message said:
As ever, my perfect love.
Remember Michelangelo’s slaves.
I can’t wait to see you again.
Giancarlo
“We found it near her bedside table, between the pages in the book she’d been reading. Do you know this Giancarlo?” Hendricks asked. “Go on, tell me. He’s been poking her all the time she was out in Florence and you got to know all about it and you came up with the idea of having her killed and walking away with the deeds to that nice flat overlooking the Thames, didn’t you?”
“You must be crazy.”
“We checked. The insurance on the apartment was increased only six weeks ago. If either of you died, the other would pick up enough to pay off the mortgage. A cool half million.”
“Our solicitor told us to do it. The value of the apartment has almost doubled since we bought it. You know what London property prices are like. There is nothing sinister in that and I don’t know who the hell Giancarlo is or why he would be writing to my wife like that. And I didn’t kill her. “
“She’s back in London and she doesn’t phone you or text you?”
“I haven’t heard from her.”
“It’s funny,” Hendricks said, “we haven’t been able to find her phone. How many women get separated from their phones? On your own account, she’s made a sudden change of plan and yet doesn’t try to contact you. Why would she do that?”
“I don’t know why… I’m struggling to understand any of this.”
“Her lover. Giancarlo. It’s not that deep is it?” Hendricks paused. “It’s the sort of thing that could lead to subterfuge and, if you knew about it, the sort of thing that could arouse a certain jealousy of mind. Enough to have your wife killed.”
“What makes you think it was someone who had planned to have her killed? It could have been a failed burglary, some demented crack-head trying to steal enough for the next fix.”
“I don’t think so,” Hendricks said. “We haven’t had the full autopsy report back yet but the pathologist has seen cases like this before. He phoned straight away as soon as he saw the pattern of the damage to your wife’s head.”
There was worse to come. Hendricks was playing with me.
“The bullet had been expertly tampered with. The killer used a dum-dum to make sure the slug didn’t pass through your wife’s head but expanded at the base of her brain when she was shot in the back of the head.”
Hendricks paused.
“Mr Blake, whoever did this intended to kill.”
“So you think I hired someone to kill my own wife and then went to the apartment to find her dying in my arms?”
“You tell me, Mr Blake. The one thing you learn in this line of work is there is no end to the devious intentions of our fellow man. People think it throws people like me off the scent. They couldn’t be more wrong.”
Chapter 4
I was allowed one call. My brother, Miles, was in London, staying at the Bridge Hotel close to London Bridge Station. We’d met for lunch the day before. I placed the call.
Within an hour I was out. The solicitor Miles had brought with him must have known his craft well. Hendricks was left with no reason to hold me, though he made it clear he did not approve of the release.
Even so, I had my fingerprints taken and I had to give a nasal swab so my DNA could be analysed and logged. The result would remain on the police database no matter what the outcome of their investigation. It was not enough that I’d been brought to the station and questioned. No doubt they would be trying all they could to match my DNA to what they’d found at the crime scene.
“I want you to report here every day,” Hendricks had said.
“Does that mean I’m a suspect?”
“Let’s just say we will need to talk to you again at short notice and you should not stray too far. Make sure you give us the address where you’re staying before you leave.”
I couldn’t go back to the apartment; even if I could have faced that, it would be off-limits for some days while the police continued their investigation. Miles suggested I should stay at his hotel and within half an hour of being released we were sitting in Miles’ room. It was more of a suite with a large seating area and more than a hint of comfort about it.
Miles had noted my expression. “It’s on expenses. The newspaper picks up the tab when I have to work in London. It’s a major that should lead to a story with world wide importance.” But then, remembering the gravity of the situation, his voice lowered. “I can’t tell you how sorry I am.”
“They’ve killed her,” I said. “I don’t know how I’m going to come to terms with that. But I’ll tell you something, whoever they are, whoever did this thing, I’m going to find them and I’m going to make sure they get the justice they deserve.”
“Jim, you don’t know who they are, where they came from, why they killed her, what kind of people you might be dealing with.”
“So, help me, Miles.”
This was just the opposite of how it was when we were kids, growing up in Birmingham. I was the elder brother, Miles the youngster, looking up to his big brother, James, who just by virtue of being three years older had been made to be the responsible one. Only now it was big brother saying never mind about caution, fight back whatever the risk.
“Of course, I’ll do everything I can to help you, Jim.”
“I’ve got to do this for Julia.” I could barely hold back the tears. “It’s the only thing that makes sense.”
I didn’t doubt my brother knew I was serious. We had shared a difficult and precarious childhood. The family had been poor even by the lowered standards of the Birmingham families around us. Our father, Danny, was some kind of war hero. He’d fought in the Falklands war
back in 1982, yomping into Port Stanley, striking the fear of God into those ill-prepared conscripts in the Argentinian army. No doubt, he’d killed. But like all those who killed in war he’d chosen not to talk about it.
Our mother, June, had tried her best to present us as a normal family but the marriage never recovered when Danny came home from the war. There were fights, endless arguments, and the children, James and Miles, would frequently get drawn in. There was invariably some petty pretext, some minor crime of which me or Miles were supposedly guilty. The more our mother sought to defend us, the more Danny took this as a sign that his wife was turning his children against him. It became one of those vicious spirals where the next inevitable incident fed off the embers of the last.
And violence, real violence, broke out when things got really twisted and began running out of control.
As the elder child, I always chose to put myself in the firing line, protecting my mother, protecting my younger brother. It had hardened me. Facing down limitless rage, not knowing when the threat of violence might break in again, had made me ever on my guard, ever careful to try to head off the next incident.
And being the eldest, I’d become a confidante to my mother. When my father was at work, she would offload her troubles, seek my advice, tell me about their failed sex life, tell me how difficult it was to keep the family together. So by the age of twelve, I’d become wise, too wise, in the ways of the world.
Danny was not a bad man. He was the victim of circumstance. I came to realize that as I grew older. But it hadn’t made my childhood an easy one.
The escape had been through education. By burying myself in schoolwork I could block out the seemingly endless problems that surrounded me. I had a flair for mathematics that developed into an interest in science. I passed the exams. I wanted to succeed.
But I learned early on that aggression would get me nowhere. I’d been provoked by a kid in school who deserved to be taken down a peg. And, hardened as I was, when it had come down to it, I found it easy to overcome him and hurt him. Somehow I’d broken a golden rule. The schoolyard violence was meant to be symbolic, with no one really getting hurt. And I’d hurt that kid for real and it had shocked everyone. I’d been in big trouble and was almost expelled. But in the end I escaped with the sternest warning, and I’d learned that if I wanted to succeed I would have to believe violence got you nowhere and reason and tolerance and understanding the other’s point of view was what mattered.