Henry's thoughts turned to Fazul Ali and whether he was holding up against the sophisticated interview techniques of Karl Donaldson. In some respects, Henry hoped he would spill the beans, not least for his own well-being; in others he hoped Ali would not break, in spite of the possible consequences. It would be a minor victory to show that torturing people did not necessarily work, war or no war.
Bill drove around Blackburn, firstly past the school on Pleckgate Road which Rice would be visiting, then across town to Ewood Park. Both places were crawling with cops: cops on foot and cops with dogs, cops on horses and cops with guns. It was always going to be a massively expensive operation and now, because every other cop in the world had been drafted in, would probably double in price.
The Galaxy pulled on to the car park behind the Darwen End stand of Ewood Park, inside which the police facilities had been constructed, including cells, refs rooms and a custody office. Henry sat ruminating as he looked at the big stand, erected in the 1990s on the back of the millions of pounds provided by a local businessman. Not like the days of corrugated roofs and rotting concrete stands, it was all steel girders and seating. The River Darwen flowed â or trickled â by the north-eastern side of the ground and beyond it was a steep, grassy hill from which, in the old days, fans who could not afford to get into the ground could watch some of the action of the matches, though they could only ever see one or the other goalmouth at one time.
âNot a bad place for a sniper.' Henry pouted thoughtfully as he looked at the hill. âHave you got a copy of the operational order?'
Bill reached into the back seat and found his dog-eared copy which detailed the visit. Henry skimmed through it. âBlah, blah, blah ⦠she's being driven from the school to the football ground ⦠stopping on Nuttall Street at the front and entering through the VIP door, then she's into the ground itself. Visiting the police post, the CCTV room, the players' changing rooms, going to the shop â no doubt buy herself a Rovers' shirt â meeting the staff, then leaving as she came in ⦠so, scratch the sniper on the hill theory cos he can't see Nuttall Street from there,' Henry said glumly. He turned to Bill. âWhat would you do if you were a fanatical terrorist and you wanted to kill her today?'
âWell, she's pretty well protected, so it won't be easy, but I've always said that if anyone doesn't give a fuck about themselves and thinks they're going somewhere better, it becomes a hell of a lot easier. She'll be doing walkabout, touching heads, kissing babies ⦠and if you're a fanatic you can definitely get close enough to her to stick a gun in her face or blow everyone in the vicinity to kingdom come. You just can, cos not everyone can be searched and no one knows what a terrorist actually looks like.'
âBut they do know what this terrorist looks like, because his most recent photo's been circulated â except he doesn't do dirty work like this himself. He gets other dumb arses to do it. He's like a paedophile in some respects, preying on young, vulnerable people.' Henry paused for thought again. His brain had been so battered that he was finding it difficult to keep it concentrating. âThere's just something about Mansur Rashid that keeps eating away at me.' His face rotated slowly to Bill. âGet me back to my car,' he said quickly. âSomething's clicked.' Henry gave Bill a quick explanation and by blue lighting it down the M65, heading north, then coming off at Whitebirk, they were back at Blackburn police station within minutes, where Henry had left his Rover.
He had been blocked in by other cars, but that did not matter. He rooted out his briefcase from the back seat and rejoined Bill, who had gravitated to the canteen to get two coffees. They sat at the only empty table â the canteen was swarming with bobbies because of the visit and they all needed food and drink at some time.
âThanks.' Henry took a sip of the coffee, then put his briefcase on the table and delved into it. He extracted the A4 document wallet which contained the statement taken from Dr Khan the previous evening, together with all the notes he'd scribbled. He glanced through the statement, frowning because he could not see what he wanted. He knew it was there somewhere.
âI'm sure I wrote it,' he said absently.
Bill watched him intently.
âNah, not there.' He put the statement down and browsed through the notes he had taken whilst interviewing the doctor. Not everything in the notes had gone into the statement. âAh ha! This is it ⦠um, um, um ⦠here we are ⦠this girl Sabera leaves her husband. Big thing for anyone to do, let alone a Muslim girl ⦠seems they're expected to hang in there whatever shit's thrown at them, which I find total bollocks ⦠Anyway, she obviously misses her family and therefore succumbs to the occasional chats with them ⦠natural thing to do â I'm OK, don't worry, sort of thing ⦠Ow!' Henry touched his cheek, which was throbbing again. âGod, that's sore ⦠Then she makes the mistake of contacting her sister and arranges to meet her on a motorway service area â but the sister turns up with the husband!' Henry said excitedly.
âShit â bitch!' Bill said.
âExactly ⦠anyway, Sabera gets away unscathed, but that's basically the end of her relationship with sis ⦠but what I'm getting at here is that if the sister was in cahoots with Rashid she must know an awful lot about him â and maybe if we can get hold of her now, she might be able to tell us something. Like where he is.'
âI suppose it's better then just bumming about hoping for the best,' Bill admitted.
âIn the very near future, we are going to have to speak to Sabera's family anyway just because she's dead. What do you think?' he asked Bill, screwing his face up.
âCan't hurt. Any addresses?'
âNo.' The word came out with a sigh. âJust somewhere in Blackburn. This Khan guy couldn't remember it and he's actually destroyed her employment records which had it on, as well as anything else which related to her, he was so scared and intimidated.'
âNeedle in a haystack, then?'
âMm.' Henry tapped his fingers on the edge of the table. âShe's called Najma Ismat.'
âVoters list?' Bill suggested.
âDoes it have a search facility?'
âNo.'
âDo you want to go through every name? Two hundred odd thousand in Blackburn?'
âNot specially. How about PNC?'
âWorth a try, but only useful if she has a conviction, which I doubt.'
âIntel check?'
âSame applies ⦠although Special Branch files might have something ⦠they collect stuff just for the hell of it,' Henry said, thinking back to the entry concerning Mansur Rashid. Henry then recalled how Eddie Daley had been able to trace Sabera without too much trouble and expressed his thoughts out loud. âBill, we are two experienced cops and if we can't locate this girl within the next half hour, then I'm calling it quits and going home. And I have a bloody good idea how we can do it.'
Minutes later they were back in the Galaxy. âNow then, Bill, I want you to drive me somewhere â somewhere that is very secret and, of course, you'll have to be blindfolded, and if you blab to anyone, even your missus in your sleep, I'll have to come and murder you, then kill myself.'
âWhat the hell are you on about?'
Henry realized he'd rambled a bit. He put it down to the pain. And the drugs. âJust drive out of here, turn left up the arterial road, then right on to Whitebirk Industrial Estate, then I'll direct you from there.'
Bill shrugged.
Henry fished out his mobile and made a call.
âSorry to interrupt your torture session, but I need to come and see you, Karl ⦠a favour, yeah. I know it's a lot to ask, but I'm asking ⦠I need a name putting through your super-duper computer.' Henry listened, then ended the call. He stared straight ahead through the windscreen, his heart thumping at the prospect of seeing Donaldson again so soon.
Henry directed Bill to the front gates of the unit now leased by the American security services, although he doubted whether that fact was actually revealed in the rental agreement. The gates were closed and did not open on their arrival.
âWhat goes on here?' Bill asked.
âIt's been rented by the Yanks to house some of their vehicles whilst the Rice visit takes place,' he answered blandly.
Bill looked at him disbelievingly.
âOK, all right,' Henry answered with a shrug. âCan't tell you, OK?'
âFair enough. I know my place.'
The gates opened wide enough to allow a very tired, harassed Karl Donaldson to contort out of the gap. He approached Henry suspiciously, eyeing Bill. Henry dropped out of the Galaxy.
âSo now you need us?' Donaldson said bitterly.
âI don't have a problem with you hacking into other people's computers. It's hacking into people's heads that bothers me.'
Donaldson nodded at Bill. âYou shouldn't have brought him.'
âHe's OK, won't blab.'
âHe stays here, then.'
âSo be it.'
Donaldson inclined his head for Henry to follow. Henry mouthed and gestured for Bill to stay put and followed the American through the gate, who then ensured it was locked. He walked ahead of Henry through a normal door adjacent to the main shutter door into the unit where the array of vehicles was parked up.
As he walked, Donaldson said, âDon't know why the hell I'm doing this,' without turning.
âCos deep down you're an old softie?' Henry speculated, trying to lighten the atmosphere between them.
âI misjudged you, Henry.'
âNo, Karl, I misjudged you,' Henry said, realizing the atmosphere was not likely to rise much.
The rest of the short walk was made in silence, through the door leading to the ground-floor corridor, then into the communications centre. Donaldson approached the same man who had done the earlier check on Mansur Rashid.
âGive him the name, tell him which database to interrogate.' Donaldson pushed out past Henry, saying, âI trust you to make your own way out ⦠and by the way, hacking into other agencies' databases is not ethical.' Then he was gone.
Henry gave the man the name and suggested some databases to interrogate. After a few moments, he leaned back. âThere you go, pal.'
Henry squinted at the screen, memorized what he saw and rushed back out to Bill who waited patiently in the Galaxy. He gave him the address.
âI'm not even going to bother to ask how you got this.'
âWhat you don't know, don't get you killed,' Henry said.
It was fortunate that the liveried Ford Galaxy with a uniformed police officer lounging by the side of it was parked behind Henry in the driveway, otherwise he would have had the front door slammed in his face. Even then, it was a close-run thing. He could tell from the look of horror on the Asian woman's face when she answered the door and found herself confronted by a man who looked like he'd been dragged under a bus for a hundred metres.
He quickly presented his warrant card and the woman hesitated, still considered closing the door, then relented because of the police vehicle.
It was probably unusual to have anyone knocking at the door in this neck of the woods anyway. Henry guessed the most regular visitors would be the postman and the Sainsbury's home delivery driver.
The house was in one of the better parts of Blackburn, on Meins Road, right on the edge of town. A big detached property in its own grounds, with sweeping views behind it towards Preston and beyond to the faint shimmer of the Lancashire coast. The huge British Aerospace complex in the middle distance slightly marred the vista. It was the house of a wealthy family.
The woman was late fifties, dressed in a very western style. She was also extremely attractive and Henry could immediately see the likeness between her and the photographs taken by Eddie Daley of Sabera Rashid. He caught his breath.
âMy name is Henry Christie. I'm a detective chief inspector with Lancashire Constabulary ⦠please don't be alarmed by my appearance â it's been a tough day ⦠I'm looking for Najma Ismat.' He tried one of his boyish smiles, but all his broken cheekbone would allow was a scary grimace.
âWhat is going on out here?' an Asian-accented male voice with a definite Lancashire twang demanded to know from inside the house. An old man appeared behind the lady. When he saw Henry, he said, âYou!' accusingly. It was Mr Iqbal, the old man Henry had innocently involved in a dangerous car chase whilst on the lookout for a suspect who had dropped through his ceiling and fled from the police raid Henry had led.
âMr Iqbal!'
âOut of the way, girl,' Iqbal said and elbowed past the woman, holding out a hand for Henry to shake. âSalma, this is the policeman I was telling you about,' he said proudly, his chest swelling as he stood next to Henry and put his arm around him. âHenry Christie, this is my daughter, Salma Ismat. She's a doctor, you know,' he said proudly.
Henry proffered his hand hesitantly. She responded coolly, but shook his fingertips.
âI am pleased to meet you,' she bowed slightly. âMy father cannot be quiet about his exciting ride in a police car ⦠it made him a happy man.'
âI thought I'd terrified you.'
âOnly in a good way,' the old man said. He banged his chest with his fist. âGot the ticker pumping ⦠exciting as hell.'
âI'm pleased.'
Iqbal looked curiously at Henry. âHave you had a car crash?'
âNo ⦠look, I don't want to be abrupt, but does Najma Ismat live here?'
âNajma is my daughter,' the lady said.
âIs she in?'
âNo, why?'
âI need to speak to her urgently ⦠I'm afraid I can't explain why. She's not in any trouble, it's just that she might know something. I'm trying to trace Mansur Rashid and I think she might know where he is.'