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'Why'd did you say no?'
Norrell shrugged. 'My dad used to work for him when I was a kid. He treated my mother like a piece of s.h.i.+t.'
'Right.'
'I mean she was a piece of s.h.i.+t. But . . .' He shrugged again.
'So what do you expect me to do?' Delaney asked.
'Do what you do best.'
'Which is?'
'f.u.c.k people's lives up.'
Norrell looked at his watch and winked at Delaney. 'This place isn't good for my health. I'll see you around.' He strode out of Delaney's private room.
Delaney thought about pus.h.i.+ng the alarm b.u.t.ton by the side of his bed, then discarded the notion. He knew why Norrell had just volunteered the information. He might just as well have put a gun to Mickey Ryan's head himself. There was a contract out on Norrell and if Delaney removed Ryan he also removed the contract. Delaney didn't like the idea of being used by Norrell, but in the end, in the grand scheme of things, he didn't much give a s.h.i.+te either. Mickey Ryan was a dead man walking. That was all that mattered. It was time to cut off his feet. Delaney lay his head back on the pillow and closed his eyes, strangely peaceful. The waiting was over.
He had taken the day off and so had plenty of time to prepare. His lizard-skin cowboy boots had been polished to a high s.h.i.+ne. His black jeans had been neatly ironed, as had his white s.h.i.+rt. He held the shoestring tie in his hand and snapped it a couple of times. Form and functionality.
He had just had a long bath and was planning to have a nice relaxing morning. He was going to need plenty of energy tonight. He lay back naked on his bed and flicked the leather tie at his p.e.n.i.s. He immediately started to stiffen and he flicked it again, harder this time. His hand moved down and he held himself for a moment, and then took his hand away. It was all about release. It was all about control.
Delaney groaned, his eyelids twitched and then fell still once more. He was in that halfway stage, not quite awake, not quite asleep, when you know your dreams have hold over you, but you are powerless to let them go.
The smell was universal. The noises in the dark. Hospital. Other hospitals.
Jack Delaney was nine years old. He was walking back from school alone. His best friend Rory had been off sick with measles and he was forbidden to visit him. Jack was okay with that. He had seen kids with the measles right enough and he could do without them. He'd catch up with Rory when he was well.
Like Jack, Rory was big for his age, bigger even than Jack. Everyone said when he grew up he'd either be a policeman or professional wrestler. It was their joke. What Rory wanted to do when he grew up was be a carpenter like his da. Heck, his ma always joked, sure enough he could just pick the trees out of the ground, he'd have no need for lumberjacks for his raw materials. Rory took it in good humour, you had to keep the women on your side.
Jack agreed with him on that one. He didn't know what he wanted to do when he grew up, though. They talked about it often enough but he couldn't fix himself on anything. Fireman one week. A soldier a few years back before the Troubles had flared up in earnest. Sometimes he secretly dreamed of being a priest. Jack could see himself standing up there in the pulpit, holding everybody in awe as he railed and castigated. He was not so hot at the academics, however, and he saw how the black crows knew everything about everything, and that must take an awful lot of book studying and the like.
He bent down to pick up a pebble form the path. He threw the stone high in the air to clatter down on the salt-crusted stones on the beach below, when he heard the cry. And he recognised the voice.
He rushed down the path and around the corner. And there, sure enough, was Liam Corrigan, his cousin. Liam was a couple of years younger than Jack, a few inches shorter, and was surrounded by four older boys with mischief on their faces and sticks in their hands. Jack could see that Liam had tears in his eyes and a small trickle of blood running down his nose.
Jack knew the other boys. All MacWhites. All trouble. Like the family had always been. Jack turned to the eldest. 'Brave of you to be taking on the one boy.'
Barry MacWhite looked at Jack and grinned, strolling over to him. 'You want to join in, do you? Do you want some of-'
But he never finished the sentence as Jack had smashed his fist furiously and suddenly into the older boy's nose. The boy dropped squealing to his knees, Jack s.n.a.t.c.hed the stick from his hand and turned to the three remaining MacWhites.
'Come on then, ya gobs.h.i.+tes.'
He waved the stick in front of him and pushed Liam towards the road. 'Get out of here, Liam.'
And as his young cousin ran off the road for help, Delaney turned and faced the others, an anger beyond his years burning in his eyes and the other youths circled him as warily as a pack of dogs would approach a wounded wolf.
Had help not arrived when it did, things might have gone a lot worse for Jack than it did. But that was just the first time he ended up in hospital because of his cousin Liam. On that occasion it was for a fractured wrist. On the second occasion it was for something far more serious.
'He's coming round.'
Jack heard the voice and tried to open his eyes. He felt as if he had been run over by a herd of cattle. Every muscle in his body ached. But most of all there was a stabbing pain in his side.
'G.o.d bless you, Jack. You've done a marvellous thing.'
Jack blinked his eyes and could just about make out his aunt looking down at him, smiling gratefully.
'Is he going to be all right?' he asked.
'Yes, Jack,' his aunt said, taking his hand and patting it. 'He's going to be just grand. You both are.'
The fact that she crossed herself immediately after saying it might have given others cause for concern, but Jack Delaney was sixteen years old and invincible.
'You've saved his life, Jack. You've saved his life,' cried his aunt, bursting into tears.
Jack shrugged. 'Sure, it was only a kidney.'
A hospital trolley laden with pills and syringes and G.o.d knows what else clattered past his bed and Delaney cursed silently. The thin tendrils of sleep that were clinging to him were severed by the sound. He was awake now, he was in pain, and he was going to have to deal with it.
He leaned his head further up the pillow and groaned, the last few images of his dreams lingering in his consciousness. Why had he been dreaming about his cousin Liam? Why had he been remembering those incidents? It wasn't just being in hospital. Delaney groaned again and raised himself to sit up in bed. He ran his good right hand over his bandaged shoulder and strapped-up left arm and grimaced. Who was he kidding? He knew exactly why he was thinking about Liam. He threw back the covers and slid his legs to the floor. Standing up and wincing at the pain in his shoulder, he looked at the clock. Way past time. The pain forgotten as he picked up his clothes from the chair beside his bed.
As an alarm bell sounded, Kate and Sally ran concerned down the corridor and into his room.
Kate couldn't believe her eyes. 'b.l.o.o.d.y, stupid, b.l.o.o.d.y man!'
'Where's he gone?'
'I don't know, Sally. You're the detective. Where do men with no brain cells go?' Kate snapped.
Sally shrugged. 'Paddington Green?'
Kate glared at her. 'Yeah, not funny.'
They went back outside and Kate stopped one of two nurses who were hurrying down the corridor. 'What's going on?'
'A prisoner's escaped from the secure room.'
Kate sighed. 'Don't tell me a Kevin Norrell.'
The nurse nodded. 'The officer who was guarding them is seriously hurt.'
'And the other prisoner here? The one with the broken jaw?'
The nurse looked at Kate, shocked, as if she could hardly believe the words that were coming out of her mouth. 'He's dead.'
Sally took Kate's arm. 'You don't think Jack's busted Norrell loose?'
Kate shook her head, her voice trembling with anger and fear. 'I don't know, Sally. Let's find the stupid man.'
Melanie Jones sat at her desk writing on her computer. She read what she had just written and then highlighted and deleted it. It was all garbage. This was supposed to be her big break and what did she have to show for it? They had a guy in custody who they figured was good for the murders, but she had listened to his voice at the police's request and she couldn't be sure it was the man who had telephoned her. She had no idea what Delaney had been doing with his comments about deformed genitalia in his press statement either. She had dealt with the police enough times to know that they didn't release that kind of detail. If she didn't know better, she would have said he was deliberately trying to rile the murderer. But if he was already in custody, what was the point? She thought ironically about the t.i.tle of the book she had in mind. Intimate Conversations With a Serial Killer. Some intimacy! She'd exchanged about ten words with the man. And the main part of the book, looking at the investigation through the eyes of the lead detective, had gone t.i.ts up as well. The suspect had been arrested by plain clothes and not only had Jack Delaney been taken off the case it looked like he had been taken out for good. Some nutter, probably an ex-girlfriend and good luck to her, had shot him and left him in intensive care in South Hampstead Hospital. Be just her luck if he died on her as well. So much for the New York office and the dream job. She had seen herself as a modern-day Truman Capote; as it was she was turning into more of a Lois Lane. Everything happened when she wasn't there, and her Superman turned out to be an Irish drunk whose IQ was no higher than her shoe size.
's.h.i.+t,' she said aloud, for the thirtieth time that day. And then the phone rang.
She picked it up, suppressing a yawn. 'Melanie Jones, Sky News.'
The lilting brogue on the other end of the line jolted the yawn into oblivion.
'Roses are c.r.a.p, me darlin'. Violets are s.h.i.+t. Sit on me face, and wriggle a bit.'
'Delaney?'
'Ah no, sad to hear he's not well.'
'Who is this?'
There was laugher on the other end of the line and the accent changed to English. 'Well now, it's not Santa's little helper. But I could be your lucky charm.'
And Melanie recognised the voice, belatedly hitting the record b.u.t.ton built into her digital phone system.
'I'm listening.'
'www.truecrimeways.com.'
'What's that?'
'The pa.s.sword is Whitechapel and your birthday.'
'But what is it?'
The line went dead and Melanie was left listening to a single persistent tone. She blinked for a moment as though mesmerised and then hung up the phone, her fingers flas.h.i.+ng across her keyboard with more enthusiasm than she had had all morning.
Delaney winced, held his side and leaned against the wall of the visitors' centre. He put a cigarette in his mouth and searched through his pockets for a box of matches. He twisted his hand to the other pocket and picked out the box with his fingertips. He pulled the box open with his teeth and managed to get a match out. But how he was going to strike it he had absolutely no idea.
'Jack Delaney!'
He looked across and cursed as he saw Kate Walker and Sally Cartwright bearing down on him. Great, he thought, double tagged.
'What the h.e.l.l do you think you're doing?'
'I'm trying to have a cigarette, Kate.'
Kate glared at him. 'I thought you'd given up?'
'I did. I'm very good at giving up. I do it all the time.'
'You should be in bed, boss,' Sally said, taking the box of matches off him and lighting his cigarette.
Kate shook her head, resigned. 'You realise Norrell has escaped.'
'Yeah, I know.'
'It's not safe for you, Jack.'
'He's not going to do anything to me.'
'How can you be so sure?'
'I just know.' Delaney drew deep on his cigarette. 'Sally, I need you to drive me.'
Kate sneered. 'Are you mad? You're not going anywhere.'
'I have to.'
'For G.o.d's sake, Sally, talk some sense into him.'
'Where do you want to go?' Sally asked.
'I'll tell you in the car.'
Kate stepped between them. 'No, if anybody is driving you it will be me.'
Delaney looked across at Sally, then shrugged with a little smile and kissed Kate full on the lips, who was too startled to back away. 'No, I've got another job for you to do.'
'What?'
'There's a man in intensive care. I saw him on my way out and recognised him. He was shot on Hampstead Heath last night. Near where we found the first victim.'
'I thought the latest theory was it was a Jack the Ripper copycat, killing prost.i.tutes.'
'Maybe we were supposed to think that. He was shot in the same area with a tranquilliser rifle. I don't believe in coincidences, Kate. Check it out, find out if it's the same tranquillising drug.'
'What does it mean if it is?'
Delaney ground his cigarette under his heel. 'I have absolutely no idea.'
He turned to Sally. 'Come on, Constable, you can drive.'
Sally shrugged helplessly at Kate and followed him to the car.
George Napier hung up the telephone. He was far from pleased. Serious crimes had just released Ashley Bradley on police bail. On top of that Kevin Norrell had escaped from the police guard at the South Hampstead Hospital. And if that wasn't enough, Delaney had gone walkabout too. Napier opened the bottom drawer of his desk cabinet and pulled out a bottle of milk of magnesia. He had just taken a healthy swig, when Diane Campbell walked into the room. Why couldn't she keep a d.a.m.n leash on her Irish b.l.o.o.d.y inspector? he'd like to know. Was it too much to ask?
Diane read his expression and nodded, at the bottle. 'Ulcer?
Napier grimaced. 'Indigestion.'