wooden cart behind him; saffron, fenugreek, cinnamon and chilli next to less familiar packets of bright blue and muddy green, fragrant smells tickling his nostrils, making him suddenly homesick for a curry in dear old Glasgow. A large basket sat on the ground at the vendor's side, full of some dried flowers the colour of old blood. Herbs of every hue packed in clear plastic dominated an entire wall of the shop and several feet above them was a rail of the ubiquitous cotton T-shirts and signs in Arabic that Brogan could not understand.

'Water?' he asked, shuffling to one side away from a group of men who were coming towards them down the narrow street, one of them so fat that he was like a huge ship in full sail under his galabaya.

The vendor followed Brogan's eyes as the men passed them by.

'Water?' Brogan repeated.

The man grinned at him, showing a set of stained and cracked teeth, then handed over the sheesha as he rose.

Brogan looked at the pipe suspiciously. He wouldn't half mind a wee puff of the old sheesh, but the buzz of flies rising from a stain on the ground made him wary. His stomach was still delicate from the boat trip and the unfamiliar food he had eaten over the last few days, so he wiped the end of the pipe with the hem of his shirt before he took it between his lips.

The vendor returned, a bottle of ice cold water in his hands, its plastic surface dewed with droplets as though he had just taken it from a cooler in the back of the shop.

'How much?' Brogan asked, offering a handful of cents.

The vendor's grin widened as he selected some of the coins.

'American?' he asked.

Naw, pal, Scottish,' Brogan replied. Then, seeing the puzzled look on the other man's face he laid down the bottle and sketched an impromptu Highland Fling, miming a set of bagpipes under his armpit.

The vendor giggled and clapped. `Scoteesh!' he said, then nodded as Brogan took the water and headed back into the crush of bodies.

Other eyes followed the Scotsman's progress as he made his way through the bazaar, wondering if a man who didn't haggle over the price was worth the bother of chasing for a few yards to offer their bargains.

Brogan tightened his grip on the pack. He had swung it to the front of his body before entering the street, fearing any light fingers that might slip under its straps. It contained everything he owned, though his money and passport were carefully secreted about his person, his mobile shoved to the bottom of his hip pocket. The man in the hotel had told him to look for a sign at the far end of the bazaar. He would see a goldsmith's shop then an opening into another street. That was where he would find the travel agent's office.

Sure enough, the familiar green sign loomed ahead, advising passers-by that here was the agency of American Express.

'My son works there,' the hotel manager had told him. 'He will be able to help you with tickets,' he had nodded, looking at Brogan suspiciously as though the request to purchase rail tickets was something illicit. But a couple of dollar hills had changed the man's expression to one of ineffable sweetness and he had been only too eager to give Brogan directions to someone who might escort him to the ticket office as his translator.

The city of Algiers was not somewhere that Brogan wanted to stay in for much longer. Too many foreign faces made the Scotsman uneasy, too many jabbering voices talking in a tongue he would never understand. Even the French words were beyond him; Billy Brogan's limited experience at school hardly progressing beyond parlez- vous franfais? So it was with some relief that the dealer passed the swinging sign into the travel bureau, the young man grinning as he came forward, hand outstretched.

'Train ticket to Marrakesh?' the guy was asking as he ushered Billy into the back shop. 'You got a passport?'

'Aye,' Brogan replied and the young man nodded his approval.

'Come,' he said, beckoning towards a door that led out into a narrow alley. 'Quicker this way.' He grinned again, his dark skin complementing a set of fine white teeth. 'No crowds here,' he explained.

Brogan followed him out along the shaded street. Piles of wooden pallets were stacked at several of the closed doors, bags of rubbish at others, colonies of flies buzzing madly at every untidy heap. A small yellow cat darted past, making Brogan jump: it was little bigger than some of the rats Billy had seen in the Glasgow slums when he'd been peddling gear to junkies. A thin trickle of something that might be water ran down the slope towards them and Brogan stepped over it, shuddering; the smells here were sour and fetid, no doubt wafting up from the rubbish discarded in these bin bags.

'Here,' the hotel manager's son motioned to Brogan as they stopped outside the back door of yet another shop. It looked like all the others save for the fact that its entry was not obscured by any garbage.

The lad knocked the door and they waited for what seemed like several minutes until a grating sound showed the door being opened. Brogan peered into the dim interior, his eyes trying to focus. Gradually he made out three steps below him and a figure who stood at their foot, waiting.

'Ticket office,' the young man encouraged him, smiling and waving his hands to usher Brogan forwards.

But in the split second that it took Brogan to sense that something was wrong here, the man below had leapt forwards, grasping Brogan's arm and dragging him into the darkness.

DCI Lorimer stood in the arrivals hall of Glasgow International Airport watching the automatic doors as the trickle of passengers became a steady stream. Young Jaffrey's flight had landed some time ago and many of his fellow passengers had already made their way from the baggage carousels to this inauspicious part of the airport. To one side was a small coffee shop, its chairs probably occupied by folk waiting for family and friends, their gaze shifting from the arrivals board to these frosted glass doors. An avenue of sorts had been created between rows of seating on one side and the bookshop on the other for the passengers to wheel their luggage out, families hovering as close as they dared to the doors that were now constantly opening and closing with a sibilant swish.

He saw Rashid Jaffrey the moment he stepped out into the brightly lit hall. The boy was dressed in wide- fitting jeans that had abandoned their hold on his waistline, sliding down well past the edge of a pair of black boxers and causing him to shuffle along, his trainers almost hidden by the ragged hems. It was the fashion still for some youths to wear their jeans like this, Lorimer knew, and looking at Jaffrey he suddenly felt not just old fashioned but simply old. With his fortieth birthday looming ever closer, the policeman could not help but reflect that he was nearer in age to Jaffrey's late father than to his son.

'Rashid?'

The boy stopped in his tracks, letting the handle of his pull along suitcase rest against the edge of a seat. `1DCI Lorimer. Strathclyde Police. Thought you might be able to spare us a few minutes before you go home,' he added gravely.

Rashid looked into Lorimer's blue gaze, his own dark eyes widening in a moment of panic but then he looked down at his feet and gave a shrug. The gesture seemed to say he wasn't bothered one way or the other but Lorimer, who knew how to read body language better than most, saw the sagging shoulders and guessed that the lad was bowing to the inevitable. He stepped alongside the boy, ushering him out into the Glasgow night and across to a waiting police car.

'We've got a family liaison officer with your mum,' Lorimer told him as they settled back for the drive into the city. Tut I'm sure she'll be glad to have you back home again as soon as we're finished.'

Rashid nodded mutely and turned his face away as though to reacquaint himself with the bustling motorway and the skyline over Paisley.

'Sorry about your dad,' Lorimer added, touching the boy's shoulder. Rashid flinched as though he had been stung but Lorimer affected not to notice, continuing in the same friendly tone as before.

'How was the flight?'

Rashid half turned back towards the man at his side and looked at him for a long moment as though he were reassessing this tall policeman.

'Okay, I suppose. The flight attendants were nice…' he broke off but not before Lorimer could hear the sound of a smothered sob in his voice. Being nice to the newly bereaved was almost guaranteed to bring their emotions to the surface. It was something he remembered from his own experience. He'd been younger than Rashid when his own dad had died and he could still recall the solicitude of various aunts and neighbours and his own useless efforts to remain tearless.

'Mallorca must be great this time of year,' Lorimer went on, deliberately making small talk to bore the lad into

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