Read Crunch Time Online

Authors: Nick Oldham

Crunch Time (21 page)

BOOK: Crunch Time
10.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Where are we?' Henry asked brightly.

Neither one replied.

Henry's right hand reached slyly to the door handle, which he tried and found, with a rushing feeling rising inside him, to be child-locked.

The track continued up the moor. The car bounced down a particularly deep rut that threw Henry up and across the seat.

‘Jeez!'

He strained to see into the dark. He twisted around and saw the lights of Rochdale in the distance.

Mitch turned in through some stone gates and drove up to a farmhouse, security lights coming on as the car stopped. From what Henry could see, it looked as though it was no longer a real farmhouse, but had been converted into a des res with a wide gravel drive.

‘Looks nice, this,' he said admiringly.

‘My new pad,' Ingram said. ‘Ops centre.'

The rain lashed down as they climbed out of the car, Mitch opening the door for Henry, and dashed to the front door, Ingram ahead.

Henry took in as much as possible, noticing a scruffy white van parked to one side of the drive, no other vehicles. They had left the Peugeot in Manchester.

Then they were in, the lights on, out of the rain. Even as Henry stood in the entrance hall and removed his jacket, he saw the place had been superbly modernized.

‘Nice, nice,' he said. There was a grandfather clock in the entrance hall which looked like a genuine antique, which struck two, making Henry jump and realize he was in the middle of nowhere with a man who was a murderer and another who, possibly, was far worse. And no one knew where he was.

His anus contracted.

Donaldson's mobile rang: it was Kate Christie.

‘What's happening, Karl?' Her voice cracked.

‘Nothing concrete yet.'

‘Do you think Henry's in trouble?'

He sighed, impatient with his own lack of knowledge. ‘Knowing Henry, he'll be fine,' he said, pulling himself together for Kate's sake.

‘I trust you,' Kate said simply. She did not need to add anything more and terminated the call.

Donaldson looked squarely at Andrea Makin.

Their eyes interlocked until they could no longer look at each other.

‘How do we take this forward?' Donaldson asked.

She shrugged helplessly.

‘You know the number Henry called from, the new mobile number, don't you?'

Andrea nodded.

‘Well, let's get in a position to track the signal if the mobile comes back on … we can be ready for that, can't we?'

‘Yeah.'

Donaldson and Andrea were still at BVH. Costain was under the knife and the drill. The police in Poulton were searching the area for a lost child. The cops in Stratford were working on a murder scene. Henry Christie had not been heard of for hours.

‘Do it,' Donaldson said.

‘OK.' She punched a number in her phone and called Dave Anger. He was the one who could get the necessary authorization to locate mobile phone signals. She turned away from Donaldson as she made her request to Anger.

Donaldson paced the corridor, waiting for her to finish.

‘Done,' she said, closing her phone.

They regarded each other again.

‘If Costain was attacked by Ingram, or by his cronies, and he did blab, then Henry could well be dead,' Andrea said. ‘Ingram doesn't take prisoners.'

‘I get the picture.'

‘So what the fuck do we do?'

‘Has anyone checked Ingram's address?'

‘He's been living in a Travelodge in Manchester. He checked out last evening.'

‘No other addresses?'

Andrea looked blankly at him. ‘He's only recently come north and kept a very low profile … started from scratch, covering his tracks all the way.'

‘What about associates?'

Andrea told him about Mitch Percy and that he, too, had come north with Ingram and started from scratch.

‘What about their mobile phones? Do you have their numbers, their service providers?'

‘They use and dispose of pay-as-you-go ones all the time. Impossible to keep track of.'

‘Basically, you don't know very much about Ingram.'

She shook her head.

‘So we're fucked?'

‘Looks that way.'

The lounge was spacious and high-ceilinged, beautifully furnished, big screen TV, wooden beams, the whole
Lancashire Life
touch.

Henry lounged in one of the leather armchairs, sinking into its soft cushions, whisky glass in hand, a shot of Grouse in it which he had watered down. Ingram was on the settee, Mitch tight in another armchair, both with drinks in their hands.

A pornographic DVD was playing on the TV, which was affixed to the chimney breast, like a cinema screen. Its images and dialogue were just background and Henry had no trouble ignoring it. Mitch was riveted, engrossed, and Henry hoped to hell he didn't feel the need to whip out his cock and start masturbating.

‘Mitch said you did good today,' Ingram told Henry.

‘More by luck than judgement,' Henry agreed reluctantly. ‘My first double murder, you know.'

‘It needed doing.'

‘I would've appreciated some warning.'

‘Best to go in at the deep end.'

Henry shook his head. ‘I prefer short, simple steps.'

‘Mitch mentioned property management to you?'

‘In passing.' Henry was astonished by the subject change, as though the murder of two men was just another business thing. But that, terrifyingly, was exactly how these men were. Killing meant nothing. Just another tool in their day-to-day life. Something that ‘needed doing'.

Henry felt nauseous. He sipped his drink, sensing something in the atmosphere, something dark and scary. He knew he needed to keep his wits about him. He glanced at Mitch, who moved uncomfortably in the chair, pushing his hand down over his crotch as he watched the DVD.

‘I'll have a lot of property soon. It'll need looking after. I need someone trustworthy to run it.'

‘And that's me?'

‘Very definitely.'

‘So you went to see Troy Costain today.'

‘Uh-huh – debt taken care of.'

‘You paid him?'

‘You could say that … now all you need to worry about is me, but there'll be plenty of ways to repay me.'

Mitch was now kneading his cock, which, thankfully, was still inside his trousers.

Ingram said, ‘Do you like the house?'

‘Very smart.'

‘Knock-down price, real bargain. The previous owner was only too glad to sell to me.'

Henry shivered wondering what that meant.

‘It's mostly renovated, but there's barns and outbuildings not yet touched. Lots of possibilities. Want to see them?'

‘Now?' Outside, the rain continued to hammer remorselessly.

‘Yeah, now.' Ingram glanced at his henchman. ‘Oi, let go of it, will you? Time for a guided tour.'

Mitch reluctantly removed his hand.

On the big screen a sexual act was taking place between two men and a little girl who, to Henry, looked no more than twelve years old.

‘I need to be getting home,' Henry whined.

‘Nah – tour first, then I'll call you a taxi,' Ingram said.

‘No, really, I need to get gone.'

‘No, like I said: tour first.'

Andrea and Donaldson had moved to the hastily commandeered incident room at Poulton Police Station. She pinched the bridge of her nose, a severe headache cutting through her skull like an axe. Donaldson, still fighting the residue of earlier alcohol, watched her, feeling helpless and foolish.

‘There's nothing to say that Troy Costain was assaulted by Ingram, nor that he abducted the girl,' Donaldson said.

Andrea just shook her head.

The room they were in was nothing more than a former games room where there had once been a three-quarter size snooker table, now removed. A dartboard hung lonely on the wall, two darts shoved into the bull, their feathered flights broken. The third dart was nowhere to be seen.

The hanging lights that had once lit up the baize illuminated an old desk that stood where the snooker table had once been.

It was not a good incident room.

In the morning they would transfer to the newly built incident room at Blackpool.

‘I hate undercover work,' Andrea admitted.

Donaldson nodded. He knew she had once lost an undercover cop. He had also lost agents and it was a terrible experience.

‘Henry knows what he's doing. He'll be fine,' Donaldson said.

Her face twisted desperately. ‘God, I hope so.'

The door opened and Dave Anger came into the room. They raised their faces expectantly; however, he did not exude confidence in his manner.

‘Nothing from the hospital yet,' he reported. ‘Nothing on the missing girl and nothing from the mobile phone company.'

‘The guy who owned this was into cars, doing them up, restoring them,' Ingram explained. They had toured the residential area of the farm – six bedrooms, three bathrooms, etc. – and Ingram had sounded like an estate agent. Now they had stepped outside into the wild night, a blast of cold moorland air and rain hitting then hard.

Henry checked his watch. It was going on three, not a time to be being shown around anyone's property, he thought. They stood at the front door and looked across at the outbuildings, a series of low barns and middens and one stand-alone building with a sliding door.

He wondered why Ingram was feeling the need to show him around. The boasting criminal?

However, something felt terribly wrong.

‘Hell,' Ingram hissed at the weather.

‘You want to give this a miss, boss?' Henry said.

‘Hey, I like that. You called me boss.'

‘That's what you are, isn't it?' Henry said, buttering him up.

‘Yeah, suppose I am … let me just show you something across in that building.' He pointed to the one with the sliding door. ‘It used to be the owner's garage and workshop. Won't take long. It's brill.' He put his head down and trudged against the weather across the yard.

Mitch gave Henry a shove, propelling him on.

After a moment of fumbling with the big lock, Ingram slid back the ten-foot-high door, reached in for the light switch, found it, then stepped into the garage. Henry and Mitch clustered in behind him, glad to get somewhere dry. Even the short dash across the yard had drenched them.

It was a huge building, probably had once been a hay barn. Steps up one side led on to a separate, suspended first floor which was fitted like a gallery, reminding Henry of a duplex apartment.

‘Impressive,' Henry said, though the thought of a workshop/garage didn't appeal to him. God wouldn't have given the world mechanics if he'd meant us to fix our own cars, he'd once pointed out to Kate. He wasn't a practical man in that sense … now maybe if this had been a home cinema …

‘Come here,' Ingram said, crooking a finger for Henry to follow. He led Henry across the concrete floor towards a big, rectangular sheet of metal that covered a vehicle inspection pit. This was hinged on one side, with a steel handle on the other and was secured to the floor by a heavy padlock. It was like the doorway to hell … a few moments later Henry realized it was the pit of hell.

‘Just have a look at this.'

Ingram indicated for Mitch to move. He bent down with difficulty, his fat legs not built for squatting. He produced a key with which he unfastened the padlock, then heaved up the metal cover, which creaked on its rusting hinges, then let it drop away, revealing the inspection pit. It was about five feet deep, three feet across, eight feet long and lined with concrete.

As the light from the barn illuminated it, Henry immediately saw the girl. Maybe ten, maybe twelve years old, sitting huddled in one corner of the pit, knees drawn up to her chin. Her hands were bound with parcel tape that also gagged her mouth. Frightened eyes peered up at the three men towering over her and she sank further back into the corner of the pit. A muffled sound of fear was trapped in her throat.

Henry stepped back, shocked. ‘What the hell is this?' he spluttered, but his voice was cut short as Mitch's left arms wrapped around his neck and tightened with a powerful jerk, choking him. Mitch yanked Henry backwards, taking him off balance, and thrust a gun into his face.

Ingram stepped in front of Henry.

‘You've become a problem,' Ingram said. With that he punched Henry in the stomach. Hard. Driving the air out of him. He could not double over, as Mitch was holding him tight with his arm, arching him backwards. The gun remained skewered into his cheek, the muzzle cold. ‘Down,' Ingram said to Mitch, who lowered Henry on to his knees right at the edge of the inspection pit. When Henry was in position, Mitch growled, ‘Do not move,' then released his grip, stepped away. His hand went into Henry's jacket pocket and found his mobile phone. He took it out and threw it on the floor, crushing it with his heel.

Henry groaned and held his guts.

Then the muzzle of the gun was rammed into the back of his neck at the point where his head balanced on the backbone. Ingram grabbed his arms and tied them behind his back using the same parcel tape the girl had been trussed up with.

It happened quickly, expertly, frighteningly, and within moments Henry was kneeling on the edge of the pit, hands bound, a gun pressed into his neck, looking down into the blackness at a kidnapped girl.

‘What the fuck …?' he tried to say. Mitch silenced him by slamming the butt of the gun across his head, knocking him on to his left side.

The gun was forced into his face again.

Mitch's face was close to his ear.

‘First thing I noticed was a change of mobiles,' Mitch hissed. ‘One day I checked one; the next day it was a different one; then it was back to the original.'

‘But people often have several mobiles,' Ingram said. He was standing somewhere behind Henry, out of his peripheral vision. ‘But today I found out for sure.'

BOOK: Crunch Time
10.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Bargaining for Baby by Robyn Grady
Snow by Tracy Lynn
Guy Renton by Alec Waugh
The View from the Top by Hillary Frank
Falling for Autumn by Topham Wood, Heather