‘It’s the name I’m using. That’s what you’ll call me. And when this is over, Tony Nelson will no longer exist.’

‘And I’ll never see you again?’

‘Why would you want to? The reason I can get away with what I do is because no one knows who I am. Even if you decide to go to the police, what can you tell them? That you paid a man called Tony Nelson to kill your husband. A man who doesn’t exist.’

‘Why would I go to the police?’

‘Guilt. Remorse.’

‘There’ll be no guilt,’ she said vehemently. ‘He’s made my life a misery.’

‘No kids?’

‘He can’t.’ She smiled coldly. ‘Low sperm count, the doctors said, but he won’t accept it. Blames me. That’s probably why he screws around as much as he does.’ She wrapped her arms round herself. ‘More information than you need, right?’ she said.

‘Anything you tell me helps,’said Shepherd.‘When can you get the money?’

‘I’ll have to withdraw it from one of my accounts. That’s a problem, isn’t it?’

‘Because?’

‘The cops might check for withdrawals in the days up to . . .’ She hesitated, then finished the sentence. ‘ . . . up to the day it happens.’

‘You just need a cover story,’ said Shepherd. She was right, of course, Shepherd knew, but he didn’t want her dragging things out while she withdrew the cash in dribs and drabs. He already had enough on tape to charge her with conspiracy, but the cash would be proof positive. ‘Say you were going gambling. Are you a member of any casinos?’

‘A couple in Manchester. Charlie likes to play blackjack.’

‘Perfect,’said Shepherd.‘Worst comes to the worst, you say you went gambling.’

‘The casinos keep records,’ she said.

‘So make sure you go a few times before I do the job. In fact, as alibis go, you could do a lot worse than be in a casino – lots of witnesses, and you have a story for where the cash went.’

‘Do you think the police will suspect me?’

‘I’ll make it look like a gangland hit,’ said Shepherd. ‘The police will put it down to a drugs war and do the bare minimum.’

‘Good riddance to bad rubbish?’

‘Something like that,’ said Shepherd.

She shivered again. ‘It’s funny, isn’t it? It’s just another day, the sun is shining, the birds are singing, people are living their lives, and we’re talking about murder.’

‘We have to talk about it. It has to be planned down to the last detail because if we make one mistake they catch us. Can you get the fifteen grand by Monday morning?’

She nodded.

‘And pictures. The more the merrier. We’ll talk about his schedule once you’ve paid me the deposit.’

They stood in silence for a while. ‘That’s it?’ Angie said eventually.

‘That’s it.’

‘I feel like I’ve just made a deal with the devil.’

‘In a way you have.’

She forced a smile, then walked away. Shepherd saw two of Hargrove’s men, both dressed casually, moving parallel to her as she left the square. They’d follow her back to her car and would be in radio contact with two motorcyclists who had parked close by. By nightfall they would know all there was to know about Angie Kerr and her gangster husband.

Shepherd headed back to the multi-storey car park, checking reflections in office windows and car wing mirrors to make sure he wasn’t being followed. Angie Kerr was the suspicious type and he wouldn’t put it past her to have someone tail him. Just as he had satisfied himself that no one was behind him, his mobile rang. ‘Looking good, Spider,’ said the superintendent.

‘You heard everything?’

‘We lost you a few times but we got the gist,’ said Hargrove. ‘That plus the fifteen grand will nail it for us. Our guys are on her tail as we speak.’

‘I’m on my way back now,’ said Shepherd.

‘Don’t bother. We’re in a side-street overlooking the square – we’ll pick you up. Where are you?’

Shepherd gave him directions, and five minutes later the Transit pulled up. Shepherd climbed into the back. Singh pulled the attache case out of his hands. The superintendent took a swig of Evian water. ‘We didn’t get much from the directional microphones but the case worked a treat.’

‘Of course it did,’ said Singh, caressing it as if it were a favourite cat.

Shepherd grinned at his enthusiasm and patted him on the back. ‘We’re done?’ he asked.

‘Absolutely,’ said Hargrove.

Shepherd climbed out of the van. He took a circuitous route to the warehouse conversion and used his swipe card to open the outer door. His flat was on the second floor. He kept nothing of himself in it. If anyone should become suspicious of Tony Nelson, they could search it for hours and never find a clue as to his real identity. The utility bills were in Nelson’s name, paid for by direct debit from a bank account that would stand up to any scrutiny. The flat had been decorated and furnished by the landlord: white walls, light oak floors, pine furniture ordered from the Habitat catalogue. Shepherd took a bottle of lager from the stainless-steel fridge in the kitchen and sat down on the white canvas square-armed sofa in front of the television.

He looked at the clock on top of the empty bookcase. Six thirty. He’d finish the beer, have a shower, then phone Liam. He took the three mobiles from his jacket pocket and put them on the glass-topped coffee-table. He sipped his lager. If all went to plan he’d be back in London on Monday afternoon. Hargrove hadn’t mentioned a new assignment so there was a chance that he could take a few days off. It would give him time to fix up an au pair and get the house ready for Liam’s return. He took a drink from the bottle. He might even make a start on clearing out Sue’s things. It was about time.

He lay back on the sofa and rested the bottle on his stomach. It had been a hell of a day. Driving from Manchester to Hereford and back, then straight into the Angie Kerr sting. One hell of a day.

Keith Rose couldn’t help smiling as he drove west on the M25. Here he was, fifteen years into a career with the Metropolitan Police, two awards for bravery on the living-room wall, and he had ten kilos of heroin in the boot of his car on the way to his very own drugs deal. ‘Funny old world,’ he whispered.

He’d thought long and hard about what he should do with the heroin they’d taken from the crack house in Harlesden. In a perfect world he’d have dumped the polythene-wrapped packages in the nearest landfill or lake, but the world wasn’t perfect and ten kilos of grade-four heroin was worth more than three-quarters of a million pounds on the street. Not that he would get anywhere near that amount. Three-quarters of a million was what the drug was worth when it was cut with whatever the dealers had to hand and sold on to addicts in single-dose wraps. The Yardies had probably paid about three hundred grand for it. The only way Rose could get that sort of money for the heroin was if he were to sell it on to street dealers and that was too much of a risk. The only way to sell it safely was to pass it on to an importer at a price below the cost of bringing it into the country. It was a simple matter of economics. A street dealer had to pay between twenty and thirty thousand pounds a kilo. An importer bringing it in from the Continent would pay half that. So, to an importer in the UK, the heroin in Rose’s boot was worth a maximum of fifteen thousand pounds a kilo. And it would have to be even cheaper than that for them to risk doing business with someone they didn’t know.

The problem for Rose was that most of the major drugs importers were under surveillance by the Drugs Squad or MI5. And the smart ones were so cagey that they would only do business with people they knew. Which meant that Rose would be putting his career, if not his life, on the line for a hundred and fifty grand at best. And he had to split that two ways. Seventy-five grand wasn’t much in the grand scheme of things. Two years’ salary, give or take. Which meant plan B: take the drugs to Ireland. Irish prices were generally twenty or thirty per cent higher than in Britain – a reflection of the Celtic Tiger’s healthy economy and the fact that most of the drugs sold on there were brought from England – and the Garda Siochana, the Irish police force, was about as efficient as the Keystone Cops on a bad day. Also there was no real equivalent of MI5. The Irish Defence Forces Military Intelligence G2

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