them all. Two were from Noble warning that Chief Superintendent Charlton was after Brook’s blood. The other four were from Charlton, his tone clipped and increasingly angry at each renewed attempt to get through to Brook without success.

‘Aren’t you going to answer those?’ asked Grant from the doorway, rubbing a towel through her hair.

Brook shrugged. ‘Maybe tomorrow.’

He took his own shower and dressed in his bedroom. Again he looked briefly across at Rose Cottage but, although a light was burning somewhere in the back, he saw no sign of his neighbour.

When they set off for Derby it was already dark, but traffic into town was light and they reached the Midland Hotel forty minutes later. Grant disappeared into the hotel and re-emerged with her small case and Brook walked her on to the platform.

‘Thanks for a lovely day, Damen,’ she smiled. ‘You don’t need to see me onto the train.’

‘I don’t mind. It’s only twenty minutes.’

She looked into his eyes and leaned forward to give him a kiss on the cheek. ‘Go. I’ll see you in a few days.’ Brook handed over her bag and turned to leave. ‘And the next walk we do, we can go a lot further.’

Brook smiled at her. ‘I look forward to it.’

‘He’s leaving it late.’ McQuarry blew out smoke through the window and flicked the butt into the middle of the road. She looked for the spray of orange but the lashing sleet extinguished the smouldering cigarette before it hit the ground. She closed the window to block out the buffeting wind and horizontal rain howling around their car.

Drexler looked over at her, his hands superfluously gripping the steering wheel of the stationary vehicle. ‘It’s tonight, Ed. Tuesday.’

‘There’s only three hours left before Wednesday, Mike.’

‘Trust me.’ Drexler watched McQuarry put the pack in her pocket, resisting the urge to ask her for a cigarette. ‘He’s laid the ground too carefully. And how perfect is this weather for discouraging stray witnesses?’

‘You shoulda let me call out the cavalry.’

‘He won’t move unless it’s just us.’

‘He said that?’

Drexler pursed his lips. ‘I just know.’

McQuarry shrugged and took out her weapon. She checked the magazine before returning it to her belt, then lay back and closed her eyes.

Ten minutes later the glint of a headlight heading away from the lake alerted the agents to Sorenson’s approach. They both slid down further in their seats. The gates opened smoothly and the red Toyota stopped at the highway. It took an age to turn onto the deserted road so the two agents lifted their heads to identify the problem.

Sorenson was sitting in the driver’s seat, staring directly at Drexler and McQuarry’s car. Despite the poor visibility, they could clearly see Sorenson smiling at them, his dead eyes creased in chilly amusement. A shiver ran down Drexler’s back. Finally the Toyota turned left towards Tahoe and continued as sedately as it had the last time.

‘How sure of himself is this guy?’ smiled McQuarry over at Drexler. The smile faded when she saw the vacant expression on Drexler’s face. He fired up the engine and, as though in a trance, manoeuvred the Audi onto the highway in pursuit.

They didn’t speak again until they rolled up to the Golden Nugget Motel an hour later, coming to a halt in a darkened corner of the deserted parking lot. Sorenson’s car had pulled up outside the reception office.

Brook walked out of the station and back to his car. As the Ingham case was largely on hold until the Ottomans could be run to ground, most of the officers involved were taking a couple of days to recharge while Forensics continued compiling the evidence against the couple. Hudson was back in Brighton now and Grant was on her way. He thought of Terri and resolved then and there to visit her as soon as the case was over. Really over.

He lit a cigarette. It was a strange feeling to be at the end of something that hadn’t ended. But for Brook the case could never end, not until he knew, so he set off for Drayfin, pulling up outside the Ottomans’ house about twenty minutes later.

He nodded to the constable at the gate and bounded up the steps to the house. Two SOCOs were still at work even at that hour and Brook exchanged a few strained pleasantries before wandering in and out of the rooms. He went to the master bedroom and pulled several pairs of shoes from the Ottomans’ wardrobe and examined them. John Ottoman was a size ten and his wife Denise a size six. Close, but not the shoe sizes of the bloody footprints found in the Ingham house. That was one thing going for them at least.

He headed down to the pitch-black garden and pulled open the shed door, although it had already been searched for the second mountain bike. He shone a small torch on the floor, looking for signs of oil. He couldn’t find any. He returned to his car and looked back at the house, which was of similar design to the Ingham and Wallis houses. A thought occurred to him and he jogged back up to the front door.

‘I suppose the loft has been searched, hasn’t it?’ he inquired of the officer standing in the hall.

‘You suppose right, sir,’ he replied through his mask. ‘Nothing. DCI Hudson even worked out they had an allotment, but there’s nothing there either.’

Brook nodded, wondering if there was a slight dig somewhere in the last sentence. Hudson seemed to achieve that easy rapport with people, especially subordinates, that Brook found impossible to master, and it was plain, outsider or not, that Hudson was already popular with Derby officers. He trudged back to his car and drove in to the station, stopping to get a coffee on the way.

At the entrance Brook spied Sergeant Hendrickson at the duty desk. With Charlton on the warpath, Brook paused until the portly sergeant was distracted by something at the rear of the duty office then walked quickly and quietly to the stairs.

The Incident Room was empty when Brook arrived. He sat at a desk and remembered the implied promise of Laura’s parting words. He took a sip of coffee and roused himself to look through the latest paperwork. It made for depressing reading. The DNA found on the fence panel in the Ingham yard had been positively matched to that from a hair found in a comb removed from the Ottomans’ bathroom.

Brook shook his head. With the couple away from home, bloodstained bikes and clothing could have been planted in their house. DNA at the crime scene was another matter.

Brook located the 999 tape and played it several times. He was forced to admit it did sound like John Ottoman.

He reread the interview notes with the butcher from Normanton who’d provided the meat for the barbecue at the Ingham house. A few card purchases for similar amounts had been followed up but no suspects identified. Not surprising. Brook was sure that The Reaper would have used cash. There was a footnote about the plastic bags used for packaging some of the meat having been discontinued three months previously. He closed the report and lifted himself to leave.

He paused, then sat back down and reopened the report. Three months? No wonder the butcher hadn’t noticed any new customers the week before the killings. Brook pulled out another cigarette but didn’t light it. There was something about the Ottomans and Mrs North that seemed significant all of a sudden, but he couldn’t bring it to mind. Then it came and, like a solved crossword clue, all the knowledge fell in a heap in his conscious mind. He leapt up and marched over to the exhibits officer’s desk and rummaged through a drawer, extracting a set of keys before quickstepping back to his car, ignoring Hendrickson’s parting sneer.

He roared through the centre of town. Ten minutes later he crossed the ring road and five minutes after that screeched to a halt outside the Ottoman house once more. He bolted back up the garden steps and into the kitchen, almost colliding with the SOCO who was finishing up.

A thought struck Brook. ‘That allotment the Ottomans have. Did they have a shed?’

‘Apparently,’ replied the officer, pulling down his mask.

‘Was there a freezer in it?’

‘A freezer? No. Just gardening equipment and a kettle.’ Brook smiled and turned towards the fridge freezer in

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