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‘And how does the old lady fit in?’ Winkler asked. ‘She writing stuff about OnTarget too?’ He laughed and looked round for others to join in. Nobody glanced at him.

‘We don’t know that yet. But we’re going to find out. And we’re going to find these girls.’

‘Dead or alive,’ said Winkler. Before Patrick could respond, he added, ‘Right, I’d better go and talk to Hammond, find out who else was at this party last night.’

‘No way.’

Patrick turned his head. It was Suzanne. She took a step towards Winkler, a fierce expression making the other detective visibly shrink away. ‘Everybody else can leave the room now. But don’t leave the station. You’d better call your partners and spouses: tell them not to wait up.’

The rest of the officers filed out, leaving Patrick, Suzanne, Winkler and Carmella, whose arm Suzanne had caught as she went to exit the room.

Suzanne addressed Winkler again. ‘I’ve already spoken to Mr Hammond and he’s willing to help us.’

‘Great.’ Winkler looked relieved.

‘But only if you apologise to him.’

‘What?’

‘He told me about your behaviour at his house. What you did to his personal property. I’ve persuaded him not to make a complaint against you by offering my own time. I’m going to talk to the children at St Mary’s and the other children’s homes where he volunteers, help Mervyn out by talking to them about a career in the police force. A good cause, and one I’m happy to help with. But he also wants a personal apology from you.’

‘But—’

She jabbed a finger at him. ‘Not just an apology, Adrian. He wants you to grovel. Now get out there and do it.’

As Winkler slunk from the room, Patrick was almost able to raise a smile.

‘Carmella, after Winkler’s begged for Mervyn’s forgiveness I want you to go in and get the details of who was at the party.’

‘And I’m going to talk to Kai Topper,’ Patrick said. He rolled his eyes. ‘Hopefully he’ll have stopped crying by now.’

Topper had indeed ceased his blubbing. He sat in interview room three, twisting a can of Coke in circles, fidgeting and chewing his grubby fingernails. As soon as Patrick entered the room he looked up hopefully. ‘Have you found her?’

‘I’m afraid not.’ Patrick took the seat opposite Kai.

He had already asked the boy if he had any idea where Jade might have gone, if there were places where his girlfriend hung out, friends she might be with. Topper had simply repeated that he was sure Jade had gone off with another bloke. ‘They’re probably doing it right now.’ He’d sniffed, but he sounded less sure.

‘Kai,’ Patrick said now, ‘I need to ask you some more questions about Jade, OK?’

‘Yeah, I guess.’

‘Kai. It’s vitally important that you tell me the truth, that you don’t try to protect Jade or yourself. All we care about is finding Jade. If there’s anything she did that might have got her into trouble, we don’t care about that right now.’

Topper gawped at him. ‘What do you mean? You think she’s in trouble? What kind of trouble?’

Patrick knew there was only one way to ensure Topper told him any uncomfortable truths, assuming he genuinely cared for Jade and hadn’t been spilling crocodile tears. ‘We think Jade might be in danger, Kai.’

To guarantee the full impact of this he opened his Moleskine and wrote ‘DANGER’ in block capitals at the top of a fresh page, then underlined it twice, making sure Kai could see it.

‘Oh my days.’

‘But if you tell me everything you know, we can find her. Stop her coming to any harm. OK?’

The boy nodded eagerly.

‘Firstly, how come you two ended up working at Mervyn Hammond’s party? Do you know him or something?’

Kai shook his head. ‘Nah, man. Jade got us the jobs with some temp agency. It was the first time we’d worked for him.’

‘Bit of a coincidence, wasn’t it, that the first job you got was working at a party that Jade’s idols were at?’

‘Not really. She got told to apply, by someone on the forum, like, a tip-off that the band would be there. She wouldn’t have done it otherwise. She hates working.’

‘And how was it?’

Kai shrugged. ‘Boring. Shit money. The guests were horrible, dead rude to me—’ He stopped abruptly, slapping his forehead. ‘Shit!’

‘What?’

The boy swallowed hard. ‘I did something.’

‘What? What did you do?’

‘I think it’s my fault, if someone’s got Jade.’

‘How come?’ Patrick held his breath, trying to sound nonchalant.

‘Oh man.’

‘Tell us, Kai.’

He looked up at Patrick with eyes like a cowed puppy. ‘It wasn’t my gear, so you can’t nick me for dealing! I swear to God I, er, found it, under a railway bridge couple weeks ago, someone must’ve dropped it . . .’

‘Drugs? What’s that got to do with Jade? What sort of drugs?’

‘It was a bottle of liquid acid. In one of them ziplock bags. I don’t do acid, and I didn’t want to sell it ’cos I ain’t no dealer . . . I’d put it in me backpack and forgot about it . . . until that night.’

‘What did you do, Kai?’

In a tiny little voice, Kai said, ‘It was near the end of the party. I got fed up with them all being ungrateful twats. Jade was in a right strop with me, flirting like mad with that Kerry and all. So I thought it might be funny if they all got off their tits, specially him – but that didn’t work, did it, ’cos he was driving, so he didn’t drink the punch . . .’

‘You spiked the punch?’ Pat shook his head. Stupid idiot. ‘How much did you put in it?’

Kai shrugged. ‘It was a small bottle. Big bowl, though. Are you gonna nick me?’

Tears filled his eyes again and he held out his wrists, inviting Patrick to handcuff him.

‘Nick me. Go on, I deserve it. I reckon someone got so high that he followed Jade home and has done something to her. I thought it was that Mangan bloke, but it must have been someone else . . .’ He dissolved into sobs again.

Patrick feared the interview was getting out of control. He handed Kai a tissue and the boy scrubbed at his face.

‘Kai, I don’t think that’s the case. We know that Kerry drove her home. It’s hardly likely that someone else followed them, is it? If anyone was that high, there’s no way they’d have been capable of that. I’m not going to nick you, not right now. It was a dangerous and, frankly, moronic thing to do, but we need to concentrate on finding Jade. So – let’s go back a bit. Who was it on the forums who told Jade to apply for the job?’

Kai shrugged. ‘No idea.’

Patrick sighed. It would have been too good to be true, if Kai could have given him a name.

‘OK. Let’s talk about something else. What do you know about Jade and StoryPad? Specifically a story she wrote called Fresh Blood.’

Topper went pale, sitting back in his chair. His reaction was worse than when he’d confessed to spiking the punch and Patrick suddenly had a horrible feeling that he was going to have to ratchet up the ‘Jade’s in danger’ stuff.

‘What are you asking about that for?’

‘We know that Jade was one of four co-authors of that story. Two of them are dead, Kai. The fourth, Chloe Hedges, is also missing.’

‘Chloe? What, F-U-Cancer? I only saw her the other day. She had this UV nail thing of Jade’s and I went round to get it back. She’s a nice girl.’

‘A good friend of Jade’s?’