The Golf continued heading west along the seafront, past the recently repainted facade of the Royal Albion Hotel. Then, as they approached the Old Ship Hotel, the Golf moved into the outside lane, its right turn indicator signalling.
To his relief, a blue S-class Mercedes in front of him was signalling right, also. Grace tucked in behind its substantial bulk. He saw the Golf head up, past the hotel, and make a right, down into the huge, Civic Square underground car park. So did the S-class. Grace was right on its tail, waiting behind it on the ramp.
Denise came back on the phone. ‘It’s the same, Roy. Bourneholt International Ltd.’
He clenched his fists in excitement. ‘Brilliant!’
The automatic barrier swung up and he moved forward, waited for the ticket to emerge from the machine and grabbed it. ‘Well done!’ he said.
But there was no signal.
The barrier swung up again, and he drove the Alfa through. Just as he did so, a BMW 3 series reversed out of a space, blocking Grace’s path.
It reversed slowly, a nervous man inching back, inch by sodding inch.
Come on! Grace screamed silently.
After what seemed an eternity, the BMW drove forward, then turned off onto the exit ramp. Grace accelerated. All the spaces on this level were taken. He took the ramp down to the next level. That was full too. So was the next level. But as he raced through it, a Ford Galaxy people carrier filled with children, a nervous mother at the wheel, reversed across his path.
Jesus, woman, get out of my way.
He had no option but to wait. And wait. And wait.
Finally he got down to Level 4, and saw several free spaces. He accelerated, looking for the Golf, and then he saw it. Parked in a bay.
The driver had vanished.
He braked behind it, cursing.
There was a blast of horn behind him. In his mirror he saw a Range Rover. He raised a finger, drove on a few yards, then turned into the first empty space he saw, switched off the engine and jumped out of the car. He sprinted towards the exit, up the steps two at a time, and out into the large open square with a Japanese restaurant in the middle, the Thistle Hotel on one side and rows of shops on the two other sides.
But there was no sign of the man with the rolling gait and the spiky hair.
There were three other exits he could have left by. Grace ran round, covering each of them. But the man had vanished.
Grace cursed, thinking hard, standing by the first exit, nearest the Golf and his car. He doubted the man had seen him tailing him. But how long it would be before he returned to the car was anyone’s guess. It could be five minutes, or five hours.
Then he had an idea.
He dialled his former base, Brighton Central, and asked to be put through to an old mate, Mike Hopkirk, a Brighton Divisional Inspector. To his relief, Hopkirk was in and not on a call.
Hopkirk was a wise owl with many years of service behind him; he commanded a lot of respect in the force and was well liked. Grace had made his choice of who to call for this task very carefully. To get everything galvanized at the speed he needed, if Hopkirk agreed, he was the man.
‘Roy! How are you? Keep seeing your name in the press! Glad to see your move to Sussex House hasn’t blunted your appetite for pissing people off!’
‘Very witty. Listen, I’ll chat later. I need a big favour, and I need it right now. We’re talking about two people’s lives – we’ve reason to believe they’ve been abducted and their lives are in imminent peril.’
‘Tom and Kellie Bryce?’ Hopkirk said, surprising Grace.
‘How the hell do you know that?’ He was forgetting, just how razor sharp Hopkirk was.
The roar of a passing lorry drowned out Hopkirk’s reply. Covering one ear and jamming the phone hard up against the other, Grace shouted, ‘Sorry? Can you repeat that?’
‘They’re on the bloody front page of the Argus!’
The PRO had managed to pull it off. Brilliant. ‘OK, Mike, here’s what I want. I need you to close down Civic Square car park for an hour – to give me enough time to search a car in here.’
He heard what sounded like a lot of air going backwards very quickly. ‘Close it down?’
‘I need an hour.’
‘The biggest car park in Brighton, in the middle of the day. Close it down – are you out of your mind?’
‘No, I need you to do this, now, right this minute.’
‘On what grounds, Roy?’
‘A bomb scare. You’ve had a call from a terrorist cell.’
‘Shit. You are serious, aren’t you?’
‘Come on, it’s a quiet Monday morning. Wake up your troops!’
‘And if this goes pear-shaped?’
‘I’ll take the rap.’
‘Won’t be you, Roy, it’ll be me, and you know that.’
‘But you’ll do it?’
‘Civic Square?’
‘Civic Square.’
‘OK,’ he said, sounding dubious but resigned. ‘Get off my bloody phone; I need it!’
Grace needed his, too. He called Sussex House to arrange for a SOCO team to get down here immediately, and for the officer to be accompanied by someone from Traffic who was capable of getting past the locks and security system of a VW Golf.
Next he phoned a Detective Inspector called Bill Ankram, who was responsible for the deployment of the local surveillance team. In a rare stroke of luck, Ankram had good news for him.
‘We were down to follow someone in central Brighton today and the job’s gone short – we’ve had a no-show. I was about to pull the team out and have a training afternoon instead.’
‘How quickly could you get them covering the Civic Square car park?’ Grace asked.
‘Within an hour. We’re not far away already.’
Grace made the detailed arrangements, gave him the vehicle registration and exact position of the Golf. Then he phoned the Incident Room and had them fax and email the photograph of the Volkswagen’s driver to Ankram.
Next he spoke to Nicholl and told him he would have to see the officer from the Met on his own, after all. As he was speaking to him, there was a deafening explosion of wailing.
It sounded as if all the emergency vehicles in the entire City of Brighton and Hove had switched on their sirens simultaneously.
78
Kellie was scaring Tom. It was like being locked in the darkness with a total stranger. A completely unpredictable one. There were long periods of silence, then suddenly she would screech hysterical abuse at him. She was starting again now, her voice cracked and strained from so much screaming.
‘You stupid bastard! You idiot man! You got us into this! If you had left the bloody CD thing on the train this would never have happened! THEY’RE NEVER GOING TO LET US GO. DO YOU UNDERSTAND THAT, YOU STUPID FUCKING FAILURE OF A MAN???’
Then she burst into a fit of sobs.
Tom felt all scrunched up inside. The sound of her crying was terrible, so harrowing. But there was nothing he could say that she seemed to take on board. He had been talking to her continuously since the fat man had left the room. Trying to calm her down, trying to boost her, to keep up their spirits.
Trying to do anything to distract himself from the searing agony in his bladder. From his raging thirst. And the pangs of hunger. And his fear.
He wondered if it was the vodka that was talking, making Kellie behave like this. Or the lack of it? Had she been on the edge, the way she had been for a few months after Jessica had been born, and this had pushed her over the cliff?
All that stuff with eBay – had that been some kind of a warning, or a cry for help that he had missed?
‘YOU STUPID FUCKING FAILURE!’ she screeched again.
Tom winced. Failure. Was that how she saw him? She was right. He’d failed in business; now he’d failed in the most important thing of all, protecting his family.