congealed thickly on the end of the smashed fibula. There was dark matter oozing slowly from the centre of the bone which, Crossley concluded with revulsion, was marrow. The stench inside the car was almost overpowering.
‘How much longer do we have to sit here, waiting? I need help,’ wailed James, his cheeks tear-stained, his skin milk-white.
Crossley wiped perspiration from his face and looked at his watch.
3.27 a.m.
It was almost thirty minutes since he’d made the phone call, stopping off quickly at a pay-phone before swinging the car off the main road and into Paddington Recreation Ground. The vehicle and its two occupants now stood silently in a children’s playground. The wind, blowing across the open ground, turned the roundabout and Crossley looked up nervously every time he heard it creak. Swings also moved gently back and forth in the breeze, as if rocked by some unseen hand. Beside him, James continued to moan loudly as the pain seemed to intensify.
‘I can’t take this much longer,’ he hissed through gritted teeth. ‘Please.’
Crossley nodded and looked round again, as if seeking inspiration from the children’s slides and climbing- frames.
He heard the soft purring of a car engine and saw the Montego rolling slowly towards them, its driver flashing his lights once as he approached.
‘Who is it?’ gasped James.
Crossley didn’t answer. He pushed open the driver’s side door and clambered out, unsure whether to approach the Montego or wait. He decided to wait, watching as the driver switched off the engine and slid from behind the wheel. He walked with brisk steps.
A strong breeze ruffled Crossley’s hair and made him shiver. Inside the car James was huddled in the seat like a whimpering child.
‘What went wrong?’ Peter Farrell snapped, looking at Crossley then down at the injured James.
‘She had a fucking gun,’ Crossley told him. ‘I wasn’t going to argue with a gun.’
‘So you found nothing?’ Farrell persisted.
Crossley shook his head.
‘Did you check his office. Upstairs?’
‘We didn’t get that far,’ Crossley said. Then, turning towards his injured companion, ‘We’ve got to get him to a hospital, he’s hurt bad.’
‘The police will have put out checks on every hospital for miles. How bad is it?’ Farrell demanded.
‘Look for yourself,’ Crossley told him and pulled open the passenger door.
Farrell saw the smashed bone sticking through skin and material.
‘You were careless,’ he said irritably.
‘We were unlucky,’ Crossley protested.
‘Same thing.’
‘And what the fuck would you have done if she’d pulled a gun on
‘Pulled one on
‘So what do we do about James?’ Crossley asked. ‘He needs help, for Christ’s sake.’
Farrell turned slowly. His hand went to the inside of his jacket.
Crossley’s mouth dropped open as he saw the taller man pull a gun into view.
The silencer jammed into the muzzle of the .45 made the weapon look enormous.
Farrell fired two shots into James’s head.
The first hit him on the bridge of the nose, almost severing the appendage and taking out an eye as it exited. The second blasted away most of the back of his head, spraying it across the driver’s seat and the side windows.
The body toppled sideways, the eyes still staring wide in shocked surprise, the mouth still open.
‘Get rid of the body
Crossley looked down at the corpse, the breeze bringing the stench of blood and excrement to his nostrils. He shivered and he knew it wasn’t just the wind.
The roundabout creaked again. The swings moved gently back and forth.
The porter accepted his tip gratefully, nodded and glanced at Donna as he left, smiling approvingly when her back was turned.
She waited until the door was closed and then crossed to the window of her suite, pulling the curtains aside. The Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin overlooked St Stephen’s Green and Donna gazed out onto the park for a moment, glad to be safely at the hotel. ‘The most distinguished address in Ireland,’ boasted the legend on the desk notepad. Donna stood at the window a moment longer, gazing out at the people in the street below. Finally she lifted her small suitcase onto the bed, flipped it open and began taking clothes out, sliding them into drawers.
The flight had been smooth but Donna didn’t enjoy flying. It didn’t frighten her; she merely disliked the physical act of getting on a plane and sitting there for the duration of the journey. Fortunately the Aer Lingus 737 had delivered her from Heathrow in less than an hour, so she’d barely had time to become bored.
She’d promised to phone Julie that night to let her know she’d arrived safely and to check on her sister. The break-in of the previous night had shaken them both, but Julie more so.
Donna finished unpacking and crossed to the desk where her handbag was. She sat down, reached inside and took out an envelope, removing the contents.
There were a dozen American Express receipts inside, each bearing the name of a hotel. One of them bore the name of The Shelbourne.
She flipped open Chris’s diary and ran her finger down the entries.
She checked the date on the Amex slip against the entry for Dublin in the diary.
It matched.
So did the one for Dromoland Castle, County Clare.
And The Holiday Inn, Edinburgh.
The Mayfair, London.
Every entry in the diary was matched to a receipt. Only some of them had the initial D beside them; it was these which Donna was interested in.
It had been simple to find out which hotels Chris had stayed in. He always paid by credit card and he always kept the receipts for his accountant. She had merely unearthed them from his office.
Donna swivelled in her seat and looked across towards the bed.
She tried to drive the thought from her mind, feeling an all-too familiar surge of anger and sorrow. If only she’d been able to ask him why, perhaps it would have been more bearable. For a moment, Donna felt tears welling up in her eyes but she fought back the pain, forced the thoughts away. There would be plenty of time for them in years to come, she thought wearily. For now she replaced the receipts in the envelope and pushed it into a drawer beneath some clothes.
She put the photo of Chris and the five men in there too.
The diary she dropped back into her handbag.
Donna got to her feet and padded across to the bathroom where she showered quickly, rinsing away the dirt