dripping wet. If I die of pneumonia, you’re sodding for it!’ There was more, none of it flattering or polite. Logan hit delete.

‘You all right?’

‘Yeah…just cold and tired.’ He didn’t look around.

He could hear her walk into the room, the clatter of plates on the coffee table, then the warmth of Samantha’s body against his back, her arms wrapping around him, her breath hot on the back of his neck. It was nice. Intimate. Maybe they’d be all right after all.

‘God, you are freezing, aren’t you?’

Logan gave a little shudder and slipped the envelope up the sleeve of his shirt. ‘Baltic out there.’

‘Right.’ She stepped back, pulled up his shirt-tails and slapped him on his grey Markies pants.

‘Ow!’

‘Get your cold bum in the shower, we can always stick the noodles in the microwave.’

The bathroom filled with steam, the shower hissing and gurgling into the white plastic bathtub, the blower grumbling hot air from the dusty unit mounted on the wall. Logan locked the door and settled onto the toilet lid, pulled Reuben’s envelope from his sleeve, and counted the contents. Two thousand, four hundred and sixty pounds, all in used notes. Less than last time, but then Logan hadn’t actually done anything to deserve it…Unless you counted elbowing Reuben in the face.

He smoothed out the crumpled Post-it note – the name and address of the man to speak to if he wanted more cash from the DIY self-service bribery buffet.

Nearly six thousand pounds, when you added in the envelope hidden away in the back of the airing cupboard. Not that much in the great scheme of things. Not compared with being a corrupt bastard.

44

Bloody jocks are useless.

Detective Superintendent Graeme Danby sits on the end of the bed wearing the white fluffy bathrobe that came with his tartan hotel room. Remote in one hand, mobile phone clamped between his ear and shoulder so he can have a good scratch at his sack.

‘Don’t really know, Val, love. All depends on how long it takes to sort things out up here, you know what I’m saying?’

Eleven o’clock. There’s a film starting on Sky, but he can’t concentrate for more than five minutes. So he skims through the channels, always ending up with SKY NEWS and their coverage of Richard Knox’s escape.

Hysterical – in both senses of the word.

Graeme slumps back on the bed, dressing gown falling open. Not like there’s anyone there to complain, is there?

‘And I managed to find this lovely blue bikini.’ Her voice goes up and down, in that sexy Fife accent of hers that always gets more pronounced on the phone. ‘It’s going to be so nice to be warm again.’

Graeme flicks through the channels: sports, music, documentary about Hitler, American sitcom…then back to the news.

‘You won’t need the top though; don’t want white bits, do you?’

He can hear the smile in her voice. ‘You’re a bad man, Graeme Danby.’

There’s a knock at the door. Graeme groans.

‘What?’

‘Hold on…’

He stands, ties the robe shut and shuffles into the complementary towelling slippers.

‘When are you coming home?’

Graeme marches over to the door and undoes the latch. ‘Told you: when I’m finished here.’

Another knock. ‘Mr Danby? Hospitality management, you have a problem with your shower?’

‘But the flights are booked for—’

‘Val, it’s not a problem, you know what I’m saying?’ He opens the door. ‘I can always meet you out there, and —’

His head snaps back. Graeme stumbles, pain bursting inside his nose. ‘Fucking…’ Everything tastes of blood. Another thump, hard in his chest, knocking all the air from his lungs.

Detective Superintendent Danby staggers against the bed.

Thump – a stabbing ache in his kidneys.

He grits his teeth and throws a punch, eyes watering too much to aim, just going on instinct.

Misses.

Something hard cracks into the back of his head. The world goes white and crackly, then the carpet rushes up to meet him, slamming into his cheek.

His phone skitters away under the bed, Val’s voice tinny and far away as she makes plans for their trip to New Zealand. His early retirement. Their happy life together.

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