underneath the window. Steel checked – more vodka. ‘What do you think, nicked?’
Logan nodded at a dozen multipacks of Durex condoms. ‘That or he was planning one hell of a weekend.’
Steel peered into another box. ‘Journals.’ She dumped one on top of a crate of rolling tobacco and flipped it open. The pages were creased and grubby, covered in a dense web of dark-blue biro. She peered at it, then backed off, and tried again, one eye squinted shut. ‘Bloody handwriting’s appalling.’
Logan looked over her shoulder. ‘Get your eyes tested.’
‘I don’t
‘If you say so.’
To be fair, Steve Polmont’s writing
‘What else?’
‘Something about a telephone conversation…’ The writing grew increasingly erratic, until it was little more than a collection of random scribbles. ‘Must’ve been drinking while he wrote it.’
Steel slapped Logan on the arm. ‘Told you I didn’t need glasses. Who’s “G and Y”?’
‘No idea. “A” might be Andy? The big bald bloke?’ Logan tried, and failed, to turn the page with his bagged hands. ‘Little help?’
‘What did your last slave die of?’ She was rummaging through another box, pulling out bundles of computer games, still wrapped in shiny plastic. ‘Fancy the new
‘That would be unethical.’
‘You’re quite right, Sergeant, what
Logan stood for a moment, looking at all the bottles of vodka, wondering if he shouldn’t take a couple into custody while he was at it.
‘You coming?’
‘Oh…yes.’ He struggled with his jacket pocket, pulling the video game out with his slippery hands, and dumped it back in the box. ‘Already got that one.’
Steel rolled her eyes. ‘You are
She really had no idea.
12
Logan tumbled another handful of dried penne into the pot of boiling water. The ivory shapes looked like little segments of finger-bone in the light from the extractor fan.
Through in the lounge, the TV was babbling away to itself, the
A little after half six and there was still no sign of Samantha – probably pulling another green shift – but he was going to bloody well impress her when she finally got in. Baked pasta with some sort of sauce and cheese. A thank you for her promising to rush through the DNA samples she’d scraped from under his nails in the little lab back at FHQ.
He checked the recipe he’d downloaded, then excavated a dust-covered casserole dish from the cupboard. A home-cooked meal, how hard could it be?
Chop an onion, fry it in olive oil, chuck in a tin of tomatoes, couple tins of tuna, some mixed herbs. Easy. What was all the fuss about?
Right now Steel was probably breaking back into Steve Polmont’s flat, acting all surprised at the boxroom full of stolen goods. At least Logan didn’t have to worry about his fingerprints being on anything.
He checked the recipe again, went to the wine rack for the last bottle of red in the house and glugged in about a glassful.
Move over Gordon Ramsay.
Should have taken a bottle of that vodka when he’d had the chance.
He let the sauce simmer for a bit, then helped himself to a glass. Chef’s prerogative. It wasn’t as if he was planning on getting hammered, just having a civilized glass of wine. Then another one. And another.
Bloody Steel. Lecturing him about
Hypocrite.
Logan chucked everything together in the casserole dish, then covered it in a wodge of grated cheddar. Whacked it in the oven.
Maybe have another glass of wine to celebrate…