He smiled.
47
‘I think I may be in love!’
Roy Grace looked up as Glenn Branson entered his office, swung around one of the chairs in front of his desk, and sat astride it like he was riding a horse.
‘So do I!’ Grace held up a printout of a Frosts Garage fact sheet and photograph of a shiny black Alfa Romeo Giulietta. ‘What do you think of her?’
‘Awesome!’
‘A year old, high mileage, but she’s in my price range!’
Branson took the details out of courtesy and glanced through them. ‘It’s only got two doors!’
‘Nope, four – the rear door handles are hidden.’
‘So you could put the baby in the rear seat, right?’
‘Exactly!’
‘Go for it. Treat yourself, you deserve it. And hey, at your age, it could be the last fun vehicle you buy before your mobility scooter.’
‘Fuck off!’ Grace retorted with a grin. ‘So what or who are you in love with?’
‘Well, you’re probably not going to believe it but – um – ’ He looked uncharacteristically coy, suddenly. ‘You know – Bella is actually a very attractive lady when she puts her mind to it!’
‘I thought she was looking quite foxy on
‘Not exactly. But I’m working on it.’
‘Good man, I’m pleased. It’s about time you started getting a life again.’
‘She’s a sweet lady.’
‘She’s smart, I’ve a lot of time for her. And well done you on your television debut – you were brilliant!’
Branson looked genuinely thrilled. ‘You think so, really?’
‘Really!’
There was a knock on the door.
‘Come in!’ Grace called out.
Ray Packham entered, holding Grace’s BlackBerry. He looked at both detectives, then hesitated. ‘Sorry to interrupt, chief. Just bringing this back.’
‘Any joy?’
‘I’ve cloned it – I’ll study it as soon as I have a moment.’ He handed over the phone.
Grace thanked him, and saw the red message light winking furiously. He began a perfunctory scroll through the messages of the past hour. Then, moments after Packham had shut the door, the BlackBerry rang.
It was Chief Superintendent Graham Barrington, the Divisional Commander for Brighton and Hove. ‘Roy, just to let you know Gaia has arrived at The Grand. I’ve arranged with her security chap, a fellow by the name of Andrew Gulli, for a meeting to discuss her security in Brighton in an hour’s time, in the Presidential Suite at the hotel. Are you able to make that?’
Grace told him he was. Just as he ended the call his internal phone rang. He answered, and heard the excited voice of one of his new team members, DC Emma Reeves.
‘Sir,’ she said, ‘I’ve just taken an interesting call from someone who saw
‘And?’
‘It was from a member of an angling club near Henfield. He’s just seen a piece of cloth that matches the one DS Branson showed on television.’ Henfield was a village ten miles north-west of Brighton.
‘How sure is he?’
‘He’s sent me a picture from his mobile phone. It certainly looks like a match. He says he was there yesterday and he’s certain the fabric wasn’t there then.’
‘You’re in the Incident Room?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘I’ll be straight down.’
He ended the call then stood up. ‘Want to go fishing?’ he asked Branson.
‘Never been fishing in my life.’
‘Now’s the time to start, before you get too old.’
‘You can sod off, too!’
‘Remember the actor Michael Hordern?’
‘
‘Know what he said?’
‘I’ve a feeling you’re about to tell me,’ Branson said with a grin.
‘
‘That’s how you stay young, old timer?’
‘Haven’t fished in years,’ said Grace. ‘I just have the gift of natural youth.’
‘In your dreams.’
‘No, in my dreams I’m even younger, and pushing you around in a wheelchair.’
48
Ten minutes later, Roy Grace stared at the blow-up of the photograph that had been texted through to Emma Reeves’s phone. It was a jagged piece of fabric, snagged on what appeared to be a branch of gorse.
‘Looks a pretty close match,’ Glenn Branson said, looking over his shoulder.
‘It’s the same pattern,’ Grace agreed.
‘This chap is absolutely certain it wasn’t there yesterday.’
Grace nodded, thinking hard. ‘Significant it appears the morning after you show it on
‘That’s what I’m thinking.’
‘Okay, send one of our detectives down to the fishing club with the Crime Scene Manager, taking the piece of cloth we have, and see if the fabric matches. If it does, get the whole area sealed off as a crime scene and get a forensic strategy in place right away. We’ll need a land and water search. It sounds like a potential deposition site.’
Leaving Grace in his office to finish off some urgent paperwork on the Venner case, before heading to the security meeting on Gaia, Glenn hurried back to MIR-1. He despatched DC Emma Reeves, together with David Green, the Crime Scene Manager, to the angling club.
Then he sat at his workstation and began checking through the large number of other calls that had come in following his
An hour later Emma Reeves phoned Glenn Branson in great excitement to tell him that the fabric did appear to be an exact match. Also she said there were fresh-looking tyre tracks that had not been made by the vehicle