Читать книгу No Way Out - David Kessler - Страница 16

Friday, 5 June 2009 – 16.50

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‘Okay, there we are,’ said the evidence technician, as she took the third buccal swab.

Like Bethel a few hours earlier, Claymore was giving a DNA sample from the lining of his mouth. They hadn’t told him that the rapist had worn a condom or that the victim had scratched the rapist’s arm. The less they told him, the better their chances of getting him to incriminate himself by revealing first-hand knowledge of the crime. But they did subject him to a full examination in which they looked for signs of scratches and found several.

Nevertheless, this was far from conclusive. The real test would be the DNA. They had several good samples from Bethel and now all they needed was a good match.

After the reference samples had been taken, Alex sat with Claymore for twenty minutes, going through where Claymore had been at the time of the alleged rape. Claymore had been very clear that he had nothing to hide and wanted to answer police questions. But Alex was wary of this; he knew that even guilty people sometimes think they can get away with the crime by talking to the police. And he also knew all about the naivety of the genuinely innocent man who thinks he has nothing to hide. Alex had known Elias for a few years now – ever since he had represented him at the plea bargain for unlawful escape, after he came back to the United States to face the music – and he had been impressed at the time by Claymore’s sincerity and genuine sense of shame at his past. But that meant little now. If a man could change once, he could change again. The only thing it did mean was that Alex had a certain amount of influence with Claymore.

But lawyers take their instructions from clients, not the other way round. So when Claymore made it clear that he was determined to answer police questions, all Alex could do was say his piece and then step aside while the interview took place. He would be present during the questioning and he’d step in if he had to.

Alex sat in silence while Lieutenant Kropf, the tall, thin man who headed up the investigation, used his aggressive rapid-fire technique to try and trip Claymore up.

‘Okay, so you admit that no one saw you at home at that time?’ barked Kropf.

Alex wanted to tell the lieutenant to stop wasting time; he’d had his answer and was just repeating himself ad nauseam. But Claymore held out a restraining hand to silence his lawyer.

‘It’s not a question of admitting,’ Claymore replied, trying to keep his voice level. ‘I was alone. That’s a fact. It’s not a crime to be alone.’

‘No, but it helps to have an alibi.’

‘You think I don’t know that?’ asked Claymore wryly.

In the tense silence that followed, Claymore looked around. The room was stark and bare. The furniture was limited to a table and three chairs, one for the lieutenant and one each for Claymore and Alex. Light entered the room from a high window located very close to the ceiling.

Another police officer, a detective, stood by the door but said nothing. He was there in case the suspect decided to get ‘physical.’ He was also there to be a witness to protect the lieutenant from false accusations. Although the interrogation was being videotaped, with Claymore’s consent, and there was a technician on the other side of the one-way glass, there were times – on the way in and the way out – when the people were out of the watchful eye of the camera.

‘Can you think of anything else that might prove you were at home?’

‘Like what?’

‘Like a phone call. Did anyone call you? Did you call anyone?’

Claymore shook his head. The monotonous drone of the air conditioning was beginning to take its toll. It was more irritating than the monotonous drone of Lieutenant Kropf’s voice as he kept up a steady stream of questions that carried with them more than a hint of quiet menace.

‘I don’t remember.’

‘If you called out from your phone then there’ll be a record on your phone bill. It’s all digital now so you should get an itemized bill.’

Alex sensed that the lieutenant was actually trying to be helpful, almost like he didn’t believe that Claymore was guilty.

‘Okay,’ Kropf continued, ‘if you’re confident on this one, we can get it now.’

The lieutenant was looking at Alex when he said this.

‘At this time?’ asked Alex skeptically, looking at his watch.

‘I know a friendly judge we can ask.’

‘And you think the phone company’s going to haul ass tonight just ‘cause we wave a subpoena in their faces? Get real!’

Alex knew well enough what the lieutenant was up to. He was testing to see how confident they were. It wasn’t a legally binding test of innocence. But it was a good way to know whether or not he was wasting his time on a sure-fire loser.

‘Okay,’ said Kropf, finally. ‘We’re not going to charge your client.’

Claymore breathed a sigh of relief.

‘At least not right now. We’ll wait for the DNA results to come in and we’ll take it from there.’

Alex smiled. It was beginning to look like the storm had blown itself out before it hit dry land. But he noticed that Kropf looked far from deflated – like he still had one more card up his sleeve.

‘Just one more question, Mr Claymore. What car do you drive?’

‘Well I’ve been using taxis for the past couple of days.’

‘Any particular reason?’

‘My car was stolen.’

‘Did you report it?’

‘Not yet. I haven’t had the time.’

‘What make of vehicle was it?’

‘A Mercedes.’

‘What color?’

‘Blue.’

‘A blue Mercedes?’

‘Aquamarine, if you want to get technical.’

No Way Out

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