There had been many scenes of urban disorder in the Big City, but they were all stage-managed and no one really ended up hurt, because each riot was risk assessed under Health & Safety regulations and it was rare for someone to get hit by a flying fridge these days.
The Big City could be found on the perimeter of an industrial estate and it was the public-order training facility owned by Greater Manchester Police. It was the cops themselves who affectionately referred to it as the Big City, but it was also known by other names, such as Dodge City, or sometimes Moss Side. It was a good place to play and learn, an excellent venue to practise tactics, where things could be made to be very real indeed. Even personnel carriers and the mounted branch could come along.
It was in the Big City that Easton had engineered his exchange meeting with Sweetman.
âIt's as good a place as any. There'll be no one around. It may belong to the cops, but it won't be in use. It's private and there'll be no one to interrupt our business.' Sweetman took a lot of persuading, but finally went for it with the proviso that each man could only be accompanied by two others and that no one should be armed. The no-arms requirement was ridiculous, but at least it had to be asked for.
âAll I want is the consignment back, then it's over between us. I'll drop the civil case against you, then it's quits, OK. You get out of my life, I leave you be. Business, not personal.'
Easton agreed, knowing there would be no deal. It was all or nothing, and despite the words and the promises, each man knew that.
âIn my occasional forays into the uniformed branch, I've taken part in Regional public-order training exercises down there, when all the north-west forces get together and throw bricks at each other.'
âMe, too,' Roscoe piped up, shuddering distastefully. âI wonder if that's where he's going â and why?'
âIf memory serves me correct â and I have had a nasty bang on the head recently â there's not much else down there, just a big industrial estate. So' â he looked at Donaldson â âwhat do you reckon? Only one way to tell â on the hoof.' He then twisted to Roscoe in the back. She was dressed in her normal work suit â nice jacket, nice skirt, heels on her shoes, not exactly appropriate dress for traipsing around an industrial estate on a dark evening. âYou stay in the car. Me and Karl'll go and have a snoop around. That OK?' He expected some resistance and maybe some complaint about sexist treatment, but it did not come. She was relieved to be staying in a warm car.
Henry reached for his personal radio.
âTake care,' Roscoe said. Henry gave her a quick sideways glance and caught her eye in a fleeting moment. Something moved inside him, and he knew something had moved within her too, but he tried to ignore it. He was not going down that road again. He gave her a nod and dived out of the car.
He and Donaldson began to walk quickly toward the road junction Lynch had turned down, their heads down, fastening their jackets against the chill of the night.
The street lighting was poor and there was no problem in keeping to the shadows, two dark figures progressing cautiously but swiftly, keeping out of any pools of illumination. It was almost like a country road, overgrown verges on either side of narrow footpaths. In the distance, away to their right, could be seen the orange glow of the lighting on the M62, and they could hear the dull hum of motorway traffic.
Ahead, the road they were hurrying down did a sharp left, but straight on was the entrance to the industrial estate. Henry recalled it well now. It was a very large estate, rambling and untidy, with lots of open space on it, lots of waste ground and some huge units, one of which was the Big City.
Behind them, a car turned off the main road, headlights ablaze. Donaldson immediately pushed Henry to one side and both men dropped low on their haunches into a sodden ditch which was part of the grass verge. They watched the car drive past slowly, three people on board. It stayed on the road, did not go into the estate.
âMake out any faces?' Henry whispered. He could see the whites on his friend's eyes in the available light.
âNo . . . looks like a recce, though.'
Henry spoke into his PR, using the dedicated channel for the SIO team. âJane, you receiving?'
âYeah â go ahead.'
âIf you haven't done so already, move the car into a more discreet location, will you? We don't want to spook anyone.'
âDone it already.'
âGood stuff.'
Henry and Donaldson were about to rise from their damp position when another car turned in from the main road.
âGetting busy down here,' Henry commented.
The car that had only just cruised by them moments before reappeared from the opposite direction. Instinct made the pair of detectives drop even lower, their bellies almost on the grass. The cars drove slowly toward each other and when they were alongside each other, only a matter of feet from where they lay hidden, they stopped.
Words inaudible to either Henry or Donaldson were exchanged by the people in the cars. Neither man hardly dared to raise his head an inch, but the temptation to have a look-see was overwhelming.
After a brief conflab, the cars separated. The one which had just turned into the road drove straight on into the industrial estate. The other executed a three-point turn and followed.
The two men rose from their secret place when they were sure the cars had gone.
Henry got on to his radio again. âJane, call me an old fuddy-duddy, but I think it might be as well if we had some back-up here after all. It's hard to say what might or might not be happening, but I'd rather have it coming and not use it.'
âYeah â what do you need?'
âWhatever we've got closest to hand. At the very least get an armed-response unit on the way and see if there's any support unit on in the Valley. You act as the RV point. Can you fix it?'
âYep. I take it you don't want GMP telling.'
âNo â just use our people, OK?'
âRoger, will do.'
âAnd we will maintain radio silence for a while now . . . we're just going on to the estate.'
Crouching and running from shadow to shadow, they set off towards the Big City.
They discovered Lynch's car parked up, unlocked, behind a block of industrial units some way from the Big City. One of the things Henry had always taken pleasure in doing was disabling cars belonging to criminals. He had often done it in his younger days just for fun. Now he took the opportunity to dive under the bonnet of Lynch's motor and yank the spark-plug leads out, whilst Donaldson kept nicks. He knew it wasn't a subtle thing to do, but it would be effective for a short time and might give Henry some advantage. Not knowing how things were going to pan out, he would be happy to gain any advantage. This done, the two detectives moved on, keeping to the building lines of the industrial units and using all cover available, their senses sharp, alert for anything. Both men were nervous, not having a clue what they were getting into.
They emerged from between two units and looked across a road to a huge, detached unit which seemed to go on forever. The bottom half of it was constructed of breeze block, the top half corrugated metal. It had no windows on the side they were looking at. âThis is it,' Henry said. âThe Big City. GMP have it on lease for God knows how many years. It's just like a little high street inside. I think there's even a Burton's shopfront. Lots of alleys, the works. What you're looking at is the gable end, in effect, because the front entrance is round that side.'
Donaldson just nodded. Henry had noticed he had gone extremely quiet, but put it down to tension and circumstance.
They legged it across the road, flattening themselves against the outside wall of the Big City. There was a lot of cover next to the building, several builders' skips, a couple of tractor units, an old van and piles of building materials, all typical of such an estate.
On a signal from Henry, they sidled up to the corner of the building where they crouched under the lee of a skip filled with what looked suspiciously like asbestos. They dropped to their hands and knees and, comically, peeked around the corner, one head above the other, so they could see down the front elevation. It stretched far and there was a big car park and a large porch on the front of the building.
Two cars were parked up. One being one of the two cars Henry and Donaldson had seen minutes before on the road.
Three people were getting out. Henry squinted in the growing darkness, trying to get a good look at them. âI recognize one of them,' he hissed.
âMendoza,' Donaldson gasped. âThe guy on his left is Lopez . . . the other will be Sweetman.'
âFather, son and holy ghost,' Henry said less than reverentially. Both men drew back out of sight.
âStruck gold here,' Donaldson said. âThis must be the return of the drug consignment . . . shit . . .'
âWhat?'
âDon't know about you, H, but I've never known something like this go smoothly for any of the parties. Tears are often shed.'
âI want to see what's going down.'
âMe, too.' Henry thought hard. âThere are several emergency exits dotted around the building, one on each wall, I think. Maybe we could get in through one of them to watch things.'
âWorth a try,' said Donaldson, then clutched his chest. Henry thought he was having a heart attack, but it was actually the American's mobile phone vibrating silently above his heart. âShit . . . let me get this.' He scurried away a few steps out of Henry's earshot.
It was rather like a badly built shopping mall, lit by massive, but not brilliant, lights suspended from the metal roof.
They met in the middle of the main street in the Big City.
Easton was flanked by Lynch and Hamlet, their breath visible in the chill air of the industrial unit. Three holdalls had been placed on a trestle table in front of them.
Sweetman, with Mendoza and Lopez at either shoulder and Grant behind them both, like a formation of fighter planes, walked slowly down the road, which had been named, appropriately enough, Ambush Alley by the cops in the public-order units which trained there regularly. Officially it was called simply âMain Street'. The four stopped, twenty metres away from Easton and his crew.
âI thought we agreed only two assistants,' Easton said.
âHe's my solicitor,' Sweetman said, thumbing a gesture at Grant. âHe's here just to oversee the legal niceties.'
âNot a good start to proceedings.'
Sweetman shrugged.
âIs that my property?' He pointed at the holdalls.
Easton said it was, then, âWhere do we go from here?'
âYou all step back twenty paces, leave the bags where they are and we pick them up. When we've gone, the matter is over. It's that simple.'
âNothing is that simple,' Easton said.
The seven men stared at each other.
Suddenly the tension was broken by a mobile phone announcing that a text message had just landed. It was Mendoza's and he instinctively pulled it out of his pocket and thumbed the âread message' button. That was the thing about texts. They were impossible to ignore, even in the most stressful of situations. Mendoza glanced at the display and skim-read the message, his face growing darker with each word he read, as it confirmed something which he had been suspecting for a long time now.
All eyes were on him, but as he replaced the phone in his pocket, looked up and shrugged, everyone's attention returned to the task in hand. Mendoza's mind was on other things as he sidled up to Lopez and smiled broadly at his second in command. He placed an arm around his shoulder and said, âSoon all our troubles will be over, amigo.' He nodded in the direction of the drugs. Lopez frowned at this out of character display from Mendoza, and he never got the opportunity to put his plan into action. On his signal, he had intended that he and Grant would draw their weapons and start shooting. Grant would take down Easton, Hamlet and Lynch. Lopez would take great pleasure in wasting Mendoza and Sweetman. Then he and Grant would be in business.
The plan never came to fruition.
Mendoza's left arm gripped Lopez's shoulders, and suddenly there was a short-barrelled revolver in his right hand, rising from the pocket into which he had just placed his mobile phone.
Easton was first to see the gun. He opened his mouth and screamed, âGet down!' He and his two sergeants started to dive, but Mendoza's gun did not even consider them. âDouble-crossing bastard,' he screamed and placed the muzzle of the gun hard against Lopez's right temple and pulled the trigger twice. The two soft-nosed bullets blasted through his brain and virtually removed the left side of his head as they tumbled out on exit. Mendoza's left arm was covered in blood and fragments of grey brain. He let go of the already dead Lopez, threw himself to one side and scrambled for the protection of the shop frontages.
Easton, Lynch and Hamlet all had weapons in their hands now and opened fire at Sweetman, Mendoza and Grant.
Everything that happened from that moment on, until it was all over, lasted perhaps thirty seconds.
Lynch discharged the single barrel of his shotgun at Sweetman, catching him in the upper arm and neck, sending him spinning.
Mendoza fired haphazardly, missing everyone completely, as he dived through the front door of a florist's shop just at the moment Easton fired at him and caught him in the upper thigh. Mendoza screamed as he landed and dragged himself behind the wooden panelling of the pretend shop.
Lynch ran up to the squirming Sweetman, blood gushing out of his neck. He stood over the criminal and racked another shell into the breech of the shotgun â a gun which was once owned by Keith Snell â then blasted his face off, killing him instantly.
âGet the other guy!' Easton yelled, pointing to the open shop door where Mendoza had managed to crawl. Lynch stepped across the bodies of Lopez and Sweetman, racking his gun again.