on her because you know what you really are and despise yourself for it.

What did you call me?’

I called you a cock-sucking faggot.’

And the Mexican lunged forward, his fist flying towards Kate’s face. Time slowed for her. She watched the punch coming and flicked his arm away at the wrist with an open left palm. As it passed she drove her right fist hard into his sternum. Years spent keeping fit with karate paying off in spades. The man grunted and fell to his knees, his face beetroot-red now as he struggled to draw breath, his eyes flicking with shock and panic. Kate had to fight really hard to suppress the urge to kick his head and really hurt him. She took a deep breath and calmed herself. She turned and nodded at Bob Wilkinson. ‘He just attacked an officer of the law. That’s an offence, isn’t it?’

Bob grinned back. ‘It is in my book. What did you say to him?’

‘I was just asking him what he recommended on the menu in the restaurant he works at. Thinking about picking up some takeaway. I might have pronounced a word wrong. It’s been a long time since I vacationed in Spain.’ Kate smiled innocently.

Bob nodded dryly. ‘These Latin types, they sure do fly off the handle sometimes.’

‘It seems so. It’s the climate, no doubt. Maybe the chillies?’

Bob Wilkinson pulled out his radio ‘I’ll call for backup.’

As the sergeant moved to the door and put the call through, Kate turned back to the woman, who was still holding her card, clutched hard in her small fist – crumpling it, but not wanting to let it go. ‘Come in and see me tomorrow. He’s not going to be doing anything for a while.’

The man on the floor was making a whistling sound now as he finally managed to coax some air painfully in and out of his lungs. His hand was clutched to his stomach as he rocked back and forth on his knees, like one of the faithful called to prayer, and a low mewing groan could be heard under his rasping breath. Bob walked back to him as the man struggled to his feet, putting one hand on the table and wiping tears from his eyes with the other. Bob winked at him as he unclipped handcuffs from his belt. ‘They’re going to take you for a little ride in the nice police van. And then, when we’ve got you nice and cosy in a little room of your own, we’ll see if your papers are all proper and correct. You wouldn’t believe it but some people try and sneak into this country without proper permission.’

*

Twenty minutes later, downstairs and outside on the pavement of Camden High Street, the sound of a police siren dwindled into the distance. It was twelve o’clock but the night was bright and raucous with noise. Laughter, raised voices and music spilling from the pubs that were starting to close and the late-night clubs and pubs that were beginning to fill up. Takeaway fast-food joints were doing a roaring trade as burgers, kebabs, greasy fried chicken, chips and pizza slices were ordered to assuage lager- and alcopop-fuelled hunger. Doctor Kate Walker was no stranger to the sight of feeding time when the pubs closed, except that in Hampstead, where she lived, you could also get crepes with your choice of filling, sweet or savoury, or toasted panini or ciabatta rolls with all kinds of exotic fillings. And the people queuing to eat them had probably had a glass of bubbly too many rather than too much vodka and Red Bull. Jack Delaney might be among them, she thought, with a small smile to herself; they weren’t all Hooray Henrys in Hampstead, after all. Jack Delaney with a glass or two of whiskey in him, hugging her warmly to him as they waited in line for a takeaway pizza from Pizza Express. Arguing whether they should go up to the hill to her house or down the hill to his new place in Belsize Park. The area was certainly a lot better with him in it. Her life was a lot better with him in it.

Breathing in the rich smells wafting out of a kebab shop as they passed it Kate realised she was pretty hungry herself. It had been a long shift – she’d grabbed a quick sandwich before coming on duty at six but that seemed like a lifetime ago now and she was thinking she might just pick up a crepe Suzette herself to enjoy with a well-earned and well-chilled glass of Viognier when she got home. Loaded with calories, she knew, but hey, she had just had a workout and, after the day she had had, she reckoned she deserved a treat or two. She smiled to herself as they passed Big Enchilada, the Mexican restaurant Rodrigues Sanchez worked in, where a chicken-and-ribs joint had once been. She glanced at the menu – tacos and burritos and her favourite, chicken quesadillas, marinated and grilled chicken meat folded in toasted tortillas with three kinds of melted cheese and fiery jalapeno sauce. Kate felt her mouth salivating and her arteries hardening at the same time and considered for a moment buying some takeout to bring home to share with Jack. And then she remembered the haunted battered face of the woman who worked long hours waitressing here to pay the rent on the squalid bedsit that they had just left. Remembered the pain written into her fragile flesh and the hurt branded in her eyes and Kate’s appetite disappeared. Besides, Jack had an early start tomorrow and would probably be sound asleep in bed. And as for her glass of Viognier? She was pregnant so that was going to have to wait a long while; it would be quite a good few months before she could look forward to that luxury again.

Kate pulled her coat tighter around herself, shivering with the cold as they continued walking past the restaurant towards Regents Park Tube station. She enjoyed her shifts as a police surgeon but on nights like this she wondered sometimes if she had done the right thing – giving up her job as a forensic pathologist. But she chased the thought away: she’d had many cold, late nights in that career too and general practice and teaching at the university gave her variety, gave her new challenges and, more importantly, it put her into contact with people. Living people. She’d been among the dead for too long in too many ways and for the first time in a very long while she felt a proper part of the real world again. She felt she belonged again. Beside her Bob Wilkinson was talking, but she wasn’t really listening. She was still thinking about Jack Delaney. Earlier he had taken a call from one of his Irish cousins and it had clearly affected him. She had pressed him for details but he had fobbed her off. She knew him well enough by now to know when he was concealing something, and she knew him well enough to realise that he was as stubborn as a rock when he wanted to be. He’d tell Kate what was going on when he was ready to, she guessed. Bob Wilkinson stopped and she realised he was waiting for her to say something.

‘I’m sorry, Bob. I was miles away. What were you saying?’

Wilkinson laughed. ‘I was just saying you were miles away and wondered what was on your mind?’

Kate opened her mouth to reply but at that moment a loud scream, piercing and terrified, came from a side road just ahead of them. They both ran and quickly turned the corner. A woman in her mid-twenties was leaning back against a wall, one hand to her mouth, her legs buckling at the knees, looking as though she was about to topple over. Further up the road, and disappearing fast, a youth in a hooded top was running away. Bob turned to Kate. ‘You see to her and I’ll get him.’

The sergeant set off at a run and Kate jogged quickly over to where the woman was gagging into her hand. ‘Did he hurt you? Has he robbed you? What’s happened?’

The woman took her hand away from her mouth, her eyes wide with fear, with shock. She shook her head,

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