To remedy this, however, there was going to be a series of raids the following morning at the homes of a number of mugging suspects, aged between twelve and sixteen, one or more of whom could well have been involved in the attack on the old lady. There were nine homes in all to search, so it was going to involve all of us. ‘It’s time to take the battle to them,’ he concluded loudly, but for me the message was muted. I remembered him saying exactly the same thing a few months back about crack dealers in the area. We’d simultaneously raided a total of fourteen premises in an operation Knox had cunningly codenamed ‘Street Shock’, had recovered drugs with a street value of more than twenty-five grand, and made a total of nine arrests. Five were later released without charge; one absconded while on bail and hadn’t been seen since; one pleaded guilty and received a fine and suspended sentence; one was acquitted by a jury who believed his story that he hadn’t known the stuff was in the house; and one was now in custody awaiting trial, having previously been released on bail and re-arrested twice in the space of three weeks for dealing. The only shock was the one the taxpayers would get if they ever discovered what a pathetically negligible effect such an expensive and time-consuming operation had had on both the criminals and the local crime figures. It was hardly a wonder our clear-up rate was so bad. Most of the time, it just wasn’t worth the bother.
I had a brief chat with Malik after the meeting had concluded, but neither of us had time to cover much ground. He was now heavily involved in the mugging case and was keen to make a good impression.
After that, Knox had me writing up reports on all my current cases, which took all morning and a good part of the afternoon. He told me Capper wanted to take a look at what I was working on to see if there was any mileage in giving me additional resources; in other words, to see if there were any mistakes I was making. Apparently, the two of them were particularly keen for movement on the armed robbery case, which appeared to have ground to a complete halt. Which was true. It had. But I wasn’t quite sure what more I or any of my colleagues could do to kick-start it. If no-one gives you information and the perpetrators haven’t left any obvious clues, a detective’s room for manoeuvre is somewhat limited. But it transpired that the Chief Superintendent had had a meeting with representatives of the Kurdish community (both the stabbing victims – the shop’s proprietor and the customer – were Kurds) who’d told him they wouldn’t rest until the culprits were caught. They had also raised that possibility, so dreaded of all senior Met officers, that racism might be playing a part in holding things up. Obviously, the Chief Super was keen to show his community bridge-building skills, and since much of the work on the case had been done by me, I was going to have to indulge in some serious arse-covering. Knox also suggested that at a later date I too might have to prostrate myself in front of these so-called representatives of the community so that they could have a go at me as well – another good reason to resign, if ever I needed one.
It was difficult to concentrate on the report writing. I kept thinking of the sex with Carla, and wishing that I could repeat the experience. I had to make a conscious effort not to call her number. I knew she wouldn’t appreciate it. Not today. She was, as she said, a woman who liked her independence. Fair enough. I’m a man who likes mine – most of the time anyway – but I still harboured hopes that I could get something going with her.
Some time around lunchtime, Jean Ashcroft phoned again. She asked me if I’d been round to see Danny. I told her I hadn’t but that I’d phoned him, and everything seemed all right. She said she’d tried to get hold of him but he wasn’t answering his phones, and I mentioned that he’d gone away on holiday for a couple of weeks.
‘Did you find out where he was getting his money from?’ she asked. ‘It’s just not like him to have any, you know.’
I told her that I wasn’t sure (I’d given up on the police informant story, thinking it might prompt her into further investigation), but said that I didn’t think it was anything to be overly concerned about. ‘Maybe he’s got less money than you think,’ I added. ‘You can get these last-minute deals for hardly anything now, so I expect he just picked up something cheap. I checked with some colleagues up his way and they say he’s not in the frame for anything they’ve got on the go.’
‘But he didn’t say anything about what was worrying him?’
‘No. But I wouldn’t read too much into it. He didn’t sound like he had anything serious on his mind, and I can usually tell. It’s my job.’
‘Did you say it was yesterday he went on holiday?’
‘That’s what he told me he was doing when I called him.’
‘Well, I’ve tried his mobile this morning and he’s still not answering.’
I said that this was probably because he couldn’t get a signal where he was, and I think I managed to convince her not to panic about it. ‘He’ll call back soon, I’m sure,’ I said, but for the first time I began to get a bad feeling about it all. I made a mental note to call Raymond when I got the chance, just to confirm that neither he nor his jittery associates had tried to track Danny down. Finally, I
