Stevie agreed. When she’d had Izzy, she naively expected life to go on as before, the baby fitting into her world and not the other way around. She hadn’t expected two years of broken nights and exhaustion which, combined with the nightmare of dealing with her ex, sent her only a whisper away from full blown depression. If it hadn’t been for Tash’s support back then she probably would’ve cracked up.
‘So is she extending her maternity leave?’ Stevie asked.
‘She’s resigned.’ Dolly fanned the air with a letter plucked from a pile on her desk. ‘She’s not coming back.’
Stevie paused as the news sank in.
Dolly opened her mouth to speak, but Stevie’s mobile rang, cutting her off. She indicated for Stevie to take the call.
It was Clarissa. ‘Sorry to interrupt, but this is important. I’ve found a photo of Bianca Webster on Kusak’s computer, along with some of her personal details. He bought the photo from the webmaster, Lolita. The photo’s maybe a year or so old, but it’s similar in format to others we found on Mason’s hard drive.’
Stevie thought for a moment. They were dealing with two problems now, both offshoots of the Bianca Webster case: the death of the paedophile and the cracking of the paedophile ring run by Lolita. She mentally reorganised her day, hoping she could slot in another visit to Stella Webster.
‘Have you spoken to Tash?’ Stevie asked.
‘Yes, she was talking to the staff in the Internet cafe when I rang, going through the logs of users at the time the photos were sent. There are a few names that keep popping up. The guy we want is probably using an alias, or more than one, but it’s a start.’
Stevie glanced across the inspector’s organised desk, caught her eye and put up her thumb. After she thanked Clarissa and hung up she said, ‘Looks like we’re getting closer to this Lolita character, ma’am.’
‘Good, keep me informed.’ Dolly clasped her hands and leaned forward, indicating a change of subject. ‘The job vacancy, sergeant in charge of the Cyber Predator Team, was part of the agenda at the senior staff meeting yesterday.’
Stevie wondered if this was the meeting Monty had had with the commissioner, the one he needed clean clothes for.
‘Your name was put forward as Kate’s replacement. It would mean promotion to senior sergeant, of course.’ Dolly smiled and raised elegantly arched eyebrows as she waited for Stevie’s reaction.
Stevie found her words disappearing before she could get them out, she didn’t know what to say. This was totally unexpected—why the hell hadn’t Monty said anything?
God, she must look like a complete moron. She was pleased to be considered up for the job, yet her mind flooded with reasons to turn it down. ‘Thank you ma’am, but there are things I need to think about. Childcare is my first priority; the new job will mean longer hours...’
Her words dried before they could leave her mouth. Dolly didn’t attempt to break the silence, giving Stevie time to organise her staccato thoughts. I’ve not been in the Cyber Predator Team long enough—I don’t understand the complexities of computers—am I up to it?—do I deserve it? What effect will it have on Izzy?
Dolly broke the silence. ‘I know; childcare; same old, same old. But you have a good support group I believe.’
Stevie nodded. Yes, but for how long?
‘How long have I got to think about this, ma’am?’ she asked, finally able to get some sensible words out.
‘They’d like an answer by next week—think you can manage that?’
Stevie attempted to smile but her face felt stretched and tight, as if coated with cosmetic peel. ‘Sure.’
Dolly must have read the doubt in her expression. ‘You know Stevie, you’re a bloody good officer, one of the best I’ve had. Your capture of Robert Mason was masterful. For all of our sakes, I hope you give the job serious consideration.’
Stevie rose to her feet. ‘Thank you, ma’am, I will.’
Dolly regarded her for a moment then smiled. ‘You’d damn well better, girl.’
20
Wayne drove most of the way to the herbalist with his jaw clamped, Barry’s words ‘he’s sweet on her’ playing over in his mind like an unwelcome tune. Damn Barry for choosing just the wrong moment to enter the herbalist’s, just as he’d been having a harmless flirt with Angela Nguyen.
He sighed as he pulled into a parking space outside the shop, hoping things would go better this time. He had to put his discomfort aside and concentrate on the case. It didn’t help that he was brooding on the information Angus had just given him about the boy who’d been associated with Zhang Li.
The signs outside the herbalist shop had already been brought in, even though it was still an hour before closing time—they can’t have been expecting much more business. He gave his paisley tie one last reassuring tug before stepping across the threshold.
There was no one at the counter, no one else in the shop. He could hear Angela Nguyen speaking on the phone in the back room and decided to let her finish her conversation.
A row of colourful boxes caught his eye from one of the aisles and he wandered over to inspect. The aisles were so narrow he couldn’t stand far enough away to read the names of the products and was forced to put on his reading glasses. The flimsy metal shelving shuddered as he reached for a box. Some kind of hair-restorer, he surmised, if the picture on the front was any guide. He looked around. The counter was still empty, the only noise came from a humming fridge and the voice of the girl on the phone. He saw no evidence of security cameras in the ceiling corners—it wouldn’t do to let the beautiful interpreter catch him in the act of inspecting boxes of hair-restoring lotion.
Prising open the cardboard box he plucked out the enclosed leaflet, looking for some English instructions. The Chinese seemed to have a way with herbs; they, if anyone, should have found a cure for baldness. Not that he was thinning too badly, he reassured himself as he smoothed down his feathery hair, and certainly not enough to do a Barry and shave it all off.
He examined the leaflet, finding nothing but Chinese writing. Shit. And now he must attempt to straighten up the box and squeeze it back into its original condition.
Busy as he was behind the shelving, Wayne only noticed the boy when he was already at the counter, leaning against it, cocking his head as if trying to hear the phone conversation in the next room. He looked to be about fourteen. A small fourteen. Swamped in camouflage army pants and a jungle green military jacket, his clothes were totally unsuitable for the current heat wave. As he pulled away from the counter, the boy scratched his head, his neck, then his arm, gazing around the shop in much the way Wayne had when he’d been looking for security cameras.
Wayne froze behind the shelving; he didn’t want to give his position away before he knew exactly what the boy was up to. The boy straightened his shoulders as if taking a breath of courage and then slipped behind the counter and pinged the till.
Wayne now had a clear view of him. This was the same boy in the photo Angus had shown him earlier. But the face was skeletal, the eyes wide and wired, skittering around the room like black beetles. The boy hesitated at the open till, picking at a sore on the side of his mouth. Wayne cursed his bad luck. Give him a grown man any day over a teenage boy with something to prove and a habit that left him with no boundaries.
Like a starving man snatching food, the boy began to stuff his jacket pockets with cash from the till.
Wayne had seen all he needed. He stepped out from behind the shelving. ‘Hold it right there, son. Police.’