‘Me, guv,’ said Mackay. ‘It’s pukka, all right. Does good work. Big employers these days have got to take on a certain number of disabled by law, but there’s nothing token about it. It’s got a good name with the disabled charities and lobby groups I contacted.’
‘Who’s the Beale of “Sturgess and Beale”?’ he asked.
‘She’s a Nora Beale, married, lives in Ealing, used to work for an ordinary employment agency, got a disabled son, decided a specialist agency was needed. Met Amanda at some social do when Amanda first moved there. Her and Amanda set up the agency together and they do all the work, bar one girl who does the clerical.’
‘Which makes our Mandy thoroughly worthy and out of the frame for First Murderer,’ Atherton said, but discontentedly.
‘We still don’t know what Rogers was doing for a living,’ said Slider. ‘What about this Windhover? Have you found out any more about it?’
Atherton answered. ‘It’s the Windhover Trust, in full, and it’s a part of something called the Geneva Medical Support and Research Foundation. The British arm, if you like. It has an address in SW1 but it’s only an accommodation address. Everything is forwarded from there to the parent organization in Geneva, and we haven’t been able to find out anything more about that, except that it’s supposed to be non-profit making. The website is outstandingly unhelpful, with little more than an address and a mission statement, and the authorities won’t play ball. You know what the Swiss are like. They didn’t stay out of the EU to answer questions to the likes of us. There is something called The Windhover Outreach, which does vaccinations in Africa, but whether that’s part of the same thing I haven’t been able to find out yet. And what they were paying David Rogers a hundred and eighty kay a year for is anyone’s guess.’
‘It’s not a huge amount,’ Slider said. ‘And yet he must have been giving them some value in return for it.’
‘Advice. Expertise,’ Hollis hazarded. ‘Maybe he was a consultant in that sense – like a business consultant.’
‘Certainly possible,’ said Slider.
‘And yet,’ said Atherton, ‘he doesn’t seem to have been living on it, or not entirely.’
‘Consultants don’t usually consult only for one company,’ Slider said.
‘No, but anyone else he was working for wasn’t paying him a salary into his bank account,’ Atherton pointed out.
Porson stirred restively. ‘This is all airy-fairy stuff,’ he objected, forgetting his temporary membership of the diptera muscidae family. ‘It’s hard evidence butters the parsnips. What about that CCTV tape? What did you get off that?’
Hollis answered. ‘We got the number of the parked car, sir. Right enough it went back to a resident of Masbro Road, a John Fletcher. We caught him at home last night and got some lifts off the bonnet. Luckily he’d not cleaned it for a while, and even luckier that’s not a place people put their hands a lot. We took his fingerprints for elimination purposes, anyway. But there was a good set of four fingers and a palm in the middle of the bonnet, matching where we saw the suspect on the CCTV put his hand to balance himself. He must have took off his gloves when he left the house.’
‘It’s the old saying, they always make one mistake,’ Porson pronounced with satisfaction. ‘Hoist with his own canard. Have you run the prints?’
‘Yes, sir,’ Slider answered. ‘There’s no match in the records.’
‘Ah well, can’t have everything, I suppose,’ said Porson, evidently disappointed. ‘But at least when you do get a suspect—’
‘We’ll have something to nail him with,’ Slider concluded. ‘It’d be a nice short cut if the prints matched Frith, but he has no criminal record, and at the moment we don’t have enough to ask him to give a sample.’
Porson grunted in acknowledgement of the point, drained his tea mug, and said, ‘All right, what about the other car? The suspect’s?’
‘It’s a BMW seven-series. Black. The best we could do after the lab had enhanced the pictures was a partial number, missing the last digit and with some doubt as to whether one number was a three or an eight. It gives us quite a lot of cars to check. We’re working on that. And we’ve also put the possible variations into the ANPR at Hendon, see if we get a ping.’
The Automatic Number Plate Recognition system was the computerized record of the millions of photographs a day taken by a network of cameras, some of them part of the congestion charge set-up, others placed on motorways, at road junctions, outside petrol stations, important buildings and so on. Very few members of the public knew about the system, which Slider thought was probably just as well, as there were certainly civil rights implications about the level of surveillance to which the general public was being submitted without its consent. But the images were so well defined that the registration numbers were able to be processed automatically by the central computer. Enter a number, and if that car had passed any of the cameras it would be ‘pinged’ and its route could be tracked. In many cases, the faces of the front seat occupants could also be clearly identified.
‘All right.’ Porson nodded. ‘Well, let me know if anything comes of that. Do we know what car Frith drives?’
‘Haven’t found that out yet,’ Slider said.
Porson didn’t need to say the obvious. ‘What else? Have you got Rogers’s phone dump yet?’
‘Yes, sir,’ Hollis answered. ‘Seems to be all social. Restaurants, clubs. Garage where he got his car serviced. A lot of women – most of ’em appearing in his address book. He doesn’t seem to have had any men friends. Dunno if that’s strange or not. Nothing work related. Hasn’t rung the only number we have for Windhover, nor any other medical establishment. And he didn’t make any calls on the morning he died.’
‘Wait a minute,’ Slider said. ‘Aude said he got a phone call early in the morning, and went into his dressing-room and rang someone on his mobile.’
‘Yes, guv,’ Hollis said. ‘She must have been mistaken.’
‘She said she heard him talking.’
‘Must have been talking to himself, then. Or she was dreaming. The fact is there’s no call logged on either his mobile or his landline.’
‘She was in flitters after what happened,’ Connolly pointed out. ‘Wouldn’t be strange if she got herself all mixed up. Coulda been another day the phone call bit happened.’
‘I suppose that must have been it,’ Slider said. ‘What about his landline?’
‘Nothing of interest there, except that he made quite a lot of calls to his ex-wife.’
‘She told me she hardly ever spoke to him,’ Slider objected.
Hollis nodded. ‘Definite porky, that.’ He took up another piece of paper. ‘He’s rung her four times in the last three weeks, the last call a week before he was killed, lasting eighteen minutes. You wouldn’t forget a call like that.’
‘She may just have panicked, given he was murdered, and tried to distance herself from him,’ Slider said. People did things like that all the time. ‘It probably had nothing to do with anything. Still, I’d like to know what they talked about.’
‘I like it when people lie,’ Porson said, rubbing his hands. ‘Gives you a reason to ask more questions. Find out what car this Frith character drives. And I could stand to know where he was on Monday morning. Given he’s the nearest thing you’ve got to a suspect.’