Seymour smirked. Henry smirked back.
âWho's the witness?'
âAh well, that's part of the problem . . . it's Mo Khan's daughter, Naseema . . . not a bad-looking bird for a Paki, actually.'
Henry flinched and stifled an uncomfortable cough. He looked round quickly to see if anyone had overheard Seymour's offensive remark. The coast was clear. Henry's unease was because the use of derogatory terms such as âPaki' were a definite no-no in the police these days. It was considered to be an outright racist term and managers were expected to put staff right about such things at the very least. But Henry could not be bothered to tackle it at the moment. He had far too much on his plate and the thought of getting to grips with such a touchy subject on his first day back, his first hour back at that, and probably alienating Seymour at the same time, did not have any appeal. Maybe it was cowardice, but an ally like Seymour in the CID might prove useful â and just at that moment, Henry thought he needed all the friends he could get.
Seymour, unaware of his gaff and Henry's inner dilemma, checked his watch. âShe's due in at seven.'
âRight, thanks.'
âAnd Joey Costain is due to answer his bail at quarter past . . . no doubt with tame brief in tow.'
âShit â that was a bit of good planning,' Henry said sarcastically. âSuppose they bump into each other on their way in? If they do, you can kiss the parade bye bye â and the job, too.'
âYeah, that's true.' Seymour did not seem overly concerned.
âWho's the officer in charge?'
âDI Roscoe.'
Henry blew out a lungful of exasperated breath. âBetter go and sort it out.' He turned to leave the office but was stopped in his tracks as the new DI, accompanied by a DS called Mark Evans and two detective constables, bustled purposely in through the door. The DS and the DCs acknowledged Henry with muted embarrassment, their eyes running up and down his uniform. Henry caught Roscoe's eye, gave a nod and edged quickly out of the office, feeling very uncomfortable.
As he trotted down the stairs, he realised why he felt like that. It was because of the eyes and expressions of those three jacks, all members of his team not long ago. They all seemed to be looking and sneering at him as though he'd been demoted and was no longer one of them. An outsider. A uniform. Even though he had expected this, it hurt him. Deeply. But what wounded his fragile ego even more was that his place on the branch had been taken by someone like DI Roscoe.
âEverything's sorted.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âThe witness and her brother are waiting in your office â accompanied by a policewoman â all the stooges are in the ID suite being looked after by a couple of lads and I'll do the scribing for you. The video cameras have all been set up and everything else that you need to know is on this . . . idiot's guide, if you'll pardon the expression.' Sergeant Dermot Byrne handed Henry a laminated A4-size sheet of paper with a blow-by-blow explanation of how to run an identification parade.
âNo, you're right, Dermot â idiot's guide.'
The sergeant smiled sympathetically. âI don't think so really, but I did think you might need a chuck-up, this being your first tour of duty and all that.'
âYou are dead right. Thanks, I appreciate it.' Henry genuinely meant it.
âAll we need now is for Joey Costain to answer his bail, but he's got a few minutes yet.'
âBrilliant,' said Henry. He cast his eyes down the idiot's guide. âI think I'll have a quick word with the witness.'
âI'll keep an eye out at the front desk for Joey and let you know when he lands.'
Byrne walked away towards the front desk and Henry thanked God for watching over him and providing a sergeant the calibre of Byrne who was worth his weight in gold.
Saeed Khan, scowling sullenly and lounging indolently against a filing cabinet, did not move when Henry walked into the inspectors' office. Henry gave him a quick once over, then ignored him and directed his attention to Naseema who was seated. Behind her, arms folded, looking very stern and intimidating, was a policewoman.
Henry had often had dealings with the Khan family, but had only ever caught glimpses of the daughter. She never seemed to be involved in any of the business, legit or otherwise, and Henry had never really given her much thought. Except for now â he had to agree that Dave Seymour's grudging accolade of her looks was spot on.
Naseema was an exceptionally beautiful young woman, exotically so, with dusky mysterious eyes, a wonderfully smooth complexion the colour of milk chocolate, and a small mouth shaped like a heart. She was dressed in a stunning red Indian trouser suit. Her slim legs were crossed, displaying finely boned ankles and petite feet in sandals. Henry knew she was twenty-three and unmarried. He did not know enough about her culture or religion to be certain as to whether this was an unusual state of affairs.
He introduced himself and offered her his hand which she shook with such delicate fingers that he could easily have crushed them. âI'll be running the identification parade, so there's just a few things I need to go through with you beforehand, OK?'
She nodded and looked past Henry towards her brother. Her face clouded over with annoyance as Saeed pushed himself away from the filing cabinet and said, âNo, not OK. You'll talk to her through me â is that understood?'
Henry bristled. He pursed his lips and slowly reappraised Saeed, a young man he had arrested twice previously for quite serious assaults. He had a quick temper and was always ready with a fist or a knife to ram home his point of view.
âIt's our custom,' Saeed stated.
âAnd it's a necessity for me to talk directly to witnesses â unless they don't speak English, in which case I'll use an official interpreter. And I know that your sister speaks English, so while I respect your customs, I have a job to do here and not much time to do it in â so we'll achieve more, quickly, if you let me get on without interruption, OK?' He spoke to Naseema, âIf that's OK with you?'
Throughout the exchange Henry had noticed that she had been glowering stonily at Saeed. Henry knew, therefore, he was on to a winner. She smiled radiantly, if falsely, at Henry. âThat will be just fine, Inspector,' she said with a hint of triumph.
Henry shot Saeed a quick warning glance and he backed down with an angry snarl of his lips, eyes blazing at his sister.
Henry wondered what the undercurrent of tension was all about; maybe Dave Seymour had hit the nail on the head with the Shakespearean scenario. It was obvious there was a sparking friction between the two siblings and Henry began to suspect that maybe the family had lost control of Naseema. Was she a wild child? Was she seeing one of the Costains? If so, this whole job could be a tricky one to handle. For the most transient of moments Henry was glad that his only involvement was the ID parade . . . but it was only a passing shiver of thought: secretly he would have given his back teeth to be the Officer in Charge.
âGood,' said Henry. âYou've already made a statement, I believe.'
âYes, she has,' Saeed interrupted rudely, âwhich says that Joey Costain assaulted our father in her presence in an unprovoked racist attack. This parade will just confirm that.'
âSaeed!' Naseema clucked with hostility. âLet me speak, please.'
âAnd don't give me the pleasure of showing you out of the police station. Just let her answer â OK?' Henry had had enough of Saeed now.
Saeed's nostrils flared wide.
Henry turned slowly back to Naseema. âDid you actually see Joey Costain assaulting your father?'
She thought hard for a few seconds. âThey had a push and shove while I was there, but nothing much. I saw them walk away together towards the bus station. I knew they were going to fight. Next time I saw my father he was being put in an ambulance.'
Henry nodded. He was about to say something when suddenly the office door burst open, no knock. A huffing and puffing Dave Seymour stood there, his bulk filling the doorway, tie askew, shirt stretched over his expanding gut. But for the hair â Seymour's was short, neatly trimmed â he reminded Henry of Kojak's sidekick, Stavros. The journey from the CID office, with his insides recently filled with kebab and cola, had exhausted him. âHenry . . . can I have a quick word?' His eyes took in the Khan brother and sister, then returned to Henry. âIn private . . . urgent.'
âI'll be back in a moment.' Henry smiled at Naseema, stared coldly at Saeed, then followed Seymour outside. As he closed the door, Saeed launched a verbal assault on his sister in Urdu.
âWhat is it, Dave?'
âBit of bad news, actually.' Seymour flinched. âMo Khan clocked out about half an hour ago. We've now got a murder investigation on our hands.'
âFuck,' said Henry eloquently.
âH
ow would you feel,' Henry demanded, âif I knew your father was dead and I didn't tell you?' He raised his eyebrows, daring a response. âIf we don't tell them, they'll have good grounds for a complaint and we will look completely and utterly stupid and insensitive. We have no justification for it at all.'
Detective Inspector Roscoe swallowed and stared coldly at Henry. Roscoe had been the one who had decided that Naseema and Saeed Khan should not be informed about their father's death before the ID parade took place.
âDespite that,' Roscoe said stubbornly, âI still don't think we should tell them. That way no pressure is put on the girl â at least no more pressure than she's already under. If we drag a hysterical, sobbing female down a line of stooges, it's more than likely she will not perform.'
âPerform to our standards, you mean, by picking Joey Costain out of the line-up?'
Henry saw he had momentarily hit a nerve before the DI spoke again. âWhat I mean is that she needs to be able to think straight, keep her head together and pick the little shit out.'
âIf she wants to pick him out,' Henry observed.
âYeah, well, there is that to it,' Roscoe conceded. âRumour has it they're shagging each other.'
There was a beat of silence between the two officers. They were discussing this delicate matter in a corridor â a location often used to conduct police business â both trying not to raise their voices. The atmosphere between them was fragile to start with, but when Dave Seymour had told Henry that Roscoe did not want the relatives informed of Mo Khan's death until after the ID parade, it had smacked Henry's âethical' button. He had immediately stormed up to the CID office and confronted Roscoe. There was a degree of devilment involved too, because he knew that if he had been in Roscoe's position, he would probably have pushed for the same thing: a nice, clean parade at which the suspect was identified â then arrested for murder.
But he wasn't in Roscoe's position and the last thing Henry needed was to be the subject of a complaint, which if attached to the ârace card' could be very uncomfortable. As much as anything, he was watching his own back. He had enough complications in his life without taking on any further grief.
âNo easy answer,' Roscoe admitted. She looked thoughtfully down at her wedding ring, twisting it around her finger, while making a clicking noise with her tongue. âI could really do with a quick result and, to be honest, I know that if we did tell them about Mo's death, Joey Costain would probably have to be re-bailed and I'd've lost the element of surprise. I intended to drop it on his toes tonight, because he won't know Mo Khan has died.' She was pensive. Henry watched her face carefully. âAnd that estate they live on is buzzing with tension. If Joey Costain was out of the picture, the place would be a lot calmer. He's a real shit stirrer. A riot up there â and that's not an exaggeration â is the last thing the town needs this week with the conference starting tomorrow.'
Henry let her ramble on, while he remained tight-lipped. His problem was the here and now: how to deal properly and sympathetically with the brother and sister. Yet he could appreciate where Roscoe was coming from, even though she had not expressed it in so many words. She was new to the job. This was her first big case here in Blackpool and there was a good chance Roscoe and her crew could bottom it without help from the headquarters SIO team. And if they did, her credibility rating would soar with her team of detectives, predominantly made up of white males lying in wait for women officers to trip up and show their fannies.
âSo what are you going to do? I know you probably don't like me very much because I've got your job, even though we hardly know each other. I can understand if you don't feel inclined to help me, but the end might justify the means in this case . . . for the greater good.' She obviously had more to say, but shut up there and let the words hang around, knowingly playing on Henry's instincts as a jack . . . former jack, that is.
He rubbed his face, jaded already. Not much more than an hour into the shift and he was having to look to his morals now . . . morals he had often hung out to dry when he had been a detective, just to get that result.
âRight, this is how it stands, Jane: we haven't had this conversation; I don't know that Mo Khan is dead; you haven't told me a thing, OK? But the minute this ID parade is over, I want to know. Get me?'
âThanks, Henry.' Roscoe sighed with relief. Henry was pleased to hear her words were not tinged with triumph. However, he was highly annoyed with himself for being swayed from what he knew was the right course of action.
âBy the way,' Roscoe said. âI didn't ask for this posting, I was given it.'
Henry spun quickly away without responding and headed towards the identification suite, hoping that his decision would not be one which would come back like a crocodile and bite his arse. It was 7.15 p.m.
âHow much longer are we going to give him?' The question from Sergeant Dermot Byrne was directed at Henry Christie.