Sitting in the little observation room next door, Logan watched DI Steel reach forward and take one of Jimmy’s hands.
Her voice came from a small speaker bolted to the wall on the dark side of the two-way mirror.
Logan settled back in his plastic chair and picked up the copy of that morning’s
According to the paper, Jimmy Evans was a retired shipbuilder from Sunderland, who’d moved to the north-east of Scotland after the death of his wife. An unremarkable man who’d lived an unremarkable life, right up until yesterday afternoon. He’d come home and discovered someone breaking into his garage, tried to be a have-a-go hero, and ended up with Richard Knox.
There was a lurid account of the attack, and then a little tagline saying, ‘COMMENT ON PAGE 6’.
Sod the commentary, Logan flipped through the rumpled newsprint, looking for Douglas Walker’s suicide note. He found it on pages nine and ten, printed like a screen-grab, complete with the first few replies and comments from the art student’s Facebook friends.
Steel had been right, a chunk of it
The note claimed he’d been interviewed all weekend, never allowed to sleep, pressured to make a confession. And the harassment had kept up once he’d been released on bail. Never ending. Poking and prodding. Until Douglas Walker just couldn’t take it any more.
He was sorry.
Lying tosser.
Twice. Logan had interviewed him twice. And
Through in the victim support lounge Steel and the FLO were still trying to tease information out of Knox’s latest victim.
Logan pulled out his phone, grimacing as his fingers touched the evidence bag with his puke-stained notebook in it. He pulled that out too and dumped it on the desk.
Should really throw the thing out. But it had Douglas Walker’s statement in it, his handing over of the holdall full of counterfeit notes, and his agreement to come into the station voluntarily. All the stuff Professional Standards would need to see.
He picked up his new mobile and called Colin Miller.
‘Where did you get the exclusive?’
‘That one: how did you get hold of Jimmy Evans before we did?’
Logan flipped back to the paper’s front page. Colin’s
‘I’m not giving you a quote, Colin.’
Logan put the paper back on the tabletop. ‘Tell me about Jimmy Evans and I’ll think about it.’
‘They didn’t search the house?’