A mass of bodies had just swarmed through the airport, having alighted a plane from Liverpool. They had been noisy, badly behaved Brits, all displaying the stereotypical lager-lout mentality â or so it seemed to Lopez â though in reality it was probably only a small minority who were chanting football songs.
The plane he was waiting for, from Rotterdam, had just landed. The passengers were due through shortly.
Lopez found himself thinking about Mendoza, his boss, and the predicament he was in at the moment.
Many people wrongly believe that top criminals are rolling in money. Sometimes it was true, but like other businesses in the legitimate arena, even crime has its ups and downs. Sometimes there was solvency, sometimes not. Sometimes there was loads of cash, other times it was tight. Sometimes you could loan, sometimes you needed to borrow. Sometimes business was good and sometimes it was
muy mal
. Feast or famine.
And just at that moment for Carlos Mendoza, life was looking rather grim. He had lent money â other people's money â and failed to get it back. Case in point was the second-rate gangster from the north of England who had borrowed money from Mendoza to initiate criminal activity. The guy had been a loser, a no-hoper â the money never came back and Mendoza had resorted to having him wasted and had transferred the debt to his more successful brother . . . who now languished in prison, unable to pay a bean, even if he had wanted to. The problem would have been manageable had Mendoza not compounded it by then borrowing a huge amount of money himself to purchase cocaine from a Colombian cartel for a deal he had set up in England. That massive consignment had now been stolen and Mendoza found himself in hock in excess of two million pounds sterling without any conceivable way of paying it off, because the majority of his wealth was tied up in building sites and half-built properties around the Costa.
It wasn't as though the debt was with a respectable clearing bank, either. Not the Bank of Santander, not Telebanco.
But the Cosa Nostra. They were his financiers.
Lopez knew that interest payments were already overdue and no one, not even someone of Mendoza's stature, would be allowed to welch.
Mendoza had already received a polite phone call from a âbusiness partner' in Sicily, enquiring as to how the deal was progressing and looking forward to the first instalment.
It was a call that Mendoza had reacted to with horror, making him recognize that, as big as he was in the world of organized crime, he was nowhere near the players who lounged around in the sun in Palermo. All he was, was another fairly minor cog in their engine and they had the power to change gear whenever they wanted.
The illegal-immigration side of Mendoza's business was going well, but even the profits from that were not as great as the media claimed. So many people were involved in the chain of events who needed paying, that by the time Mendoza received his cut, whilst considerable, it was not as great as people imagined and nowhere near enough to clear his debts to the Mafia.
In short, Mendoza was in a critical condition and if he wanted to save himself, he needed to act swiftly, decisively and ruthlessly.
Which was why Lopez was at the airport.
He chuckled to himself as he stood there
The passengers from the Rotterdam flight filtered peacefully through the airport until there was just a dribble left.
Lopez grinned as the man he was waiting for appeared. They glanced at each other, nodded almost imperceptibly. Lopez turned and walked out ahead of him, stepping into the oppressive heat of the day, crossing the road and making for the multi-storey car park where he had parked the car he had arrived in, an unspectacular-looking Seat. A driver sat in it, waiting patiently. Lopez paused at the car and waited to greet the man who had discreetly followed him.
His face broke into a wide smile as they shook hands, embraced, and indulged in a lot of hearty back-patting. âRamon, my friend, it is good to see you. Very good.'
âAnd you, and you,' Ramon responded ebulliently. â
Como esta?
'
â
Muy bien
. . . come, we need to get out of this heat . . . you sit in the front next to Miguel . . .' He opened the door for Ramon, the guy who headed Mendoza's operations at Zeebrugge. The chill from the air-conditioning system whipped up.
Ramon hesitated, almost stepped backwards. His smile dropped and he eyed Lopez suspiciously. âWhat is this?'
Lopez laughed, sensing quickly what Ramon was worried about. âAhh, the front seat,' he said knowingly. âThe death seat . . . the bullet in the back of the head seat . . . do not worry, my friend . . . it is nothing like that.'
Ramon was not convinced. He knew of too many people who had been foolish enough to be suckered into climbing into front passenger seats of cars for innocent journeys, only to have their brains blown out or their throats slit, or to be strangled with piano wire.
âAre you sure?'
Lopez smiled, but was irritated. âOf course. We have urgent business . . . but I have a laptop in the back seat, and papers which I need to work on. Come, my friend, have you heard of anyone being beaten to death by a laptop computer? No, I think not . . . please . . .'
Spinks was the name of the big man operating on the Rochdale side of Manchester. He owned pubs and clubs, controlled all the town-centre drugs trade via his bouncers on the doors. Control the doors, control the drugs. That was the saying. He lived a flash lifestyle with good cars, clothes and good-looking women. He was brazen and open and did not mind who knew just how wealthy he was, which was partly his downfall. The other âpartly' was that he had once called Rufus Sweetman a âno-good shit' and threatened that one day he would âtake everything he owned away from him'.
In those terms, Spinks was a good starting point for Sweetman.
Teddy Bear Jackman and Tony Cromer did not take long to latch on to Spinks. They cruised the streets of Rochdale for a while, wondering where best to find him, racking their brains for inspiration, when suddenly Jackman blurted, âVic and Tom's!'
Cromer smiled wickedly. âYou're bloody right.' He was driving and executed a wild u-turn without warning or signals and accelerated in the direction of the town centre. He abandoned the car on double yellows outside the high-class hair salon known as âVic and Tom's' on a crowded side street close to the location of the world's first ever Co-op.
Side by side they muscled into the busy salon, a place frequented by the area's richest and swankiest women, the side of the business run by Victoria. All eyes swivelled and watched the progress of the two heavies across the shop floor and out the other side through Wild-West-type saloon swing doors into Tom's. This was a gent's hair stylist designed to resemble a Victorian barber's shop, all tiles and leather chairs. It was busy in here, too, a customer on every chair, several waiting, reading magazines.
Cromer and Jackman continued their relentless march towards the office at the far end of the salon, until one of the braver members of staff, tiny scissors in hand, stepped in front of them.
âCan I help you gents? It's appointment only, you know?' he challenged nervously, eyes taking in the sheer bulk and animalism of the two men . . . and rather liking what he saw.
âWe've come to see Tom,' Cromer said.
The hairdresser shook his head. âNot in. Sorry. Can I take a message?'
âFuck off!' Jackman growled.
The scissors wavered in the air. All eyes were now focused on the incident.
âI'm sorry, he's not in, honestly.' His voice sounded weedy.
âI'll just check that out, if you don't mind,' Cromer said, leaning towards the young man, âby going in there' â he pointed to the office â âand having a look.'
âStaff only,' he squeaked.
Cromer's hands closed around the scissors and he eased them gently off the hairdresser's thumb and finger. He held them like a knife. âLike my friend said â fuck off.'
Meekly the hairdresser stepped aside, slim shoulders drooping, his body deflated. Cromer and Jackman walked past as though nothing had happened. They barged into the office.
Tom looked up in surprise, as did his newest sixteen-year-old male employee, who was kneeling down in front of Tom.
âJesus Christ, I told you lot to . . .' Tom began, knocking the young man away with a slap and attempting to do up his trousers. âWhat the . . .?' he continued when he saw who was interrupting him, hopping around. âWhat do you want?'
âJust a little word,' Cromer smiled cruelly. He clicked the scissors. âYou â out,' he told the young lad, who scuttled out of the office, trying to rise from his knees as he went, leaving his boss to face two very evil-looking men.
The MIR at Rawtenstall police station was quiet when Henry arrived back from the revisit to the murder scene. The only person in was Jane Roscoe, who was deep in a review of actions taken and pending. All other officers were out, just as it should be, Henry thought. Out digging, overturning rocks, annoying the bugs which lived under them. One other person, though, should have been in the office.
Henry strolled across to Roscoe, his eyes taking in everything which had been plastered on the walls. Known details about the victim, the location, speculation about motives, timelines, photos of the scene and all manner of other items from the intelligence cell Henry had established, including where to buy the best sandwich in town.
Roscoe did not notice Henry's approach. She looked up, startled, to see him hovering next to her.
âWhere's my chum, Carradine?'
âLunch,' Roscoe said shortly. âGone with . . .' She checked herself abruptly.
âWith who?' Henry asked.
Roscoe looked away, averting her eyes.
âWith who?' Henry probed again, wondering why he even wanted to know, because he could not really care less who Carradine lunched with. It was just that Roscoe's reaction had made him curious.
âMr Anger.'
âOh, right . . . good mates, are they?'
âServed in Merseyside together.' Roscoe peered at Henry as he juggled this bit of information in his brain and could not stop from letting his face do the talking. So Carradine and Anger were old mates. Carradine had started his career in Liverpool, later transferring to Lancashire. That had been a good few years ago. Anger had served in Merseyside too, before his own, more recent, transfer across the border to the head of the SIO team. Shit. Old buddies. Anger promises he'll look after Carradine, get him a job on the SIO team and instead gets lumbered with Henry Christie whom he cannot seem to offload. Henry was in the way of Anger doing Carradine a good turn. That explained Carradine's behaviour and attitude towards Henry.
He allowed himself a short, mirthless laugh, and gave Roscoe a knowing look.
âAnything new I need to know about?' Henry inquired, bringing the whole thing back to a more professional footing. âDNA back? Firearms?' She shook her head to both. âChase 'em up, will you?' Henry veered away and left the MIR, now understanding that he had obstructed a promised move. A rather wicked grin appeared on his face. Knowing that made him even more resolved to stick in there and show the bastards.
âDon't get me wrong, Ted, but I quite enjoyed that.' Cromer made a snipping gesture with the first two fingers of his right hand. Both men erupted in laughter.
âWhich bit â getting hold of Tom's knob?'
âNo â snipping off that little bit of foreskin.'
âHe screamed a bit, though.'
âYeah â but at least he told us where to find Spinksy.'
âShould've told us when we first asked.'
âShould've,' agreed Cromer.
âThere
was
a lot of blood wasn't there . . .? I mean, for such a small cut.'
âGallons . . . wouldn't stop flowing.'
âBet it's gonna sting.'
They were walking side by side across the moor-top golf course at Whitworth, a cold, damp, windswept course which had wonderful sweeping views away towards Rochdale and Manchester beyond. They had seen Spinks's Bentley in the car park, so they knew he was here and the information passed so painfully by Tom through screams, gasps and penile blood flow was correct. He had told them that Spinks was at Whitworth Golf Club with his girlfriend, but if he wasn't, he would be shagging her at his house.
Cromer and Jackman warned Tom not to contact Spinks, otherwise they would return and cut his dick off. He had promised them he would comply with that reasonable request as he dabbed at his bleeding genitalia with one of the salon's towels.
Even though the day was pleasant, the wind was whipping around the moors. The sheep and cattle which roamed unchecked over the course, leaving their droppings and hoof prints all over the tees and greens, looked cold and miserable.
There were few players on the course. The pair easily spotted Spinks and his lady on the eighth, approaching the green, very concentrated on their game. They did not clock the two men until both balls were on the green and within putting distance of the hole. They were laughing and joking with each other in an intimate way.
Cromer and Jackman took up a position on the edge of the green, side by side, hands clasped around their backs, watching as though they were golf aficionados.
Spinks was lining up for a long putt, head down, taking a few practice swings. It was his girlfriend who saw the deadly duo first.
âJohnny,' she said, looking worriedly past Spinks.
âShh, I'm gonna hole this, babe.'
âJohnny.' Her voice became a little more urgent.
His head swivelled impatiently towards her, about to deliver short shrift for interrupting his concentration. He saw her expression, stood upright from his unplayed shot and turned in the direction of her stare.
Cromer gave him a friendly wave. âGo on, it's OK, play your shot,' he called pleasantly. âDon't let us interrupt you.'