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Flynn frowned. ‘What do you mean?’

‘I know she got up this morning soon after Henry left for work and she did some stuff down in the cellar. Then she got the kitchen fired up and made herself a brew… and now I don’t know where she is. It’s like she disappeared, vanished. And the brew is half-drunk on the bar and her toast is still here, cold.’

‘Is your car still there? She hasn’t gone off in that, has she?’

‘No — it’s still here.’

‘Perhaps she went off with Henry.’

‘No — he definitely went to work alone.’

Flynn pouted. ‘Has she popped into the village for some supplies?’

‘I don’t think so. We don’t need anything — and I do that, anyway.’

‘Have you spoken to Henry, just in case?’

‘I tried his mobile, but there was no reply.’

‘Right — OK,’ Flynn said, frown deepening. ‘First off, don’t worry. There’s probably a simple explanation, but if you like I could come across. I’m just in Lancaster now at a bit of a loose end.’ And a shop to open and run, he thought.

‘Please… I’m a bit worried. It’s not like her just to disappear.’

‘It’ll be fine,’ Flynn assured her. ‘I’ll be there in twenty minutes or so.’ He swung his legs into the car and started the engine, reversing out of the parking slot.

They waited in the inspector’s office for the duty inspector to make his way up from the custody suite where he had been tied up doing prisoner reviews. His name was Drummond, a fine name for a fine man who did a good job and had no ambitions beyond that role. Henry had known him for a long time and Drummond nodded pleasantly at him, but came up short when he saw Barlow. His eyes narrowed fractionally. No doubt news of the arrest would have spread quickly, but of the release perhaps not too fast.

‘Hi, Jack,’ Barlow said affably.

‘Ralph,’ Drummond nodded unsurely.

‘We’ve come to pick up some property from the safe,’ Barlow explained. Henry noticed his right hand was still in his jacket pocket, holding the gun, but trying to appear calm and normal. Henry wanted to believe that this was the weak point, but he felt powerless to act, to rush Barlow and pin the fucker to the wall. He knew he could and if he had been alone in this shitty mess he would have done. Alison, he called, I’ll sort this. Be brave.

Barlow went on, ‘It’ll be marked for Detective Superintendent Christie only. It’s a mobile phone and some passports.’

Drummond nodded. ‘Yeah, I know — a support unit sergeant booked it in earlier.’ He had a set of heavy looking keys on a detachable fob linked to his leather belt. He unhooked them and selected one, a long, but sturdy one.

The big old safe was in the back corner of the room, not fixed to anything, but unlikely that it would ever move. It was far too heavy and would need specialist lifting equipment to drag it anywhere. It was used mainly to keep any monies that came into police possession and other small valuable items. Most everything else went into the property store.

Drummond bent down and slotted the key in the lock.

Barlow grinned at Henry. ‘You OK?’ he mouthed.

‘Fuck off,’ Henry mouthed back.

The safe door opened easily and the inspector pulled out the items, plus a single, cut-off Wellington boot. Henry swallowed at the sight of this and felt his fists bunch up. The phone and the passports were in separate envelopes across which had been written ‘ To be handed to Det. Supt Christie ONLY ’. Drummond ripped them open.

He handed the property — seven passports, mobile phone and boot — across to Barlow, still eyeing him suspiciously. ‘You need to sign for it all.’ Drummond gave Barlow the form, which he in turn handed to Henry.

‘You’ll be wanting to sign this, boss.’

‘I don’t have a pen,’ Henry said awkwardly.

‘Here.’ Drummond gave him one from his shirt pocket. Henry signed the form.

‘Thanks, Jack,’ Barlow said. ‘We need to get going now. Bodies to deal with.’ It was the sort of thing any cop might have said, but to Henry the words sounded ominous: whose bodies?

They walked out of the office and down the corridor. Henry saw Barlow drop the boot into a waste bin, something else so disrespectful to the dead that a shiver of horror went through him. Then they exited through the enquiry office door.

Once in the foyer, Barlow spun to the lady behind the desk who was now dealing with a member of the public.

‘All quiet, love?’ he asked her.

‘No sign of the yellow peril,’ she confirmed.

Henry went ahead of Barlow out to the car and walked around to the driver’s door, where he paused and leaned on the roof with his forearms.

The Mercedes was still there. Barlow gave the occupants a quick nod and said to Henry, ‘Get in.’

Henry stared in the direction of the Mercedes. Someone sounded an angry blast of a horn further down the street and it looked as though a car had pulled up without warning in front of another car, causing a problem.

Henry got in, as did Barlow.

‘That was nice ’n’ easy, wasn’t it, Henry?’

‘Jack Drummond wasn’t happy. He’ll be making phone calls now, you know. He’s not stupid.’

‘Fuck him. Drive,’ Barlow ordered and drew the gun out of his pocket. ‘Head north.’

Henry started the car, checked his mirrors and over his shoulder and set off. The Mercedes moved out to follow.

Flynn drove off the mortuary car park and onto the A588, where he turned left up to Pointer Island. The traffic seemed worse than normal, irritating him. He couldn’t remember the last time there had been a traffic jam in Puerto Rico, although it did have its moments.

His mobile phone rang and he answered it, securing it between his right shoulder and ear.

‘Flynn, it’s Rik again. Have you made contact with Henry yet?’

‘Tried but failed. I think he’s gone AWOL.’

‘Shit.’

‘Why? Is there a problem?’

Flynn edged forwards in the car and was two cars away from the roundabout. It was then he saw a car he knew pull onto the roundabout from the A6 and sail past him, some fifty metres away and then onto South Road towards the city.

Flynn said quickly, ‘Isn’t that DI Barlow supposed to be in custody?’

‘Ahh… why do you ask?’

‘Answer the question, Rik.’

‘He got released first thing this morning, as did Sunderland. Nothing to do with Henry. A done deal. Again, why?’

The word Fiasco rang in Flynn’s ears.

‘Because Henry’s just driven past me towards Lancaster — and Barlow’s sat right beside him. What going on, Rik?’

‘Double murder in Bispham,’ Rik said succinctly. ‘Two females, one of which is Joe Speakman’s daughter, Melanie. The other is her friend. Both shot in the head — and Henry’s warrant card was found at the scene.’

Flynn reached the roundabout, zipped around a more sedate driver and gunned Alison’s car down South Road, but was immediately caught up in more snail traffic at the red lights outside the front of the hospital — and he had lost sight of Henry.

He still had the phone to his ear. ‘You still there, Rik?’

‘Still here.’

‘I’ve lost him.’

‘Shit — try the nick.’

‘Will do. Oh, by the way, don’t know if this is significant, but Alison’s gone missing this morning. Henry’s Alison, that is. Done a disappearing trick. I’ll call you back.’ He cut the connection.

The lights seemed to stay on red for ever, but it was far too busy for Flynn to do anything rash, like race down the wrong side of the street against two lanes of oncoming vehicles.

Instead, he had to wait. Then they changed and he tailgated the car in front through the lights, veered into the outside lane on King Street, and then bore right into Penny Street and next sharp right into Marton Street where he almost ran into the back of a black Mercedes parked illegally on the double yellow lines on the left. He swerved, drove on and saw that Henry’s classy pool car was parked just as illegally on the double yellow lines outside the police station.