have a bearing. The public are always more sympathetic towards a pretty woman than a plain one, although this one is a bit old to fully catch the nation’s attention. Women over twenty-seven have to work so much harder to exist, even being murdered isn’t enough to incite sympathy, unless you are cute. Clements sighs, frustrated at the world. Frustration is not a bad reaction; it means there is some fight in her, still. Sometimes Clements is furious and wants to kick and punch at the invisible, insidious walls that limit, cage, corrupt. Other days she’s just out-and-out depressed. Those are the worst days.

Leigh Fletcher has long dark hair. In the pic the glossy hair has clearly just benefited from a fresh blow-dry. She’s wearing lipstick, a pale pink shade, but not much else in the way of make-up. She doesn’t need it. Her lashes are thick and fabulous, her skin clear and the only wrinkles on her face are around her eyes. Clements imagines the missing woman identifying them as laughter lines, shunning the miserable description of crow’s feet. She’s smiling in the photo, a huge beam. But there’s something about her big brown soulful eyes that makes Clements wonder. She looks weary. Most working mums are tired – that’s a given – but this is deeper. She’s drained. Done for.

Clements shakes her head. Sometimes she wonders whether she has too much imagination for a cop. She has to keep that in check. It’s perfectly possible that she’s reading too much into the snap.

Suddenly, Clements feels the weight of a hand on the back of her chair, someone leaning in far too close – ostensibly to look at what she is typing – in fact, simply invading her body space because he can. She recognises DC Morgan’s bulk and body odour instantly. Without looking at him, she knows he’ll have food between his teeth or caught in his beard. His shirt will be gaping, the buttons straining to stretch the material across his pale podgy belly that is coated in dark hair. Morgan is not an attractive man anymore, but Clements admits he might have had a charm once. Before his confidence loosened into boorishness, when his mass was the result of muscle not fat. Invasion of body space – and probably much more – is the sort of stunt he has been pulling for twenty-plus years, and no amount of training courses on appropriate workplace behaviour are likely to change him now. In fact, Clements has been on the courses with him and heard him dismiss them as ‘political correctness gone mad. Nothing more than the spawn of limp-wristed liberals’. He is a treat. She would probably hate him if he wasn’t such a good copper.

‘All right, Morgan?’ Clements says in greeting. She rolls her chair away from him, narrowly avoiding running over his foot but forcing him to jump back from her.

He straightens up, arches his back. ‘Must be the day for it.’ He likes starting conversations in an obtuse way, forcing others to ask questions, somehow making him seem more interesting and engaging than he truly is.

‘The day for what?’ Clements asks dutifully.

‘Missing women. I’ve just had one put through to my desk too.’ Clements feels a chill run through her body, her breathing stutters but she manages to keep her outward response to nothing more than raising an eyebrow. So, he was actually reading her screen. That doesn’t mean he wasn’t trying to secretly rub up against her, though, it’s just proof that, despite stereotypes, he is a man who can multitask.

‘Really. Who? Where?’

‘A Kai Janssen. Her husband called it in. Woman in her early forties, boss.’

Clements is not Morgan’s boss. She’s not even his senior. They hold the same rank. However, she is fifteen years younger than him and likely to continue to take exams and be promoted, whereas he is most probably done. The use of the term ‘boss’ is laden with sarcasm. He does not see this ‘slip of a girl’ so much as an equal. It’s her breasts. Not that her breasts are particularly notable. Not especially large or small but their existence – proving she is a woman – is enough to convince Morgan that Clements is inherently inferior. That’s why he laughs at the idea that one day she might outrank him. He jokes about it now, so that when it does happen, it won’t seem threatening or even important.

‘The husband sounded posh, maybe foreign. Dutch? With a name like Janssen. Some foreigners sound so posh they sound more English than we do, though, eh? I’m just heading over there to talk to him in person. To follow up.’

‘Do you mind if I take it?’ Clements tries to keep the eagerness out of her voice. If he knows she really wants it, then he’s doing her a favour. If he does her a favour, she owes him.

‘You think they are connected?’

‘Maybe.’

Morgan scratches his belly, glances towards the window. It’s raining again. ‘Be my guest,’ he says.

15

DC Clements

Clements doesn’t bother taking Tanner with her. She needs a break from her esteemed male colleagues: their sweat, their opinions, their careless assumptions. Not for the first time she wishes her division had more female officers.

It’s 3 p.m. by the time she arrives at the address Morgan has given her. The property is on the river, one of those flash, multi-million-pound apartment blocks within spitting distance of the shiny financial district. She is a bit surprised because urban legend has it that no one lives in these apartments, that they are all bought up by Russian oligarchs who don’t want to live in the UK but want to protect their cash and so pour it into something tangible overseas. A soulless arrangement. This is a very different part of London from the bit she was at earlier. A few miles in physical distance, worlds apart in reality. Leigh Fletcher’s home is slap bang in the middle of row after

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