‘Do you want to do this now?’ I asked her simply. Joanne looked down and Sarah got slowly to her feet.
‘Can you keep an eye on her?’ she asked her old friend.
‘Course,’ said Joanne, and she smiled over at Emma. ‘Come on chicken. Let’s go to Auntie Jo’s and we’ll bake some cakes.’
I put Emma down and she took Joanne’s hand. They left without another word. I sat down opposite Sarah.
‘Are you sure you want to do this?’ I asked her firmly, ‘you really want to know everything?’
She seemed to hesitate for a moment then said, ‘Yes.’
‘Some of it you know,’ I told her, ‘and some you don’t. Your dad controlled a lot of what went on in this city, some of it legal, but not all.’
‘I know he was no saint, Davey, but nor are you. I’m not that naive.’
Maybe it was her tone that irritated me, or perhaps I had been through too much lately to really spare her feelings, so I went on. ‘Protection money; security, by which I mean muscle on the doors of nightclubs; prostitution; drugs; armed robbery; money laundering — and he would hurt people, when it was required.’
I could tell by the look on her face that she had known about this all along but it was still a shock to hear it finally confirmed by me. ‘Where do you think all of the money came from? Your father controlled a city, which made him a powerful man, but it also made him enemies. One day Alan Gladwell came down from Glasgow and tried to take it all away from him. Men died as a result and one of them was your father. I had to take the city back from Alan Gladwell. You don’t need to know the details of how that happened.’
‘I hope you killed the bastard slowly Davey,’ she said. I had done, but I wasn’t about to confirm that, even to her.
‘Before I took back the city, Gladwell and his Russian henchmen took your dad and Finney away.’
‘I was there, remember?’
‘I remember,’ I confirmed, ‘they took them both to a lock up, a disused factory on the outskirts of the city. They brought me there too. By the time I arrived Finney was already dead. They strapped him to a chair, tortured him, then garrotted him with wire. They took Northam, our accountant, there too. They got the information they needed from him, then they shot him in the head. When I got there your father was the only one left alive. They wanted me to see him. Gladwell wanted everyone to know that your dad was finished.’
‘Did they torture him too,’ she asked me, ‘did they hurt him before they…’ She couldn’t complete the sentence. Tears formed in her eyes.
‘They beat him,’ I said, ‘pretty badly, but your dad was the toughest old bugger I ever met. It wasn’t the first time he’d taken a few punches. He could handle that.’
‘What did they do then Davey?’ she asked me, ‘tell me. I have to know.’
‘Your dad was tied to a chair and they made me watch while a man called Vitaly drew a gun and pointed it straight at your father. Gladwell then said he was going to kill him and I assumed he would kill me too. He gave your dad ten seconds, I think he wanted your father to beg for his life, but he didn’t, quite the opposite in fact, he told Gladwell to go and fuck himself. Gladwell counted down the ten seconds.’ I hesitated before telling her.
‘What happened when he finished counting?’ she urged me.
‘Vitaly shot your father in the head.’
The tears were falling from her eyes now, tracks forming on her cheeks. She nodded silently and after she had absorbed that she said, ‘But how did you get away, Davey? How come they let you go? When you’d seen them kill my father, you were a witness, so why would they let you just walk away?’
‘They weren’t scared of me,’ I explained, ‘they didn’t think I was a threat. They thought I was just a suit and I couldn’t possibly harm them. Everyone who could do that was already dead; Jerry Lemon, Finney, Geordie Cartwright, your dad, they were all gone by then. They thought I was the only one left, but they didn’t know about Palmer, Danny or Kinane. I still don’t know why they let me live but I think they needed someone who could tell the world that Bobby Mahoney was really gone. Your father was a legend in this city. Nobody would have believed a man like Alan Gladwell could have brought him down without me to corroborate his story.’
I couldn’t tell her that they had film of me shooting Bobby for them, which meant I was in their power by then and could be conveniently put in the frame for his killing if the heat became too much. ‘The truth is they could have killed me if they’d wanted to, it made no difference to them whether I lived or died. In the end they put me on a train to London, told me not to come back, that there was nothing in Newcastle for me anymore, but they didn’t know how I felt about you, Sarah. I came back for you.’
She could barely speak now because of the tears. ‘I know,’ she sniffed, ‘and I’m so sorry. I’ve just been so messed up about dad, not knowing what really happened to him and then that detective came round, and more or less said you were involved, and I got confused, and then his daughter was killed…’ The words came out in a rush.
‘That had nothing to do with me.’
‘I know that now. I should have always known it. I’m so sorry,’ and she took a deep breath then to try to quell the sobbing. ‘Did he say anything?’ She was in floods of tears now, ‘Before he died, did my daddy say anything?’
‘Yes,’ I answered, ‘he told me to get away from there. “Find Sarah,” he said, “take care of her” and that’s what I did. That’s what I’ve been doing ever since.’
‘Oh Davey,’ she collapsed into my arms, sobbing, ‘I’m so sorry… I’m so, so sorry… I’m so ashamed I doubted you.’
‘That’s alright,’ I told her, ‘it doesn’t matter now.’
I didn’t want to talk about it anymore because her shame was nothing compared to mine.
33
Everyone knew my link to Henry Baxter, so it didn’t matter that I was in the public gallery. Opposite me, Matt Bell listened intently to the court proceedings, taking copious notes. Things didn’t get properly interesting until the third day of the trial, when our barrister took centre stage.
Detective Chief Inspector Argyle, who headed up the original case into the murder of Leanne Bell, took the witness stand. Argyle couldn’t have been far from retirement age. He stood in the dock in his crumpled grey suit and M amp;S tie and, when our barrister cross-examined him, he stared out at the court like a rabbit caught between headlights.
‘Detective Chief Inspector, the investigation into the murder of Leanne Bell was a large and extensively-resourced one,’ Julian Aimes reminded him, ‘involving more than thirty detectives, all of whom reported to you.’
‘That is correct,’ he answered, in a strong Bristolian burr.
‘During the course of this investigation, your team interviewed a large number of people, did you not?’
‘We did.’
‘How many?’
‘I can’t recall the exact number, but it was significant.’
‘One hundred and seventeen.’ Aimes prompted him.
‘If you say so.’
‘Whether I say so or not, that is the number, according to the documentation provided by the prosecution. Are you now telling me this is inaccurate?’
‘Of course not. I’m just saying I couldn’t remember, but it sounds about right to me. If that number has come from the prosecution, I have no reason to doubt it.’
‘Nor have I. One hundred and seventeen people spoken to in the course of your lengthy investigation into Leanne’s murder,’ Aimes told the jury. ‘I have the names of each and every one of them detailed here, but there is one name missing from the list, isn’t there Detective Chief Inspector?’