them. âThat message was for you. They say that even though this is a police car, youâre not allowed to stop here and Iâm not supposed to be chatting to you, so Iâve had a rollocking too. If you donât move, theyâll get the bomb squad in to blow you up.â
âFair enough,â Henry said, understanding. Any unauthorised vehicle parking near to the hotel would be seen as a potential bomb this week. âSee you, Dave.â He gave his old mate a quick wave. To Byrne he said, âLetâs follow Fanshaw-Bayley and see if heâs on his way into the nick. I recognised one of his passengers and Iâd like to have a word.â He wound his window up gratefully â his arm and leg had got quite wet.
As the car drew away, their personal radios screamed to life.
âAll patrols, please be making to Shoreside Estate. Officers requesting assistance. Repeat, officers requesting assistance, Shoreside Estate. Large disturbance in progress, officers under fire. Repeat large disturbance officers under fire. Patrols to acknowledge.â
Four
F ollowing her conversation with Henry Christie about Mo Khanâs death, DI Jane Roscoe had not been looking forward to her next encounter with Henry with any degree of anticipation. In fact she was dreading it. She was sharply aware that their embryonic relationship had got off to a very rocky start right from the moment she had first seen him when the garage door had opened, and her driver, DS Mark Evans, had said through the side of his mouth, âThatâs Henry Christie, boss,â and she had not even dared look at him as she was driven past. Then there had been the frosty, wordless encounter in the CID office when Henryâs gaze had settled on her oh so fleetingly with an expression that seemed to scream at her, âIâd like to tear your heart out with my fingernails.â And lastly, the blatantly unethical request she had made to him, which Henry, much to her surprise and shock, had agreed to. Because of all these things and more, Roscoe knew that their association would be edgy at best, most probably doomed.
Although she was certain Henry would not have believed it she had not gone out deliberately to poach his job. It had been offered to her out of the blue by ACC (Operations) Fanshaw-Bayley. Apparently he had decided on a whim that she was the right person for the job, though it was never explicitly articulated to her why she was that person, but such was the way the Constabulary worked: mysteriously.
As anyone else would, she had grabbed the opportunity with both hands. Not knowing Henry Christie personally, though having heard of him by reputation, and being unaware of any of the background to the situation, how could she have refused the offer?
At the time she had been a uniformed inspector at Chorley, to the south of the county, living in Fulwood, near Preston. Travelling to Blackpool, in the opposite direction, therefore, presented her with no real problems. In fact it was an easier journey â motorway all the way. She had been working long, tiring shifts which were causing serious ructions within her married life, and saw little of her solicitor husband. She knew the DIâs job would also mean long hours and would not solve any problems at home, but at least she would be happier at work because having spent much of her time in the CID, both as a DC and a DS, she had always wanted to progress to detective inspector.
Her feelings for the job itself did not change when she got to Blackpool, but she soon discovered that her appointment was not a popular one, particularly within the CID office. And it was all down to one man: Henry Christie, even though he wasnât even there in the flesh. Everyone regarded him as some sort of icon. But to Roscoe, his reputation hung around like a bad smell.
He was worshipped by the DCs and could do no wrong in their eyes. Within hours of starting the job Roscoe knew