Authors: Nick Oldham
Tope was all smiles, his face expectant like a pet dog which knew it was in for a treat.
âTwo-man job?' he asked hopefully, raising his eyebrows.
âOnly if you roll over and play dead,' Henry countered.
âEh?'
âNothing. But you're probably right, Jerry. But, no disrespect, from what little I know of Scartarelli, it's likely I'll need someone with me who's got a little more in the brawn department. Which is a backhanded compliment, actually.'
Tope's face went south. âI never get out of the bloody office.'
âSorry, mate, next time maybe.' Henry gave his shoulder a manly tap.
âHo-hum, no probs,' Tope said accepting his lot. âHere's the file and contacts.' He gave Henry a thick folder. âAnd you're right, he's a dangerous git. He'll need watching.'
Henry nodded. âThanks for that. I'll pop up to accounts and clear the money ⦠going to need plane tickets and lots of euros.'
Tope scowled.
Madeline was busy talking to her husband, who'd made his way up to see her after talking to Jerry Tope. They gave Henry a suspicious look at first, then Madeline waved at him and smiled, but made no move to speak to him. Henry had to speak to another lady in accounts instead and arranged to buy seven hundred euros, withdraw two hundred sterling and get an order number for a flight out to Cyprus. He was also given use of a constabulary credit card, just in case of emergencies.
He then found an empty meeting room on the ground floor where he sat and read Scartarelli's file and began making phone calls and sending emails.
It was on the following day he knew for sure he would be going and the day after that before he and Bill Robbins actually fought their way for a seat on the easyJet flight to Pafos.
The plane banked sharply, cutting across the magnificent Troodos Mountains then heading towards the south-west coast on its descent. Henry blew out his cheeks appreciatively as, banking again, he glimpsed the crystal-clear waters of the Mediterranean dotted with tiny whitecaps and boats across the bulk of the sleeping fat woman beside him.
He adjusted his seat belt, stored his food tray as per instructions, and held his nose between finger and thumb, blowing hard to level out the pressure between his ears.
âYou OK, boss?' Bill Robbins had noticed Henry's discomfort.
âYeah â always gets me on the way down. Very painful.' He blew again and his ears popped, suddenly making his hearing keener than Superman's. âThat's better.'
Henry had chosen Bill Robbins, the PC who was the disgruntled firearms officer, to come along for the ride. This was not because they were old mates, which they were, or because they'd worked together years back, which they had. It was because that by accident Henry had found himself working with Bill when he'd stumbled across the plot to assassinate the American State Secretary on her visit to Blackburn. Bill's laconic cynicism and his calmness under the most extreme duress had impressed Henry. Bill was the sort of guy you pushed in front of you in a crisis. He had an old, level head on his shoulders and because he'd been steeped in firearms lore for the past fifteen years, he could handle himself physically and mentally.
As the plane made its final trim adjustments prior to landing, Henry allowed his mind to do a quick skim through his knowledge of Paulo Scartarelli, the second person on his wanted list.
Henry found it amazing that he was no longer surprised to be arresting a foreign criminal who had been operating on British soil â Lancashire soil at that. Although he knew it wasn't a new phenomenon, it was far more common than it had ever been because of the immigration mess the country was in.
Not much was known about Scartarelli. He'd been operating on the periphery of some brothels that had been set up in the north of England and had been circulated as wanted for the savage attack on an Albanian prostitute who had subsequently died. But not before she named Scartarelli as her killer. By the time she'd blabbed his name â when she realized she would die â he was long gone and though the initial murder enquiry generated many leads, it wound up after nine months when Scartarelli failed to raise his head above the parapet. Many rumours as to his whereabouts abounded. All related to connections with people-trafficking and various European gangs, but nothing concrete came to light â until Cyprus.
Henry was eager to hear the full story as to how he'd been found.
He braced himself as the plane touched down on the short runway and the brakes and reverse thrust were applied and finally his ears came back to normal. A short while later the plane taxied up to the terminal building and everybody de-planed, was transferred across the tarmac by bendy bus to customs and baggage reclaim.
Henry Christie and Bill Robbins had set foot in Cyprus. British cops abroad.
A
gonizingly, Henry's bag came last down the conveyor belt, whilst Bill's was one of the first to appear through the rubber flaps. The firearms officer waited patiently for Henry whilst the DCI became increasingly annoyed, suspecting that it might not even have made the flight.
âHow can this be?' Henry moaned. âOur bags went in together.'
âIt'll come,' Bill assured him.
And it did, eventually, all by itself.
Henry tore it off the belt and angrily set off towards the doors which opened out into the comparatively tiny arrivals hall, Bill in tow.
By the time they appeared, all the other passengers from the flight had gone and the hall was quiet.
Henry stood and looked around. Bill tapped him on the shoulder and pointed to a person holding up an A4-sized piece of white card on which had been scribbled âCHRISTIE & ROBBINS'. Bill set off, Henry a beat behind him.
Bill stretched out a hand in greeting and the woman holding the sign broke into a wide, welcoming smile as she shook Bill's hand.
âYou must be Detective Christie,' she said to Bill, whose bottom lip dropped stupidly open as he took in the sight of the woman sent to meet and greet them. âYou're just as I imagined.'
âI'm ⦠er,' he blubbered.
âIt's so lovely to meet you,' she said and looked at Henry as she prised her hand from Bill's grasp and proffered it to Henry. âYou must be Constable Robbins,' she said, shaking his hand firmly. âI'm Detective Sergeant Papakostas ⦠Georgia Papakostas.'
Henry's mouth also drooped, almost flopping on to the tiled floor, his anger over his late luggage immediately evaporating, to be replaced by a sort of awe at the sight of one of the most stunning women he'd ever met. Her jet-black hair was pulled back tightly from her face and tied in a neat ponytail. She had honey-coloured skin, deep-brown eyes, an imperfect complexion with two tiny pockmarks on her left cheek that only added to the overall effect of a true Mediterranean beauty. There was no make up other than a touch of lip gloss which simply served to accentuate the full mouth and pure white teeth of her hot, real smile.
For a few moments Henry could not form any words. He and Bill just simply stood before this woman drooling like imbeciles from a Tom and Jerry cartoon.
âPleased to meet you, Sergeant,' he managed to say.
Her thick black, but perfectly trimmed eyebrows knitted together in puzzlement. âI have got it the right way round, haven't I?' she said in a lightly Greek-accented voice. âYou are Bill, yes?' she said to Henry.
âOh no, I'm DCI Christie ⦠this is PC Robbins.' Henry moved forward a couple of steps, positioning himself slightly ahead of Bill because there were times when it was only right and proper for a DCI to lead from the front.
Georgia giggled. âI've been looking at the names on the paperwork, imagining what you both would look like.' She gave an apologetic tilt of the head. âGot it wrong.'
Henry caught the merest scent of light perfume from her, reminding him of strawberries.
âAll you need to know is that I'm the brains and he' â he thumbed disrespectfully at Bill â âis the muscle.' And immediately regretted what he'd said because he knew it made him look stupid.
âThanks, boss,' Bill said under his breath.
To try and compensate, Henry gave Georgia his cute tilted-head half-smile he kept for use on such occasions, coupled with a few blinks of his eyes.
She smiled and emitted a pleasant chuckle. âAnyway, I'm very pleased to meet you both. As you probably know I'm the officer in this case and may I formally welcome you to Cyprus, halfway to the Orient, as they say.' She bowed her head gracefully and gave a very minor curtsey.
She was wearing a black trouser suit with sensible black shoes, good practical clothing for a female detective. As she bowed, her unbuttoned jacket flapped open slightly, revealing her red blouse fastened just above her breasts. Obviously these caught Henry's eye, as they did Bill's, but what really caught Henry's breath and what made him realize that this might not be just a jolly to a sunny holiday island was the sight of the pistol strapped to her right hip.
Stepping out of the terminal building, Henry was struck in the face by the incredible heat of the day and the myriad of intoxicating aromas associated with the island, particularly that of the sea, which was literally just across the road.
The two Lancashire officers followed DS Papakostas down the ramp, past a few lounging and moustachioed taxi drivers touting idly for work, all of who watched the female detective's progress with dirty eyes and thoughts. She led Henry and Bill across the car park to a Nissan Terrano, a big four-wheel drive beast, into the back of which they heaved their cases and then themselves.
âYou can have use of this,' she explained, âbut I'll drop you off at your hotel first.'
âSounds good,' said Henry, barging Bill out of the way to get into the front passenger seat alongside Georgia, who climbed in behind the wheel. The two men exchanged scowls, but Bill relented and got into the back seat with great reluctance. It was only as Henry settled himself in and pulled on his seat belt did he realize that the vehicle's steering wheel was on the right. He said, âYou drive on the left,' with surprise.
âOh yes,' she said.
Bill tutted and Henry shot him a quick look which said, âWatch it.'
âYou haven't been to the island before?'
Henry shook his head. âI have,' Bill piped up.
Georgia smiled. âLots of British influence here, still,' she explained, manoeuvring the Terrano out of its parking space. âWe only recently changed to the euro,' she added.
âFrom what?'
âPounds ⦠Cypriot pounds, that is.' She drove on to the road, the shimmering Med on their right, and gunned the big, but lazy, diesel engine which responded sluggishly. There then followed one of those slightly stifled introductory conversations covering such inanities as flight comfort, in-flight meals and other bits of trivia to break the ice. This included the fact that her father was Cypriot and her mother English, hence her almost excellent use of the language.
That done, Henry asked about the plan for the remainder of the day ahead.
Georgia checked her wristwatch. âIf it's OK with you guys, I'll take you to your hotel and get you settled in. Then, maybe, we meet up and plan for tomorrow, which is when we'll move for Scartarelli. It will have been a long day for you today, so you just need to chill for the remainder of the day and maybe we get a meal later?'
âSounds OK to me,' Henry said.
âAnd me,' Bill seconded from the rear. âI'm dying for a large Keo.'
Henry turned and grimaced at him.
âThe local brew â very nice.' Bill smiled and licked his lips.
âI'll go with that, Henry agreed, turning forwards huffily, then looking sideways at DS Papakostas's profile. âHow far to the hotel?'
âMaybe half-hour. It's in a place called Coral Bay.'
âIn that case could you give me a bit of background as to how Scartarelli came into your sights?'
She gave a short laugh. âGood phrase, because that's what he did â come into my sights.' She patted the gun nestling against her right hip.
She had a good informant, one she had been keeping to herself, something Henry could relate to. He had been a smuggler for many years and was in his early sixties, though he looked fifteen years younger despite his weather-beaten face and grey moustache. Georgia had encountered the man known as Haram when she had been a keen rookie cop patrolling the streets of Nicosia, the island's capital, in the early days of her service. She had, in fact, worked her way up to Haram. He had been the one every cop in the southern half of Cyprus had wanted to catch red-handed. Her trail had begun with the spot-check and subsequent arrest of a minor drug-dealer under the battered ruin of Pafos Gate. A deal had been struck leading her to the next dealer up the chain and so on, until she reached the final link: Haram. He was known to smuggle Turkish heroin down through the north and then cheap cigarettes and booze in the opposite direction. Although he had been arrested on a multitude of occasions, no prosecutions ever ensued.
But Georgia â ambitious to be a detective â bided her time. Constantly digging and building a jigsaw of Haram until she had four informants, all with jail penalties hanging over them, passing on information to save their own arses.
All the patience came to fruition almost a year after the encounter with the first dealer under the gate in Nicosia. Haram was bringing a carload of drugs across the border from the Turkish north of the island by a circuitous route around the western tip from where he would be supplying the tourists and the British forces bases in the south.
If her intelligence was correct â and jail sentences would happen if it weren't â Haram would eventually be travelling south down the coastal E704 towards Polis, a town popular with backpackers. Once on that road, there would be no escape for him.
That had been ten years ago and Haram, terrified by the thought of losing his liberty, had reached an âunderstanding' with Georgia who, after successfully transferring to CID, used his intimate knowledge of the Cypriot underworld to further her career.