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Authors: Paul Johnston

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“I don’t think so. Ginny…Ginny told me I was responsible for what happened to Dave.”

“Aw, shit, man.”

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“But at least she understood the danger. Dave had got her to memorize the number of the solicitor who has the package with false passports for them all and a credit card for her. By now she should have dumped her car, hired a different model and got out of London.”

I stopped at the barrier at the side of my apartment block and tapped in my access code, then parked in my space in the underground car park and turned off the engine. “Look, Slash, it’ll be better if you disappear as per the plan. I never expected Dave to be hit first. Sara’s even more dangerous than we thought. I don’t want to put you in her sights, too.”

“Kiss my ass,” the American said. “You need protection and you know it. Besides, what else am I going to do? I can’t track the bitch down on a computer. All I can do is watch your back. And I prefer to be obvious when I do that, not tagging along behind like some half-assed spy.”

I knew he’d react like that, but it was still good to hear the words. Andy was the best man to watch over me. Apart from Dave. I bowed my head as the blood-drenched and disfigured body flashed before me again. Andy sat up slowly and looked around the well-lit concrete chamber. “This place’s like a car dealer’s for rich people with no taste.”

Despite how I was feeling, I laughed. My fellow residents did have some seriously shitty cars—there was a pink MG, a Bentley with leopard-skin seat covers and a Range Rover sporting the logo of a porn film production company. These were people who had no shame about how they made their money or how environmentally damaging their cars were. Then again, they didn’t write books that led to their friends’ deaths.

“We’ll take the stairs,” Andy said, hoisting his bag 118

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from the backseat. He took out a Glock and handed it to me with a magazine. “Forget the silencer. If Sara tries anything, I don’t care who hears what we do to her.” He slapped in a mag, racked the slide and held the weapon beneath his jacket. I did the same. “I’ll go first,” he said. I locked the car and followed him. Fortunately there was no one around. I didn’t want Andy’s presence to be registered. There were security cameras at the top of the car park ramp, in the block’s entrance hall and in the elevators, so we were all right. Presumably the company that installed them assumed burglars would be too lazy to use the stairs.

I looked through the round window in the fire door on the ground floor. There was no one in the hall. If Karen had someone watching me, it wasn’t from there. Maybe there would be a cop in the hall on my floor. I tapped Andy’s back as we reached the fire door there. I saw no one.

I turned the keys and opened my door. The alarm immediately started beeping. I punched in the code number to stop it. By the time I’d done that, Andy was already checking the spare room. He knew there were no sensors in the bedrooms. I watched as he ran across the expanse of the living area and went into the master bedroom at the far side. Theoretically, a skilled intruder could have worked the locks and overridden the alarm electronically, then hidden in a bedroom after turning it on again.

“Clear,” he said, appearing at the door and lowering his automatic.

I headed to my desk. I needed to find out if Lucy and Fran were all right. I booted up my second computer. Rog had protected it with a series of firewalls that would puzzle the world’s best hacker. Then I logged on to a
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mail provider where I kept an account that I only used once every quarter, just enough to keep it in operation. There should have been a message from Caroline saying that they had made it to the safe house. There wasn’t.

The young men were hanging around outside the Kurdish youth club on Green Lanes in northeast London, happy that the rain had finally let off. Dressed in the latest sports gear and trainers, the three looked good and they knew it. They weren’t welcome inside because the organizers knew they worked for the King. That didn’t stop them talking to the boys who went in to play table tennis and pool, or selling them small quantities of grass and hashish when they came out. Nedim Zinar’s murder had put them on their toes, but business went on as usual.

“Hey, Faik, look,” said one of them, in Kurdish. He pointed to a white BMW 6 series coupé across the road.

“Is that who I think it is?”

His friend peered over. “I think so.”

They watched as the front window came down and an arm was waved at them.

“Yes, it’s Aro Izady,” Faik said. He watched as the driver waved, and then pointed only at him. “Looks like he’s got a job for me. See you around.”

Faik Jabar ran across the road, provoking a loud blast from a lorry that almost clipped his heels.

“What’s up?” he asked the mustachioed man in the driver’s seat. The passenger was a bearded man he hadn’t seen before.

“Get in,” Izady said in English. His voice was hoarse, as if he’d been shouting.

Faik paused momentarily before obeying. You did 120

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what the King’s family said, without question, but he had the feeling that something wasn’t quite right. After he had closed the rear door, the man with the mustache pulled out and drove toward Manor House Station.

“Where are we going?” Faik asked.

“Speak English,” Izady ordered.

Faik repeated the question in the language he’d learned at school, from which he’d been expelled for dope-dealing when he was fourteen. It wasn’t the first time a King’s lieutenant had brought a stranger along. The guy was probably a buyer who wanted to see how reliable the Kurdish operation was.

“It isn’t far,” the passenger said. “You know where it is, don’t you, Aro?”

The driver nodded.

Faik looked at the stranger’s thick brown hair that reached his shoulders. There was definitely something going on. Aro Izady wasn’t one of the King’s street commanders. He was a money counter, who gave the impression that he despised the young men who did the dirty jobs. But the story went that he’d killed one of the Turkish competition, a Shadow, with a snooker cue when doubts were cast on his sister’s virginity.

Izady made a left turn and pulled up outside a dark house. It looked derelict, the windows boarded up and a steel bar padlocked across the front door.

“Out,” Izady said over his shoulder.

The young man obeyed. When they were on the pavement, Faik felt for the cutthroat razor he always carried in his back pocket. He didn’t like this. Maybe it was a dope pickup, but he’d never been to the place before. He kept his eyes on the passenger. His upper body was bulky beneath a black leather jacket. Faik couldn’t tell what age
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he was, what with the beard covering the lower half of his face.

Izady pointed down a flight of rubbish-strewn steps.

“Basement,” he said.

Faik went first, stepping over old pizza boxes and newspapers, with the stranger close behind. Izady followed, his head tilted slightly backward, as if he was trying to hear what the bearded man was saying. But no words were spoken. Izady pushed Faik aside and put a key in the door—

this one was not barred.

“After you,” the stranger said, his arms extended wide. The two Kurds paused, and then complied. The basement hallway was rank with damp and decay, as well as something more pungent. When the four of them were inside, the stranger pulled the door shut and turned on a light. Faik gasped. The front room was piled high with boxes containing plasma TVs, computers and stereo systems. There was also a green metal trunk on the floor.

“I take it the drugs are in there,” the bearded man said, his hands in his pockets.

Izady looked at him and nodded slowly.

“Let’s have a look then,” the stranger said with a tight smile.

Faik was watching the man carefully. There was something wrong about him, all the Kurd’s instincts told him that, but he couldn’t identify what it was. Could he be an undercover cop? If so, he was taking a hell of a risk coming down here with them. Something else bothered Faik. Why hadn’t he been told the man’s name and crew? He seemed to be native English. Was the local mob playing games with the King’s operation?

“Tell him where we are,” the bearded man said to Izady.

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The King’s cousin ran his hand across his damp forehead. “This is a Shadow store.”

Faik stared at Izady. Their lives were forfeit if the Turks discovered their presence.

“What?” Faik said. “Where are the guards?”

“They were told to take the evening off,” Izady said, his head down.

“Yes,” the bearded man said. “You see, Aro Izady doesn’t only work for the King. He’s also a Shadow.”

“No!” Faik said. “That’s impossible!”

The stranger was now standing behind Izady. “Tell him,” he said.

“It’s…it’s true,” Izady said, his eyes not meeting those of his fellow Kurd.

“But the Shadows hate us,” said Faik. “They’d never have a Kurd in their organization.”

“Aro is the exception,” the bearded man said. “And, in case you’re wondering, he isn’t playing them off against each other. He’s loyal only to the Turks.”

Faik stepped forward and forced Izady’s chin up so he couldn’t avoid the young man’s gaze. “Is he speaking the truth?”

“Ye…yes,” he said.

Faik had the cutthroat out and open before the man with the mustache could move, but he failed to slash the traitor’s throat. There was a spitting sound and the blade spun away. Faik watched as blood welled from the palm of his right hand.

“Impressive,” the bearded man said. “But this is my show.”

Izady froze as the muzzle of the silenced pistol touched the side of his head. His eyes bulged, then he started to babble in English. There was a cracking sound, then a
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spray of blood and brain launched from the other side of his head. He dropped to the floor like an unstrung puppet.

“Wh…why?” Faik said, clutching his wounded hand. The bearded man smiled. “I like you. You’ve got a pretty face. Pity.” He turned his weapon on the young Kurd.

“No!” Faik screamed.

The man stood in front of Faik, then raised the hand that wasn’t holding the gun and tugged his beard and hair.

Faik’s eyes opened wide. “No,” he said in horror.

“No!”

Then the shooter smashed the butt of his weapon against the side of the Kurd’s head and darkness overtook his world.

Nine

“Sara couldn’t have found Lucy and the others, Matt,”

Andy said. “It’s impossible.
You
don’t know where they are. How could she?”

I looked at the curtains that I’d drawn across the wide expanse of the windows. If anyone was watching from across the river, he or she wouldn’t even be able to see that the lights were on.

“There are plenty of things Sara could have done,” I said, turning away from the screen on my desk. “She or a sidekick could have followed Caroline and Lucy from Wimbledon, or got on their tail when they picked up my mother. She could have put bugs on both cars. It wouldn’t surprise me if she got a bug into Caroline’s handbag.”

Andy shook his head. “You’ll drive yourself crazy thinking that way. They’ve probably just had computer problems.”

“She could have sent me a text. Even Lucy could do that.”

The American raised an eyebrow. “You’re losing your
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cool, man. You told Caroline to take Lucy’s cell phone away, to turn it and her own off.”

He was right, though I had the feeling Caroline would be reluctant to turn her phone off. I took some deep breaths and tried to get my head in order. I’d just about succeeded when the doorbell from the main entrance rang. Andy grabbed his weapon. “You expecting anybody?”

I shook my head. “Karen’s got keys, but she told me she wouldn’t be coming tonight.” I went over to the entryphone. It had a screen that showed who had rung the bell, as long as they stayed within camera range.

“Shit,” I said.

“Trouble?” Andy asked.

“No, just an asshole.”

“Don’t pick up then.”

“Then he’ll come back.” I looked at the face that was mugging at the camera. It was conceivable that Josh Hinkley had heard something useful. He had contacts with criminals, who got him to buy numerous rounds of drinks and generally took the piss.

“Bit late, isn’t it, Josh?” I said after signaling to Andy to stay back.

“It’s not even eleven. Come on, Matt, let me in.” He held up a bottle of Highland Park. That immediately made me suspicious. He wanted something. I needed to find out what. It wasn’t beyond the realms of possibility that Sara had got to him, either directly or indirectly. I pressed the button, then went over to my computer.

“You’d better go into my bedroom, Andy. I don’t want Josh Hinkley to know anyone’s here. He’s got a mouth that motors all over London. Leave the door ajar so you can hear what’s going on.”

He departed with his weapon, his jacket and his bag. I 126

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switched off my computer and made sure my Glock was out of sight. When the interior bell rang, I went to the spyhole and checked he was on his own. Then I opened the door with the two chains still on, to make a hundred percent sure.

“Hey, Matt,” Josh said. “Sorry about your fr—”

I shut the door in his face, realizing that he would have heard about Dave’s murder. It had been on the TV and radio news, though Karen had managed to keep my name out of the bulletins—that wouldn’t last much longer. After I’d unhitched the chains, I let Hinkley in.

“As I was saying, sorry about your friend.” He handed me the bottle of whisky and walked into the living area.

“This is one hell of a pad, Matt.” He turned to me and grinned. “Got a football?”

I cracked the seal and pulled the cork. He got a large measure, I took a small one. “Look, Josh, this is a bad time for me.”

“I know,” he said, his expression serious. “That’s why I came. Bit of moral support. You on your own?” He looked toward the bedroom door.

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