Tuesday 17 September 2024

Hidden Motive by Dave Dempster,cafe latte

 

“Come on, Mum. Pick it up. Please pick it up. It’s just ringing out. That’s the second day.

Something’s wrong. I’ll have to go round there.”

“Try not to worry, Jess. There’s bound to be a simple explanation.” Harry tried to reassure his

wife.

“She always answers at this time of day. Something’s definitely wrong. Her friend Jenny

hasn’t heard from her, and they were supposed to meet last Thursday. I must go round there now.

Can you watch the kids for a while?” Harry would reluctantly hold the fort, hoping that his Saturday

lunchtime tee-off would still be available.

When Jessica’s knock at her mother’s door went unanswered, she tried to look through the

living room curtains, which were drawn, ominously. Out of the corner of her eye Jessica spotted the

next door neighbour heading for his garage. “Excuse me. Have you seen my mother? She’s not

answering the door.”

The neighbour hesitated. “Come to think of it. I haven’t seen her for a few days. Sorry, I have

to dash.” Jessica’s fears were reaching a crescendo. She hoped the Police wouldn’t give her a telling

off, but this was serious.

Luckily for Jessica, the young constable was understanding and very helpful. He went as far

as apologising for forcing the front door the following Monday morning, although Jessica had made

the request. They found no trace of Jessica’s mother and were about to leave, when something

about the living room carpet caught Jessica’s attention. She bent down. “What’s that?”

The constable’s reply had a shocking effect. “Looks like blood, I’m afraid, and the coffee table’s

been moved.” Jessica saw the exposed impression in the carpet where one of the legs had been. “I

must treat the area as a crime scene now. Can I just check your details, so we can keep in touch?”

Jessica’s world became darker as the Police investigation progressed. Jessica’s mother’s bank

account hadn’t been touched. Her car hadn’t left the garage. And still her family and friends hadn’t

heard anything. The preliminary forensic findings at the house were alarming. A small area of blood

had been found near the coffee table in the living room and there were tiny spots of blood on one of

the coffee table legs. The police had taken Jessica’s mother’s toothbrush and hairbrush. Jessica had

not given up hope.

Then Jessica received the call she had been dreading. When the Police Family Liaison Officer

told Jessica, as sympathetically as she could, that there was no good news, and asked her to come to

the police station with her husband Harry, Jessica burst into tears. The blood found in the living

room was Jessica’s mother’s blood. The blood pattern ruled out accident. Jessica’s mother had been

attacked. There had been no ransom note to indicate mere abduction. The police were now

conducting a murder investigation.

“It’s always the worst part of the job, telling the family.”

“Yeah”, sighed DS Mark Miller. He and DI Larry Jenkins had worked side by side in the

Norfolk Homicide Squad based in Norwich for more than five years. Despite their experience it was

always heart-rending to witness the grief of loved ones at first hand. By way of consolation, it drove

them to work harder to catch the culprit. There was always the possibility that Jessica’s mother would

suddenly reappear, but the police knew the chances were fanciful in the extreme.

The detectives understood that with no body and no murder weapon, only the strongest

circumstantial evidence would suffice, assuming even then that the Crown Prosecution Service was

satisfied there was enough to proceed.

Some reasonable deductions could be made though. Without additional traces of blood,

and no ballistics indicators, the most likely cause of death was strangulation. The pathologist

thought it reasonable to suppose that the deceased woman collided with the coffee table on her

way down. On the plus side, entry had not been forced. Jessica’s mother knew her killer.

         Significantly, the killer must have had access to the back door key, because Jessica knew that her

mother, who lived alone, was always careful to keep her back door locked. Forensics established

that the deceased had been wrapped in bed-clothing missing from a bedroom, before being carried

and dragged through the back door to the gate at the rear of the garden. The back door was then

locked from the outside and the key thrown into a flowerbed. The killer had worn gloves. Not a

single fingerprint could be found. Obviously, the body must have been loaded into a vehicle and

driven off.

The time of death could be narrowed to a span of a few days, from the time Jessica’s mother

was last seen alive, to the time she failed to answer Jessica’s first phone call. However, the most

thorough door knocking and CCTV retrieval produced only disappointment. If only a vehicle had

been noticed near to the rear of the property!  Realistically, there were only two persons of interest

– the deceased’s estranged husband and her boyfriend, Andrew Birmingham. Police soon learned

that one suspect had no motive and the other had every motive.

The boyfriend seemed to have adored Jessica’s mother. He had no motive and was quickly

ruled out. By contrast, Jessica’s mother had had a very unhappy marriage by all accounts. Even after

the separation, her husband bitterly resented any claim she made to share in his considerable

wealth. In short, he hated her. When a tearful Jessica had been asked if she knew of anyone who

might wish her mother harm, Jessica nominated her stepfather without hesitation.

 Digging further, Inspector Jenkins established that the prolonged and acrimonious divorce

process had reached the point where, had Jessica’s mother not been murdered, her husband would

have been forced to sell his large house to settle with Jessica’s mother. The interior of the husband’s

Range Rover had plainly not been cleaned for a very long time. Would the killer not have taken every

precaution and cleaned his vehicle meticulously? In any event, the vehicle was subjected to the most

rigorous forensic testing. Every inch was examined and re-examined. Results were double checked,

and, in some cases, even triple checked. There was simply no trace.

The Police kept watching and waiting but after another four months the case had gone cold. 

The two detectives shared the pain over a beer. “We’ve done our best. I’m sure we haven’t

missed anything, Mark, but it’s always a grind when one gets away.”

“Yeah, Larry. I hate it, letting the family down, but we must move on. Can’t afford to dwell on

it. I’ll get the next round.”

It was nearly a year after her mother’s disappearance. Jessica began in her usual self-effacing

way. “I’m sorry to bother you, but I thought you should have this. Just in case it might mean

something.” With that, she handed over a few sheets of paper. “That’s my mother’s handwriting. I

found this when I was going through her things the other day. The figures and the notes about ‘he

this’ and ‘he that’ don’t make sense to me.”

“I’ve seen that figure at the top, £63,000, somewhere before”, pondered DS Miller, as Jessica

left the office. “And those £5,000 entries, I’ll check if they match her bank records.”

Things were beginning to fall into place. The boyfriend had indeed been generous, making

four deposits of £5,000 into his lover’s bank account in the month before she disappeared. Unusual,

perhaps, but nothing untoward, thought the sergeant. But that figure of £63,000 was bothering him

And it kept bothering him. A few days later the eureka moment happened.

“Remember that inside job at Baker’s? How much went missing?”

DS Paul Butcher of the Fraud Squad was on the other end of the line. “Hang on, Mark. I’ll just

be a minute. “Are you still there, Mark? Yeah, here it is. £63,104.”

“Thanks, Paul. Just one more question. An Andrew Birmingham worked there. Did you look

at him?”

“You bet. He was the main guy, the in-house accountant. He was the closest we got, but we

couldn’t make it stick, and the company wrote it off.”

It was just enough to get a warrant. Why is it that guilty souls always keep some kind of

trophy?  Inspector Jenkins was reminded of the notion when the search of the boyfriend’s home

uncovered a photo of Jessica’s mother in a bedside drawer. Hardly an ordinary photo. A telling

feature stood out. Pound signs had been scrawled all over her face. This was encouraging but far

short of the sort of evidence acceptable to the Crown Prosecution Service, of course.

The boyfriend had told police earlier that his car had been under repair in a local garage

around the time of Jessica’s mother’s disappearance. That had checked out. The boyfriend had also

explained earlier that, without his car, he had walked to his work at Baker’s, although it was quite a 

distance, as part of a fitness drive. Further enquiries would now be made at Baker’s.

“That’s it, he’s lied to us! According to the office manager, Birmingham used his father’s mini

traveller at Baker’s, when his own car was being repaired. It’ll be delicate approaching his father but

that’s the next step.” Encouraged, Inspector Jenkins felt they were closing in.

“I thought you people had finished with him at Baker’s.” Birmingham’s dad sounded

irritated, but he went on to confirm that he had indeed lent his car to his son from the Wednesday

night before the disappearance. “Won’t forget that in a hurry. He promised he would only need it for

a few short trips but he used more than half a bloody tank!” Mr Birmingham senior was less than

pleased again, when, armed with the necessary warrant, police removed his beloved car for forensic

examination.

Thankfully, the boyfriend had been unable to remove all traces from the inside of his father’s

car. Faced with all the evidence, and some skilful questioning, the boyfriend eventually came clean.

He was remorseful enough to lead police to the place of burial.

Jessica had trouble coming to terms with it all. The boyfriend had trusted her mother with his

stealing secret, but in return she had chosen to blackmail him - and paid the highest price.

About the author

 Dave Dempster is a retired lawyer, who practised in Scotland and Western Australia. He has been published in JONAH magazine and has had two of his detective crime short stories accepted for print anthologies. 
 
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