was like an ulcer, this constant twinge, and he hadn’t yet found a way to stop it hurting.

He thought of home. Was it raining like this there?, he wondered. Because it felt biblical. If he were to get into his car and drive the three miles to the parish limits, would he find himself confronting a ring of blue sky, a rainbow bridge to the world outside?

You heavens above, rain down my righteousness . . .

What was that? Genesis? Isaiah? The quote came unbidden, as powerfully evocative as a familiar smell, and it made him want to light another cigarette.

“Detective Inspector Fleet?”

Just as he’d been about to dash toward his company Insignia, Fleet turned. It was the hotelier, a woman in her late forties to whom Fleet had taken an instant dislike on first meeting her, only to later reverse his opinion completely. She dressed primly, rarely smiled, and wore her hair in a skin-stretching bun. Fleet had marked her down as yet another disapproving gossip, in a town with far more than its fair share, but she’d proved discreet, generous and obliquely loyal. In many ways, she was the closest thing Fleet had in this town to a friend.

“There’s a call for you,” said Anne, as she pointed over her left shoulder. Her expression was apologetic. She was familiar enough now with Fleet’s business to know the news he received was never good.

Fleet checked the screen of his mobile. There were no missed calls, but there was also no reception. The entire town was pocked with dead spots. Which seemed as appropriate an analogy as any.

He followed Anne back inside. The hotel wasn’t luxurious, but it was a luxury. Fleet lived only an hour or so along the coast, but rather than traveling back and forth he’d taken a room here, at the Harbor View Hotel. For convenience, he’d told himself. The Harbor View was no more or less than your typical seaside-town B&B, and Fleet might have picked any one of the dozen or so guesthouses that were clustered beside the harbor. All would have had space, and Anne was the only thing that set this one apart. She cleaned his room, fried his breakfast and—now—fielded his calls. She did so much it made Fleet feel guilty, to the extent he’d started making his own bed. Not that he used it much anyway. Most nights, since checking in just under a week ago, he’d sat up gazing at the harbor, imagining what might be hidden beneath the water.

Anne showed him to the little office behind the reception counter, and gestured to the receiver lying unhooked on the desk. She nodded when Fleet offered his thanks, and then closed the glass door to give him some privacy.

“Robin Fleet,” he announced into the receiver.

“Boss? It’s Nicky.”

The line was poor, the reception wherever Nicky was clearly only a fraction better than it was in the black spot that covered the area around the harbor.

“What’s up, Nicky? I was just on my way to the river.”

Detective Sergeant Nicola Collins took a breath. Even through the crackle she sounded excited about something.

“We’ve found them,” she said.

Fleet straightened. “You did? When?”

“Just now. And, Rob? Brace yourself. It’s a fucking shitshow.”

*   *   *

So much for the rainbow bridge.

Fleet had to follow the river inland to get to where he was heading—passing the current search site on the way—and though something inside him lifted when he reached the final dilapidated houses of the town itself, the clouds did not. The sky was gray to the end of the world, and on the roof of Fleet’s car the rain persisted with its relentless beat.

As the last few buildings disappeared from his rearview mirror, Fleet found himself in countryside. The forest thickened, obscuring the river. And although Fleet remembered the area far better than he would have liked, he twice took a wrong turning. He blamed the satnav, which was insistent that he should cut across a field. He switched it off, turned up the radio—the local station, playing modern pop tunes, teenage stuff, until he dialed to something classical instead—and relied on memory, together with the directions Nicky had given him at the end of their patchy phone call.

It took him half an hour longer than he’d expected, and in the end even the radio signal gave out. Had they really come this far? This deep inland?

The Insignia wasn’t built for country lanes, even less for muddy fields, so he had to park it short of the pair of police Land Rovers. Nicky was waiting for him, wellied and dripping. Somehow, though, DS Nicola Collins always managed to look like she was fresh from a good night’s sleep and her second cup of coffee. It was those frost blue eyes of hers, clear and crisp against the frame of her short black hair. Also, she was young. Twenty-six? Twenty-seven? A decade younger than Fleet, and Fleet’s true age, he always felt, was his own plus the number of cigarettes he’d smoked that day.

But what Fleet had mistaken for excitement in Nicky’s voice when he’d spoken to her on the phone was something else, he quickly realized. It was adrenaline, yes, but Fleet could see she was rattled. And DS Collins didn’t rattle easily.

“Boss,” she said, in greeting. She looked down at his shoes, which were already sinking into the mud.

Fleet flipped the hood of his anorak over his head. “You can always give me a piggyback if I get stuck,” he said. Fleet was six-three, and at least fifteen kilos overweight. Nicky was trimmer than a greyhound, and weighed about as much. Even so, Fleet had no doubt she could have managed it. She was tenacious as hell, which was part of the reason he’d given this particular assignment to her. Others would have seen it as being sidelined, but Nicky seemed to appreciate how crucial it was likely to be.

“If it carries on raining like this, we’ll both be swimming soon anyway,” Nicky said.

Which might actually have suited Fleet better.

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