‘Where?’ Logan killed the engine.
‘You know, when she…When the baby comes.’
In the dark of the car, Logan grimaced. ‘Never really thought about it.’
‘Well, it’s technically your kid too, so if—’
A bright flash, followed by a hard pop.
Three answering flashes, and then the Transit van shot forward, headlights sweeping towards the farm track.
‘Laz…?’
Logan fumbled with his seatbelt. ‘Out!’ He snapped on the hazard lights, hauled open the door and scrambled out into the snow. The van was picking up speed, barrelling down the road towards them.
Oh, crap. No way that was going to stop.
He lunged for the drystane dyke, pulling himself up the slippery stones. The top course gave way and Logan tumbled down the other side into a bank of freezing white, boulders thumping down all around him.
BANG! The sound of shattering glass. The squeal of tortured metal.
Swearing.
Logan hauled himself upright, hands and face stinging with the cold, and peered over the wall. The Fiat was at least six feet back from where he’d abandoned it, wedged across the track – the back end in the ditch, one headlight smashed, front bumper hanging off, the bonnet crumpled into a sneer of metal. The Transit van looked as if nothing had happened.
Behind the steering wheel, the van’s driver blinked and shook his head. A lumpy man with rough features and Lemmy-from-Motorhead stubble.
‘You dick!’ Logan stumbled across the scattered wall stones, through the snow, and round to the driver’s door. ‘That was my car!’ He hauled the door open and dragged the man out into the snow.
Resisting the urge to kick him in the goolies, Logan produced his warrant card and rammed it in Lemmy’s face. ‘POLICE!’ Then flipped him over onto his front and cuffed his hands behind his back. ‘You’re nicked.’
Lemmy just lay there and groaned.
That’ll teach him not to wear a seatbelt…Logan jumped to his feet. Steel – where the hell was Steel? He hurried over to the car. She wasn’t in the passenger seat. She wasn’t in the ditch ether.
Then he heard the swearing again.
‘Inspector?’ Logan waded through the snow in the ditch and peered over the wall into the field beyond. Steel was lying flat on her back with the cigarette sticking straight up out of her mouth, smoke trailing away into the sky. ‘Inspector? You OK?’
She didn’t get up, just raised a hand. ‘Either I’m having one of them sympathetic pregnancies and my water’s just broke, or I’ve peed myself a little.’
Steel slumped back against the barn wall and ran a hand over her face. ‘He going to be OK?’
‘He’s a lucky sod – shotgun wasn’t close enough, so the vest took most of it. Got some pellets in his arms and chin, but other than that, yeah.’ Which was more than could be said for Norman Yates.
‘The other one?’
‘Depends how quickly the ambulance gets here. Did you see the state of my bloody car?’
‘What did I tell them? No getting shot, no shooting anyone. Why does no
‘Not like they had any choice, is it? They identified themselves; he opened fire; they took him out.’
‘Get this bloody thing off me!’ She hopped on one foot. ‘And what sort of moron takes a shotgun to a firearms team anyway?’
Logan hauled the box off, then took a look around the barn: shelves on all four walls, stacked with cartons and containers; pallets on the floor, keeping more stuff off the compacted dirt. There was a whole section devoted to Grant’s Vodka. He tore a case open, pulled out a bottle and read the label. ‘Counterfeit.’
‘Bollocks.’
Logan handed it over. ‘See anything suspicious?’
Frown. ‘That’s not how you spell “Distillers”.’
‘Oh…’ She’d got there a lot faster than he had. ‘I’m guessing most of this is dodgy, if not all of it.’
‘Yes, well done Sherlock, I think I might have worked that one out on my own.’ She cracked open another box. ‘Fancy some knock-off Calvin Klein’s Obsession?’
‘No.’
Steel stuck the carton back in the box. ‘Well, one thing’s for certain, Malk the Knife’s no’ going to be too pleased with Mr Gallagher when he finds out he’s lost a whole shipment of dodgy goods. Poor baby.’ She grinned.
