Neil White 3 Book Bundle. Neil White
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Charlie scrambled in the drawer again, looking for the video camera. He fumbled with the tape and then found the button that would make it play. He rewound it to the beginning and pulled out the screen at the side. As the tape scrolled forward, Billy Privett appeared on the small screen. He was sitting in a chair and looking nervous, messing with the jewellery on his wrist.
Charlie punched the air. This was it.
He turned off the camera and put it into the pocket in his jacket. He took the file too, along with Donia’s application, grabbed the car keys and headed for the door.
Chapter Forty-Two
Ted’s eyes were fixed on the road as Sheldon drove them towards Oulton. Sheldon hadn’t said much since he had been into the police station in Penwortham, but he was in a rush, screeching his car around the tights bends lined by stone walls, the long slope towards Oulton visible ahead as a long line of orange lights.
‘Do you know what is the hardest thing about losing Alice?’ Ted said.
Sheldon looked at him briefly, and then turned back to the road. ‘The thought that her killer is still out there?’
Ted shook his head. ‘No. It’s the way it hits when you are not expecting it, and so you feel like you can never live your life. I’ve tried to channel my anger, because it felt like I could control it that way, even start to rationalise it, because I know that being angry won’t bring Alice back. So it’s not that.’ He let out a long sigh and swallowed. ‘You think you are dealing with it, and then you see something, and you forget for a moment that she is dead, and so when it comes back at you, it feels like the hurt has never gone away.’
‘What like?’
‘Stupid things. A trailer for a film, some fluffy chick-flick, and the first thought you have is that Alice would like that, but then you remember that she can’t, and it seems so unfair, because everyone else’s kids will queue up for it, and Alice never will. Or a dress that would make her look pretty, or a book she might like. We tried to go on holiday, and we went to a lovely place in the south of France. The sunflowers were out and everywhere had charm and sunshine, but all we could think about was that Alice would have loved it.’
Sheldon didn’t respond, there was no point, and so they drove in silence for a few miles until Sheldon said, ‘I need to go to the station in Oulton.’
‘I’m coming with you.’
Sheldon shook his head. ‘You’re too well known. They’ll spot you and throw you out.’
‘They might do that to you.’
‘No, they won’t,’ Sheldon said, and he clenched his jaw.
Ted stayed silent for a few minutes and watched the flash of the houses past the windscreen. As Sheldon started on the long climb to Oulton, he said, ‘So what do I do?’
‘You go home until I get there.’
‘What will you do if you find out something crucial?’ When Sheldon glanced at him, Ted added, ‘Do you tell the police, or me?’
Sheldon thought about that, and then said, ‘I don’t know.’
Ted frowned. ‘So it’s all one-way. I tell you what I know and then you shut me out.’
‘It’s not like that.’
‘It seems like it is.’
‘I’m still a police officer, Ted. I’m sorry about that, but I do still have to do the right thing. I can promise you one thing though.’
‘Go on.’
‘Whatever I tell the police, I’ll tell you too, and so we can both look at it. You never know, we might beat them to it.’
Ted nodded and then he smiled. He seemed happy with that.
Charlie checked around as he got onto the fire escape outside his office. He couldn’t see anyone watching, but the onset of night had turned the alley behind into shadows. He was looking out for blue lights as well, not just threats in the dark, and he needed to move quickly but quietly.
Despite his efforts, his footsteps clanged on the metal and echoed between the buildings. He had the John Abbott file hidden in his suit, and as he got to the yard, he paused, waiting for the rush of an attacker, his breath held. There was no one, just the light cast by the kitchen of the takeaway and chatter in Turkish he couldn’t understand drifting through an open window.
The rear gate clicked open. Patrick’s Corsa was still there. There was nothing unusual in the alley, but there were gateways all along, small dark spaces that would hide someone, and they could block him in.
He climbed into the car quickly. He hadn’t locked it, and so he sat there for a moment and checked his mirror, waiting for the shadow of someone to appear from the back seat, a growing threat blocking out the rear window. He turned around slowly, just to look in the back seat, and then let out a sigh of relief when he saw it was empty.
There was a bang on the bonnet, and so he whirled around quickly, his eyes wide, teeth bared. It was a cat, making its way to the floor from an alley wall. Charlie closed his eyes to let his heart rate calm down, and then turned the ignition key, the engine loud as he pulled away. He relaxed when he got onto the street, where he was in control of where he went next.
He drove away from the town centre, turning down side streets and through estates to make sure he wasn’t being followed. His phone vibrated in his pocket and so he stopped in a parking bay outside an off-licence. He didn’t want to get pulled into a cell just because he had used a phone when driving.
It was a text from Julie. I did some ringing around, and then there were some numbers highlighted in blue. He called the number, and Sheldon’s familiar measured tones came through.
‘Brown.’
No introductions. This man was used to being in charge.
‘This is Charlie Barker,’ he said.
Sheldon didn’t respond at first, until eventually he said, ‘What can I do for you, Mr Barker?’
It sounded like Sheldon was in a car. Charlie could hear the whoosh of passing traffic.
‘I’ve got some information for you, about the Billy Privett case,’ Charlie said.
‘I’m listening.’
‘No, I need to show you.’
‘How do I know it’s important?’
‘Dare you take the risk?’
A pause, and then, ‘I’m going to the station. Meet me there.’
‘No, I can’t go there.’
Sheldon was silent for a while, and then he said, ‘Okay, go to