But it seemed I was going to have to wait a little longer.
‘He’s not there,’ said Elaine Toms, coming back to the papers on the bar. ‘Either that or he’s not answering.’
‘Have you got his address?’ She nodded, and wrote it down on a piece of paper. I took it, thanking her, and put it in my pocket. It was local. ‘And what’s your position here, Miss Toms?’
‘I told you, I’ve already been interviewed about the murder.’
‘Well, we’re talking to you again. I’d just like to refresh myself of your account.’
‘It was a DI I talked to.’
‘DI Capper. Yes, I know. Now, if you’ll answer the questions.’
‘Have you got any ID?’
She was trying to be difficult but I wasn’t going to argue about it, so I took out my warrant card and showed it to her, as did Berrin. She inspected them both carefully, paying particular attention to mine. ‘It’s not a very good photo of you,’ she told me.
‘With me, the camera always lies,’ I said. ‘Now, your position?’
‘I manage the place.’
‘And how long have you been here for?’
‘Just over a year. I joined last July.’
‘You knew Shaun Matthews pretty well, then?’
She sighed theatrically. ‘Yeah, I knew Shaun Matthews pretty well. You know, I’ve said all this before.’
‘Humour me. I presume you knew he dealt drugs?’
‘Are you asking me or telling me?’
‘I’m asking you.’
She shrugged. ‘I heard that he did some dealing here and there and that he might even have done some in this place, but I never saw him do any and I never saw anyone else take any stuff either. Occasionally you get someone off their face, but if they get like that we don’t serve them and we chuck them out. They’re certainly not sold the stuff in here. I only heard Shaun was meant to be this big-time dealer after he died.’
‘You’re sticking to the party line, then? That Arcadia’s pretty much drug free and that you don’t go in for that sort of thing here.’
She glared at me. ‘We don’t. Now, if you’ve finished …’
‘Does Stefan Holtz own this place?’
‘Who?’
‘Stefan Holtz. You must have heard of him.’ She shook her head. ‘He’s a well-known local businessman, to use the term very loosely.’
‘Look, as far as I’m concerned, Roy Fowler owns this place. That’s who hired me and that’s who pays me.’
‘Are you sure the name Stefan Holtz means nothing to you?’ asked Berrin.
‘Oh, it speaks,’ she said with a smirk.
Berrin looked slightly embarrassed. ‘Just answer the question,’ he persisted, trying not to be intimidated by her, but not making a particularly good job of it.
She slowly turned her head, faced him down, took a breath, then spoke. ‘Yes, I’m sure.’ She turned back to me. ‘I don’t know a Stefan Holtz.’
‘Mr Fowler was going to get us a list of casual door staff who’ve worked here over the past six months,’ I continued, ‘but so far we haven’t received it.’
‘Oh dear,’ she said with a cheeky half-smile.
‘You’re the manager,’ said Berrin. ‘Can you provide us with that information?’
The smile disappeared rapidly. ‘I haven’t got time. You’ll need to speak to Mr Fowler about it.’
‘We would do if he was here,’ I said, thinking that this was one of the great problems with policework. That most of the time you were constantly trying to get blood out of a stone. ‘Just tell us the name of the company who supplies the doormen, then,’ I added, not wanting to waste any more time with Elaine Toms, ‘and we’ll contact them.’
She paused, and the reason she paused was simple. If there were any dodgy ownership issues, then they would spread to the company who supplied the doormen because with nightclubs that’s how things work. She wouldn’t want to give out the information but I knew she couldn’t lie about it either, in case Fowler had already given us the name and I was just testing her.
‘It’s an outfit called Elite A,’ she said eventually. Berrin wrote the name down. ‘But I don’t know how much they’ll be able to tell you. I don’t think they’re too hot on the paperwork front.’
‘What makes you say that?’
‘You know what these security firms are like. They use freelancers.’
‘Did Shaun Matthews come via Elite A?’
‘I think so, originally, but it was before my time so I couldn’t say for sure. The papers said something about him being poisoned.’
‘That’s what we believe.’
She shook her head as if she couldn’t comprehend such an end for him. ‘What’s the world coming to, eh?’
‘To the same place it’s always been, Miss Toms. Full of not very nice people doing not very nice things to each other.’ I resisted adding that with Shaun Matthews’s demise there was at least one fewer of them. ‘If you hear from Mr Fowler, please ask him to get in touch with us immediately.’
She took the card I gave her with my number on it. ‘So, have you got any suspects?’
‘We’re working on a number of leads,’ I answered, using the stock detective’s line which was basically a euphemism for ‘No’, and she obviously recognized it for what it was because she turned away with another of those half-smiles. The discussion was over.
When we were back in the car, Berrin turned to me with an expression of concern. ‘I don’t think I did too well in there,’ he said. ‘You handled it a lot better than me.’
Berrin’s young, he’s a graduate, and, like most of us, he’s still got a lot to learn. Unlike most of us, he recognizes it, and it means he’s not as confident as he could be. He’d only been promoted out of uniform three months earlier, and apart from Rudi, the casual killer and carjacker, this was his first murder case. It was also the first time we’d worked together.
I shrugged. ‘I’ve been in the game a lot longer, which makes it a lot easier to handle people like her. Remember, you’re the one who’s the boss. With the cocky ones it can be easy to forget.’
He nodded thoughtfully. At that moment, he reminded me of a contestant from that TV programme Faking It. One month to turn a good-looking Home Counties college boy into a Met detective. He was working hard to master the ropes, to make a good impression, but he didn’t look a natural.
He turned to me, the concern replaced by determined zeal, the kind you sometimes see on the faces of door-to-door missionaries. ‘I let her get me on the wrong foot. That was the problem. I didn’t do enough to make her show me respect. It won’t happen again.’
‘I know it won’t,’ I said, patting him on the shoulder. ‘You work with me, you’ll be Dirty Harry in no time.’
He pulled out of the parking space. ‘Yeah, right.’
Roy Fowler lived in a modern, showy-looking development complex near Finsbury Park. It’s what these days they like to call a gated community, although there usually tends to be very little community-wise about them. We were stopped at the main gates by a uniformed doorman who was well past retirement age and looked like he’d have trouble stopping a runaway skateboard let alone a shadowy intruder. We showed him our credentials and were waved into the car park in front of the five six-storey buildings that were arranged in a semi-circle around the well-kept, if rather dull, communal gardens. Fowler lived in apartment number 12 which was in the second building on the left.