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‘I’m sorry,’ Resnick said.

‘Why the hell should you be sorry?’

He shrugged, heavy shouldered. If he knew why, he couldn’t explain. Behind, the sound of transport pulling off the road, reinforcements arriving.

‘When you first knew me, Terry too, I was stripping, right? This i’n’t so very different.’ They both knew that wasn’t so. ‘Besides, get to my age, those kind of jobs, prime ones, they can get few and far between.’

She was what, Resnick thought, twenty-six, twenty-seven? Shy of thirty, to be sure. ‘You’d best tell me what happened,’ he said.

Eileen lit a fresh cigarette from the butt of the last. ‘This punter, he said he weren’t going to use a condom, couldn’t understand why an extra twenty didn’t see it right. Chucked me out and drove off. I was walking up on to Forest Road, thought I might pick up a cab, go back into town. Which was when I saw her. Ducked through that first lot of bushes and there she was.’

‘You could have carried on walking,’ Resnick said. ‘Skirted round.’ At his back, he could hear Millington’s voice, organising the troops.

‘Not once I’d seen her.’

‘So you called it in.’

‘Had my mobile. Didn’t take but a minute.’

‘You could have left her then.’

‘No, I couldn’t.’ Her eyes fastened on his, challenging.

The pathologist was driving slowly across the pitted surface towards them, mindful of the paintwork on his new Volvo.

‘I’ll get someone to take you to the station,’ Resnick said. ‘Get a statement. No sense you freezing out here any more than you have to.’

Already he was turning away.

The dead woman was scarcely that: a girl, mid-teens. Below medium height and underweight; scars, some possibly self-inflicted, to her legs and arms; bruising across the buttocks and around the neck. The thin cotton of her dress was stuck to her chest with blood. Scratches to exposed parts of the body suggested that she could have been attacked elsewhere then dragged to the spot where she was found and dumped. No bag nor purse nor any other article she might have been carrying had been discovered so far. Preliminary examination suggested she had been dead not less than twenty-four hours, possibly more. Further tests on her body and clothing were being carried out.

Officers would be out on the streets around Hyson Green and the Forest with hastily reproduced photographs, talking to prostitutes plying their trade, stopping cars, knocking on doors. Others would be checking missing persons on the computer, contacting social services, those responsible for the care and custody of juveniles. If no one had come forward with an identification by the end of the day, public relations would release a picture to the press for the morning editions, push for the maximum publicity on local radio and TV.

In his office, Resnick eased a now lukewarm mug of coffee aside and reached again for the transcript of Lynn Kellogg’s interview with Eileen. As a document in a murder investigation it was unlikely to set the pulses racing; Eileen’s responses rarely rose above the monosyllabic, while Lynn’s questioning, for once, was little more than routine.

In the CID room, Lynn Kellogg’s head was just visible over the top of her VDU. Resnick waited until she had saved what was on the screen and dropped the transcript down on her desk.

‘You didn’t get on, you and Eileen.’

‘Were we supposed to?’

‘You didn’t like her.’

‘What was to like?’

A suggestion of a smile showed on Resnick’s face. ‘She dialled 999. Hung around. Agreed to make a statement.’

‘Which was next to useless.’

‘Agreed.’

Lynn touched her index finger to the keyboard and the image on the screen disappeared. ‘I’m sorry, sir, but what exactly’s your point?’

‘I’m just wondering if we’ve missed something, that’s all.’

‘You want me to talk to her again?’

‘Perhaps not.’

Lynn’s eyes narrowed perceptibly. ‘I see.’

‘I mean, if she sensed you didn’t like her…’

‘Whereas she might open up to you.’

‘It’s possible.’

With a slow shake of the head, Lynn flipped back through the pages of her notebook for the address and copied it onto a fresh sheet, which Resnick glanced at quickly before folding it down into the breast pocket of his suit.

‘She’s a tart, sir. A whore.’

If, on his way to the door, Resnick heard her, he gave no sign.

It was a two-up, two-down off the Hucknall Road, opening into the living room directly off the street: one of those old staples of inner-city living that are gradually being bulldozed from sight, some would say good riddance, to be replaced by mazes of neat little semis with miniature gardens and brightly painted doors.

Eileen answered the bell in jeans and a baggy sweatshirt, hair tied back, no trace of make-up on her face.

‘Lost?’ she asked caustically.

‘I hope not.’

She stood back and motioned him inside. The room was neat and comfortably furnished, a framed photograph of herself and Terry on the tiled mantelpiece, some sunny day in both their pasts. Set into the old fireplace, a gas fire was going full blast; the television playing soundlessly, racing from somewhere, Newmarket or Uttoxeter, hard going under leaden skies.

‘Nice,’ Resnick said, looking round.

‘But not what you’d’ve expected.’

‘How d’you mean?’

‘Terry, leaving me half of everything. You’d have reckoned something posh, Burton Joyce at least.’

‘Maybe.’

‘Yes, well, half of everything proved to be half of nothing much. Terry, bless him, all over. And by the time that family of his had come scrounging round, to say nothing of all his mates, Frankie Farmer and the rest, oh, Terry owed me this, Terry promised me that, I was lucky to get away with what I did.’

‘You could always have said no, turned them down.’

‘You think so?’ Eileen reached for her cigarettes, bent low and lit one from the fire. ‘Farmer and his like, no’s not a word they like to hear.’

‘They threatened you?’

Tilting back her head, she released a slow spiral of smoke towards the ceiling. ‘They didn’t have to.’

Nodding, Resnick began to unbutton his overcoat.

‘You’re stopping then?’ Almost despite herself, a smile along the curve of her mouth.

‘Long enough for a coffee, maybe.’

‘It’s instant.’

‘Tea then.’ Resnick grinned. ‘If that’s all right.’

With a short sigh, Eileen held out her hand. ‘Here. Give me your coat.’

She brought it through from the kitchen on a tray, the tea in mugs, sugar in a blue-and-white Tate amp; Lyle bag, three digestive biscuits, one of them chocolate-faced.

‘You did want milk?’

‘Milk’s fine.’

Eileen sat opposite him in the second of matching chairs, stirred two sugars into her tea, leaned back and lit another cigarette.

‘The last thousand I had left-’ she began.

‘You don’t have to tell me,’ Resnick said.

‘What was I doing, out on the Forest, your question.’

‘You still don’t have-’

‘Maybe I do.’

Resnick sat back and listened.

‘The last thousand from what Terry left me — after I’d bought this place, I mean — this pal of mine — least, I’d reckoned her for a pal — she persuaded me to come in with her on this sauna she was opening, Mapperley Top. Money was for the deposit, first three months’ rent, tarting the place up — you know, a lick of paint and a few posters — buying towels and the like.’ She rested her cigarette on the edge of the tray and swallowed a mouthful of tea. ‘Vice Squad raided us five times in the first fortnight. Whether it was one of the girls refusing a freebie or something more — backhanders, you know the kind of thing — I never knew. Either way, a month after we opened we were closed and I was left sorting out the bills.’