voluntarily.
‘Look. All done by the book.’ Logan held the notebook out.
Young backed away from the desk slightly. ‘Any chance you can put that back in its bag?’
Logan did, then swept the little pile of yellow flakes left behind into the bin. ‘I showed Walker’s lawyer everything at the time. He’s just chancing his arm.’
The chief inspector sat back in his leather chair, eyes creased, mouth working silently on something. ‘You know, DCI Finnie has asked if we would consider taking you on secondment to Professional Standards.’
Logan stared back. And he’d thought the frog-faced bastard had been joking. ‘Did he?’
‘You look horrified.’
‘Thank you, sir.’
‘…and he said Finnie wants to palm me off on the rubber-heelers!’ Logan shifted his shoulder, keeping the phone clamped to his ear as he washed the flakes of dried sick off his hands. The smell was getting worse as they rehydrated.
DI Steel made wet chomping noises in his ear for a moment.
‘Why the hell would
‘First thing I’d do is investigate that sarcastic bastard Finnie.’
‘What? Yeah: bite marks and saliva. Anything else?’
Logan frowned. ‘Does this whole thing sound…
‘Knox drugs his Sacro handlers, beats the crap out of them, gets past the surveillance team…Then stops off on the way down the road so he can torture and rape an old man in Cove? Like it’s a service station and he fancies a burger?’ Logan hauled the plug out of the sink, letting the water gurgle away. ‘Do you think he’s the one who snatched Danby?’
He could hear her chewing again.
‘So he had help. Would explain where he got the Rohypnol from. Half the heavies in Tyneside are after Mental Mikey’s millions, maybe this is Knox’s price? Help him get revenge on the guy who put him away, and then disappear?’
Biohazard Bob was hunched over a pile of paperwork in the Wee Hoose. He looked up as Logan entered, then went back to his forms. ‘Shut the bloody door.’
Clunk. The noise of phones and harassed constables died down.
Logan settled into his chair and called Northumbria Police. Ten minutes later he had reference numbers for every case Danby had worked in the last eighteen months, and a promise that the relevant files would be with him soon as possible. Then he was put through to a Detective Inspector Walsh.
Logan frowned at the receiver. ‘Yes?’
‘Wasted? But he was—’
Logan opened the spreadsheet of Knox’s cellmates from Frankland Prison. ‘But Knox said Renwick told him —’
‘But—’
‘But I didn’t know—’
‘But…’
He was talking to a dead line. The DI had hung up.
