True Crime Story(95)



KIMBERLY NOLAN:

Marcus brought the paper to my room that morning before he checked out. I wasn’t interested, I never read it. I just wanted the number that the tip about me and Andrew at Owens Park had come from. He kept his word, said I should let him know if it gave me more to say. When I saw the number, I knew it was familiar, but I had to go back through my phone to work out why. Then I saw it was the same one Fintan Murphy had called me from six days before, when he broke the news about what Dad had done.



From: [email protected]

Sent: 2019-03-22 19:20

To: you

on Fri, Mar 22, 2019, Joseph Knox [email protected] wrote:

Hey—sorry—it was a little bit awkward when you called. XXXXX XXXX XXXX XXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXX Also on deadline but can maybe squeeze in ten mins later tonight? Found it hard to follow what you were saying without seeing a transcript but were you ever able to follow up on Fintan’s alibi? His flatmate/lover Connor Sullivan??

Really glad to hear you finally saw a doctor. I’ve got everything crossed for you, E.

Jx

# # #

It’s okay. XXX XXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX XXXX

Yes—I called Connor a couple of weeks back. He confirmed Fintan’s alibi from the night Zoe went missing. Said Fintan got home late (12–1am) and went to bed. He and Fintan went back to Owens Park the next morning to pack up the speakers Connor had rented out for the party. Connor didn’t know the rest of them, he was a few years older, but he said Fintan turned green when he heard Zoe was missing. He left Connor to it while he went to join the search.

Sounds like that was the story of their life, like, Zoe kind of came between them. He’s married now but started asking how Fintan was, if he’d ever managed to have kids, etc. Apparently that was the big dream back in the day. I’m starting to feel like this might be the book of lost dreams…

My guy from Fairfield Property Management’s been back in touch. I asked before if there was any way he could build me a list of people who worked at the site in the summer of 2011, just before the students arrived. At the time he didn’t think so, but his wife’s been in the attic and thinks she might have some old time cards(!) She’s wading through them now.

Yeah, I’m glad I saw the doctor too. She says she’ll be in touch. I was expecting to lie awake all night worrying but I can hardly keep my eyes open. Don’t worry about calling me back, I know you have other priorities.

E





28.


“Being Wrong”

FINTAN MURPHY:

It was a rough few days. The revelations about Robert’s personal life on the fourteenth, followed by the leak of the Andrew-Kim video, and then the anniversary of Zoe’s disappearance on the seventeenth. So when I wake up to two phones ringing on the twentieth, messages coming at me from all angles, I thought, what now? Of course, it was the world spinning off its axis in response to Kimberly’s Mail interview.

I was furious, as you know.

It felt to me like she was taking oxygen away from Zoe. That’s why I spent that week talking to you about it, ranting it all off my chest. When I got messages from the office in the wake of the news saying that Kimberly had called, that she was trying to get in touch, I ignored them. I knew you were interviewing her, though. And I knew her kidnapping story would make for a chapter in the book, so I think I started using you as a go-between, saying cruel things, knowing they’d get back to her. Christmas week went by like that, both of us meeting you at different times to trash each other. At a certain point, I just thought, Who’s this helping? You know, I wanted a fresh start, to draw a line under it all.

I went into the office on New Year’s Day, hoping to leave it behind. Then I’m in the middle of a meeting when Andrew Flowers storms into the room demanding to speak with me. I haven’t seen him in seven years. I haven’t even thought of him until this business with the video, and more to the point, I haven’t wanted to. I start to say, “Look, whatever this is, you’ll just have to wait,” when I see Kimberly standing behind him in the doorway.

KIMBERLY NOLAN:

I’d never been there before, the Nolan Foundation. To be honest, I didn’t think about it until I was actually in the building, but I was stunned. It wasn’t some pant-wetting feel-goodery set up to absorb middle-class guilt. We walked in through actual work. I mean, the office is above the outreach center in Ancoats. There were people in the doorway who relied on the place, who loved it. There were people inside getting meals and winter coats. There was a whole warehouse of household items to try and help the less well-off get back on their feet. I don’t know why it surprised me to see that it was such a good thing, but it did, and in the best possible way. I couldn’t stay angry once I walked through that door.

ANDREW FLOWERS:

We’d been trying to get hold of Fintan for over a week, but he was dodging us, so we decided to go down to the foundation. I asked him to explain how his fucking phone number had been used to call in a tip about our location to the Mail. He started stammering, “My number? The Mail? What?” I told him we knew he’d set us up and the sooner he explained why, the sooner we could get the police involved.

FINTAN MURPHY:

I think I just sat down. It all just made me tired. I told them that obviously I had nothing to do with anything like that. I told them the truth, you know, “For starters, I didn’t even know either of you were in town until Kimberly’s tell-all interview. For seconds, why on earth would I do something like that?” I sort of gestured to our surroundings to say, “Is that really the kind of man I strike you as?”

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