The Special Projects office was empty apart from one person, Jenny âAttitude' Fisher. He nodded at her, went into his own office and picked up his PR, then came back into the open plan area. âCan you give me an update?'
Jenny was on the phone, but put her hand over the mouthpiece. âThe dep and Graeme have gone to look for Mansur Rashid.'
âI know that!' he almost squeaked. âWhat time did they go?'
âAbout nine.'
Henry's eyes rose to the wall clock, doing a few quick calculations. Half an hour to Blackburn, ten to fifteen minutes finding the address, say ⦠if Rashid was there, arrest him, then down to the cells by 10.30 a.m., he guesstimated. If things went according to plan.
âHave you heard from them since?'
Jenny shook her head and pouted, then concentrated on what was being said to her down the phone and said, âThanks for that.' She scribbled something on a notepad and hung up.
âBoss ⦠just been on to Orange â oh, you won't know, will you?' she said, seeing Henry's puzzled expression. She stood up and crossed to him. âDuring a search of Jackie Kippax's flat, we found phone bills relating to Eddie Daley's Orange mobile account.' Henry was suddenly interested. âThe latest bill wasn't there, but I've been on to Orange today and they're going to fax it to me ⦠but in the meantime â voila!' She showed Henry her pad. âThis is the last number he phoned from his mobile â at 10.05 p.m. on the night he was murdered. It was to an O
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number and I'm going to try to get the name of the subscriber without all the bureaucracy if I can.'
âWell done, Jenny,' he said. âKeep at it.' He ducked back into his office where he dialled the extension for Blackburn custody office. It rang ⦠rang ⦠and rang ⦠and was then answered by a harassed sounding gaoler. âCustody.'
âDCI Christie here ⦠is the deputy chief constable there? Or has she been there?'
âNo to both.'
âIs there a guy called Mansur Rashid in custody?'
No hesitation. âNope.'
âYou've been exceedingly helpful.'
âTa.' The phone slammed down, leaving Henry holding a dead handset. He dialled Angela Cranlow's mobile again. But got the same response as previously, the answerphone. âJenny?' he yelled through his door. âHave you got Graeme's mobile number?'
âNo.'
âHas anyone?'
âDon't think so.'
Henry replaced his phone, which he'd been holding in readiness to use. He hurried out of the door, down one flight of stairs and along the corridor. He didn't knock, but just turned into the anteroom that housed the bag carriers and secretaries. Only the deputy's secretary was at her desk, no one else in.
âI need to make contact with the dep,' Henry told her breathlessly.
âYou and me both. I can't get hold of her.'
âHas she got her PR?'
âYeah â no reply on that, either.'
âDid she say where she was going?'
âTo make an arrest in Blackburn,' the secretary said sourly. âDCCs should not be doing things like that.'
âAny address?' The secretary shook her head. Henry said, âThanks,' and scurried back to Special Projects, a scary feeling in the pit of his stomach. He did not like it when cops could not be contacted. He went to Jenny's desk. âDid they tell you Rashid's address?'
âNo ⦠something wrong?'
âBloody hope not.' Henry gestured to the office. âWhere's everyone else?'
âOut doing jobs ⦠on Eddie Daley's murder, yeah?'
âRight.' Henry stomped back to his office, cursing today's reliance on communications. If you couldn't get hold of someone these days it was always a problem. In the old days, if you couldn't make contact you lived with it. Maybe he was being a bit too nervous, but Mansur Rashid, whether he had killed his wife or not, was a violent man, as evidenced by Dr Khan's injuries. If Angela Cranlow and Graeme Walling had gone in a bit gung-ho, they might have bitten off more than they could chew.
He tried her mobile again and got the same response, then sat at his desk deep in thought, tapping his chin with his knuckles before rising and walking into the outer office and going to the desk of the woman who'd been given the job of Murder Incident Room manager when the Special Projects team was turned into SPMS.
âWhere's Delia?' he asked Jenny.
âGone sick.'
âWhat a surprise,' he muttered, shaking his head. He picked up a sheaf of actions. The top one of the pile gave him what he was looking for. It was handwritten by Angela Cranlow and simply said, âFrom info received, arrest Mansur Rashid on sus of murder.' There was nothing else. He took the sheet and went to Jenny's desk. âMansur Rashid,' he said, placing it in front of her. âSee if you can find out his address for me, somewhere in Blackburn. Interrogate all the intel systems if you have to ⦠then call me on my mobile and let me know it. The dep and Graeme have found it somehow and they should've written it on here, but they haven't.' He leaned to her. âThis is urgent.'
Henry hurried out to his car.
His radio was already tuned into Blackburn's frequency. As he drove out of HQ he turned up the volume to listen.
Airwave traffic was busy, a lot going on, much of it generated by the visit later that day of Condoleezza Rice, even though the operation actually dedicated to it had its own specified channel and was running separately to the day-to-day policing of the town. It would have been impossible for such a large-scale operation not to have some overlap. Cops from all over the county had been drafted in for the day. Search teams and sniffer dogs were scouring the venues she was due to visit and the routes she would use were being constantly patrolled by armed officers. It seemed to Henry that a visit instigated at the whim of a politician was causing uproar â and not just within the police. The public, particularly the Asian community, were not exactly welcoming her to town and some demonstrations had been planned.
But that was not his problem.
He drove hard and fast through the country roads behind HQ before joining the motorway and heading towards Blackburn for what seemed the millionth time in just a few short days. Throughout the journey he continually called Angela's mobile but got no answer, which increased his agitation and concern.
He hated it when officers went to a job and then you didn't hear from them.
Ninety-nine per cent of the time it was for a legitimate reason and sooner or later they came back on the radar.
It was that last percentage point that bothered him today. He wondered if Cranlow, in her eagerness to be hands-on, had been a bit reckless and not obeyed the golden rule of telling someone where you were, what you were doing and that you were OK when you'd done it.
Henry grimaced.
Even the most experienced made mistakes. The unfortunate thing was that sometimes those mistakes became banner headlines.
Or was he overreacting?
During the course of his journey he picked out the voice of Bill Robbins on the radio, his old friend he had faced the pit bull with. It seemed he was not working the Condoleezza Rice operation, but doing a general ARV patrol â much to his chagrin, Henry suspected.
Henry tapped Bill's collar number into his PR and called him up, using the mobile phone facility.
âBill, Henry Christie ⦠are you available to give me a chuck-up?'
âIs there a dog involved?'
âHope not.'
âIn that case I'm free.'
Henry suggested an RV point at Blackburn police station in ten minutes. As his conversation with Bill ended, his own mobile rang.
âHenry, it's Jenny ⦠got that address for you. Took a bit of doing, though. It's only on the Special Branch system.'
Major relief flooded through Henry's system.
Fifteen minutes later Bill Robbins and his partner for the day, the policewoman called Carly, were travelling behind Henry's car towards Whalley Range, an area in Blackburn which is predominantly Asian. Henry had been there many times over the years, particularly in the late 1970s just after he had joined the force, when there had been a great deal of racial unrest caused by the activities of the extreme right-wing political party, the National Front.
As he turned on to Whalley Range, a long, narrow road, sided by terraced houses and various Asian shops just off Blackburn town centre, he noticed a lot of street activity, more than was usual. No doubt generated by the arrival in town later that day of the American Secretary of State. From the snippets he'd heard, Henry knew there was to be a protest at the town hall by the Muslim community later that day, and maybe the bustle on the street was connected to this. A visit to a local mosque had been called off because of fears that protesters would invade. There was a distinct buzz of tension and he saw many people stop and coldly watch the liveried ARV behind him.
Henry drove on, feeling the hairs on the back of his neck begin to prickle. He wasn't a cat amongst the pigeons any more; he was a cat tiptoeing through a dog pound.
The street he was searching for was just off Whalley Range, one of the myriad of tight terraces clinging to the steep hillside north of the town centre: Balaclava Street, a name to conjure with, one which gave a good idea of the time when it was built. They were all pretty standard, two-up, two-down, many now extended at the rear for a kitchen, and almost all the outside privvies demolished and the toilets now indoors, although some outside loos still did exist. The street reminded Henry of the one in Accrington into which he had led a PSU on a dawn raid that seemed an eon ago. A stroke of luck had saved him that day. He hoped he wouldn't need such fortune again.
Still the questions lingered. Where was the dep? Where was Graeme? Henry had asked Blackburn comms to try and contact them, but there had been no reply. And still no reply from the dep's mobile phone.
Henry pulled in on Randal Street, just before the junction with Balaclava Street, the ARV Ford Galaxy drawing up behind. He jumped out with the intention of speaking to Bill and Carly. Before he could open his mouth, all their personal radios interrupted.
âChief Constable to DCI Christie, receiving?' FB's gruff tones demanded over the airwaves.
Henry rolled his eyes. He knew that FB was at the helm of Condoleezza Rice's visit today, that he was to be found at Blackburn nick, kicking everyone's arses. âGo ahead, sir.'
âI've been made aware of the situation, Henry ⦠any developments?'
âI'm just about to knock on a door.' Henry gave FB the address.
âIs there any reason why we should be concerned?'
âOnly in as much as communication has broken down and we can't contact two officers.'
âOK â do what you have to do ⦠oh, have you got back-up?'
âYes â an ARV crew have joined me.'
âKeep me informed.'
âRoger.' He regarded the two firearms officers. âI'm just going to go and knock on the door, just like I'm a cop knocking on a door. Can't see any reason to do it any other way, except if you've got a spare ballistic vest in the back, I'd appreciate it.'
They did and he put it on. It was a new style vest, very light and flexible, giving just as much protection as the older, heavier vests; however, it didn't stop a bullet to the head or the groin. He put his leather jacket over it.
âIf I've worked this out right, it's up on the right. I'll walk to it and you just stay here ready to rumble and I'll see how the land lies. If I suspect anything's amiss, I'll yell. I don't want to spook anybody unnecessarily.'
âOK, Henry. What about tooling up?' Bill asked.
âBased on what?' Henry replied. Bill shrugged, understanding that so far there was nothing to suggest that firearms were likely to be encountered â that anything was likely to be encountered, actually. He and Carly climbed out of the Galaxy and lounged against it, arms folded. Henry set off around the corner and up Balaclava Street, out of their sight.
The house looked no different than any of the others â and why should it? A front door, opening directly on to the footpath, with a living room window next to it, two windows above on the first floor. The curtains were all drawn. But nothing outwardly untoward.
Henry paused outside the door, holding his PR in his left hand and warrant card in his right. He banged firmly, using the bottom edge of his radio, waited. There was no response, so he banged again â harder. Still no response. As he was about to turn away and make to the back, there was a noise from inside and the sound of footsteps approaching the door.
His cop instincts, honed over many years of knocking on doors, tingled and told him to beware. Two experienced cops didn't go missing for nothing. It was always the âroutine' jobs that took everyone by surprise.
There was someone behind the door. He could hear them. Then it opened an inch to reveal the eye of a man peering out across a security chain.
âHello,' Henry smiled. âI'm DCI Christie from Lancashire Constabulary ⦠I wonder if I could have a word, please?' He held up his warrant card.
âAbout what?' Through the gap, Henry could make out the guy was of Asian background and appeared to be quite big.
âI'd like to speak to Mansur Rashid, if he's at home.'
The man shook his head. âDon't know him.'
Henry's guts did one of those sick-inducing somersaults. He swallowed as he identified the first lie.
âI'd still like a word.' He moved slightly closer to the door and gave the eye he could see the evil eye from himself. âI won't be going away,' he added.
The man nodded. âI have to close the door to unlock the chain.'
âPlease make sure you reopen it.' Henry saw the man smile.
The door closed. The chain slid back. The man opened up and stood on the threshold, one step above Henry on the pavement. He had to look up to the man and did not like what he saw â an unusually tall and wide Asian man with yellows for his eyes, rather than whites, and a scar on his face running from his upper lip to just below his right eye. He was probably in his mid-thirties and looked mean. He smelled clean and wore a crisp white shirt and pressed jeans, as though he had just got showered and dressed. His thick black hair was slicked back, and wet. Henry noticed his hands and wrists were thick. They looked capable of strangulation.