They finished their drinks and strolled back to Donaldson's Jeep in the hotel car park. âY'know, pal . . . it was a good thing Snell's body was dumped in Lancashire, otherwise Easton could well have been able to cover it all up.'
Henry guffawed. âDidn't I tell you?'
âTell me what?'
âThe body was in GMP.'
âEh?'
âYep â definitely GMP.' He stopped and regarded Donaldson. âOnly by a few feet, admittedly, but it was on their patch. I know the ins and outs of that place like the back of my hand. I stole it.'
âWhy?'
âCos I wanted a meaty murder to show that bastard Anger I could do a good job, that's why.'
âYou son of a bitch.' Donaldson slapped Henry hard between the shoulder blades and they continued to walk to his car.
âI knew no one would know the difference â except that PC who was convinced it was on GMP, but I'm sure he won't really be too bothered.'
Donaldson laughed heartily as he clambered into the Jeep. Henry dropped in next to him. âNow you need to tell me about your Spanish jaunt.'
Had he been Spiderman he would have been climbing the walls. However, he was not, but that did not prevent him from trying. He felt like they were closing in on him, inch by dreadful inch; that the ceiling was dropping, going to crush him.
Troy Costain rushed to the cell door and hammered on it, the inspection flap rattling metallically but staying firmly shut. Tears streamed from his eyes as he begged, âLet me out, you bastards! You fuckin' twattin' bastards. I can't stand this. It's giving me a shedder. Please,' he screamed, hammering louder.
Suddenly an eye appeared at the peephole. Troy jumped backwards into the middle of the cell, where he stood shaking and sweating.
The cell door swung open to reveal the figure of Henry Christie, still clad in the tracksuit he had set off in that morning.
âHenry â thank God you've come,' Troy bawled, sinking to his knees. âYou know I can't stand being locked up. Get me out of here, please. I've done nothing. What's this shit? Conspiracy to murder? What the hell does that mean?'
Henry stepped into the cell. His face was hard and unforgiving. He took hold of Troy's chin and tilted his face up whilst he bent down so they were eye to eye. Henry spoke quietly.
âA friend of yours came to see you to ask for help, didn't he?'
âWhat?'
âHe came in a stolen car, didn't he?'
âI don't know what theâ'
Henry snapped Troy's head further back. âDon't lie, Troy, don't ever lie, OK? Somehow that car ended up in Roy's hands and then he killed Renata . . .'
âWhat?' Troy interrupted. âIs that what this is about? Conspiracy to murder?'
âNo . . . that's not what this is about,' Henry almost whispered, his eyes wild with menace. âYour friend was on the run, wasn't he? And somehow the people who were after him found out where he was, didn't they?'
Icy realization dawned slowly over Troy's face.
Henry smiled dangerously. âDo you know what they did to your friend when they found him?'
Troy's head, held by Henry's hand, shook slowly.
âKilled him. Shot him. Murdered him. And do you know why? Because you told them where he was, didn't you?'
Troy was like a statue now. Henry released the hold on his head.
âTherefore you conspired to kill him.'
Henry let go of him and Troy rose shakily to his feet, moved back and sat down heavily on the bench bed. âNo, I didn't do it for that.'
âYou must have known they would kill him,' Henry said harshly. âI now want the telephone number you called to drop your mate right in this, and I want the name of the guy you spoke to . . . then, maybe, we can start talking about where we go from here. Understand, Troy? You are in the biggest trouble you have ever been in â ever.'
âMy mobile phone is in my property. It's one of the last ten numbers in there. The guy's name was Phil â and that's all I know,' he wailed. âHonest. Keith had twenty-five grand on him and he told me how he'd got hold of it when he was drugged up. I thought I'd be able to get a backhander for telling them where the cash was. I didn't mean to get him killed.'
âTroy â you are the scum of the earth,' Henry said with disgust. âAnd while we're about it, you can tell me where Roy is . . .'
Henry left Troy in mental agony in the cell at Blackpool nick, booked out his mobile phone from the property bag in the custody office and tabbed through the numbers Troy had recently called. With the business card that Phil Lynch had given him, Henry soon found that the number Troy had called was indeed that of the corrupt SPOC. Matching the numbers sent a spurt of adrenaline through his system, as the case against Lynch was getting stronger and stronger. It would be a good springboard into the rest of the inquiry into Carl Easton's corrupt team of big city jacks. Henry returned the phone, then ran up to see Rik Dean in the CID office. He thanked him for picking Troy up and asked him to confiscate the mobile phone, which could provide valuable evidence in the murder investigation. He told Dean that, for the moment, Troy was going nowhere, and gave him the whereabouts of Roy Costain. It would be a nice arrest for Dean.
Henry dashed back out to Donaldson, who was waiting for him in the car park, and they drove to Henry's house.
Kate was all over Donaldson like a bad rash, so relieved to see him alive, and once this show of affection was over, Henry almost having to prise them apart, she prepared a quick meal for the both of them. They devoured it, Henry got changed and within twenty minutes they hit the road again, heading speedily across the county to Rawtenstall, Henry's mind now filled with the prospect of an arrest followed by a protracted investigation and lots of arrests. He was going to be busy for quite some time.
It was a closed briefing. Henry, Karl Donaldson, Jane Roscoe, Dave Anger and the ACC Operations, now acting chief in the absence of FB. Henry had decided not to invite Carradine, just to be awkward, but nobody seemed to notice. The show had been well and truly handed to Henry â who had now formally returned to work from sickness.
They met at Rawtenstall police station, hijacked the inspector's office once again, imported a few extra chairs into the cramped space and scrummed down behind closed doors.
âThere is good evidence against Phil Lynch regarding the murder of Keith Snell.' Henry glanced at Roscoe. âAlthough Lawrence Bignall is still being interviewed, he's put enough down on paper to put Lynch right in the frame. There are other circumstantial bits of evidence to support what he says and as far as I'm concerned, we've enough to arrest him now. But, at the same time as we arrest him, I want us to get into the safe in the property store at the Arena police station and seize the guns belonging to Snell.' He paused, taking a breath. âThose actions will open floodgates, I guess. These could sweep us to the murder and attempted murder of Colin Carruthers, me and the chief. It will also open up links to the job on the M62 where twenty illegal immigrants died in the back of a truck, and from there on, a lot of international stuff â hence the presence of Karl, here, from the FBI.'
âHow do you want to play it, then?'
âWe need to get Lynch sewn up tight. I want everything done to the nth degree â forensics, house searches, clothing, all vehicles he's had access to gone over by CSI, and I want to find that damned Citroën van. We've already got a lot of this information from Bignall, so my view is we need to act on it quickly. Once Lynch is nailed to the wall, we can go for the others.'
Henry saw nods of agreement. It was a plan and he was open to suggestions, but none came.
âI take it this is OK with everybody?' A murmur of assent came back. He would have liked to see a little more enthusiasm, but there you go. âRight, let's work out some of the logistics.'
Henry and Donaldson drove out towards Manchester in an unmarked police car. Jane Roscoe sat quietly in the back as Henry whisked them down the M66. Why he had let her tag along with him he wasn't certain. Maybe it was to further demonstrate to her that he was an OK guy.
âIt has to be better to pick him up at his home address,' he was saying. âThat way we keep a lid on it. None of his mates need to find out until it's too late for them â hopefully. He lives alone, so there shouldn't be anyone there to blab. It would be nice to keep him under wraps for some time at least.'
The journey did not take long, Henry exiting the motorway at Bury, where Lynch lived on a newish estate in the Walshaw area. Henry had a good idea where it was, especially after refreshing his mind from an A-Z map book he found at Rawtenstall nick.
âEverybody happy?' Henry beamed sitting at the wheel. He was buzzing, but there was no response from the other two, though he knew they were keyed-up for action. Even Donaldson, who would have to remain on the sidelines whilst Henry and Roscoe did the work of making the arrest. âSoon be there,' he promised, as though to kids.
Henry reached a road where he could not quite be sure whether he should turn off first or second left.
He got it wrong, but it was just as well.
As he flew past the road end he should have turned into, a car drew up to the junction.
âThat's him,' Henry snapped, recognizing Lynch at the wheel. He held back the urge to duck down behind his steering wheel and kept going without swerving.
Donaldson eyeballed Lynch, getting a good, if quick, look at his face. âI recognize him,' he said. âHe's the guy that gave me the hard stare from the back of the Citroën van on the motorway.'
âNice one,' Henry said, watching Lynch in his rear-view mirror. He pulled out of the junction and turned right, going in the direction Henry had just driven from, towards Bury town centre. âNeed to turn this bus round.'
Following a vehicle on a one-on-one is tricky. To effectively surveil someone travelling on four wheels generally requires at least four cars and, if possible, a motorbike. Henry was kicking himself for failing to anticipate this situation, but then again, he thought reasonably, it's impossible to cover all bases with the limited resources available. But he had not expected to have to follow his target, and this made him twitch a little nervously. Judgement again? He took a breath . . . go with the situation, keep assessing it and do your best, he told himself, gripping the wheel firmly. Then pick the best opportunity to lift Lynch.
âWonder where he's going?' Donaldson speculated.
Henry slotted in three cars behind, hoping to hell that Lynch was such a confident bastard that it would never occur to him he was being tailed. If he started to use anti-surveillance tactics, Henry would be stuffed at the first junction.
He led them into Bury town centre. Henry had problems staying with him here. Having to hang back all the time meant either missing lights or running them. Henry ran plenty, unscathed more by luck than skill, and stayed with Lynch, who wound through the town and dropped on to the A58, going in the direction of Heywood and Rochdale.
âDoesn't look like he's going to the office,' Henry said.
It was just after eight p.m., getting darker, making following even more of a problem. Henry often had to rely on recognizing the rear light cluster of Lynch's motor.
All three were now getting jittery.
So much for a plan.
As for Lynch, it never entered his head he was being followed. For a start he thought he had done the job on those simpletons from Lancashire. Even though the two cops in the car he had forced into the ARMCO barrier had survived, it had given the Invincibles the chance to regroup and put a better game plan together. Sure, the cops from Lancs would come back, but then the gates would be firmly closed and they would find nothing. The chief constable was hospitalized, the DCI was off sick and Carruthers was now really dead as opposed to just brain-dead. A good job, well done.
Now all that remained was to sort Rufus Sweetman and his cocaine â and that is what he was en route to pull off.
Easton had arranged a meet at a uniquely brilliant location, ostensibly to hand the consignment of drugs back and therefore stop the random shootings of innocent cops. But Lynch knew that no handing over would ever take place. Secretly everyone knew that there would only ever be one outcome, but because the stakes were so high, they were all prepared to take the risk.
Someone was going to die and Lynch was damn sure it would not be him.
He checked his rear-view mirror as he pulled on to the roundabout under the M66. Damn sure . . .
They travelled through the small town of Heywood, then bore right towards Middleton.
âAll the best places,' Henry said.
âI don't like this,' Donaldson said.
âNor me,' Roscoe chimed in. âSomething's happening.'
Henry knew what they meant. That inner voice of the experienced cop, wittering in your earhole. He was hearing it, too. Over his shoulder he said to Roscoe, âGive Dave Anger a call, tell him where we're up to.'
She nodded.
Henry was now only one vehicle behind Lynch. Traffic was light on the road and maintaining invisibility was getting more problematical. âHe'll clock us soon, if he hasn't done already . . .' Then Lynch's brake lights came on and he turned off the main road. Henry could not follow. He had no choice but to drive on and stop after a further hundred metres.
âI know what's down there . . .' He looked quizzically at his American friend. âIt's the Big City.'
That was its affectionate nickname â the Big City. It was housed in a massive warehouse on the edge of an industrial estate on the outskirts of Heywood, not far from the noise of the M62 at Birch Services. And although it was known as the Big City, it was actually more like a small town. It consisted of a main street, shops on either side, with side streets and alleyways shooting off this main drag, some leading into small squares, others to dead ends. Most of the buildings were merely shells, constructed of plywood, held together by four by two, some were merely frontages like a Wild West film set. Some of the buildings had stairs in them, leading up to first-floor landings and windows, from which rioters could pelt police lines.