unrealistic to Kathy. Together they went over the most urgent administrative tasks that would need to be covered, and Kathy asked her to send Phil, her usual case action manager, and DC Pip Gallagher, now permanently attached to the team, to meet her at the Chelsea police station as soon as they arrived.

They gathered there with borough command officers to plan the next stages of the investigation and allocate manpower. The steps were familiar and predictable, everyone busy, but as the time passed and no tangible leads to the killer emerged, Kathy began to feel the same nagging sense of frustration that she’d been feeling about Nancy’s investigation, as if they were missing something. It’s the public interest, she told herself. The morning editions of the papers were full of it. It was like dancing naked on an empty stage.

She was on her way to Moszynski’s autopsy, which had been pushed to the front of the longlist usual for a Monday morning, when a call came through from Marilyn at the Press Bureau.

‘I can’t get hold of Brock. Do you know where he is?’

‘He’s not available, Marilyn.’

‘Not available? I’m arranging a press briefing for one o’clock. Top priority. Commander Sharpe’s agreed it with the Deputy Commissioner. Where the hell is he?’

Kathy took a deep breath. ‘In Scotland, I’m afraid.’

She heard Marilyn splutter. ‘Did I hear that right? Another Russian oligarch gets murdered in London, every media unit from here to Vladivostok is hammering on our door, and our front man buggers off to Scotland?’

Kathy swallowed. ‘An important line of inquiry. But not for publication at this stage.’

‘Sharpe doesn’t know about it, does he? I think you’d better talk to him, quick smart.’

‘Yes, I’ll do that.’

Kathy had been putting this off, but now, glimpsing the heavy machinery of senior management that had obviously been grinding away, she saw her mistake. As if to underline it, she got another call, this time from Dot.

‘Sharpe’s office is on the warpath, Kathy. Better give him a ring.’

‘Did you tell them about Scotland?’

‘I thought I’d leave that to you.’

Kathy felt a sudden spasm of nausea and wondered if she might have caught Brock’s bug. She had an overpowering desire to tell Sharpe the truth, but she had already begun the lie and to switch stories now seemed pathetic.

Sharpe’s secretary seemed reluctant to put Kathy through at first.

‘He’s in a meeting,’ she said. ‘He really needs to talk to Brock.’

‘That won’t be possible. I’m leading the Moszynski investigation at the moment. I have to speak to him.’

There was a short hesitation. ‘Hang on.’

Then a male voice, harsh and impatient. ‘Sharpe.’

‘Sir, it’s DI Kolla.’

‘Yes?’

‘Concerning the Moszynski murder last night.’

‘Yes, yes. I need Brock to brief me immediately.’

‘I’m afraid he’s been called away urgently, sir.’

‘Called away?’

‘Yes, a critical line of inquiry, sir, which he had to attend to personally.’ Kathy hesitated, picturing herself hanging from a public gibbet. ‘In Scotland.’

‘ Scotland! ’

‘Yes.’

‘I think you’d better get in here and tell me what’s going on.’

‘Yes, sir. Can it wait for an hour or so? I’m on my way to Moszynski’s autopsy.’

There was a strained silence, then Sharpe said. ‘Just tell me, Inspector. What’s he up to? What is this critical line of inquiry?’

‘Nancy Haynes, the American tourist, was about to go on to Scotland when she was killed last Thursday. We learned of a substantial legacy up there which she intended claiming. This provides the first real motive we’ve had for her murder, and Brock felt it was so important that he had to pursue it immediately.’

‘But… for God’s sake, that can wait. Moszynski’s the priority now. Moszynski, not Haynes.’

‘That’s what made it so urgent, sir. You see, if Haynes’ death was indeed a planned murder, and not a random act, then Moszynski’s murder may be simply an attempt to divert our attention and resources onto a much higher profile case, away from the real reason.’

‘The same killer…’ Sharpe said. He sounded mildly sceptical but not entirely incredulous, Kathy thought. She hoped that a banal, domestic motive for Moszynski’s death might have some appeal to Sharpe, at least enough to buy a day or two.

‘How long before he gets back?’

‘Hopefully tonight, sir, but I’m waiting for him to contact me. Unfortunately the castle’s in a rather remote area, with poor mobile coverage.’

‘The castle?’

‘The legacy, sir, a castle.’

She wondered if she’d gone too far, then heard him muse, ‘A castle in Scotland…’ and imagined the picture in his head, a turreted stone keep in the middle of a lonely loch among purple hills inhabited only by shaggy highland cattle.

‘We were planning on Brock holding a press conference today.’

‘I wonder if that could be delayed, sir, until we have something concrete to report?’

‘We’ll get back to you. Let me know immediately you hear anything, understand? Immediately.’

Kathy hung up and continued to the autopsy, which confirmed what they’d already assumed. Moszynski had died as a result of three stab wounds to the chest, one of which had punctured the left ventricle of his heart. The blade was sharp and narrow, about one centimetre wide and at least ten centimetres long. The assailant had most likely been sitting or crouching on the victim’s right side, and would have been right-handed. His or her right hand and forearm would have been covered in blood.

Kathy went on to Queen Anne’s Gate, where Zack had been busy compiling data fed into his computers from the teams in Chelsea and surrounding districts. Bren Gurney, the other DI on Brock’s team, came in and asked Kathy how it was going.

‘What’s this about Brock going to Scotland?’

He laughed when she explained. ‘The old bastard! He’s pulled a few swifties in his time, but this is a classic.’

‘It’s not funny, Bren. I’m out on a limb on this. I had to tell Sharpe a string of lies.’

Bren became serious. ‘Okay. How can I help?’

They went over it all again, the two murders, the lack of leads.

‘That was a good story, Kathy, the castle in Scotland. You should write a crime novel.’

‘The great detective doesn’t go down with flu in crime novels, Bren. Only alcohol poisoning and gunshot wounds.’

‘The crucial point is that you’re connecting the two crimes. You’re quite sure of that, are you? You’re not just trying to stop someone else moving in and taking over one or both of your murders?’

‘It’s a hell of a coincidence if they’re not connected.’

‘Yes, but the connection may not be crucial. There could still be two quite separate murderers, the second riding on the first to create a false impression of a connection, to muddy the waters. It might have affected his timing, but not his intent. And you’ve got to consider whether you wouldn’t be better concentrating on Nancy Haynes’ murder and letting someone else run the other. The Moszynski case is going to be a bastard. Everyone’ll want a piece of it-Counter Terrorism Command, MI5, MI6. And what do we know of these Russians, the Litvinenkos and Patarkatsishvilis? Only what we read in the papers-that they were maybe killed by the KGB. This isn’t our kind of case. Those other guys are experts; let them handle it.’

Kathy nodded. ‘Yes, you’re probably right. But that’s not the way Brock sees it.’

With ominous timing, Dot rang through to say that Kathy would be required to attend an interagency meeting at Marsham Street later that afternoon.

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