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Authors: Paul Cornell

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‘Talk a lot, don’t you?’ said the other bloke this time.

Sefton gave him a long look that made him take a step back. Then he broke into a cheerful smile. ‘Sorry,’ he said, ‘long day.’ And he went back to the safe house
alone.

And then it was over. He was told he should expect a meeting with SCD 10 for reassignment, considered damaged goods along with the rest of Goodfellow. But then he got another
call: this time Lofthouse’s office, which was on his approved list but not a number he’d ever used. A new meeting to be held at a Radisson hotel out near Heathrow. This must be a
post-mortem, something on the way to holding an inquiry. Dirt was going to be dished and Sefton resolved that, just for once, he’d do the dishing. Against all his experience of the copper
lifestyle, he was hoping for some sort of closure.

He stepped out of the lift, walked into the anonymous meeting room without knocking, closed the door behind him and found himself facing someone he didn’t know. A young woman in her
twenties, who had the strangest eyes he’d ever seen. She looked out of place in a suit, didn’t stand like police did – she wasn’t balanced squarely on both feet so as to be
braced against whatever was about to happen, the way he’d had to train himself not to stand. She thus looked vulnerable, and vulnerable was worrying. Lofthouse, Quill and Costain were there,
too. Apart from the detective superintendent, they all looked equally uncomfortable. ‘Ma’am,’ he nodded, ‘Sir.’ Just a nod to Costain. ‘Who’s
this?’

‘This is our intelligence analyst, Lisa Ross,’ began Lofthouse. ‘Lisa, this is DC—’

What the fuck?
‘Ma’am, I’m not comfortable with—!’

‘You were told at the start of Goodfellow that Lisa was indoctrinated in the operation, but cut out from it for security reasons. And you’re now reacting like any UC would, but
Goodfellow is over, Detective Constable. And I’ve put together a juicy little spin-off.’

Sefton felt like walking straight out again. This was the last thing he’d expected. And it was not bloody closure. A spin-off with Costain? But . . . he wasn’t being sent home
either. He controlled himself. He kept it all in. He nodded to Ross. ‘DC Kevin Sefton, second UC.’

She looked back at him, apparently as fearful of hearing his name as he was of giving it. Then she looked over to Costain. ‘
You’re
“Blakey”, then?’ she
said.

‘Guilty as charged.’ At least he hadn’t smiled.

Ross actually snorted, which made Sefton hide a smile. Oh, he liked her.

Quill had meanwhile been lost in paperwork and waiting. Waiting far too long for those bloody test results to come in. He’d also been anticipating a post-mortem in which
they’d doubtless try to establish exactly what Costain had been guilty of. His own reports to Lofthouse had leaned heavily in that direction. But it seemed he’d been ignored.

‘A spin-off?’ he enquired.

‘Just you four, reporting directly to me.’

Quill looked round at the others, and saw they were as boggled as he was. ‘Two UCs, an analyst and a DI?’

‘Yes.’

‘Well, apart from anything else, I’ll need my DS, Harry Dobson—’

‘I’m sorry, no.’

Quill felt himself getting angry. ‘Is the possibility of corruption in Gipsy Hill so widespread,’ he said, ‘that
we
are the only four definitely exempt?’ And he
couldn’t help but look straight at Costain as he said it.

Lofthouse just raised a warning eyebrow.

Costain had only narrowly persuaded himself to come here. His memory darted back now to the night when Lofthouse herself, incredibly, had arrived outside his cell. She’d
taken away the Nagra tape. But then she’d come back, the key to the cell in her hand. ‘Only take phone calls from me,’ she’d instructed, walking him out to a waiting car.
‘I’ll take care of you. All right?’

He’d felt ridiculously glad to hear that. He remembered the night when she’d called him about the death that occurred in custody. He’d heard about Rob breaking, of him being
about to tell it all, against everything he stood for, and then he heard that Quill had been the only officer in the room. Costain had hung up and gone to a door in his safe house and started
slamming it. As if that would bring down punishment.

‘Just us four?’ he echoed, glaring back at Quill in the same way the man was glaring at him. ‘How are we going to do this without a traffic warden and a dog handler?’

Since that death in custody, Ross had continued examining the evidence from Goodfellow in her exile in Norwood. She’d kept at it ferociously, focused on it, because she
couldn’t see a life beyond it. She’d kept telling herself she needed to get past how she felt about Toshack. She’d kept trying to find satisfaction in his death. But she
couldn’t.

And now this new operation was going to demand that she actually
lived
in this world that was not – but was supposed to have been – a happy-ever-after one. It was mad. It was
irrelevant. She focused her attention back on the man they were calling Costain, and set about memorizing him as if one day she’d have to profile him.

Lofthouse pointed to the round table in the middle of the room. ‘Please, sit.’

Quill, aware that he was eyeing her interrogatively, even a bit desperately, made to do so but she held up a hand. ‘Ah, no. Wait.’ They all halted. She toyed with her charm bracelet
for a moment, lost in thought, then pointed from each person to a chair. ‘Jimmy, you go there. Tony there. Kevin there, Lisa there, please.’

They moved around to their assigned places, feeling rather amazed. None of them had witnessed a detective superintendent having a nervous breakdown before.

‘I’m leaving the name of this new operation,’ she said, passing out the documents, ‘to you.’

Quill gaped at that too. There was a reason that job and subject names were picked from lists of randomly chosen words. What if he suffered a fit of madness and called it after the target?
Speaking of which: ‘What’s the objective?’

‘Investigate what happened in that interview room. Find out who killed Robert Toshack.’

Quill’s heart sank.

‘And
how
, because the pathologist’s tests found no evidence of poisoning or physical assault.’

‘So . . .’ he couldn’t quite find the words for a moment. ‘How are you so sure he didn’t die of natural causes, ma’am?’ He wanted her to confirm he was
in the clear.

‘Because, according to the many experts I’ve spent a long time talking to, there are no natural causes able to do
that
.’

He looked to his insanely small team. They looked back, equally flabbergasted. They had, as the old joke about the stolen toilets went, nothing to go on.

‘You’ll stay at Gipsy Hill.’ She finally managed a smile. ‘Lisa, you’ll finally be able to join them. But I’ve found you a nice new Ops Room, to keep you out
of the general population.’

Two days later, Quill staggered into the Portakabin, carrying an ancient overhead projector he’d found in the stores at Gipsy Hill, and had heaved the quarter-mile back
to the trading estate across the way. The inside of this new ‘Ops Room’ looked as unpromising as the outside. An Ops Board that had been improvised from a cork board found at the
market, but empty except for a single photo of Toshack. Some desks. A stack of chairs. One desktop PC, perhaps even more ancient than those in Gipsy Hill. A new kettle. He looked out of the window
towards the building in which he’d previously worked. He could smell the distrust even from here. ‘Gone all Professional Standards on us, have you?’ That had been Mark Salter when
Quill had popped into the canteen this morning. He’d said it with a smile, but it hadn’t extended to his eyes.

They’re sure we’re looking for a mole. And Lofthouse has bloody kept us here on the Hill to do it.
When he’d stopped Lofthouse on the way out of that insane meeting,
she’d firmly told him there was nothing further to discuss. And that tone in her voice was one he’d learned to pay attention to.

Ross entered and nodded to him, still wearing that face of hers that looked like it might one day end up on a wanted poster or a stamp. Understandable. The only change for her was that now her
anonymous building had slightly more people in it. He made tea as first one car and then another stopped outside, and first Sefton, then Costain, entered, having both taken the shortest possible
route from vehicle to door. At least Lofthouse had realized how neither of those two would be eager to show his warrant card at the gate of Gipsy Hill, especially since now there was a strong
possibility that someone might write down the name on it, so that a visit to friends and family could be arranged. Not that they weren’t still vulnerable out here. Not just politically but
physically.

‘So,’ he said to his unlikely unit now it had been assembled, ‘what have we got?’

‘A nagging fear that this is all bollocks, Jimmy,’ replied Costain.

They went over every detail. Quill then called the pathologist to hear it for himself, but it was open and shut. No known toxin. No known medical condition. An
impossibility.

There were only a few avenues of investigation that he could even think of as places to begin with. He next set his team to the task of checking out the records of everyone who’d been in
and out of Gipsy Hill on the day Toshack died.

‘Okay,’ said Sefton, but with an enormous internal sigh written on his face. And this was just the first day.

‘This,’ said Costain, ‘is why we became UCs: to share a computer in a Portakabin, processing data.’

‘Well,’ said Quill, limiting himself to a knowing look at Costain, ‘just think – it could have been
so
much worse.’

And that was the first week, with the sound of the rain pounding on the roof of the Portakabin, and the slow sensation of false trail after false trail coming to an end. Since
the time frame to be checked was the early hours of New Year’s Day until the following morning, no civilians had visited, except Toshack’s brief. ‘So it’s either a copper or
he “ingested the poison” before he arrived at Gipsy Hill,’ said Costain.

‘You reckon that’s likely?’ asked Quill.

‘No,’ said Costain casually, as if it was none of his concern anyway.

This felt like internal exile, as if somehow Lofthouse expected Quill to accuse himself of something. The week lasted forever, and Quill underwent several pints of therapy, on his own, each
night.

It was early on a Monday morning, before the other two had come in, that Ross looked up from the wheezing PC and caught his eye. She, in her quiet way, had dug in, had become
the one who was too busy to make tea. Quill realized that, for her, doing something that still even tangentially involved Toshack must be some sort of lifeline. And he wondered if it would actually
be a mercy to her to cut that line and to let her get on with life.

‘I’ve found something in the Goodfellow case notes,’ she said.

He went over, and she pointed out the entry: ‘Lassiter, the driver of the Fulham Road security van. He lost a lot of blood, too. It was assumed that he’d been beaten, but I think
someone was a bit quick to jump to that conclusion, ’cos the injuries I’ve got here aren’t entirely consistent with that explanation.’

‘You’re saying getting people’s blood to explode in all directions might be someone’s modus operandi?’

‘It’s just one data point, so I’m not, not yet.’

Quill sighed. ‘Listen, do you want to go and check out the scene of the crime over at the Hill? The other two bloody can’t, but while it’s just you and me here . . .’

‘I think that’s a reasonable risk.’

‘You think Tony’s dodgy,’ said Ross, as they crossed the road and headed towards the rear gate of Gipsy Hill.

Quill neither confirmed nor denied it. ‘I do sometimes think there might be some other reason for this weird unit assignment. Maybe to shake something out.’

‘So why us too?’

Quill shrugged. He saw that it was Josh Stuart stationed at the back gate, and actually got a smile out of him as he showed him his warrant card and then Ross’ ID. Ross seemed to be trying
to make herself invisible, and she was doing a good job. They headed down the garden path and out of earshot.

‘I need this op to be real,’ she said. ‘Is it?’

Quill stopped. They were by that strange pile of earth, and still nobody had planted that bloody tree or whatever it was going to be. ‘You know as much as I do.’

‘Only, you three already have that look on your faces . . .’

‘What look?’

‘That copper look. That British look. The “Oh well, it’s all going to fall apart, so might as well get on with it, even though we’re going to fail.”’

‘Do you have a point, Lisa?’

‘Because if this is a real op, and if you all treat it as a real op, we can make real progress. If you make proper use of me; if you let me do what I do. And I’m going to need you
too, because otherwise I don’t know what I’m going to do. And because . . . we’re standing on top of something huge.’

Quill realized that her expression had become urgent – amazed, even. And that she kept looking between his eyes . . . and then at the ground by his feet.

He turned and examined the pile of soil closely for the first time. There was a pattern there, preserved by the frost, not washed out too much by the rain. It was as if someone had inscribed it
in the disturbed earth with a spade. Or maybe it had needed a tool more precise. It was a fine spiral.

‘Literally,’ continued Ross. ‘I’ve seen that symbol before.’

With joy bursting in his heart, Quill looked up and around. He pointed up at the CCTV camera that was looking straight down at them. ‘Bingo,’ he said.

Quill headed into Gipsy Hill to get the CCTV tapes sent over, while Ross rushed back to the Portakabin to grab her camera. ‘We’ve got a new intelligence
analyst,’ said Harry, falling into step beside him. ‘Since you took away ours.’ Many more arrests were being made, extending to the outlying reaches of the Toshack firm. Harry
waited until the corridor was clear, then dropped his voice to a whisper. ‘What are you doing out there, Jimmy?’

‘Your guess is as good as mine. I asked to get you over straight away—’

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