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‘You told me that already.’

‘I’m serious.’

‘Or what? I’ll end up like Beatrice?’ She tried to laugh but it came out more like a hollow squeak.

He took a deep breath. ‘Be serious, Fran.’

Placing her mug on the table, she gave him a reassuring pat on the arm. ‘Don’t worry. I won’t drop you in it. The usual rules apply, however big the story.’

‘Good,’ Holt exhaled. At the outset of their relationship the two of them had agreed that no ‘pillow talk’ could ever, under any circumstances, be used in any of Fran’s stories. At the time, it hadn’t been such a big deal; Inspector Holt didn’t have any newsworthy stories. But since they’d been caught up in the mineworkers’ strike, the agreement had been put to the test once or twice.

Mullin, however, had always kept her side of the bargain.

So far.

Did he trust her? He was forty-three years old, forty-four in little more than a month. This had become, more or less, the longest relationship he’d had in his life. He was beginning to think that he and Fran Mullin might even have some kind of long-term future together. If he couldn’t trust Fran, whom could he trust?

Sitting across the table in the middle of the night, he made a clear decision. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘you see, it’s like this: we have been told that the Slater thing has to be cleared up as quickly as possible.’

‘Told? By whom?’

Holt made a face. ‘Just told. This is a very unusual situation. We are kind of at war. The usual rules have been suspended.’ He thought about that statement for a moment, before correcting himself. ‘Well, maybe not so much suspended as blurred. It’s all very confused. Everyone’s making it up as they go along.’

She stared into her mug. ‘Including fitting people up for murder? That doesn’t seem like blurring the rules to me; that seems like breaking them.’

‘No one’s fitting anyone up,’ he protested, already wondering about the wisdom of his decision to come clean. ‘Williamson is a genuine suspect. Plus, don’t forget that he assaulted one of my officers when he was arrested. I saw that myself.’

‘Do you think he did it?’

Staring at the table, he sighed deeply. ‘Like I said, I don’t have to take a view on the person’s innocence or guilt. I just have to present the evidence.’

‘How very diplomatic,’ she replied sarcastically. ‘Even a half-decent lawyer will say this is a political prosecution. Ian Williamson is being hung out to dry because he supports the strike. It allows you to kill two birds with one stone. You can silence that dotty old woman who keeps saying embarrassing things about Thatcher and get an NUM yobbo off the street at the same time.’

Holt shook his head. ‘Williamson isn’t political. He’s just a little thug using the opportunity presented by the current situation to have a scrap every night. He isn’t a miner either. As far as I know, he’s never done a proper day’s work in his life.’

‘Still,’ Mullin yawned, ‘that’s not how he’ll be presented. Unless you have a totally watertight conviction. He’ll become a martyr to the cause.’

‘I know.’

‘And who’s to say, in twenty years’ time, he isn’t freed on a miscarriage of justice and they come after you?’

For a while, they sat in silence, each lost in their thoughts. Finally, Mullin got to her feet. ‘Time for bed,’ she said, pushing back her chair.

He raised his eyebrows hopefully.

‘To sleep,’ she said firmly. ‘You need your rest. I’ve got a feeling you’ve got a rough few days coming up.’

EIGHT

Feeling sorry for himself, Ian Williamson felt the large bump where his head had repeatedly hit the tarmac. The bleeding had stopped but it still hurt like a motherfucker. It was like the worst hangover he’d ever had, times ten.

Times a hundred.

He looked up at the young WPC sitting by the door. ‘Can I get some aspirin?’ He pointed to his forehead. ‘It hurts like a total bastid.’

The officer looked at him, but said nothing.

‘Hey!’ He pushed out of the chair, yanking at the handcuffs which kept him attached to the radiator on the wall behind him. ‘I’m talking to you. .’

The WPC gave her best inscrutable stare. She had a hawk nose and a bad case of acne.

‘I’m talking to you,’ he repeated, sitting down again. ‘All I want is a bloody aspirin.’

Still he got no response.

Stupid bitch, Williamson thought grimly, yawning. His body ached with tiredness and he needed a shit. He thought about having a crap in his trousers. That might force them to get him out of here. On the other hand, if the lads found out about it he’d never hear the end of it. That kind of thing could stain you for life, no pun intended. Grimacing, he kept his sphincter squeezed shut.

Where were Arthur and Eric? After bringing them back to the station, the police had split the three of them up. Williamson had been left in this interview room with the beaky bitch all night. What the hell was going on?

In his experience, this was not the way it usually panned out. This was the fifth time he’d been nicked since the coal strike had begun. Every arrest was a badge of honour. It was like everything; once you understood the routine you were fine.

The routine had never changed, until now. Normally, he would have been given a couple of slaps, processed and then thrown into a cell for the night. The next morning, after breakfast, there would be a quick visit to the local magistrate’s court. There, along with the others rounded up the night before he would plead guilty to some public order offence, as directed by the union lawyers. He would receive his fine and be back out on the streets in time for lunch. It was all really quite efficient, by British standards of justice.

So far, his fines had grown to more than six hundred quid. Six hundred quid! Where was he going to find that sort of dough? Williamson shook his head at the stupidity of it all. Good luck if you think you’re ever going to see any of that. They’d have to start docking his student grant. His parents would have a heart attack if they ever found out. As far as they knew, he was busy studying for his degree in Geography and Urban Studies at Leeds Poly.

Oblivious to his existence, the WPC began picking her nose. Urgh! Looking away, Williamson fought the urge to gag. This whole carry-on was beginning to piss him off, big time. Up until now, the whole strike thing had been nothing more than a bit of a laugh. Why was this time different? Was it all because he’d headbutted some plod? Why not just fine him an extra fifty quid and be done with it?

As he thought about it, Williamson’s sense of injustice grew. It wasn’t even as if he had gone out looking for a fight. Well, he had, but not that fight. The whole police response seemed way over the top. Then, again, the dispute was getting worse by the day. Increasingly, PC Plod was taking no prisoners.

His musings were interrupted by the door opening. Hastily removing an index finger from her nostril, the WPC jumped to her feet. A tall, middle-aged guy in a green quilted jacket walked in, followed by a fat bloke in a suit. The guy in the green jacket nodded at the WPC, who scuttled out.

Williamson eyed the new arrivals suspiciously. One looked like he was going out hunting; the other looked like he worked in a bank. Why is a guy in a suit wandering round the cop shop? Williamson wondered. You don’t get many blokes in suits round these parts in the middle of the day, never mind the middle of the night.

The older guy pulled up a chair and sat down. ‘Ian, I’m Inspector Holt. I’m in charge of this investigation.’

Williamson glanced up at the younger guy, who was hovering nervously by the door, arms folded. ‘Who’s he? Is he my lawyer?’

Holt glanced over his shoulder and grinned. ‘Have you asked for a lawyer?’