into his cupped hands to warm his fingers. The others, Matas and Valdas, stood silent against the roller door. They were good men, Herkus had known them since his army days, and they would back him up, no matter what happened here.

He’d called Arturas on the way, told him he had the two men on the way to the lockup. Arturas had said to do whatever was necessary, to hell with whomever it upset.

The lives of these two men were now worth shit, which gave Herkus solace.

The lockup was as cold inside as it was outside, one of two dozen identical buildings on an abandoned industrial estate that lay to the north of the city. It had belonged to someone called McGinty. Herkus had been told in hushed tones that a crooked cop had been killed here by a madman called Fegan, and the planned housing development that was to replace the complex of storage buildings and commercial premises was indefinitely put on hold as a result.

Herkus regarded each of the men in turn. Sam was as stupid as his idiot brother, both cheap hoods with a big-name organization behind them. No wonder Arturas held his business partners in the Loyalist movement in such contempt; if this was the standard of their personnel, then God help them all.

Darius was a different animal. He was not the brightest of Arturas’s men, that wasn’t under question, but he had heart. And real physical strength. A mountain of a man, bigger than Herkus, even.

So whom should he start with? For a moment, he thought it should be Darius. Show Sam how serious this situation was. But on the other hand, Darius was too useful. At least for the moment.

Sam, then.

Herkus tore two strips off a tissue. He rolled each into a ball and jammed them into his ears. He took the Glock 17 from his pocket and pressed the muzzle against Sam’s forehead.

“Where is Tomas?” he asked.

“Jesus,” Sam whined. “I don’t know, I swear to—”

Herkus squeezed the trigger and shouted, “Bang!”

Sam screamed, and a dark stain spread on his lap.

Herkus laughed. “Other thing about Glock 17,” he said. “No round in chamber, no bang.”

He pulled back the slide assembly.

“Now it goes bang,” he said.

Herkus placed the muzzle against Sam’s forehead.

Liquid trickled to the floor.

“Where is Tomas?” Herkus asked.

“He’s dead!” Sam cried. “She killed him.”

Herkus’s heart sank. He closed his eyes.

“Who killed him?” he asked, opening them again.

“The girl,” Sam said. “She had a piece of glass, off a mirror. She stabbed him in the throat. We panicked. We stuffed her and the body in the trunk of the car. We drove out to the harbor to get rid of them. She got away. We left Tomas there on the side of the road.”

He looked up at Herkus, his eyes wide and wet. “Oh, Christ, I’m sorry. We didn’t know what to do, we were scared, I’m sorry, oh God, I’m—”

Herkus squeezed the trigger.

The back of Sam’s skull exploded.

Darius wept.

Herkus placed the muzzle against his old friend’s forehead.

“Tell me everything,” he said.

14

ARTURAS STRAZDAS PRESSED the red button on his phone before Herkus finished speaking. He stared at the display, but saw nothing.

Tomas dead.

Killed by a whore.

Abandoned at some roadside like a dog.

Strazdas roared and threw the phone at the wall. He burned inside, his heart incandescent. He grabbed fistfuls of his own hair and pulled until his scalp screamed. He formed a fist with his right hand and struck his forehead and temples again and again until he staggered, dizzy like a drunk, into the wall.

But still, the fire would not dim.

He tugged at his left shirtsleeve to expose his forearm and closed his teeth on the pale flesh.

Oh, the pain, white hot and fierce, at last blotting out the anger. His mind found balance. He eased his jaw open, tasted metal.

The shame hit hard, like a punch to his gut. He had never, would never tell a living soul about his anger. How sometimes it made him hurt himself. How, now and then, he bruised himself. How, albeit rarely, he occasionally drew his own blood.

Strazdas breathed hard, in through his nose, out through his mouth, until his heartbeat settled in his chest. He went to the suite’s bathroom and turned the cold-water tap on the washbasin. Leaning against the black marble, he held his forearm beneath the stream and watched the red streaks run down to the drain.

He cursed himself.

Ten years or more he’d been doing this. Always out of the blue, always over as soon as it began. First the anger, then the pain to drown it out, then the shame.

Once, in his Brussels apartment, the housecleaner had seen him slap his own face and bite the back of his hand. She had asked if everything was all right. He had said yes, everything was fine, not to worry.

Her body had never been found.

Strazdas tore off half a dozen sheets of toilet paper, wadded them into a ball, and pressed them against the bloody ellipse. He straightened and looked at himself in the mirror. A handsome man, he had been told. Thick dark hair and blue eyes. Good skin, fine features.

He spat at the mirror.

Saliva sprayed and dripped down the glass.

Arturas Strazdas knew he was unwell, but had no idea how to get better. Often it seemed his life played out before him, and he was a spectator of his own days. He had never had a woman he hadn’t paid for, he had never had a friend who didn’t fear him, and he knew he would die alone.

He had always known he would bury his brother.

Oh God, Tomas.

Strazdas grabbed a hand towel and wiped spittle from the mirror, avoiding his own gaze in the reflection. He dropped the towel in the basin, walked to the bedroom, and sat on the edge of the bed.

Tomas, dead.

What did grief feel like? Strazdas had never knowingly experienced it. When he got word from an uncle that his father had died, he had played the part of the mournful son, but deep down, he had rejoiced. He had never wept over the passing of another.

Strazdas closed his eyes, reached inside himself, searched for any sense of loss. Something nestled there, in his heart, that might have been a keening for his brother. But it was matched by the relief that he would never have to deal with Tomas’s catastrophes again. And that in turn was dwarfed by the anger at his own kin being snuffed out by a whore.

There, seize on that, take hold of the anger.

Surely a real human being would feel anger at the murder of his brother? Yes, they would. Murdered by a whore. Strazdas took hold of his rage and brought it close to his heart.

Don’t call until you’ve found him, his mother had said.

“I found him,” Strazdas said to the empty room.

He had to call her. Tell her what happened. He thought about waiting until he had more information, but it would do no good. She would resent every second he held the knowledge from her and punish him for it. Every minute he spared himself the act of telling was a minute of fury earned from her.

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