onto the carpet, his back arching with each retch.
Lucy heard the wailing siren of the ambulance cut through the white noise of the alarm.
âWhatâs the code for the alarm?â she asked.
Fleming looked up at her, then turned to the floor once more as he dry-heaved. Finally he struggled to stand, seemingly not realizing that his feet were still on the stairs.
âThe alarm, sir,â Lucy said. âWhatâs the code?â
âOne, two, three, four,â he managed hoarsely.
So much for police officers being security conscious, Lucy thought.
Lucy had just managed to get the code entered and the alarm silenced when the blaring of the siren outside crescendoed, then stopped abruptly. She could see the flickering of the blue lights through the chink in the curtain over the front door. She pulled the curtain back, turned the key left in the lock and opened the door, flooding the stultifying atmosphere of the hallway both with light and fresh air.
âIs there an officer down?â the paramedic asked, stepping into the hallway and catching sight of Fleming at once.
âI thought he was injured when I looked in from outside,â Lucy explained. âI donât think itâs quite as serious as I thought.â
The paramedic approached him. âSir?â he said. âCan you hear me?â
Fleming groaned and tried to shift himself again.
âIs he pissed?â the paramedic asked incredulously.
Lucy nodded, the gesture greeted by Flemingâs grumbles of disagreement.
âIâm sorry,â she said. âI thought it was ... you know. I looked in and saw him lying there.â
âWeâll give him a quick check over,â the man said. âHe might have injured himself in the fall.â He shifted across to Fleming again. âWeâre going to lift you, mate, all right?â
Fleming muttered something, but the man moved in and, gripping the drunk man under the armpits, hefted him to his feet.
âSit there a moment and Iâll get some help,â he said as he helped Fleming to sit on the bottom step of the staircase.
Fleming slumped on the step, then leant sideways, against the wall. His face was pale, his stubble grey against his skin, flecked with his vomit.
âAre you OK, Tom?â Lucy said, stepping past the pool on the floor and laying one hand on his shoulder.
He stared at her accusingly. âWhat the hell did you call them for?â he said.
Chapter Fifteen
She was making coffee for them both in Flemingâs kitchen when Tara Gallagher called. Theyâd had a hit on the metal thefts. Finnâs scrap metal yard had called to say that a team was offloading cabling at that moment. Finn, keen to avoid charges of handling stolen goods, had said that if the police were quick enough, they might catch them in the act.
F innâs yard was on the outskirts of the city, past Ballyarnett, where Amelia Earhart had landed following her cross-Atlantic flight in 1932. The yard itself was a half-acre compound, enclosed on all sides by a metal palisade fence. A small portable unit from which the owner operated his business sat behind the front section of the fence, at the single gateway into the yard.
The PSNI teams had parked some distance away and were watching the gang as they moved to and fro, shifting metal from the rear of their white Transit van, which was parked on the roadway that bisected the yard.
To the left-hand side of the road, the skeletal remains of crushed cars sat atop each other, three high, six piles deep, against the palisade fence. The other half of the yard, to the right of the gangâs van, was comprised of piles of scrap metal and skips, some already filled, as best Lucy could tell. She could see four men moving backwards and forwards, removing scrap from the back of the van and depositing it in different piles and skips, perhaps in an attempt to mix the stolen metal more thoroughly with the legitimate