Land was so used to Bryant’s odd behaviour that he finally accepted the card, looked at it and put it back in the pack. “Why would he leave a sticker on one victim but not the other? It doesn’t make any sense.”
“For once I agree with you. Nine of clubs.”
Raymond smoothed his straggling hair across his bald patch, a sure sign that he was attempting to think. “I mean,” he persisted, “what possible connection could exist between a single mum working at a cosmetics counter and a King’s Cross junkie?” He gave a weary sigh. “It was the four of diamonds. Let’s hope you’re a better detective than you are a magician.”
¦
“I don’t know how you can eat that,” said Meera Mangeshkar. She watched as Colin Bimsley stuffed a forkful of dripping orange noodles into his mouth. He was sitting on top of a green plastic recycling bin, grazing from a yellow polystyrene box, and didn’t seem to mind the smell of rotting garbage that permeated the brick yard.
The pair were staking out the Margery Street flat from the rubbish disposal area. It was the only place on the ground floor of the housing estate that could not be seen from the windows of the apartment. Half past nine on a murky, saturated Monday night. Meera was wet, cold and impatient for results. She was also annoyed that Bimsley appeared to be enjoying himself.
“I can eat anything if I’m hungry,” he told her, thrusting his plastic fork into the glutinous contents of the box. “Chicken korma, pad thai,
Meera grimaced. “You’re a genuinely disgusting person, do you know that?”
“No, I just come from a big family of coppers, that’s all. None of them ever came home and cooked after being on duty, they were all too knackered. We lived on take-out food. The difference between you and me is that you saw being a cop as a way out, whereas it never occurred to me to do anything else.”
“So you want to spend your life sifting through rotting crap and doing surveillance? You don’t want to better yourself?”
Bimsley spat a piece of gristle back into the box, then looked at her with blank blue eyes.
“I give up with you,” she said. “We’ve got nothing in common.”
“That’s why it’d be a good idea for you to go out with me. I never trust those online dating questionnaires where you list all the things you like and find someone who likes exactly the same stuff. I mean, what’s the point of having someone who agrees with you all the time?”
“And that’s your entire philosophy for dating, is it?”
“Yeah, I ask out the least likely women. It worked until I met you.”
“If you know we’ve got nothing in common, why do you keep asking?”
“I figured you’d eventually crack. I thought one day I’d be talking to you and there would be this tiny noise, like – ” There was a tinkle of breaking glass. “Yeah, like that.”
“No. Someone’s broken in,” said Meera.
Bimsley threw his dinner carton behind him and vaulted down from the bin. The pair ran around the corner in time to see a leg vanishing through Mr Fox’s kitchen window.
“There’s a back way,” said Mangeshkar. “You take it. I can get through the front.” They splattered through the flooded forecourt to the flat. Meera reached the kitchen window and lifted herself to the sill, carefully climbing through. The apartment’s interior was in darkness, but she could hear footsteps in the room beyond. Dropping to the floor, she entered the hall and saw a far door closing. She padded along the hall and cautiously pushed it open.
A familiar figure was framed outside the window. “He’s already gone,” Bimsley called. “Go back out the front.”
¦
They met outside the block, but there was no sign of anyone. A small park backed onto the estate. Beyond that was a maze of misted side streets. “How could he have gone through the flat so quickly?” Meera demanded.
“He came back for something and knew exactly where to look,” answered Colin. “Call it in.”
¦
Dan Banbury was halfway home when the message came through. Bryant wanted him to return to Margery Street and see if anything was missing. Banbury had taken photographs, but did not need to rely on them. He could always tell when something had been moved at a crime scene. As a kid he had conducted memory tests as bets. A favourite party trick had been to divine the contents of other kids’ pockets, a pastime he was now teaching to his own son. He arrived back at the housing block half an hour later, and found Bimsley waiting for him. It only took a few seconds of looking around in the living room to spot what had been removed.
“A framed photograph. There.” Banbury pointed to a small space on the wall. “It doesn’t make sense.”
“What do you mean?” Bimsley cocked his head at the rectangle of pale wallpaper.
“It was a photograph of a metal bench,” Banbury replied.
“And that’s all he’s taken?”
“Nothing else has been touched.”
“What kind of frame?”
“Aluminium, with a cardboard back.”
“Blimey,” said Bimsley. “There must have been something pretty valuable hidden inside it to risk getting caught like that.”
? Off the Rails ?
14
The Letter K
John May checked his vintage Rolex for the fifth time. He was seated at the bar of the St Pancras Grand, a restaurant on the upper level of the vast, airy St Pancras station. He was waiting for Rufus Abu. Like a pixilated image on a TV screen, Rufus was infernally difficult to keep in focus. He left a ghost track across the city’s security network, and never stayed longer than a few minutes in any public place. May tried contacting him on every electronic device he owned, but there had been no answer. All he could ever do was send a call-sign into the ether and wait for him to appear at a pre-arranged spot.
The police remained unconvinced that the teenaged hacker was working on their side. Rufus was still wanted for extradition by an American intelligence agency operating in London, because he had slipped under the tracking defences of a U.S. insurance company and exposed their vulnerability to cyber-attack. The fact that Rufus was merely intending to highlight the firm’s security issues revealed his greatest weakness; the hacker was driven to try and change the world for the better, without realising that he would always make the wrong people angry.
“Don’t make me eat here.” May turned and found Rufus standing beside him at the counter. “Just get me an OJ. I have my own alcohol.”
“I knew you wouldn’t stay long enough to have dinner,” May replied. He had picked the venue because there was only one surveillance camera in operation, by the door, and he was blocking its view. “How are you doing?”
“Copacetic, John, staying fly and dry. Cotchin’ down in the South Bank until the fudges pass. Buncha drag-ass cholos in old-school Pumas looking for a face-up.” May had trouble deciphering Rufus’s retro-slang, but vaguely recalled that a
“You’re wanted by the CIA, Rufus, what do you expect me to do? Maybe I could talk to someone, but you’ll have to do something for me.”
“Spell it, I’m listening.”
May waited while Rufus added homemade gin to his orange juice, then took the plastic sticker from his