The Nothing Job (26 page)

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Authors: Nick Oldham

BOOK: The Nothing Job
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‘What the hell's going on?' he said out loud – and with the instinct bred of almost thirty years of being suspicious of everyone and their motives, never trusting a damn soul, Henry followed Shafer out of the car park in the direction of Southport town centre.

Donaldson remained enigmatically silent, thinking, until he said, ‘
Something
's going on.'

With a scowl of derision, Henry looked sideways at him. ‘The great G-man has spoken,' he said with mock-reverence. ‘Americans can sleep safe in their beds knowing guys like you are protecting them.'

Donaldson punched Henry very hard on the shoulder, numbing his arm.

Henry gritted his teeth and held his arm tightly to prevent it from spasming. For a further few minutes he followed Shafer driving with one hand.

Shafer drove along Lord Street, Southport's main shopping street, which at that time of night was buzzing with good-natured revellers. He drew into the car park of a large Victorian-style hotel and Henry drove on, parking a hundred metres north on Lord Street itself.

‘That explained why he managed to turn up so quickly … if he was here.'

‘And if the creepy mortuary attendant called him,' Donaldson said.

‘I'd make that assumption.'

‘You know what happens when you assume?'

‘All right, hypothesize then!'

‘Anyway, I'm still not sure what we're doing here,' Donaldson said. He checked his watch. ‘Time's winged chariot and all that.'

‘It's just …' Henry's fingers tensed as though he was strangling somebody. ‘Just … like you said, G-man, something's not right.'

‘I said something's going on.'

‘Yeah, but what?'

‘The Merseyside cops are twitchy because a real detective's investigating them and maybe their procedures were lax or something and they managed to fox the other investigator …'

‘It's a theory … and thanks for the compliment.'

‘Aw, shucks, y'all know I didn't really mean it,' Donaldson drawled.

‘Whatever,' Henry said, his mind now somewhere else. ‘Why don't you sneak into the hotel and see if you can find out what's going on in there. Might be nothing, who knows?'

Donaldson sighed heavily. ‘OK.' He smacked the dashboard with the flat of his hands. Something sounded loose inside it.

‘I'll stay here, for obvious reasons.'

The bulky American rolled out of the Rover, pulled his jacket around himself and set off swiftly back to the hotel, passing Shafer's parked car and trotting up the steps into the spacious foyer, off which were several doors and a wide, sweeping staircase dead ahead.

Donaldson peered into a large restaurant, in which a few people were still at tables. No sign of Shafer. Next he checked a large lounge fitted with a variety of comfy chairs and Chesterfields; still no sign of Shafer. As expected, Donaldson found him in the bar. He was alone, being served. Donaldson glanced around the room. There was no obvious companion for Shafer, but he looked like a man who didn't drink alone. Donaldson crossed to the bar as Shafer paid for two shorts and mixers. He collected the drinks in his hands and retreated to chairs and a table in an alcove.

‘Yes, sir?' the bartender asked.

Donaldson ordered a mineral water, leaned on the bar and picked at a bowl of nuts, able to keep an eye on Shafer in the mirror behind the bar.

The Liverpool detective looked ill at ease, constantly readjusting his seating position, fiddling with the crease in his trousers.

A well-kept middle-aged lady sidled up to the bar next to Donaldson and gave him a dry smile. He raised his eyebrows. ‘Ma'am,' he said respectfully, bowing slightly.

‘Ooh, an American,' she giggled delightedly.

‘Yes, ma'am,' he said, broadening his accent and making her quiver visibly. She seemed suddenly out of breath, especially when Donaldson flashed his white teeth and raised his square chin so she could see his handsome profile better. She placed the palm of her hand across her ample bosom, her eyes a-twinkle. ‘May I buy you a drink?' he asked.

‘That would be most … Martini,' she gasped.

Donaldson crooked a finger at the barman and whilst he ordered, kept a watchful eye on the uncomfortable Shafer via the mirror.

‘That'll be four-twenty,' the barman said, placing the single drink in front of the lady, who must have thought that all her Christmases had come at once. Donaldson pulled out a fiver – then two things happened almost simultaneously.

A man appeared behind the woman, glaring angrily at her and Donaldson.

‘Esther, what the hell are you playing at?' This was the husband, Donaldson guessed, groaning inwardly.

‘Why, darling, I don't know what you mean,' Esther flushed guiltily.

‘I mean fucking flirting with strangers.' The husband squared aggressively to Donaldson. ‘She's a fuckin' married woman, pal.'

Donaldson noted that Shafer, as well as everyone else in the bar, was now looking in the direction of the incident. He flicked the fiver on the bar and said, ‘No harm done,' and started to turn away from the couple. That was when he caught sight of another man entering the bar. A man he recognized and who he knew would be able to recognize him.

He was about to spin away and scuttle out of the bar, head down, vainly hoping he hadn't been spotted, but his planned exit was rudely curtailed when the angry husband grabbed his right bicep and tried to hook him round.

In a swift, blurred move, Donaldson twisted to the man, who was probably ten years older than the American, and though well built was no match for him in any respect. Donaldson pinned him discreetly to the bar and jerked him tight, causing pain to appear in the man's face. Donaldson peered into his eyes, his breathing shallow.

‘Don't,' Donaldson said quietly, and nothing else. He released the man, who for some unaccountable reason had to hold himself upright on the bar, maybe because Donaldson's forefinger had touched a point somewhere behind his ear and caused some sort of shock wave to course through him. Donaldson then exited as speedily as possible, leaving the flirty wife to assist her husband remain upright on rubbery legs.

He hoped he managed to succeed to get out without being spotted, as out of the corner of his eye he saw Shafer rise and greet the man who had entered the bar, then shake hands.

So concerned was he about getting out unseen, he almost rammed face-to-face into another guy who was striding in the direction of the bar. At the last possible moment, Donaldson sidestepped with a muted apology, managed to avoid a collision and missed the man by a matter of inches.

For Donaldson that would have been the final insult. To have crashed in the hotel foyer whilst doing his level best to remain invisible.

He scurried out of the hotel and ran up to Henry's car, slotting in beside his friend.

‘That was quick.' Henry looked at him. ‘What happened?'

Donaldson eased out a long sigh, then gave Henry a worried look. ‘I got hit on by a sex-starved woman.'

‘That's a bad thing?'

‘But her husband intervened.'

‘That's a bad thing.'

‘I did spot Shafer. He was alone in the bar until someone joined him.' A beat. ‘Brace yourself … Dave Anger. He didn't see me, incidentally.'

The name hit Henry like a demolition ball, but then he thought quickly, So what? Two old mates having a drink. He expressed that thought.

‘Well, up to that point I might've agreed. Maybe your suspicious mind is seeing conspiracies where there are none.' Donaldson kept Henry's gaze, a serious expression on his ruggedly handsome features.

‘What changed your mind?'

‘The man I almost bulldozed into the ground as I left the bar in a hurry …'

Henry waited for the punchline, not even able to hazard a guess who he was talking about.

‘Walter Corrigan.'

Henry then blinked. ‘As in the Mafia fix-it guy?'

Donaldson nodded.

Stunned, confused, Henry's head tilted back and hit the head-rest, only to jerk forwards again before he spun around as the rear passenger door was yanked open and an uninvited guest dropped into the seat with a cheery, ‘Hi, guys.'

FIFTEEN

G
eorgia Papakostas immediately realized that there would be no quick solution to the murder of an innocent policeman on the steps of an aeroplane. But she also knew, as did all detectives, that the first seventy-two hours of any murder investigation are crucial. Maybe ninety-six hours in the case of a murdered cop … but the fact remained that if a breakthrough wasn't made within either of those times, then the likelihood of solving the crime would lessen considerably.

That is why she did not allow the grass to grow under her feet and, exhausted though she was, as soon as the plane taking Henry Christie, Bill Robbins and Paulo Scartarelli rose into the air from Pafos airport, she got down to the business of tracing a killer.

The last thing she needed, or so she thought at the time, was the appearance at her elbow of DI Tekke, her former lover and, for the moment, her current supervisor.

She had set up an Incident Room at Pafos police station and was pulling together a murder team. She was very much aware that the crime was one of the worst in living memory on the island and had been reported internationally and there was every chance she would quickly be sidelined or even ousted from the job once the big guns shouldered their way into it.

That much she accepted. After all, despite her record, she was still just a lowly detective sergeant, albeit on the brink of promotion. But she was conscientious and knew things had got to be moving quickly. Contacts had to be spoken to, favours had to be called in and at the very least she could do some real initial groundwork for the investigation before the rug was pulled from under her. Sadly she believed that the police in Cyprus were not really up to the task of running such a high-profile murder enquiry, especially once the high-rankers moved in.

Following her hunch about a sniper possibly being a hired gun from the Turkish side of the island, the first thing she had to arrange were checkpoints on all the main roads north, particularly at the border in Nicosia which was a route used regularly by the underworld. Then she needed to alert every detective on the island to get into the ribs of their informants and get an information flow coming in. Then she needed to do some personal phoning – at the same time as setting up a properly functioning Incident Room.

If she could achieve these things before she was booted, she would be, if not happy, at least satisfied she'd done the best she could.

She was on the phone cajoling some action out of a particularly lazy detective in the capital when Tekke trudged into the office she was using. He looked hangdog and very dishevelled.

Georgia's heart missed a few beats as she resisted the temptation to tell him to fuck off out of her life – in Greek, of course.

She concentrated on the phone call, aware of Tekke's brooding presence. ‘Yes, I know you've got some superb contacts,' she smarmed up to the lazy Nicosian detective. ‘Yeah … really interested in gunmen, riflemen …' She continued to schmooze him and got him to promise some action. All the while Tekke hovered, hands thrust deeply into pockets, continually sighing. Eventually Georgia replaced the phone and turned her attention to him. She was cold-faced and certainly did not want this complication.

‘What?' she demanded, rubbing her eyes wearily.

‘I've come to say I'm sorry,' he began falteringly. His eyes were stuck to the floor, but then he raised them. ‘It was silly to accuse you about that English detective …'

‘That was the least of our problems.'

‘I want us back together.'

She snorted and shook her head. ‘Won't work. Especially now that I'll be taking over your role. Too much friction, too much … bah! You just can't stand me being a good detective, can you?'

‘I could try.'

She told him to fuck off.

Six hours later, as refreshed as she would ever be after three hours' sleep and a long bath, she was back at work.

Much to her surprise she was allowed to pull the murder squad together and run with the investigation – and she was promoted there and then to DI to do it. She was, in fact, astounded by the faith her superiors put in her and her view of them changed somewhat. Maybe they weren't as dumb as they seemed?

This gave her an extra surge of energy and she was even more invigorated when the lazy detective from Nicosia called her and asked her to make to the capital
pronto
. An arrest had been made.

Two hours later she was driving through the gates of Nicosia.

‘I hear you and Tekke have split?' the detective half-enquired of Georgia. ‘Sorry to hear that.'

‘News travels fast,' she said stiffly.

The detective was in his mid-thirties, but was already sporting a Greek moustache and had the florid complexion of a drinker and the moth-eaten looks that reminded her sharply of Tekke. He was also, like many other Cypriot cops, always on the lookout for a score, even though he was married and had two daughters. Georgia could read it in his eyes.

‘Don't,' she warned him. His face fell abruptly. ‘I'm here to work, to solve the murder of a colleague, not to flirt or make dates – OK?'

He held up both hands defensively. His mouth became a thin, unpleasant line under his overgrown moustache.

‘Now what have we got?' she asked brusquely.

Pulling himself together the detective said, ‘This young guy was in a dirty fight last night. He ended up in hospital semi-conscious, drunk too. Head injury, but not serious. Uniform cops went to speak to him and he pulled a gun on them, held them at bay for half an hour before he fell over and shot out the ceiling of the emergency room.'

‘And?' she demanded. ‘What's the connection?'

‘Says he knows something about a cop being shot at.'

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