And now she was calling him again.
âHenry, I need to speak to you . . . please,' Tara said over the phone.
âLook, Tara, I'm sorry but I haven't got time. I'm really busy.'
âI know you areâ'
Henry ended the call with one press of the thumb and felt more like a bastard than ever. He expected an immediate recall, staring at the display on the phone. It never came.
He veered away from his car and strode across the road to the pub on the corner opposite the station. He was urgently in need of a pint of Stella Artois.
âI thought you said you'd fixed it? I thought you said you'd sorted it . . . well, it's plainly obvious that hasn't happened, has it?'
Lynch stood there white-faced as he was dressed down by the top boss of the drug-dealing organization for which he worked.
âYou told me you'd dumped that body in Greater Manchester.'
âI thought I had. In fact, I was sure I had. I misjudged.'
âThis could cause us problems.'
âI know, I fucking know.'
âHave they identified him yet?'
Lynch shook his head.
âOnly a matter of time,' the boss said. âOnly a matter of time before they start crawling round us . . . and as if we haven't got enough shit to deal with.'
Lynch hung his head and mumbled, âOur tracks're covered.'
âSon, they better fucking had be.'
Lynch expelled an unsteady breath.
âAnd what about your chum, PC Bignall? How much does he know? How far can he drop us in it?'
âHe won't say owt.'
The boss eyed Lynch. âHis colleagues'll be all over him like a rash when he wakes up. They'll very much be wanting to know how the hell he managed to get shot, won't they? He'll be weak and vulnerable and I'll lay you a pound to a pinch of shit, he'll blab. Do we need that? Do we fuck!'
âWhat're you suggesting?'
âFinish what you should've done in the first place.'
âKill him, you mean?'
The boss did not respond, but he did not need to. His look said it all.
âKill a cop?'
Silence.
âYou're saying I kill a cop?'
âI'm saying he'll be one less thing to think about.'
The pint of Stella was ice-cold. Beads of condensation dripped down the outside of the glass. It tasted wonderful. Ice-cold in Rawtenstall, he mused. He took several large gulps and within seconds half of it had disappeared down his throat. Then he checked himself. He could easily have sunk it all, but then he would have wanted another because he would not really have appreciated the first. One, though, was all he was going to have. The length of the journey home saw to that. He moved away from the bar and found an empty table, surveying the pub as his mind churned.
He was annoyed with himself. He had been given a very meaty murder, one with which he could re-establish his reputation as long as he concentrated on it, did all the right things and got a result. The necessity was concentration. A job like this demanded 110 per cent and already he was failing in that department. His personal life was cutting that back to about 70 per cent.
Shit. Another misjudgement. Firstly in that he had covered up a crime and now because he had slept with Tara. Somewhere in his brain was a self-destruct button marked, âPress Me â It'll Be All Right.' His teeth ground together. It was bad enough having to deal with Tara's guilt not having had sex with her; now it was a million times more difficult. And on top of that was his own guilt. Once again Kate had been betrayed. He had been desperately trying to change, keep a lid on his behaviour, but as the saying went, âA bastard never changes his spots.' He could not help but want to have sex with other women.
About three-quarters of the pint had gone when his phone rang again. The words âNumber Withheld' on the display made his heart sink. He almost pressed the âC' button, but reluctantly he answered.
âHenry Christie,' he said cringingly.
âHenry â John Gornall, Forensic Submissions.'
âJohn â hi.' Henry instinctively checked his watch, but did not make any comment. âWhat's happening?'
âI stayed on because ballistics said they'd get back to us today and I was curious. Couldn't wait until tomorrow.'
âThey got back to you, then?'
âYep.' He sounded pleased. Henry waited. âIt's only a phone call from them, remember, but the paperwork will follow.'
âFine.'
âAbout the bullet we dug out of that stolen car in Blackpool?'
âYeah.' Henry tried not to come across as disheartened. He was expecting something about two bullets dug out of a burned corpse's back.
âInteresting stuff . . . the bullet we found in the back seat of that car was fired from a gun used in a building society robbery in Manchester about six months ago.'
âOh, that is interesting.'
âThe scientist at Huntingdon said it was recently fired, too . . . so it hasn't been in the car all that long.'
âIs it linked to any arrest?'
âThey don't have that information but there are some case number references to a job in GMP, so it shouldn't be too difficult to get that info.'
âGo on.'
âThe bullets were thirty-eights.'
âRight, good.'
âAnd the guy down in Huntingdon has also been working on the slugs found in the back of the victim in Deeply Vale.'
âHas he something on them, then?'
âOh yes . . . the gun used in the robbery is the same one which fired the bullet into the car . . . is the same gun which fired bullets into the back of our unknown victim.'
Henry took a nanosecond or two to digest this. âThe bullet in the stolen car, and the bullets in the back of our dead man, come from the same gun. Is that what you are saying, John?'
âYes.'
âAnd the gun was used in a robbery in GMP six months ago?'
âYes.'
Henry sank the remainder of the drink as soon as he finished this call. He looked up at the big-screen TV hanging down in one corner of the bar, showing
Sky News
. The scrolling headlines made Henry reach for his phone again.
North Manchester General Hospital, once known as Crumpsall Hospital, is huge and old. It is a complex warren of corridors and Lynch found that he could wander unchallenged. It helped, he assumed, because he had his ID pinned to his jacket and anyone who displayed any sort of ID was deemed to be kosher.
Lynch knew the hospital well, had been there on numerous occasions for various matters over the years and knew exactly where he was going.
He walked swiftly, businesslike, and found the ward he was looking for, not too far away from the outpatient department.
It was late in the day and staff were sparse on the ground.
Excellent.
At the entrance to the ward, he paused and peered down into it. On the right was an office, beyond that was the first of two private side wards, then, further on, the public ward.
He knew Bignall's exact location. The problem was getting to him without being spotted. He assumed the night-shift staff were in the office, a fact confirmed by a laugh and the door opening. A nurse stepped out, said something to one of her colleagues in the office, turned and walked into the ward.
Lynch dropped back into the shadow of the corridor. He watched the nurse stroll down the ward, checking on patients, sharing jokes, smiling, being professional. His eyes narrowed as he waited for his moment.
Henry tabbed through the phone book in his mobile until he found Karl Donaldson's number and pressed the call button. The connection was made more or less immediately and he heard the unmistakable tones of Karl's American drawl.
âHi, pal.' Donaldson sounded weary and far away.
âKarl â how's it going? I'm really sorry about calling you at this time of night. I heard about the death of the lorry driver, but I've been so busy tied up with my own life, I just forgot to phone. It was really bad news.'
âYeah, pal, thanks. I thought it could've been the opening to the Spaniard, but it didn't happen. One o' those things, I guess.' He pronounced âthings' as âthangs'.
âPhilosophical.'
âThat's life, baby. I hear you've been landed with a big, nasty murder.'
âYeah, gangland thing, I reckon. Not made too much progress yet, but I think things'll begin to move tomorrow. But what's your way forward, re the Spaniard?'
âJust doin' some shakin' down.'
In the background Henry heard music and laughter.
âWhere the hell are you?'
âEspaña, babe . . . out where the sun shines three hundred and twenty days each year.'
* * *
The nurse completed her round of the ward and returned to the office, failing to notice the figure of Lynch in the darkness, lurking silently. He waited, then stepped across the corridor and into the mouth of the ward. The door to the office was on the right. He crept close, listening hard. A patient on the ward coughed horribly. Lynch could make out the murmur of voices in the office. He crept nearer. The top half of the door was clear glass. He took a chance, sidled up and peered in with one eye â quickly â before flattening himself against the wall. Two nurses were in the office, sitting, talking.
He bent down and crawled past the door, rising back to his full height as he passed. The next door on the right was the private room in which Bignall was ensconced.
A troublesome thought entered Lynch's head as he reached for the handle. One of those thoughts in which something worries you, but you cannot put your finger on exactly what. He turned the handle and opened the door slightly. His eyes searched the dark room. The dark room! The private room which the nurse had not checked on her round. Why not?
The empty room.
The bed was made up, neat and tidy, bedclothes pulled tight, awaiting the next patient.
Because Bignall was not there.
Karl Donaldson tugged at the unbuttoned collar of his short-sleeved shirt and blew down the front of it, cooling his chest. He was sweating, feeling lines of moisture dribbling down his body, pooling in uncomfortable places.
Although it was almost midnight, Spanish time, the evening heat on the Costa Blanca remained oppressive. He took a sip from his chilled mineral water â memories of overindulgence still lingering â and continued to gaze down the road from the terrace of the restaurant at which he sat. From there he could see the arched entrance leading into the Ciudad Quesada, that being a sprawling estate of villas which had spread rapidly over the last few years to accommodate some of the massive investment in property in the area. It was about five kilometres inland from Torrevieja and Donaldson knew that his informant lived in a huge house on the estate.
Donaldson was more desperate than ever to nail Mendoza. The man was at the very top of Donaldson's hit list. The American realized that his interest in Mendoza was becoming unhealthy to the point of obsession, but he remained determined to bring him down and his whole organization along the way. Donaldson could trace it all back to the death of Zeke, the undercover FBI agent whom Mendoza had cold-bloodedly had murdered, Zeke the agent that Donaldson had been controlling. Donaldson had taken it personally and, one way or another, Mendoza would soon be history.
He had already partly revenged Zeke's death. Verner, the man who had actually put the bullets into Zeke's brain, had been eliminated, taken out by Donaldson . . . and now all that remained was to do the same to Mendoza.
It had come to that.
Donaldson's nostrils flared at the thought of the man. He could picture the bullet blowing out his brains.
Then he sniffed.
But that would not happen, as much as he dreamed about it.
Donaldson actually wanted to destroy the Spaniard by legitimate means if at all possible, to see him go through the legal process, to watch his face as he was sentenced to life behind bars.
Which is where the informant came in. The man had appeared from nowhere and offered up his services, something that occasionally happens, and gift horses should not be put down too quickly.
He was high up in Mendoza's organization, fulfilling the role of business manager. It was his job to explore new openings, to seek out and explore new markets, to crush rivals if necessary and develop more profit for the boss man. He had been forging new connections in England in the last few years.
The informant was no angel. A couple of years earlier he had ordered a hit on a Manchester criminal, the kill being carried out by Verner. It had been whilst the body of the criminal was being disposed of that Verner had been surprised by two surveillance cops whom he had also murdered and buried. So the informant was very much implicated in the deaths of two cops, a fact which troubled Donaldson, but one which did not prevent him from going for the bigger picture: Mendoza.
Maybe when Mendoza had tumbled he would try to deal with the informant, but in the meantime he needed him.
âDo you require anything more?'
â
Si ... agua mineral, por favor
.'
The waiter nodded and trundled back to the bar.
What the hell am I doing here? Donaldson demanded of himself.
He had jumped on a plane to Alicante on a whim. No particular plan in mind, more just a determination to get to grips with the informant, wring the guy's neck and say, âWhat the fuck is going on? Why give me false information about the truck full of immigrants? How did someone else come to stop the truck and get away with the drugs? That cannot have been an accident.' The questions tumbled through his mind.
In fact he had a million questions to ask, but wasn't really sure whether turning up out of the blue on the guy's doorstep would lead to any direct answers. All previous meetings had been in neutral territory â Holland, France â never in Spain itself and certainly never near Mendoza.
But desperation makes a man do foolish things.