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Lesley lifts a handset from a wall mount. ‘What’s her number, honey?’

‘It’s in my pocket.’ She can’t get at it because her hand is still being cleaned up. ‘It’s not my mom’s cell but one that the man said she’d be on.’

Betty gets it for her and hands it across.

‘What man do you mean, honey?’ Lesley checks the digits on the note and enters them.

‘The one who took us. He said if I don’t call straight away, he’ll kill Jade.’

‘Jade’s your sister?’ She hits dial.

‘Yes.’ She sounds close to breaking.

The number rings out and is instantly picked up. ‘Hello.’

‘This is Ann Lesley from San Joaquin Hospital. Who is that?’

‘Lieutenant Fallon — do you have my daughter?’

She’s surprised the mom is a cop. ‘Yes, I do. Amber’s just being treated by some of my staff. Mrs Fallon—’

Mitzi cuts her off. ‘Lady, I don’t have time for questions. Give me the main number of your hospital, so I can call back and confirm you are who you say you are. Please do this right away — a lot of lives depend on it.’

‘The number you need is four six eight, four seven hundred. If you’re calling from out of Stockton the area code is two zero nine. Tell reception to put the call through to ER and they’ll route it to me.’

‘Is she okay?’

‘She’s fine, Mrs Fallon. She’s in safe hands now.’

Mitzi feels like she’s going to cry. ‘Thanks.’

The administrator hangs up, ducks the curtain and shouts to the triage desk. ‘Call switchboard and say they’re about to get a call for me. It’s urgent and needs to be put through immediately.’

Lesley looks around the waiting area as the nurse calls the operator. ER is jammed to bursting. She wishes there was somewhere she could shift all these patients to.

She re-enters the cubicle and looks at the young girl on the bed. Poor kid is stressed out and, judging from the whiteness of her skin, pretty bled out too.

She takes a tissue from a box at the side of the bed and wipes tears welling up in the corners of Amber’s reddened eyes.

The phone on the wall rings. Everyone stares at it.

Lesley snatches it from the cradle. ‘Hello.’

‘It’s Mitzi Fallon. Are you still with Amber?’

‘Yes, Mrs Fallon.’

‘Then for God’s sake get her somewhere safe and call the—’

The line goes dead.

Amber looks up at the administrator. ‘What did Mom say?’

She puts a reassuring hand to the girl’s face. ‘She says you’re not to worry. Everything’s going to be fine.’

158

FBI HQ, SAN FRANCISCO

‘San Joaquin Hospital — Amber Fallon has just been admitted to the ER.’

Bob Beam looks up from his desk at Assistant Director Donovan. ‘Your source again?’

She corrects him. ‘Lansley’s source.’

His instinct is to check. Always check before you deploy. He picks up his desk phone. ‘Get me the administrator at San Joaquin Hospital in Stockton. I’ll hold.’

The AD lets out a sigh of frustration. ‘You need to get a team there, Bob, and you need to do it quick.’

He puts his hand over the mouthpiece. ‘I need to be sure, Sandra. Post budget cuts mean we have too few people and once they’re gone they’re gone.’

His secretary comes on the line. ‘Putting you through now.’

A woman’s voice follows. ‘Ann Lesley; who am I talking to?’

‘This is Special Agent Robert Beam from the FBI in San Francisco. Can you confirm for me that you’ve just admitted a young girl called Amber Fallon?’

The line goes silent for a moment. ‘Agent Beam, do you have a number I can call you back on to verify you are who you say you are?’

‘Jesus Christ, lady, I don’t have time for this—’

‘A number, please.’

‘Five, five, three, seven four hundred and make it fast.’ He slams down the phone and looks up at Donovan. ‘She wants to check who I am.’

‘Checking can be so annoying, eh?’ She’s red-faced with anger as she flips out her phone and taps in a number. ‘Eleonora, it’s Sandra Donovan. Get yourself to San Joaquin Hospital in Stockton. Run the lights. Mitzi’s daughter Amber has just been admitted.’

Beam is about to argue when his phone rings. ‘H’lo.’

‘Agent Beam?’

‘Yes.’

‘It’s Ann Lesley. We do have Amber Fallon. She’s with me right now and she’s a very frightened young lady—’

‘We’re going to get some agents out to your hospital, ma’am.’

‘She was left in ER with a note pinned to her chest saying the police were not to be called. She claims her sister is in great danger—’

‘We know about that, ma’am. Thank you for your help.’ He glances down at the two face shots Donovan gave him. ‘Can you tell me, was she with a man or woman? A big man, round faced with dark hair, or a woman, probably blonde hair, quite pretty?’

‘No, sir. She wasn’t with anyone. She’d just been left here.’

‘Can I talk to her?’

‘Not right now. We’ve given her a sedative and need to get her X-rayed and treated.’

‘Call me when you’re done.’ He hangs up and turns to Donovan.

The AD’s gone.

‘Shit.’ He bangs a hand down on the desk.

159

LONDON

Marchetti’s slap knocks the phone out of Mitzi’s hands.

There’s wildness in his eyes. It’s a look she’s seen before. Usually on the face of a murderer or rapist she’s hunted down. Sometimes on that of her ex-husband.

Marchetti grabs her by the throat and squeezes hard. ‘One daughter freed. That was the deal.’ He shows a smartphone in his other hand. ‘Now, do you want to watch the other one being chopped up, piece by piece — or are you going to give me my fucking memory stick?’ He lets go and leaves her spluttering.

Mitzi struggles to get her breath.

Marchetti gives her a second then grabs her by the hair and lifts her head. ‘Where is it?’

‘Dean Street.’

‘Be more specific.’

‘I bagged and wired it. Sealed it in an evidence bag and hung it down a street drain outside the hotel where I stayed.’

Marchetti sizes up a punch, one to teach the bitch a lesson.

There’s a blinding flash. Smoke.

The brunette screams.

There’s gunfire. Pistol shots. Pop. Pop. Pop. The raw stutter of semi-automatics. Blue and orange muzzle flashes in the dark, smoky haze.

Then silence.

160

LONDON

George Dalton watches the tac teams on split-screen feeds on his laptop.

Soon after the team leader and his right-hand man go through the window, four SSOA operatives take out the front door of the apartment and come in as back-up.

Once the shooting stops, Dalton switches to the single night-vision camera on the helmet of the team leader. The viewing frame fills with a pea-green sea as the former marine crunches his way over shattered glass, splintered wood and bodies.

The first corpse to come into focus is one of the bodyguards. He’s bleeding out in a classic dead man’s sprawl near the doorway. A Glock rests in his loose fingers.

Next to him is what remains of a thin, young woman. Most of her face and chest have been chewed away by the bullets of an MP5.

The body of a second bodyguard is against the foot of an adjacent wall, legs stretched out, back against a doorframe. It looks to Dalton like he’s been shot as he came in from another room.

The leader’s camera tracks across to the centre of the foggy room. Two SSOA men are bent over Angelo Marchetti.