Read Death and Deception Online

Authors: B. A. Steadman

Death and Deception (5 page)

He gazed at the roast beef and mustard sandwich sitting on the little table near the door and practised self-control. One more to do. Gould glanced at the list, Miles Westlake, Music teacher.

He heard footsteps outside the room but they disappeared into the Gents’ toilet opposite before he could get to the door. He could hear the unmistakeable retch and hurl of someone throwing up, flushing the toilet, sluicing the sink, and, he assumed, washing his face.

Gould held the door open and waited for him to come out. He could hear Sam Knowles next door interviewing one of Carly’s friends and struggling to get her to stop giggling. Her friends didn’t seem unduly upset at her death, but that was girls for you. The door to the Gents’ opened across the narrow corridor and a tall, slim figure with a mane of gold curls came out, scraping back damp hair from his face. Gould saw anguish in the red-rimmed eyes.

‘Mr Westlake?’ Miles Westlake nodded and took a seat in the small office, winding one leg around the other and clasping both arms across his thin chest. Gould wondered how long this guy had been in teaching, he didn’t look a day over twenty. ‘How long have you taught at this school?’

‘Three years in September.’

‘So, that would make you about what, twenty-four? Did you come into teaching straight from University?’

Westlake shrugged. ‘No, Inspector, I tried to be a pop star first, like many a teacher, so I’m twenty-six. But I love teaching now, it’s a great job.’ He dropped his eyes to the table-top. Gould could see the tension in his arms, his face, Westlake was hugging himself to stop himself from shaking.

‘How well did you know Carly Braithwaite, Mr Westlake?’

‘Pretty well.’ Westlake let the breath he had been holding go in a quiet sigh. ‘She was a talented girl with a fantastic voice and real determination. I wasn’t surprised when she won the Exeter singing competition. It was just a matter of time until she got her break.’ He gulped air and let out another shuddering sigh.

‘If you don’t mind me saying so, you seem very upset. More upset than the other teachers I have spoken to this morning.’ Westlake’s eyes were full to the brim with tears again. Talk about the highly-strung artistic type. Gould could feel dislike setting his lips into a thin line.

‘I’m sorry,’ sighed Westlake, ‘I’m not usually like this. It’s not just what has happened to Carly. Things haven’t been going too well for me and this is sort of the last straw.’ Westlake made an attempt to smile. ‘I guess I feel things too deeply. Bit pathetic, I know.’

‘When did you last see Carly?’

Westlake gave the briefest hesitation. ‘She and Jamie came by my place on Saturday and we had a last practice in the afternoon before her session on the Sunday.’

‘Is it normal for school students to visit teachers’ houses, sir?’ Gould couldn’t imagine ever having wanted to set foot in a teacher’s house. Marie Claire, the French teaching assistant’s house, however, now that would have been a very different matter.

Westlake hesitated again. ‘My wife didn’t mind as it was for such an important reason. But you’re right, it’s not normally what happens. We were finished for 3.30pm and then they both left.’

‘So you didn’t see Carly on Sunday before she went to the studio?’

‘No, I thought her Dad was going to take her. I was waiting in the Music room this morning to hear how it had gone.’ His eyes filled up again. Gould bit back feelings of distaste. He couldn’t see this one as a murderer, he probably needed his wife to get the spiders out of the bath for him.

‘Ok, Mr Westlake, thanks very much. I may have to speak to you again, but that’s it for now.’

They both breathed a sigh of relief.

The lunch bell rang as Westlake left the office and Gould took it as permission to fall upon his sandwich. When Sam Knowles entered the room a few minutes later, Gould was wiping the crumbs from his chin and pointing at the kettle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 6

 

Monday 24
th
April
Time:13:12
Illusion Recording Studio

Dan drove slowly into the centre of Exeter, negotiating the Monday morning shoppers and avoiding speeding where he knew cameras lurked. He left his beloved Audi in the multi-storey car park behind the newly opened John Lewis store, and walked round onto Sidwell Street.
He checked out his reflection in the glass as he walked, sucked in his stomach and pushed his shoulders back. He spent so much time over a computer these days he was developing a hunchback.

The open doors of the store were tempting. A nice display of squashy sofas distracted him. He’d got virtually no furniture in his flat yet. Four weeks in and he’d been working practically every day. How could he entertain friends, even just have someone round for a drink, when he only had one chair? At least he’d got the bike delivered when he was in. She was a beauty. He just needed a couple of days browsing and he reckoned he could do the furnishing in one go.

Sidwell Street had once been the centre of Exeter’s shopping district, but it was fast deteriorating into the cheap end of town. He scanned the peeling shop signs, looking for the recording studio as he walked. He wondered if, now he was a DI, he could delegate furniture purchase to a member of the team. Someone with good taste. He thought about his colleagues. Unlikely. Or, he could do what his Mum had suggested, find a room display in John Lewis that he liked and buy the whole thing. He could do it for the bedroom and kitchen, too. Great idea, Mum. Just might be lacking the thousands needed to pay for it, until the settlement on his flat in London came through, of course. That would cover everything, wouldn’t it?

He hadn’t exactly been in the mood for entertaining since he’d returned from London, tail between his legs, grateful that he got a transfer rather than a demotion straight down the ranks. He’d been so stupid to let himself get caught out like that. It wouldn’t happen again.

Things had started to go wrong when he talked about getting married and having kids, about settling down and moving out of London. Sarah had stared at him like he was a stranger. She moved out two weeks later, after some horrible late-night discussions that always ended in tears, most of them his.

He just couldn’t believe that she would choose that ugly loser over him. The familiar flush began in his chest, bloomed over his throat and into his face. Ugly, rich, bastard, loser smirking and raising his glass to him in the pub with his arm around Sarah, like he owned her. Tosser deserved it. Every punch and kick. He unclenched his fists and realised he’d stopped walking and was looking at his reflection in a shop window. Looking but not seeing.

Dan shook his head and crossed the road. Sarah wouldn’t even talk to him now, so no point in going over it again and again. He just felt like a massive hole had been cut into the place where all his security had been. The tosser had decided not to press charges, which had made Dan even angrier, although he knew that was irrational. He walked further towards the old Odeon, checking side streets and wondering if he’d missed it altogether.

He’d been shocked to see how few possessions he had to show for the five years they had spent together. It had only taken one trip in a Transit van for him and his dad to wipe out the previous ten years of his life in London. Or at least that’s what it felt like. In reality he hadn’t stopped missing Sarah and worrying about his decision to take the transfer for a single minute. Had he just been a stubborn fool, hankering after an impossible life? He knew the answer. In those middle-of-the-night honesty sessions where he lay awake on one side of a bed too big, he admitted to himself that he did want a life like he had imagined, with marriage and kids and a dog. That was who he was. So Sarah of the long legs and clever brain was not the girl for him, and he had to get over it.

He still couldn’t understand how they could have been so far apart when he’d thought they were so happy together. But that was the way it was. His mum had said the usual clichés about ‘better to find out now than later’, ‘going through a divorce was worse’, etc. Dan didn’t know about that. He couldn’t see that a marriage certificate added more weight to the feeling of loss he experienced pretty much all the time.

Two weeks back with his parents in the Exeter suburbs had been enough to convince him to take his small flat on the quayside, and he was growing to love living near the water.

He trotted past more shop fronts, noticing the gradual decline from glass and steel to badly painted wood and hand-painted signs. Students occupied much of this part of town, there were bars, cheap takeaways, laundrettes and open-late mini-supermarkets.

The Illusion Recording Studio was located in the basement of a spacious, two-storey music shop. Dan approached via a small alleyway, where a Mini in Racing Green and a rusty white Transit van were squashed nose to tail. He squeezed past the van. Did Carly Braithwaite actually get here on Sunday and did she leave again? This Abrams character could easily have transported her body in the Transit van to the woods. People would be used to seeing him load up, leave and return at all hours. He made a note to check out the van’s movements on CCTV.

Pulling open the external steel security door, Dan found himself in a small lobby facing a locked glass door. He looked into the security camera and pressed the buzzer. After a brief conversation with a Welsh accent, he was buzzed through.

Illusion Studios was far more impressive than the dingy entrance had led him to expect. Once through the glass door, Dan followed a carpeted stairway to the basement. The walls held well-lit pictures of semi-famous bands and singers who had recorded at Illusion as well as pictures of the owner, Jed Abrams, at parties with celebrities. They appeared to have been taken over a period of at least twenty years. Dan smirked at the ponytail. Abrams really didn’t carry it off as well as Bono and hadn’t had the sense to chop it off when he hit forty, either.

He entered through the lower door, experiencing a small thrill in the pit of his stomach. As a teenager he too had harboured dreams of being in a band and becoming famous. He and a group of lads from school had played in a band for a while, called rather embarrassingly,
‘Kids eat Free’
, but they had split up when university beckoned and their parents made them choose a more reliable method of earning a living. But, Dan still played guitar and would have loved to have the opportunity to record in a proper studio with the lads. Who knew where they might have ended up?

He looked around. The place was large with a roomy reception area furnished with two enormous in-trend, battered leather sofas and a slate coffee table holding music magazines.

‘Can I help you?’

The Welsh accent belonged to a tiny girl/woman with short, black, spiky hair and dramatic eyeliner. She seemed to be wearing several tee shirts of various colours and sleeve lengths, stripy leggings and Doc Martens. Fashion student earning a bit of extra cash, Dan guessed.

‘Only you’ve taken five minutes to get down the stairs. Don’t think anyone has actually looked at those photos for years. Is it someone in a photo you’re looking for?’

‘No,’ said Dan, showing his warrant card. ‘I need to speak to Jed Abrams. It’s urgent.’

The girl took a step forward to read the card. She only came up to the middle of his chest.

‘He’s recording at the moment. I’m due to take them in a cuppa, though, so I can interrupt them then. What’s it about?’ she asked, heading for the compact kitchen behind her desk.

Dan hesitated. He wanted Abrams to hear the news first. He needed to judge his reactions before he had a chance to work out a cover story. On the other hand, he had a few minutes now to gather some useful information.
      
‘What’s your name?’ he asked, following her into the kitchen.

‘Chas Lloyd’, she replied, ‘short for Chastity. Laugh and I’ll never speak to you again. I’m the product of Welsh Presbyterian lay preachers.’ She lifted one corner of her mouth up into half a smile, ‘but my brother is called Ezekiel, so I guess I was lucky. Tea or coffee?’

Dan remembered he’d eaten nothing since the night before, and his stomach, betraying him utterly, rumbled loudly enough for Chas to hear it and smile.

‘Biscuit?’

He smiled too, ice broken. ‘I’ll have coffee with milk, please. Ms Lloyd, did you know about the recording session won by Carly Braithwaite?’

‘The schoolgirl? Yeah, course. Call me Chas, by the way, everyone does. Jed’s been going on about this girl for ages, said she has a good voice and he’s hoping to manage her once she leaves school.' She made air quotes as she spoke. 'He’s always looking for the next big thing.’ Turning, she measured coffee into four mugs and emptied half a packet of plain chocolate digestives onto a plate. ‘He’s just got one guy in there this afternoon,’ she explained. ‘Does most of his band work later in the day.’

‘Did Mr Abrams say anything about the session with Carly on Sunday evening?’

She nodded. ‘Yeah, he was furious, said she didn’t turn up and he was hanging around for an hour waiting for her.’

‘Were you here then?’

Chas shook her head. ‘No, I’m usually off on a Sunday unless we’ve got a really busy day. He doesn’t exactly like paying me overtime, so if he’s just got one punter in, he manages by himself. Suits me. Pile of talentless tossers, most of them. I’m only here to earn a bit of cash so I can go to Design school next year.’

‘Fashion?’

She laughed and looked down at her stripy leggings. ‘Is it that obvious?’

‘How do you get on with Mr Abrams? Is he a good boss to work for?’ Dan saw a wariness enter her eyes, as if she’d suddenly remembered that he was a police officer.

‘He’s OK.’ She turned away, filled the mugs with hot water, gave each one a vigorous stir, and re-arranged the biscuits on the plate. Classic displacement activity. He didn’t push
. He could speak to her later.

Dan took his coffee and two biscuits and stood outside the long window, which looked into the studio control room. Inside, he could see the back of Jed Abrams’ head and smiled at Lizzie Singh’s description of his ‘rat’s tail’. Abrams was twiddling knobs on a vast console as a lone guitarist sang and played. He wasn’t bad at all.

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