mates were a bit high. She chose me first, probably because I wasnât as drunk as them. I liked her but the rest of the guys gave her a hard time.â
âHow?â
âCalled her names, handled her... â He wasnât proud of this.
âAnd?â
âI went back to apologise the next day. We drank champagne. She danced. I left.â
âYou brought your own rose.â
He looked startled. âHow did you know...â
âYou bought roses in Marks and Spencers. Someone recognised you.â
âI bought a bunch. I was going to give them to her to apologise.â
âAnd then you poisoned her.â
âWhat?â
âTracey was given strychnine in a drink.â
âNot by me.â
âThen dumped in a skip.â
âNo!â
He was shocked, but there was fear there too.Fear that he was linked in some way to the crime. Bill went for it.
âThe mouth swab you gave. What if I told you we found a DNA match in Donnaâs flat.â
Watkins thought about that. âYou canât have. Youâre lying.â
Bill was, but he didnât let it show. âAmazing what you find between the sheets â bits of skin, hair, semen. I believe you had sex with Donna Stevens the night she died.â
For a moment, Bill thought his instinct was wrong. Then Watkinsâ face crumpled: âOkay. Okay. I was with her that night. But I didnât kill her.â
Bill waited patiently.
âShe really wanted that dress. Showed me a picture of it. She said her boyfriend would kill her if he found out...â he stopped suddenly realising what heâd said.
âGo on.â
âThat was supposed to be the last time I saw her. One last time, thatâs what she said.â
âBut you didnât want that, did you?â
A quick flush crept up the pale neck and across the face.
âYou were angry with Donna because she wouldnât see you again. And youâd spent all that money on her.â
Watkins swallowed hard, his lips trembling. Bill almost felt sorry for him.
âI want to speak to my solicitor.â
âI think youâd better.â
Â
CHAPTER TWENTY
There were hardly any bits missing, only slithers here and there. If you looked at it casually, you were looking at a whole bottle.
Rhona dusted it all over with lampblack powder, pulled over the light and lifted the magnifying glass. Donna was the last person to handle the bottle, most likely by the neck. But Donna had been wearing long black gloves as part of her devilâs outfit.
Rhona concentrated the magnifying glass on the lower part of the bottle. When she spotted the print, her heart leapt in her chest. She quickly took a series of photos. Then applied the lifting tape.
Her old mentor had been right. A murderer will always leave something of himself at the scene of crime, however well hidden.
âI have a print from the broken bottle.â
Bill was incredulous. âHow the hell did you do that?â
âIâll explain later. I ran a check on it and a name came up. Alec Bankfoot. Convicted of assault on a prostitute in 1995, sentenced to two years.â
âBut Thomas Watkins was the one with the rose.â
âWatkins didnât kill Donna or Tracey.â
âBut we thought Donna knew her killer.â
âShe did.â A horrible thought had entered her head. âIs there a policeman guarding Jonny Simpson?â
âNo. But his mate Banks has taken time off work to sit with him. Seems heâs there round the clock.â
There was a brief silence as they both digested this. Then Rhona said:
âIâll meet you at the hospital in fifteen minutes.â
The room smelt of disinfectant and singed flesh. Jonny lay still and alone. Rhona pulled up a chair and sat beside him. She tried to imagine what itwould be like to lose your love in such a way and to feel responsible.
She would probably want to die. It would be