‘It’s all documented on the custody record,’ the sergeant said. ‘There was all sorts of talk about civil litigation and I think the chief super was just covering his arse. Sorry, boss.’
‘I’ll go and see him now.’
‘There’s something else,’ the sergeant hesitated.
‘What?’ Henry said suspiciously.
‘Something I overheard… about the house searches…’ Henry’s guts whipped over and a fist seemed to crush them. ‘About them being illegal, too, and the chief super saying he would cancel or stop them.’
‘Shit… thanks, buzz me out, will you?’
Henry barged past him and went out into the police garage where he had half-abandoned the pool car. Here he found a signal on his mobile phone and called the support-unit sergeant in charge of the search at Sunderland’s house.
‘It’s Henry Christie… has anyone contacted you about stopping the search, Dave?’
‘No, should they have?’
‘They might do… look, what I want you to do is this…’ Henry gave him some instructions and at the end of the call he leaned against the pool car. The engine was still creaking as it cooled down from boiling point and a horrible whiff emanated from it. He shook his head, wondering what the hell was happening and who was on whose side.
Steeling himself, he walked back into the station, deciding to take the stairs up to the level on which the chief superintendent’s office was located instead of the lift.
Being early in the day, it was easy to find a space in the hospital car park. Flynn walked in and made his way through to the ward, off which Colin was now being cared for. As he turned into the ward, a nurse emerged from an office and asked if she could help.
Flynn’s nice smile and general charm worked wonders and although it was well out of normal visiting hours, she said he could have ten minutes — max — with the patient, who was awake and actually eating for the first time since his operation.
Colin looked better than when Flynn had last seen him, but was still exhausted and drawn.
‘Flynn!’
‘Hi, Col, how you feeling?’
He was sitting, propped up by pillows. Scrambled eggs on toast were on a plate across his knees.
‘I’m actually famished and feeling as good as can be expected, as they say. But famished is good. So, what’s new? Shouldn’t you be minding the shop?’
‘Yeah, I should,’ Flynn said, knowing that Colin knew nothing about the occurrences of the last few days. Flynn regarded his old mate with a puckered brow.
‘Problem?’ Colin asked.
The secretary rose defensively as Henry barged through the door of the divisional commander’s outer office.
‘I want to see Mr Geldhill,’ he said, and made to his right to pass her on the wing to get to the divisional commander’s office door.
She moved quickly and positioned herself between Henry and the door, shaking her head. ‘He’s busy. Someone’s in with him.’
‘Margery,’ Henry said, he had known the battle axe for quite a few years, ‘I don’t give a toss.’
‘You can’t go in, Henry.’
Henry shot her a pitying look. ‘I think you’ll find I can,’ he said petulantly.
‘Henry, please.’
‘Just tell him you couldn’t stop me. Tell him I was rude and elbowed my way past you — which is what I am and what I’m going to do.’
She saw ire and determination in Henry’s whole being, could see he was shaking. She wilted and moved sideways, allowing him to pass, a glint of apprehension in her eyes.
He did not knock, simply opened the door and let himself into the chief super’s office.
Tom Gledhill was sitting behind his wide desk, a uniformed inspector sitting opposite him. From their body language they seemed to be having a fairly informal discussion. Gledhill looked up and the instantaneous change in his demeanour was visible, becoming upright in his chair, tense suddenly.
Henry stood there, not saying a word.
Gledhill said, ‘Excuse me?’ Still Henry did not speak. ‘Henry, can’t you see I’m busy here?’
Henry knew he was trembling. He pointed a finger at the inspector. ‘Get out,’ he said.
Dumbfounded, the inspector’s mouth actually dropped open in complete horror. He looked for guidance from the commander.
‘We’ll continue this later, Gerry.’
The inspector stood and sidled warily around Henry, looking at the detective superintendent with a mix of awe and contempt, unable to make up his mind one way or the other.
‘And shut the door,’ Henry snapped. The poor man reacted as though he’d been slapped by a wet towel in a changing room and jerked out of the office.
Henry’s gaze settled on Gledhill, who picked up his desk phone. ‘Margery, definitely no interruptions now. Yes, I know.’ He glanced at Henry. ‘He is, you’re right.’ He cradled the phone. ‘Sit.’
Henry sat on the recently vacated chair. ‘What’s going on?’
‘With regard to your prisoners?’
‘Tom, no — with regard to the situation in the Middle East. Please, don’t fuck me about.’
Gledhill’s face hardened. ‘And don’t you forget you are talking to someone of senior rank,’ he bristled, but not terribly convincingly. Sometimes, even in the modern day and age, rank was pulled.
‘Fair enough,’ Henry relented. ‘Don’t fuck me about — sir.’
Henry saw the man was needled. His jaw muscles worked as though he was chewing something tough and unpleasant. ‘Like I said,’ Henry repeated, ‘what’s going on. Sir?’
‘I was dragged out of bed at five this morning by an irate solicitor, demanding that he be heard and that his clients were to be released forthwith, following their unlawful arrests.’
‘OK — so why wasn’t I contacted about this? I would have gladly turned out to defend the position.’
‘Henry, I tried to call you several times — no reply.’
Henry held up his phone. ‘No missed calls on this,’ he said.
Gledhill shrugged. ‘I take it you were ensconced with your tame landlady, out in the wilds where the phone signal is non-existent. Not good for an SIO. Hardly professional, eh?’ Gledhill was trying to bounce it back to Henry.
‘If you knew where I was, why didn’t you call the landline?’
‘It doesn’t really matter now, does it? Fact is I got dragged out of bed, you were uncontactable and someone had to make a decision.’
‘So you took the line of least resistance?’
‘I did the correct thing under the circumstances, and with regard to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act and the Codes of Practice.’ He waited for Henry’s challenge.
‘Utter cock!’
‘The solicitor argued that the arrests were purely speculative, with no evidential foundation or reasonable suspicion. The force was in a very bad position.’
Henry studied the senior officer, senior in terms of rank, not years. He was not impressed. ‘Tom — Harry Sunderland probably killed his wife. Ralph Barlow has been feeding him confidential information which was used to commit crime. They could both be linked to the unsolved murder of a teenage girl and the search of Sunderland’s house has uncovered some pretty fucking damning evidence about him sheltering two killers.’
‘Henry, this is not the good old days, like when you worked down the Valley. You cannot lock people up on a whim and then go looking for evidence, just because you think they might be guilty. That was a seventies trick and you know it. And how come the searches are still going on? I specifically instructed Rik Dean to contact the search teams to call them off.’
Henry held back a smirk. ‘Guess the message mustn’t have got through — bad reception up there.’
‘What have you found?’