looking agitated, if not exactly nervous. His face and hair were both greyer than Thorne remembered, and he had filled out a little beneath the blue and white striped shirt he wore with standard HMP-issue jeans and training shoes. He stabbed at his watch. âYouâre late.â The irritation was clear enough under the nasal Derry twang.
âSomewhere else youâd like to be?â Thorne asked. He took off his jacket, laid it across the back of a chair. Anna did the same.
âGot a class.â
Thorne nodded. It looked like he, rather than Gary Brand, had been closer to the mark when it came to guessing at Monahanâs prison hobbies. That said, it might have been a class in cage fighting. Like most prisons, aside from a bewildering assortment of treatment programmes, Wakefield had an enormous range of activities and educational opportunities on offer. Thorne happened to know for example that those working in the engineering workshop spent their time making security gates, grilles and fencing. Even he had to admit that sounded like taking the piss. âI thought you might have a hot date.â
âYou were funny as cancer ten years ago,â Monahan said. âYouâve not got any funnier.â
âNice to see you again, too.â
Monahan looked at Anna for the first time. âWhoâs this?â
âDetective Carpenter,â Thorne said. Not a lie. Not exactly. He saw Monahanâs eyes wander across Annaâs body, lingering where they shouldnât. âLetâs crack on, shall we? Seeing as youâre so busy.â
Monahan shrugged, leaned back.
âYou know your former employerâs out and about, donât you?â Thorne let it hang for a few seconds. âIâm talking about Donna Langford, obviously.â
Another shrug. Monahan might have known, or known and not cared.
âSorry, when I said âemployerâ, did you think I meant Alan Langford?â
The hesitation was brief, but it was enough. âWhy would I think that?â
âWell, you did some work for him too, once upon a time. Before Donna hired you, I mean.â
âSo?â
âSo, Iâm just trying to avoid any confusion.â
âYouâre the one whoâs confused, pal. How can he be out and about anywhere?â
âOf course. Heâs dead meat, isnât he?â Thorne shook his head in mock-annoyance at his own mock-idiocy. âSeriously overdone meat, now I think about it, but certainly dead. Stupid mistake on my part. Donât know what I was thinking.â He looked hard at Monahan, watched the eyes move back to Anna.
Less about lust this time. More an attempt to change the way the conversation was heading.
âIsnât it kind of annoying?â Thorne asked. âDonna on the out while youâre still stuck in here, doing your GCSEs or whatever.â
âNot thought about it,â Monahan said.
âI donât think I believe you.â
âBelieve what you like.â
âNot that youâve done yourself a lot of favours, mind you. All that extra time getting whacked on to your sentence. Assaulting prison guards, trashing your cell . . .â
âWhy should you care?â
âI couldnât give a toss, but itâs not clever, is it?â
âI get wound up.â
âYou must love that Seg Unit.â
Monahanâs head dropped a little, one hand pulling at the fingers of the other. âCanât do anything about it.â
âWhat have you got, another seven or eight years, minimum?â
A nod. His chin inching closer to his chest.
Thorne was about to speak again when Anna cut in. âSounds like it could get a whole lot longer if youâre not careful,â she said. If she was aware of the hard look Thorne gave her, she chose to ignore it. âYou need to sort yourself out.â
Monahan raised his head, sniffed. After a few seconds he looked away from Anna, sat