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‘What else?’

‘I’d like your permission to search the flat again.’

‘Wasn’t that done at the time?’ Henry nodded. ‘Surely there won’t be anything to find — it’s been so long. There can’t be any value in another search.’

‘I’ll be the judge of that,’ he said haughtily. ‘I think it would be worth it, so I take it your permission is granted?’

She nodded, but not happily.

‘Thanks. That’s about it.’ Henry stood up and headed for the door. Burrows followed him. He paused, turned and did his impression of Columbo. ‘There is one more thing. .’

‘And that is?’

‘What’s your relationship with Marty Cragg?’ he asked bluntly, going straight for the jugular. She shifted slightly as the question hit her, but stayed casual. Henry was impressed by her composure.

‘I don’t know any Marty Cragg.’

‘How come he phoned you when he was in custody last year?’

She shook her head. ‘You must be mistaken.’

Henry took a piece of paper from his jacket pocket and unfolded it. He read a telephone number out. ‘That’s yours, isn’t it?’

‘Yes.’ Her face became tight and unpleasant.

‘That was the number on the custody record with your name next to it. One hell of a mistake, wouldn’t you say? Marty dictated the number to the custody sergeant.’

She remained silent and shook her head, shrugging innocently. Henry waited impassively, his hand resting on the inner door handle. He enjoyed these difficult silences and rarely broke them. He raised his eyebrows. Again she shook her head and would not be drawn to say anything. Henry admired her fortitude under pressure, but wondered why she was denying this relationship. For a split second it looked like she was about to say something, then she checked herself, coughed and said, ‘No further comment.’

‘Okay.’ Henry relented, but only for that one word. ‘Maybe next time we’ll be talking into a tape recorder, eh?’

‘I doubt it,’ she responded crisply.

Henry turned the door handle as the pager on his belt bleeped. He pulled it off and read the scrolling display, then re-read it.

‘Another murder?’ Burrows asked brightly.

‘No, just my wife telling me my dinner’ll be in the oven.’ He opened the door. ‘Oh, key for the flat?’

‘The house manager has one. You can get it from the office in Hornby Road. I’ll make sure he knows you’re coming for it sometime. As far as I know, the flat is unoccupied at the moment.’

‘You’ve been a great help,’ he said, reverting to the lowest form of wit. ‘No doubt we’ll meet again soon.’

‘Can’t wait.’ She closed the door behind him, then leaned on to it to stop herself falling over. ‘Shit,’ she breathed through clenched teeth.

In the Vectra, Henry switched his mobile phone on and called into the force control room as instructed by his pager message.

Burrows watched Henry surreptitiously through the living-room window, then picked up her phone and called a number. It rang on, and on, until eventually that nice metallic lady on the answerphone service interrupted. Burrows ended the call and threw the cordless phone across the room, smashing it against the wall.

Karl Donaldson sat opposite his steely-eyed boss, Philippa Bottram, who headed the legation in London. He told her of his concerns about Zeke. She listened intently, very much aware that for Karl to be so bothered about anything meant that it was deadly serious.

She liked having him in her office. She was single, having divorced last year, living in a flat in London and she wished Donaldson would respond to her less than subtle approaches. So far he had been a brick wall, but never took umbrage at her passes. She thought this was because such things like women throwing themselves at him was such an integral part of his life, him being such a goddam handsome SOB. Bottram despised Donaldson’s wife and was madly jealous of her.

For his part, Donaldson was very wary of getting involved with his boss, even if he had been single and free. He had heard that Bottram batted for both sides and if he got involved with any woman, he wanted her to be all for him and none for her, as it were.

‘I find it unusual and unsettling,’ he was saying. ‘Zeke is very good, very punctual and always makes back-up contact if he misses for any reason.’

‘It’s not rocket science, Karl. There could be any number of reasons for non-contact.’

‘Yeah, it’s just. .’

‘Gut instinct?’

‘Something like that. I know it sounds a bit weak.’

‘No, not where you’re concerned.’ She smiled seductively, something that was lost on Donaldson, who was far too deeply engrossed thinking about his undercover agent. He checked his watch. It was approaching midday. ‘I’ll give him another hour, then I make contact.’

It was a relief to Henry to be leaving the environs of Blackpool. It was as though he was leaving behind a world of chaos of which he had been the instigator. He was desperately trying not to get embroiled in another personal mess, but the thought of Jane Roscoe was starting to overpower him.

He wondered if he just liked falling in love. Was that what it was all about? The euphoric feeling of first love combined with lust? The feeling that disappeared with the solid routine of marriage?

He headed east along the M55, south on the M6 and came off at junction 29, the Bamber Bridge exit. At the first set of traffic lights he did a left towards Euxton and less than quarter of a mile down the road went under a motorway bridge and turned left into a car park; from here the Cuerden Valley Park could be accessed by cycle and on foot. He could not drive on to the car park because it had been cordoned off. He had to reverse back on to the road and find somewhere to park about quarter of a mile away. He did not mind the inconvenience.

It showed him that as much of the scene as possible was being preserved and it gave him the opportunity to saunter up, using his eyes, ears and nose to get a real sense of the place. The entrance to the car park was being strictly controlled by two uniformed PCs who logged every arrival and departure. Henry showed his ID and signed in. He was directed to another PC who was in charge of paper clothing. He doled out a paper suit and slip-over shoes to Henry, which he pulled on over his suit. He signed for these items.

Snazzily dressed, he looked across the car park to a cycleway which led to a footbridge spanning the M6, then into Cuerden Valley Park proper. Most of the police activity centred on the cycleway, just before the bridge. A support unit team was searching the car park itself, moving in a line, halting when something of interest was found, or when one of the officers cracked a joke and they all needed to laugh.

A route to the scene had been marked by cordon tape.

Henry began to walk along it slowly.

All he knew was that there had been a double murder. A shooting. Two bodies. Nothing more. He was happy with that because it gave him the opportunity to consider the scene without any preconceptions, although he had already begun to form ideas as soon as he began the walk to the centre of police activity.

Already he was assuming that the dead people had arrived by some sort of vehicular transport at the car park and from there been dumped on the path. Had they been killed here, or somewhere else?

‘Morning, Henry — sorry, afternoon.’ Detective Chief Superintendent Bernie Fleming broke away from a cluster of four local detectives and welcomed the newcomer.

‘Hi, Bernie, what’s the crack?’

A screen had been erected around the corpses, preventing onlookers from getting an eyeful and allowing the experts to work without interruption.

‘Two dead men, both in their twenties, both shot in the back of the head.’

‘Executed?’

‘You could say that.’

Fleming belched, then broke wind. ‘Sorry,’ he said, ‘too much of everything last night.’

‘Any identification?’