Trust Me. Angela Clarke
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Название: Trust Me

Автор: Angela Clarke

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Полицейские детективы

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isbn: 9780008174651

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СКАЧАТЬ Urgent? Her pulse quickened; she flung open the car door and took the stairs up to the street two at a time. Giulia’s Café was on the east corner. Freddie was sat in the window, talking to a casually dressed older black woman she didn’t recognise. Nasreen slowed. What was the emergency?

      Freddie beckoned her in. ‘Nas – over here.’ She pulled over a red vinyl chair. ‘This is Kate: I worked with her when I was at the Guardian.’

      Oh, no: press. She didn’t move towards the seat Freddie had positioned. ‘We’ve got an appointment we need to be getting to.’ How could Freddie imply this was a crisis?

      Freddie lowered her voice. ‘Kate needs our help.’

      ‘I’m not talking to the media,’ Nasreen hissed back. They could be with Moast and Tibbsy now, making progress on a proper case. One she needed to deliver on.

      Freddie’s eyebrows furrowed. ‘Kate’s a teacher. She’s seen a violent rape.’

      ‘What?’ A rape? Neither of them looked like they were joking. Nasreen hung her jacket on the back of the chair, sat down and extended a hand to the woman. ‘I’m DS Nasreen Cudmore.’

      ‘Thank you for agreeing to talk to me,’ Kate said.

      She hadn’t really been given a choice. Freddie took a swig from her bottle of water.

      ‘Go back to the beginning,’ Nasreen said. ‘When was this? Where did you see it?’

      ‘I wrote down everything.’ Kate opened the black handbag that was on her lap and took out an A4 jotter. Nasreen could see paragraphs of neat blue writing. Dates. Times. Notes. And then she told them what had happened.

      Nasreen studied Kate’s face as she talked. She maintained eye contact. Her delivery was clear, and without hysteria. She occasionally double-checked a time and the name of the account that had hosted the feed, but it seemed as though she wanted to ensure she got everything correct, rather than that she’d forgotten any details. She didn’t exhibit any of the usual tells you might see with those who were lying. When she finished, Nasreen spoke. ‘And you reported this?’

      ‘Immediately on Friday night,’ she said. ‘After I was sick,’ she added matter-of-factly.

      Two days ago. ‘And what did they say?’

      ‘A PC Jones came to my house. He thought – well, he implied – that I had been confused.’

      Freddie tutted.

      ‘I tried ringing the hospitals, but no one would tell me if the girl had been admitted. Because I’m not family,’ Kate said. ‘I’m a witness, aren’t I? And I keep thinking what if they just left her there and no one knows?’

      Nasreen let her speak.

      ‘It was the early hours of Saturday morning by then. I’d had one glass of red wine, as I was working. That’s the ironic thing: I was only looking at the feed for research. I’m compiling a paper on sexual safety and the internet among teens for a conference in the autumn term,’ Kate said.

      Nasreen had planned to ask why the woman had clicked onto a live stream video titled ‘Live Sex’. It was an oddity – apart from the assault – in what Kate had presented so far. ‘Freddie said you’re a teacher?’

      ‘Yes, I’m head of Hackney High.’ She still had hold of her notebook. ‘I’ve been there over thirty years. I was born locally, and I stayed. It’s my community. My kids mean everything to me.’

      ‘I interviewed Kate a few years back.’ Freddie had remained spellbound during Kate’s report, but now she was picking at the label on her bottle. ‘She won a TESA award for the work she does at her school. For turning their results around. She pioneered an outreach scheme to provide positive role models for kids from broken homes.’

      ‘I have a good relationship with a local constable, PC Scott. I tried to contact him, but he’s on holiday with his family in the Algarve for a fortnight,’ Kate said.

      ‘All right for some,’ Freddie said.

      An award-winning head teacher who had turned around the reputation of an inner-city school. A fine upstanding member of the community who worked with the police. It lent validity to her claims about why she was watching that particular video. The Crown Prosecution would call that a good witness. There was no alteration in her voice or body posture when she spoke about either the video or her school. If she was a liar, she was a very good one. ‘Do you have kids of your own?’ Nasreen asked Kate.

      ‘No, I live alone,’ she answered.

      Nasreen nodded again. ‘And you didn’t recognise either the woman or the man in the film?’

      ‘No,’ said Kate. ‘There were two men. One was behind the camera. They were boys really. The one I could see may have been nineteen, the one whose voice I could hear sounded younger than that.’

      ‘Would you be able to provide a description of the man and the woman who were visible to help make a photofit of them?’

      ‘I don’t know,’ Kate faltered.

      That wasn’t unusual: most witnesses weren’t confident they’d be able to describe suspects they’d seen, especially when put on the spot. But when questioned correctly, they often came up with the goods.

      ‘We’ll do the photofits first then?’ Freddie had been typing notes into her phone as Kate was talking.

      Nasreen bristled. ‘Let’s not get ahead of ourselves here. This isn’t our case, Freddie.’

      Kate’s facial muscles tightened. ‘You don’t believe me either.’

      ‘It’s not that,’ Nasreen said. ‘It’s just that we can’t confirm that what you saw was real.’ Nasreen knew what Saunders or Chips would say. There was no evidence.

      ‘Come on, Nas,’ Freddie said. ‘Talk to Burgone, he’d listen to you.’

      She doubted that very much. She wanted to help – this woman had obviously seen something awful – but they couldn’t police the world. ‘With the account deactivated, there’s no way to confirm the video feed was shot locally.’

      ‘It was London, it was tagged in London,’ said Kate.

      ‘That’s easily faked,’ Freddie said. ‘Annoyingly.’

      ‘It looked like local authority accommodation.’

      ‘You recognised it?’ Nasreen pushed.

      ‘No, it just had that feel.’ Kate was growing agitated. ‘I’ve travelled, I watch a lot of world cinema, everywhere has a different light. I know that light. I’ve been in flats like that. It was London, I’m certain of it.’

      Nasreen sighed. ‘I’m really sorry, Kate, but everything you have given us is circumstantial. There’s no concrete evidence that a crime has been committed here.’

      ‘Someone must be looking for the girl?’ Kate insisted.

      ‘Yeah, СКАЧАТЬ