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Chapter no 15

As Good As Dead (A Good Girl's Guide to Murder, #3)

‌Pip had stared at the numbers so long they were burned into the underside of her eyes. 01632 725 288. A lilting tune inside her head that she could now repeat back, without looking. An ever-repeating loop that had played through her head all night as she’d begged for sleep. Down to her last four pills now.

Her thumb hovered over the green call button again. She and Ravi had tried it five times yesterday, but it rang out each time, no voicemail. It was a landline and Maria Karras must have been away from home. Maybe even visiting her son, they’d guessed. Pip said she would try again in the morning, but now she was stalling, afraid even. Because once she pressed that button, and Maria picked up on the other end, there’d be no going back. No un-knowing what she knew, or unhearing or unthinking it. But already the idea had burrowed deep, settling down inside her head next to Stanley’s dead eyes and Charlie’s grey gun. And even now, as she clicked a ballpoint pen in one hand, she heard something in the click and unclick. Two distinct notes, two letters. DT. DT. DT. And yet, she kept on clicking.

Her hand was resting against her notebook, a new page, beyond her notes on body decomposition and livor mortis. Maria Karras’ number scribbled there. She couldn’t escape it.

Pip finally pressed the call button and put the phone on speaker. It rang, the shrill sound riding up and down her spine, just as it had yesterday. But then –

Click.

‘Hello? Karras residence?’ said a muffled voice, the words softened by a Greek accent.

‘Oh, um, hi,’ Pip said, recovering, clearing her throat. ‘I’m looking for Maria Karras?’

‘Yes, that’s me,’ the voice replied, and Pip imagined the woman behind it: heavy eyes and a sad smile. ‘How can I help you?’

‘Hi, Maria,’ she said, fiddling nervously with the pen again. DT. DT. DT. ‘Sorry to disturb you on a Sunday. My name is Pip Fitz-Amobi and I –’

‘Oh my god,’ Maria cut across her. ‘You finally got my message?’

Pip stuttered, felt her eyebrows pulling together. What message? ‘Oh, I… um, your message?’

‘Yes, the email I sent through your website, oh, back in April it must have been. I also tried to send you a message on Tweeter but I can never work these things on my own. But you finally got it?’ she said, her voice climbing in pitch.

Pip had never seen this email. She considered for half a moment, deciding to go with it. ‘Y-yes, your email,’ she said. ‘Thank you so much for reaching out to me, Maria, and apologies it’s taken me so long to respond.’

‘Oh, darling, please,’ Maria said, a rustle down her end as she repositioned the phone. ‘I know you must be terribly busy, and I’m just so happy you got it at all. I didn’t know if you would be doing any more of this podcast, but I wanted to reach out anyway, in case you were looking for another local case. You’re really very brilliant, your parents must be very proud of you. And I just knew this is exactly what we need for Billy, to bring some media attention, which you and your podcast would very much do. It’s very popular, my hairdresser listens to it too. As my email said, we are trying to get the Innocence Project to help us with Billy.’

Maria paused to take a breath, and Pip stepped in, before she lost her chance.

‘Yes,’ Pip said. ‘And Maria – I have to be upfront with you – this call doesn’t mean I will necessarily be covering your son’s case on the podcast. I’d need to do some extensive research before I make any decisions on that front.’

‘Oh, darling, yes, I understand, of course,’ Maria said, and it was almost as though Pip could feel the warmth of her voice, radiating out of the phone. ‘And maybe you are still thinking my son is guilty. He’s the DT

Killer, the Slough Strangler, whichever name it is. Almost everybody does, I would not blame you.’

Pip cleared her throat again, to buy herself some time. She certainly hoped Billy Karras was guilty, for her own sake, but she couldn’t say that.

‘Well, I haven’t looked into all the details of the case yet. I know your son confessed to all five murders, and then pleaded guilty in court, which isn’t the easiest position to begin with.’

‘It was a false confession,’ Maria said, with a sniff. ‘It was coerced by the officers interviewing him.’

‘So, why didn’t Billy then plead innocent, take the case to trial? Do you think you could talk me through the details, the evidence, why you think Billy is not guilty?’

‘Of course, darling, I do not mind,’ Maria said. ‘And I can tell you a secret. I thought Billy was guilty too. For the first year or two. I thought eventually he would tell me the truth, but he kept telling me, Mama, Mama, I did not do it, I promise you. For two years. So then I started to look into it, and that’s when I realized he was telling the truth; he’s innocent. And you would think so too, if you could see the police interview. Oh, wait, I can send it to you!’ More rustling down the line. ‘I got copies of all these police documents, years ago. Through that, what do they call it again… oh, the Freedom of Information Act. I have the whole interview, his confession. The transcript is over a hundred pages; did you know they had him in that room for nine hours? He was exhausted, terrified. But I tell you what, I can go through it and highlight the most important parts, send a scan to you? I think I know how to use that scanner. It might take me a while to go through it all, but I can send that to you, tomorrow latest.’

‘Yes please,’ Pip said, making a scribbled note on her page. ‘If you could, that would be very helpful, thank you. But there’s no rush, really.’ Except there definitely was. Five little stick women, their heads gone because they were all wrapped up in tape, climbing up to Pip’s room to meet their number six. The end in sight. Unless that’s just what someone wanted her to think, of course.

‘Yes, I will,’ said Maria. ‘And you can see exactly what I mean. All the answers they feed to him. He knows nothing. They tell him they have all this evidence against him, they even imply they have someone who saw him during one murder, which wasn’t true. Billy got so confused, bless him.

I know he’s my son, but he was never the sharpest tool in the shed, as they say. He had a bit of a drinking problem too, back then, sometimes would black out in the evening. And these officers convince him that he’s committing the murders while he’s blacked out, that’s why he doesn’t remember. I think Billy started to believe it of himself, even. Until he finally got some sleep in the cell, and then he recanted the confession right away. You know, false confessions are a lot more common than you think. Of the three hundred and sixty-five people the Innocence Project have helped exonerate in recent decades, more than a quarter of them had confessed to their alleged crime.’

Maria must have recited that fact off the top of her head, and that’s when Pip fully realized: this was Maria’s entire life. Every breath and every thought dedicated to her son. To Billy. He had new names now, though: the DT Killer, the Slough Strangler, monster. Pip’s chest ached for this woman, but not quite enough to want her to be right. Anything but that.

‘I did not know that statistic,’ Pip said. ‘And I’m very interested to see Billy’s interview. But, Maria, if he recanted the next morning, why did he then plead guilty?’

‘His lawyer,’ Maria said, a hint of reproach tainting her soft voice. ‘He was a public defender; I did not have money to hire a lawyer. If only I had, it is one of my biggest regrets. I should have tried harder.’ Maria paused, her breath crackling through the speaker. ‘This lawyer basically told Billy that because he had already confessed to all five murders, and the police had this confession on tape, that there was no point going to trial. He would lose. They had other evidence too, but the confession was the thing. The jury would believe that tape over Billy, any day. Well, the lawyer wasn’t wrong; they say that a confession is the most prejudicial piece of evidence.’

‘I see,’ Pip said, because she couldn’t think of what else to say.

‘But we should have tried,’ Maria continued. ‘Who knows what might have come up in a trial, to save Billy. What evidence. You know, there was an unidentified fingerprint on the second victim, Melissa Denny. The print does not match Billy’s and they don’t know who it belongs to. And…’ She broke off. Paused. ‘On the night that Bethany Ingham was murdered, the third victim, I think Billy was here, with me. I can’t be certain, but I think on that night, Billy came over to my house in the evening. He’d been drinking, a lot. Could not string one sentence together. So, I made him sleep

in his old bedroom, took his keys so he wouldn’t try to get in the car again. I don’t have any evidence of this; I have searched and searched. Phone records, CCTV cameras down the road, everything. I don’t have evidence, but in a court, my testimony would have been evidence. How could Billy have murdered Bethany if he was home with me?’ She exhaled. ‘But the lawyer told Billy that if he pleaded guilty, the judge might let him serve in a prison closer by, so that I could visit him more easily. Which then didn’t happen, of course. Billy lost hope, that’s why he said he was guilty. He thought he’d already lost before it began.’

Pip had been scribbling as Maria spoke, her words slanted, letters trampling each other in her haste to get it all down. She realized Maria had stopped, was waiting for her to speak.

‘Sorry,’ Pip said. ‘So, other than the confession, what evidence did the police have that made them think Billy is DT?’

‘Well, there were a few things,’ Maria said, and Pip could hear shuffling down her end, as though Maria were flicking through papers. ‘The main one was that Billy was the person who found Tara Yates, the final victim.’

‘He found her body?’ Pip asked. She vaguely remembered that now, from one of the podcasts she’d listened to, remembered how they’d framed it as the big twist.

‘Yes. He found her like that. Tape around her ankles and wrists, wrapped around her face. I couldn’t ever imagine seeing another human being like that. It was at work, where he found her. Billy worked for a grounds maintenance company: cutting lawns, trimming hedges, picking up rubbish, that sort of thing. It was early in the morning, and Billy was on the grounds of a manor house, one of his company’s sites, cutting the grass. He spotted Tara in the trees around the edge of the site.’ She cleared her throat. ‘And Billy… well, the first thing he does is run over to her. He thought she might still be alive, couldn’t see her face, you see. He shouldn’t have gone over, should have left her there and called the police straight away. But that’s not what Billy did.’

Maria trailed off.

‘What did he do?’ Pip prompted her.

‘He tried to help her,’ Maria exhaled. ‘He thought the tape on her face was keeping her from breathing, so he started to unwrap it. Touching her and the tape with his bare hands. Then when he realized that she wasn’t

breathing anyway, he attempted CPR, but he didn’t know what he was doing, had never learned what to do.’ A small cough. ‘He knew he needed help, so he ran back to the manor and told one of the employees to call the police, to come help him. He had his mobile on him, he just forgot about it in the moment. I guess maybe he was in shock? I don’t know what that does to you, seeing another person like that.’

Pip knew exactly what it did to you, though she could never try to explain it.

‘So, the result of that,’ Maria continued, ‘was that Billy’s DNA, his sweat and saliva, were all over poor Tara. And his fingerprints. Silly boy,’ she said quietly.

‘But the police would have known that was from him discovering the body, trying to save Tara, even if he didn’t realize it was too late and he was only contaminating the scene.’

‘Yes, well, maybe that’s what they believed initially. But, you know, I’ve done a lot of research into serial killers these last few years. I would even go as far to say I am an expert in them now. And with this kind of criminal – DT – it is very common that the killer would try to insert himself into the police investigation somehow. Calling in with ideas or tips, or offering to help in search parties, that sort of thing, even trying to get information to see how safe they are from suspicion. That’s what the police thought this was, eventually. Billy inserting himself into the investigation by discovering Tara’s body, to appear helpful, innocent. Or maybe to cover himself in case he had left any DNA on her while committing the murder.’ Maria sighed. ‘You see now, how everything is twisted to fit the story?’

With a sinking feeling in her gut, Pip realized she had just nodded. No, what was she doing? She didn’t want it to go this way, because if there was a chance Billy was innocent, then… fuck, oh fuck.

Luckily Maria had resumed talking, and Pip didn’t have to listen to the voice in her head any more.

‘Maybe this would have been OK, on its own,’ she said, ‘but there were other details that tied Billy into this whole mess. He knew one of the victims. Bethany Ingham, number three, she was his supervisor at work. He was very sad after he learned about her death, said she was always so nice to him. And the first victim, Phillipa Brockfield, her body was found on a golf course in Beaconsfield. It was another site that had a contract with the

company Billy worked at, and Billy was on the team assigned there. His work van was seen driving to the golf course on the same morning Phillipa’s body was left there but, of course, he was just driving to work. And the duct tape… well, it was the exact same kind Billy had access to at work, so…’

Pip could feel that part of her awakening, the spark in her brain, questions rolling over each other, gathering speed. The world slowing as her mind picked up, double pace. She shouldn’t, she knew what this path meant for her, but she couldn’t stop it, and one of the questions came loose.

‘So, all of these details tying Billy to the murders, they’re related to his job,’ Pip said. ‘What’s the name of the company he worked for?’

Too late. Just asking it meant it was already too late for her. That, on some level, she must think it possible, that she might not be speaking to the mother of the DT Killer at all.

‘Yes, that is where the connections seem to come from,’ Maria said, voice even faster now, more excitable. ‘The company is called Green Scene Limited. Scene, not like eyes, like the kind in a film.’

‘Got it, thanks,’ Pip said, writing the name of the company at the bottom of her page. She tilted her head, studied the words from another angle. She thought she recognized the name. From where, though? Well, if the company operated nearby, she’d probably seen its logo on vans driving through Kilton.

‘And how long had Billy worked there?’ Pip asked, as she swiped her finger across her laptop’s trackpad, the screen springing back to life. She typed in Green Scene Ltd Buckinghamshire and hit enter.

‘Since 2007, it was.’

The first result was the company’s website and, yes, Pip did recognize the cone-shaped tree of its logo. An image she knew, that already existed in her brain somewhere. But why? The home page told her about Green Scene’s specialist and awardwinning grounds maintenance services with a slideshow of photos. Lower down the page was a link to another site, its sister company Clean Scene Ltd which offered cleaning services for offices, housing associations and more.

‘Hello?’ Maria said tentatively, breaking the silence, and Pip had almost forgotten she was even there.

‘Sorry, Maria,’ she said, scratching her eyebrow. ‘For some reason, I recognize the company’s name. And I can’t figure out why.’

Pip clicked on the menu item labelled Our Team.

‘Oh, I know why you’ll recognize it, darling,’ Maria said. ‘It’s because the –’

But the page loaded, and the answer was there in front of her, before Maria could say it. A grinning photo of a suited man at the top, introducing the Managing Director and Owner of Green Scene and Clean Scene Ltd.

It was Jason Bell.

‘It’s Jason Bell’s company,’ Pip said on an outward breath, the pieces connecting in her head. Yes, that was it. That’s how she knew it.

‘Yes, dear,’ Maria said softly. ‘Andie Bell’s father, and of course you know all about Andie Bell. We all do now, because of your podcast. Poor Mr Bell was going through his own unthinkable tragedy around the same time.’

Exactly the same time, Pip thought: Andie died on the same night Tara Yates was murdered. And here, Andie had come up yet again, back from the dead. Billy Karras worked at Jason Bell’s company, and his connection to the DT killings in each case was also tied to his job.

If Pip had to admit it to herself, right here, right now, that there was even the faintest possibility Billy Karras was innocent – that there might be a wrong man and a right man – Green Scene Ltd was where she should look first. If this were a case with no other complications, no ties to her, no dead pigeons or stick figures on her doorway, that would be her first step. And yet, that step seemed so much harder this time, so much heavier.

‘Maria,’ Pip said, her voice rough and gravelly. ‘Just one last thing.

After Billy was arrested, the killings stopped. How do you explain that?’

‘As I said, I’ve learned a lot about serial killers in the last few years,’ she said. ‘And one thing most people don’t realize is that sometimes serial killers just stop. Sometimes they age out, or they have life events going on that mean they don’t have the urge, or the time any more. Say a new relationship, or maybe the birth of a child. So, maybe that’s what happened here. Or maybe the killer saw an easy way out, after Billy’s arrest.’

Pip’s pen dragged to a stop, her mind too full. ‘Maria, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me today. This has all been very –’ don’t

say helpful, don’t say terrifying – ‘interesting,’ she said.

‘Oh, darling, please, thank you for taking the time,’ Maria sniffed. ‘There’s no one I can talk to about this, no one who listens, so thank you for that. Even if it goes no further, I understand, darling. You know how hard it is to appeal a conviction once it is made? It is almost hopeless, we know this. But Billy will be so touched to even know you reached out. And I will get right on to scanning the transcript of Billy’s interview, so you can see for yourself.’

Pip wasn’t sure she wanted to see for herself. There was a part of her that wanted to clasp her hands over her eyes and wish this all away. Wish herself away. Disappear.

‘Tomorrow,’ Maria said firmly. ‘I promise. Shall I send it to your podcast email address?’

‘Y-yes, that would be perfect, thank you,’ Pip said. ‘And I’ll be in contact soon.’

‘Goodbye darling,’ Maria said, and Pip thought she heard it in her voice then, the smallest stirrings of hope.

She thumbed the red button on her phone, and the silence grated in her ears.

It was a maybe.

It was possible.

And that possibility, it began with Green Scene Ltd.

And it ended – the voice in her head interrupted – with her dead. The sixth victim of the DT Killer.

Pip tried to speak over that voice in her head, distract it. Don’t think about the end for now, just the next step. One day at a time. But how many more of those did she have?

Shut up, leave her alone. First step: Green Scene. The echo of those two words sounding in her head, morphing into the click of her pen. DT. DT. DT.

And that’s when she realized, Jason Bell wasn’t the only person she knew who was connected to Green Scene Ltd. There was someone else too: Daniel da Silva. Before he became a police officer, he’d worked at Jason Bell’s company for a couple of years. Maybe even worked directly with Billy Karras.

This case, which just yesterday had seemed so far away from her, so remote, was creeping closer and closer to home, just like those chalk figures climbing up her wall. Closer and closer, like it was leading her right back to Andie Bell and to the very beginning of everything.

There was a sudden sound, a harsh buzzing. Pip flinched.

It was only her phone, vibrating against the desk with an incoming call. Pip glanced at the screen as she picked up the phone. No Caller ID. ‘Hello?’ she said.

There was no answer down the other end. No voice, no sound, other than the faintest trace of static.

‘Hello?’ Pip said again, holding on to the sound. She waited, listened. Could she hear someone breathing, or was that just her own? ‘Maria?’ she said. ‘Is that you?’

No answer.

A telemarketing call maybe, with a bad connection.

Pip held her breath and listened. Closed her eyes to focus her ears. It was faint, but it was there. Someone was there, breathing into the phone. Couldn’t they hear her speaking?

‘Cara?’ Pip said. ‘Cara, I swear, if you think this is funny then –’ The call ended.

Pip lowered the phone and stared at it. Stared at it for far too long, as though it might explain itself to her. And it wasn’t her own voice in her head now, it was Harriet Hunter who spoke to her, in an imagined voice Pip created for her, talking about her murdered sister from that article about DT. She also mentioned getting a few prank calls. That was in the week before she went missing.

Pip’s heart reacted, and the gun went off inside her chest. Billy Karras might be the DT Killer. And he might not. And if – an if that circled Pip like a black hole – if Billy wasn’t DT, then the game had changed again. Into the final round. And now a timer was ticking down.

The week before.

Who will look for you when you’re the one who disappears?

File Name:

 

 

Download: Billy Karras police interview.pdf

 

 

flame on, Billy, let’s stop messing around here. It’s going to be ‘ OK. Looket me. Lat’s stop playing this game, eh† You will feel ,. ao muoh better when you just say it. Trust me. Everything will

be better for you if yau just tell me what happened. You probably didn’t maan for any of this to happen, right? And you hadn’t mean tohurt any of those girts, I understand that. Maybe they wronged you in some way, did they? Were they mean to

 

 

flea, sir, I dam know any of them. I didn’t do it.

See, you*fa lying to me now, Billy, aren’t you? Because we know you knew Bethany Ingham. She was your supervisor at

Yea, sorry, I meant I didn’t know the other women. I knew Bethaqy though. didn’t mesn to lie, sir, I’m just so tired. Could we have break aoon7

Did you hata Bathany, BilIy’7 Did you think she was attractive? Did you want to sleep with her, and did she turn you down? Is that why you killed her7

No, I – pteaae, can you stop asking so many questions so

 

 

J\zst7 I-IN trying to not get confused, to not accidentally lie again. I didn’t hats Brittany at all. I liked her, but not like how you’re saying. Shn was nioe to me. She brought in a cake to 6›e office for my birthday last year, made everyone sing fbr me. People arnn’t normally nice to me like that, except my

 

 

0o,yotñaskmegeeeyou,0#y?|sbatwhetyounessyng7

You dam ha«o a girlfñend, do yout Do women make you “• woomlbrtabie because yod\e lonelyt Does it make you angry

 

 

No, I … sir, I )uct, I can1keep up. Please, I’m trying. I’m not a bner, )ust dam have many frlarda at the moment, maybe some of the guys at worlc who used to

work with me in Bethany’a taam too, he’s actually a police ‘; officer now. And I have nothing but respect Jbr women. My

mum raked me, a single mother, and she’s alweya taught me

 

 

DCI Nolan:

BK:

, DCI Nolan:

 

 

DCI Nolan:

BK:

DCI Nolan:

 

 

DCI Nolan:

BK:

DCI Nolan:

BK:

You can1remember7

 

 

I Juat mean that sometimes, when I’ve drunk a lot, I black out. I cant really remember what I’ve done. I think i have a problem, I’m going to get help with it, I promise.

apu’o aayiiq matp«don’t remember any of the nights that

Oieae women diedt You can’t remember where you were on

 

 

No, I would have been at my house, I just don’t remember exactly. I was explaining to you sometimes the reason why I done remember.

But, Billy, If you don1 remember, isn’t it possible that you weren1 at home? That you did kill these women, while you

I-I-I’m not sure, sir. I don1… I guess it is possible —

It ib poaelble that you killed these women? Just say it, Billy. No, I df— Just, If I donlremember then I can’t say what I was or wesnldolng, thats all. Can I get some water or somethlng7 My heed hurts.

 

 

Just tell me, Billy. And then this can all stop, and yes you can hays some water, get some sleep. Come on, we’re both tired. You MII feel ao much batter, so much lighter. The guilt muat be eating you up. Just tell me you did it. You can trust me, Billy, you know that. Your already gone from saying / didn’t do It to

/ donY zemwnder. Come on, let’s just go one step further, tell

me the truth.

That ia the truth. I didn’t do it, but I don’t remember tt›oee dghts.

Stop lying to me, Billy. Your van was captured driving to theske where Phlilipa Brockfleld’s body was dumped, on that same morning. Your DNA Is ail over Tara Yates’ body. Loalc, have file as m ›i‹ ‹w arm of evidence against you. It’s over. Just tell me what you did and I can make this all go away.

I ahouldnl heve touched her. Tara. I’m sorry. I thought she was alive. I waa trying tri help her. That’s why my DNA is on her.

Someone saw you, Billy.

G-eaw ma7 Doing what7

* ’:.”. .”*“”’*.-*“•.”.:..:…-I -.*“.I*-4.’-*’”!:*-*’”’.-” ””.-…..

 

 

 

 

– DCI Molart:

BK:

Molan:

 

 

BK:

 

 

BK:

 

 

DCI Nolan:

BK:

Page 77

You know what. Billy. You know exactly what. Let’s stop pretending here. You‘ve been caught. Just tell me, so we can give the families of these poor girls some peace.

s-someone saw me’7 With Tara … before? At night? But I donl remember, I don1 … How could I not remember if … This doesnl make sense.

What doean1 make sense, Billy?

Well, fzom everything you’re telling me … all the evidence you have, k aounds like … maybe, I must have done it. But I dam understand how.

Maybe you blocked it out. Billy. Maybe you didn’t want to remember, because you feel so sorry for what you’ve done. Maybe, but I dam remember. don’t remember anything. But someone saw met

I’m going to need you to say it out loud, Billy. Tell me what you

dld.

I think, maybe .. . It must have been me. I don’t understand how, but it waa me, wasn’t it† was the one who hurt those women. I’m aorry. I donl … I wouldn’t ever do anything like that. But It muat have been me.

Well done, Billy. That’s roally good. There’s no need to cry now. I know how sorry you must feel. Come on, here’s a tissue. There you go. Right, I’ll go and get you some water now, butwhanI’mback, we need to carry on this conversation, OK? Get everything, all the details out in the open. You’ve done really well, Billy. You must feel better already.

Not retally. Are you … is my mum going to find out?

 

 

Page 91

 

 

DCI Nolan: How did you NII them, Billy?

BK: lt’8 the tspe afound their faces. They couldn’t breathe, thatâ

 

 

 

 

DCI Nolan: Mo, Billy. That’s not how they died. Come on, you know the anaaer. How did you kill them? It wasn’t the duct tape.

BK:

I … I donl km, sir. I’m sorry. Did I, did I strangle thern7

Y-yes, I strangled them.

DCI Nolan: Good, Billy. BK: Wkh my hands.

DCI Nolan: No, It wasnl with your hands, was it, BiIIy‘7 You used something, what dld you use?

BK: Um … I don’t … maybe, a rope?

 

 

DCI Nolan: Yes, It waa. Blue rope. We found fibres that match the ezact

type of rope in your van.

BK:

fi’a the kind we use at work. Especially with the tree surgeon

teams. I muat have taken it from work, did I?

DCI NoIAn: As wetl ae the duct tape.

BK: I gueax

“ DCI Nolan: Where dN you Nil them, Billy? After you abducted them,

where dld you taka them to kill them?

BK: Um, I don1… my work van, maybe? And then I could drive

them straight0 where they were found.

 

 

DCI Molan: You left each z ‘them fora while though, didn’t you? After you bound them In the duct tape, before you returned to strangle Siem. A few of the women had managed to loosen the tape around their wrists, taar it in places, which suggests you left Siem unsupervised for a little while. Where did you go, in that

BK: I … just dñve around, I suppose.

DTI Nolan:

BK:

DCI Nolan:

BK:

 

 

DCI Nolan:

BK:

DCI Nolan:

 

 

:

 

 

DCI Nolan:

DCI Nolan: BK:

DCI Nolan:

, BK:

DCI Nolan:

 

 

,1” BK:

DCI Nolan:

BK:

.* DCI Nolan:

BK:

Page 102

 

 

Good, that’s right, Billy And what did you taka from Melissa

Denny? As a trophy.

Another bit of jewellery, I think.

No, it wasn’t, that time. It was something else. Something else

woman might carry in her handbag

Oh, maybe her purse? H-her driving licence†

No, Billy. You know what it was. Something she probably

used every day.

Oh. A lipstick‘2

You might have taken a lipstick too, Billy. But there was something else missing from her bag. Something bigger than that, something her family told us she took everywhere.

What — oh … something h-hair, a hairbrush† Is that what you

mean by that7

Yes, it was a hairbrush, wasn’t it, Billy? One of those wider brushes. She had a lot of hair, Melissa, long blonde hair. Is that why you wanted to keep the brush?

I guess. That makes sense.

And what colour was the brush? P-pink†

Hmm, I’d describe it more as a purple myself. A light purple.

Lavender-ish. L-like, lilac?

Yes, that’s exactly it. So, where are you keeping the trophies, BilIy‘2 Phillipa’s necklace, Melissa’s hairbrush, Bethany’s watch, Julia’s earrings and Tara’s keyrings. We’ve searched your house and your van, and we couldn’t find them.

I think I must have thrown them away, then. I don’t remember.

Threw them in the bin?

Yeah. Wrapped them up and threw them in the bin. You didn’t want to keep them?

Can I please go to sleep now? I’m just so tired.

›t”‘“. :

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