Authors: Nick Oldham
âNo.' It was bitterly said.
âAnd a few things have happened to you, assaults that were unexplained, yeah? I was there for one.'
âThere hasn't been anything for a while, though.'
âMaybe the guy was plotting, maybe he was in prison, maybe he was building up the courage ⦠who knows? But what I'm saying isâ'
âThat I got sloppy?'
Donaldson breathed a sigh down his nose. âIt's possible this guy might have tailed you right to Ingram, or the apartment in Salford, and maybe he saw an opportunity to fuck you up, put your life in peril without putting himself at risk, and then going for the soft option â Kate, alone at home.'
Henry sat back, thoughts brimming.
âBut whatever,' Donaldson warned, âthere's one sicko out there and he needs to be caught before he comes back and succeeds where he failed. The way I see it is, this guy wants your family dead and he hasn't succeeded yet.'
He sat back, point made â but he couldn't resist going on.
âHow long before he discovers where you live now?'
âProbably not long ⦠might even know now.' Henry chewed the inside of his cheek, then downed the remainder of his lager.
âI think you need to know what Ingram knows, get that out the way, then see how the land lies.'
âBut first I need to go home and protect my family.' Henry was having bad feelings about things.
âOK, I understand.' Donaldson emptied his water down his throat. The two men left the pub and began the walk back home.
âTrouble is,' Henry postulated, âwe can't talk to Ingram, not yet. Doctors say he's still too ill to be interviewed, arrested, et cetera.'
âBut he can talk?'
âApparently.'
Donaldson exchanged a glance with Henry. âLook, pal, I know you disapprove of some of my methods, and we had a heated discussion about that earlier and cleared the air between us, I hope ⦠but sometimes things have to be done for the greater good.'
âWe cannot speak to him, if that's what you're thinking.'
âI know that.'
âAnd he's being guarded twenty-fourâseven by two cops. And his solicitor is watching us like a hawk.'
âI know that, too.'
âAnd I couldn't even contemplate an off-the-record interview. If that happened and it was discovered, it might jeopardize the whole case against him.'
âI know that, too.'
âSo where does that leave me?'
They crossed the main street in Kirkham.
âYou don't have to be involved in anything.'
âGo on.'
âUnder the right, unofficial pressure, Ingram might tell you the name of the person who ratted on you, which could well lead to the arrest of your stalker, and save you and Kate and the girls a lot of grief.' Donaldson liked the word, grief, used it often.
Henry's hands stuffed deep into his jeans' pockets. His head was bowed low as he walked.
âI'm good at this sort of thing,' Donaldson said. âI have no moral qualms whatsoever, whether I'm dealing with a terrorist, gangster, whatever â especially when I could save a friend's life.'
To all intents and purposes the friendship between these two men had ended when Henry violently disagreed with the tactics used by Donaldson to extract a confession from a suspected terrorist. They were back on course now, but Donaldson was obviously now suggesting something which made Henry feel queasy again, something which went against his sense of decency ⦠but for the sake of the safety of his family, Henry knew he would have to surmount it and fuck the ethics.
âAnd anyway,' Donaldson wittered on, âall I want to do is have a chat with the guy and also, as I'm not a British cop, I'm not actually bound by your police procedural stuff, am I?'
âYou probably are,' Henry said.
âDoes that mean yes?'
Henry nodded glumly.
âHey, don't worry, pal.' Donaldson slapped him hard on the back, causing Henry to hiss with pain. âI'll just squeeze a few of his tubes, that's all.'
H
enry considered making a phone call, but as it was his wont to turn up unexpectedly and catch people on the back foot, he jumped into the Rover next day and headed out of Kirkham to the M55. Donaldson had been up early, having crashed for the night in a sleeping bag in the spare bedroom, and his Jeep was conspicuous in its absence. Henry shivered when he speculated what Karl might be up to.
But Henry was on his own mission, which might or might not help ID the man who attempted to murder Kate.
The journey had been prompted by the thought he'd had on yesterday's stroll with Andrea Makin, something he knew he needed to follow up.
He went east on the motorway, M55 â M6 â M61 â M60, then off on the A56 and towards Manchester through Prestwich until about two miles short of the city centre he drew on to the forecourt of the car sales dealership specializing in MGs and Rovers. He slotted into a space on the customer parking lot and entered the plush showroom. He couldn't see Ken, the boozy-breathed salesman with whom he had previously dealt. He approached the counter, behind which sat an extremely pretty young lady, unnecessarily layered in make-up.
âHello, sir, may I help?'
âI'm looking for Ken, salesman Ken. I don't recall his surname.'
The young lady's name badge said she was called Sandy. âKen Connolly?'
âThat'd be the one,' Henry guessed. âMany Kens here?'
âThere have been a few â a lot of our salesmen seem to be called Ken' â she giggled â âbut he was the most recent.'
âBe him, then.'
âI'm afraid he's left.'
âFor the day, for breakfast?'
âFor ever ⦠he resigned. One minute here, next gone.'
âOh.'
âCan anyone else help?'
âWhy did he leave?'
âI don't know. It was very sudden, unexpected.'
âCould I see the manager, then?' Henry fished out and flashed his warrant card. âCop,' he said, smiling.
âI'll give Mr Lennox a ring.' Sandy picked up the phone with a finely manicured hand and dialled a short number. Henry glanced towards a glass-fronted office at the back of the showroom where a desk-bound individual in short sleeves picked up a phone.
âMr Lennox? It's Sandy on reception.' Henry saw the man look out towards her. âThere's a policeman here would like a word with you.' Henry gave Lennox a little wave. He saw the man's mouth move. âNo, I don't know what it's about.' Sandy pressed the silent button and asked Henry, âCan I say what it's about?' by which time Henry had had enough.
âI'll tell him myself.'
He set off towards Mr Lennox in his glass-fronted office.
Lennox was a fat, sweaty man with pools of damp under his arms and another across his chest underneath his large man-boobs. He didn't smell, which was a bonus, and was quite helpful â two things which endeared him to Henry.
âAhh,' Lennox said, after Henry had explained why he wanted to see Ken Connolly. âOne of many, I suspect â well, several.'
âSeveral what?'
âShady deals done by Ken Connolly.'
âWhat sort of shady deals?'
âWe suspect Ken of skimming from the trade-in values of bangers against new vehicles. Unfortunately it's not something we could prove, so the management had a word in his lughole, told him we were on to him, and he decided to quit whilst the going was good.'
âWhat was he up to?'
âFalsifying trade-ins, getting cash from customers for a better on-paper deal ⦠something I suspect he's been doing for years at various places. He's worked all over the place.'
âWere the police ever contacted to investigate him?'
Lennox shook his head. âIt was only a suspicion.'
âAnd he never got challenged, either?'
âNot as such, just got told he was being scrutinized.' Lennox picked up an envelope on his desk. âHis P45's in here. I was going to send it to him today, if he's still there. He's a bit of a nomad, old Ken.'
Henry took the envelope, saw the address was in Rawtenstall, which was back on his home turf of Lancashire. Henry commented on the address.
âA lot of people commute into Manchester from there.'
âWhat exactly was Ken doing?'
âBasically getting a backhander from likely customers in order to get a better trade-in deal on their vehicles. Or, for cash buyers, getting a wodge of cash â by asking people to go and come back with cash-in-hand â from which he'd take a percentage, falsify the paperwork and get a whole load of drinking and gambling money. Happens all the time in the car trade, especially for sort of mid-sized concerns like ours with a pretty big turnover. There's a million scams going on.'
âBloody hell,' Henry said, âif you can't trust a car salesman, who the hell can you trust these days?'
âIs that ironic or facetious?'
âBit of both, I imagine.' Henry smiled. âSo could that have happened to the Mondeo I traded in?'
Lennox shrugged. âIt's possible â and you turning up and asking about it maybe spooked him, too, made him decide to pack his bags a bit sooner.'
âI was after the name and address of the guy who bought it, though Ken did say it went for auction. He looked at some paperwork ⦠could you recheck it for me?'
âI could ⦠like, when?'
âRound about now, would be good.'
âWhy is it so urgent?'
âBecause the guy who bought the Mondeo is wanted for attempted murder and arson.'
Lennox gave an appreciative whistle.
âAlso, Ken did mention that you had good surveillance cameras. Digital recordings, he said.'
âYeah.'
âI wondered if there was any chance of seeing if anyone, a customer, showed an interest in the Mondeo? Ken said he'd do that for me, but he seems to have welched on his word.'
Lennox looked extremely pained. âThere is a chance of looking at the tapes, but the part-exes are usually put right at the back of the lot and they're not covered by the cameras. We could see, I suppose.'
âIf you show me how to do it, I'll do the legwork, if that's what's bothering you.'
Lennox raised himself
Titanic
ally from his seat, which seemed to breathe a sigh of relief. He led Henry into another office off the service area in which there was a bank of four, four-by-four TV monitors on a desk, each giving a different view of the forecourt. Also on the desk was a personal computer. Lennox sat at the desk and pulled the keyboard up to his large gut and adjusted the computer screen so he could see it better.
âThey're all linked up to this computer,' he explained. âVery state of the art, but worth it.' He tapped a few keys, logged in and asked Henry what dates Henry was interested in. He searched for the first date, and the screen split into four. âThis is oh-six-hundred on the day you brought the car in ⦠can you recall what time you came in?'
âTen-ish.'
Lennox fast-forwarded the day in question and stopped at ten, then clicked from screen to screen. One of them showed the entrance/exit of the forecourt, two others the stock on display and one cutting back and forth to the showroom itself.
There was a lot of coming and going and then a Ford Mondeo drew on to the forecourt, driven by Henry.
âMy poor car,' he said.
Lennox looked over his shoulder. âRight, sometime between then and when the car was sold, the guy who bought it must have come into the garage, unless it went for auction, as Ken says. If I show you how to scan through the images, can I leave it with you?'
âThat would be good.'
âAnd I'll have a look at the paperwork for you.'
Thus trained, Henry began his task, part of his mind wondering what Karl Donaldson was up to.
âWhy did you want to meet me here?' Andrea Makin asked. She and Donaldson were standing in the car park at Preston Royal Infirmary. âSounded mysterious.'
âI want to do a favour for a friend. I might need some help.'
âRiiight,' she said, drawing out the syllable suspiciously.
âAnd maybe do one for you.'
Inappropriately, she thought there was only one favour Donaldson could do for her. It had nothing to do with crime, but there might be some punishment involved. She cleared her mind of such meanderings. âGo ahead.'
Donaldson's face darkened. âI want to do something that you, the cops, can't do at this moment in time.' Andrea waited. âYou don't have to know I'm doing it and you can deny all knowledge if the brown stuff gets flung everywhere. However, I do need assistance from you in facilitating this thing.'
âIt's not like you to beat about the bush, but I take it it's about Ingram?'
The American nodded. âI want an off-the-record discussion with him.'
âHe's not fit to be interviewed just yet.'
âThis won't be an interview.'
âWhat will it be?'
âAn exploration of his inner knowledge and self,' he suggested.
âYou mean a baring of the soul? An opportunity to get something off his chest? An unburdening?'
âThese are all nice, appropriate terms.'
âBut highly unethical and illegal to boot.'
âThere's always a downside,' he said, and pouted. He gave her a naughty smile which sent a shiver to a certain part of her body. âBut sometimes that's the way of the world and the way I see it is this â if he can unload something valuable to me, it may prevent something very nasty from happening to someone else. And if there's nothing to confess, then so be it.'
Andrea looked at the hospital. Ingram had initially been airlifted to Rochdale Infirmary, but with a bit of connivance between the police and the medical world, once the patient had been stabilized he had been transferred to Preston under guard. Here it was easier for Lancashire police to keep track of him and provide the manpower needed to watch him. He was presently under twenty-four-hour armed guard.