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Authors: Nick Oldham

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BOOK: Psycho Alley
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After that, things became slightly less clear.

‘Didn't see that one coming,' Henry admitted with a short and bitter laugh, then groaned as a sharp needle of intense pain seared through his cranium. ‘Dear me,' he added stiffly. He was sitting on a low wall surrounding flowerbeds in Fleetwood town centre, holding the side of his head, cradling it in his left hand. The front of his face below his left eye was tender, already slightly swollen, his eye starting to close. His cheekbone felt like it could have been fractured, but then he was always one to exaggerate the extent of an injury. ‘I can't take you anywhere,' he moaned.

An unruffled Jane Roscoe sat on the wall beside him, philosophically inspecting the knuckles on her right hand, which were grazed and sore. ‘Sorry,' she said. ‘It was an instinctive thing. I just swung in the direction of whoever grabbed me. Unfortunately it just happened to be you.'

‘You pack a good punch.'

‘Sorry, again … but then maybe I actually knew it was you who got hold of me and maybe punching you good and hard is something I've been wanting to do subconsciously for a long time. Y'know – a sort of Freudian thing?' She grinned maliciously. ‘But I guess neither of us will ever know, until maybe I go for some deep counselling.'

‘Let's hope it's out of your system, then.'

She shrugged doubtfully. ‘Who knows?'

Henry touched his face gingerly and winced. ‘Gonna be a shiner,' he said. ‘God, I hate fighting women. So much nastier than blokes.' He checked his watch: ten thirty-five p.m. ‘What d'you think about calling it off for the rest of the night?' he asked Jane. ‘Maybe we could get a drink somewhere decent on the way home?'

‘You asking me out?'

‘For a drink … in the workplace sense, not the romantic sense … I thought we'd moved on from that,' he said, hoping it didn't sound too cruel.

She nodded. ‘OK, I'll have that.'

Henry spoke into his new Generation 2 TETRA personal radio. He ensured the rest of his team, who were scattered about in various hostelries about town, were receiving and stood them down with instructions to resume duty at nine a.m. on Monday. They all acknowledged Henry and he breathed a sigh of relief. ‘Phew – a weekend off. I think I'll have Monday, too.'

‘Going to surprise Kate?' Roscoe probed, her mouth twisted rather like the metaphorical knife she was holding.

Henry shrugged, not wanting to answer. The affair he and Roscoe had was a thing of the past, for him at least, but there were still some raw nerve endings exposed. He could tell from the tone of her voice that she still had ‘issues' to deal with and put to bed, so to speak. It didn't help matters that they worked in such close proximity. Sometimes it was hard to get away from each other, as tonight had proved.

They walked in silence back to Fleetwood police station where their cars were parked in the back yard. Henry's eye throbbed painfully, the swelling growing, maybe a visit to A & E on the cards, but not tonight. Friday meant busy with drunks, accident victims and a long wait. Maybe he'd get Kate to run him in in the morning if it was still a problem.

‘We did well to get out of that place,' Henry said, breaking the silence. He had a hazy memory of himself and Jane staggering out of the pub – which had been still fighting in lumps – as the uniformed police contingent arrived en masse. ‘We'd have looked pretty stupid in a cell, wouldn't we?'

Jane did not respond, her face cold, her attitude now icy.

Once in the yard, he and Jane stood awkwardly by their cars. Jane scraped the toe of her shoe on the ground and looked up at Henry. ‘I know I've given you a hard time since we … y'know … since you dumped me, but that's because it hurt… it hurt me so much, you hurt me. I thought we were on the verge of something,' she said quietly. ‘But it didn't happen. I fell in love with you and it hurt, OK? Still does.'

Henry nodded dumbly. He was trying not to do ‘feelings' any more, because he was basically very bad at ‘going there'. All he wanted to do now was get on with his life, not get involved with anyone again, concentrate on making his life good with Kate, buy an expensive hi-fi system, maybe indulge in a plasma screen TV, collect films on DVD and go away for as many foreign holidays as possible; he was due to retire in three years – when he reached the grand old age of forty-nine – and he wanted to approach that time with a light heart and an easy existence. He'd had enough trauma with feelings, enough of making a fool of himself over women, he hoped, yet he did have a weakness of character that meant he had a tendency to press the self-destruct button without thought of consequence. Something he had to fight.

He sighed. ‘Maybe going for a drink isn't a good idea.'

‘Maybe not,' she agreed. ‘Get a bit of alcohol down me and next thing you know, we'd be shagging. See you Monday.'

‘Oh, about Monday … can you cover for me?'

‘Cheeky bastard,' she uttered through gritted teeth. She regarded him chillingly and exhaled a long, aggrieved breath, very close to telling him where he should stick it. ‘OK,' she relented.

‘Thanks, appreciate it.'

‘I wonder what Chief Superintendent Anger'll say about you not being there on Monday?' she teased.

Anger was Henry's boss. Jane and Anger had formed a close alliance, both seeming to want to get Henry ditched, each for their own reasons. ‘Depends on what you tell him, I suppose. You could just say I've worked like hell for the past three months and I deserve a break. How about that?'

‘Or I could tell him you're a lazy git who hasn't got a cat in hell's chance of getting a result and should be replaced as SIO. Mm,' she said, tip of her forefinger on the cleft of her chin. ‘I wonder which one?'

‘Follow your conscience,' he said abruptly. ‘Whatever, I won't be in on Monday.' He strutted angrily to his car, his brittle mood not made any the better when he saw how busy the seagulls had been on his windscreen.

He watched Jane reverse, or lurch, her car out of the parking bay, slam it into first with an angry crunch and screech dramatically out of the police yard with a squeal of rubber. He had a friend, a frequently divorced friend, who had once told him without a trace of irony that women were not worth the hassle. ‘Henry, me old mate,' he'd said drunkenly once, ‘losin' it all for the sake of a wizard's sleeve is bloody crass stupidity.' He'd gone on to explain what he meant by ‘wizard's sleeve', but with a bit of imagination Henry had already worked out what he meant. Henry believed that if he and Jane had tipped over the ‘verge', as she had called it, he would now be living to regret it. He would have lost his family, which included two great daughters, and would have been nowhere near buying a plasma screen TV … all for the sake of a wizard's sleeve. He allowed himself a chuckle at his friend's crude metaphor, started his car, cleared the screen of bird shit and allowed it to warm up before setting off into the night.

He drove to the Esplanade, Fleetwood's seafront promenade, then did a right past the North Euston Hotel on to Queen's Terrace, the Isle of Man ferry terminal to his left. Way across the mouth of the River Wyre were the lights of the sleepy village of Knott End on Sea, and in the far distance to the north the hulking structures of the nuclear power station at Heysham, illuminated by an eerie orange phosphorescent-like glow.

His intention was to trundle down on to the romantically-named Dock Street, cut right across town then head south towards Blackpool and home, hoping he could make it safely with just the one good eye.

Henry's bleat to Jane about having worked long, hard hours for the past three months had only been partially true. With the exception of a two-week family holiday jaunt to Ibiza, he had actually been hard at it for nine months. For the first six he had been running a complex and particularly dangerous investigation into large-scale corruption and murder within the ranks of some Greater Manchester Police officers. This had entailed much overtime – all unpaid, of course – and several trips to Spain. During the course of the investigation, headed nominally by Lancashire's chief constable, but run directly by Henry, his life had been threatened twice and his firm's car had been regularly damaged whilst parked unattended in Manchester. These worrying occurrences had not deterred him from completing a job which had sent shockwaves through GMP. There were some loose ends, as there always are in such a far-reaching enquiry, but Henry was as satisfied as he could be at the outcome … and then he returned to the force, immediately being handed the reins of his present investigation and a new posting to boot.

He was currently a temporary detective chief inspector, a member of the Senior Investigating Officer (SIO) team which was based at force headquarters near to Preston. Or at least he had been. Whilst busy in Manchester, there had been some changes to the SIO team and its remit. It had been renamed the Force Major Investigation Team (FMIT) and in order to ensure there was an even better response to serious crime, the staff had been divvied up and given responsibility to provide cover to specific police divisions in the county. In the shuffle, during which Henry had no say, nor was consulted, he had ended up with responsibility for ‘A' and ‘B' Divisions, covering the west and north of Lancashire. He had been turfed out of his comfy headquarters office and relocated to Blackpool nick, where he had ended up in a shoe-box of an office with no heating and initially no phone or computer.

Having spent much of his career in Blackpool, and living there, the move wasn't entirely unwelcome. At least he did not have to do the forty-odd mile round trip each day through increasingly horrendous traffic. But in his paranoia, he did suspect the move could be the first step in ousting him from FMIT by putting him at arms' length and giving him an investigation to run which he had overheard described as having gone ‘tits up'.

‘Tits up.' A phrase to conjure with. It had been up to him to reverse the grim way in which the investigation had gone so far, and so far it had not gone well.

He gripped the steering wheel tightly as his thoughts spiralled around to his boss, Dave Anger, a man who made the phrase ‘intrusive supervision' look like something a nanny did. Anger was forever on Henry's shoulder, overseeing everything he was doing, questioning him, making him feel unsettled, making it known that if Henry did not pull the investigation out of the bag, he would be going on a sideways jaunt. He had made it clear that he did not want Henry on FMIT, for reasons that still remained unclear to Henry; what Henry did know was that although he detested Anger with a vengeance, it would take a crowbar to prise him out of the job he loved and was passionate about.

As Henry cruised along Dock Street, he tried to relax and put these things out of his mind. On reaching the roundabout at which he intended to swing right through town, he stopped at the give-way lines whilst waiting to see what the car coming on to the roundabout from the opposite direction was going to do. At first Henry thought the driver would loop right round, but at the last second, the car carried straight on in the direction Henry had just driven.

‘Thanks for the signal, mate,' Henry muttered, aiming his best glare of contempt at the man behind the wheel who turned face-on to Henry for the fleeting moment that the two cars were side by side, door by door. The yellow street lighting illuminated the man's face, very brightly for a flash – just long enough for Henry's one good eye to go for a ninety-five per cent certainty.

The man driving the car was none other than the slippery Mr George Uren.

As the cars passed in the night, separated by maybe four feet, and the man's head turned away, Henry caught a flick of the ponytail at the back of his head; Uren was known to sport such a haircut. Henry also caught sight of the dark profile of another person in the car, a man sitting low alongside Uren in the front passenger seat. He could not make out any of that man's features.

‘Shit,' Henry blurted, a flush of cop-adrenalin gushing into his system. ‘Even with one good eye,' he congratulated himself.

He stabbed the accelerator and raced around the roundabout, losing sight of the car for a few seconds. As he drove back up Dock Street, Henry thought he might have lost him. He decided not to race, just cruise easily around – and there he was, stationary at the side of the road, brake lights on, smoke puffing out of the exhaust. Henry sailed past, sneaking a quick sideways look at Uren, who was in deep conversation with the passenger, who remained in shadow. Henry pressed the transmit button on his PR, still on the same exclusive channel as previously.

‘DCI Christie – anyone receiving?' He would not have been surprised if no one answered. The team would all probably have switched off as soon as he'd stood them down. No one answered. ‘Rory? Jane? Deppo?' Still no response. Henry cursed silently, annoyed that his radio was inaccessible at the moment inside his jacket and he could have done with changing channels. He swore and drew into the side of the road a hundred metres ahead of Uren's car. He switched his lights off, kept his foot off the brake pedal and adjusted the rear view mirror so he could observe Uren and partner. They were still chatting. About what, Henry wondered. ‘Anyone receiving?' he asked hopefully into his PR.

‘Henry? That you?' It was Jane Roscoe's dulcet tones. Henry's face screwed up in frustration. Why did it have to be her? Still, any port in a storm … a saying which had often caused him to get into trouble in the past.

‘Yeah, it's me. Just sighted Uren. Where've you got to?'

‘Almost at Poulton-le-Fylde.'

Henry raised his eyebrows. To get so far in such a short time she must really have been motoring. He had obviously rattled her cage. ‘Can you start heading back? He's currently sat in a car on Queen's Terrace, more or less opposite the ferry terminal. In a dark-coloured Astra, blue, I think. Don't have the registered number yet. One other person on board, male, no other details. Uren is in the driver's seat. I'm parked further up the road, facing towards the North Euston Hotel.'

BOOK: Psycho Alley
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