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Authors: John Harvey

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BOOK: Flesh And Blood
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‘Can I ask you something?’ Katherine said.
‘Ask away.’ He thought it would be about her mother, but he was wrong.
‘That woman you were seeing, Helen – you don’t see her any more.’
‘No.’
‘Why not?’
The taste of wine was ripe in his mouth, blackcurranty. He had driven up to Whitby almost as soon as he’d arrived back in England. Promises to keep and at last that promise could be fulfilled. Helen’s daughter, he had found her. Wasn’t that what he’d sworn to do?
Sitting there in that small, cluttered room, he had watched Helen’s face as he described what he had found, skin tightening over bone. Watched her expression as she unfolded the sheet of paper on which he had written Susan’s address. What had he expected? Tears of joy? Relief? Instead she had stared at the floor and whatever she had felt she had clutched it to herself.
When, later, he had tried to hold her, she had pulled back from his touch.
Her daughter’s desertion building a wall between them, brick by brick.
‘I don’t know,’ he said now. ‘One of those things.’
Katherine nodded. ‘A shame. That time she came to the hospital, I thought she was nice.’
Helen still walked out from time to time, Elder knew, along the cliff path to Saltwick Nab and left flowers at the spot where Susan had disappeared. As if she had not been found; as if she’d died. He didn’t know if she had written to her daughter, if she ever would.
‘The trial,’ Katherine began.
‘There’s still a chance it might not come to that.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘He could still plead guilty.’
‘Why would he do that?’
‘A lighter sentence. If he pleads not guilty and the verdict goes against him, the judge will come down hard.’
‘And do you think that’s what he’ll do?’
‘I should think that’s what his brief will be telling him to do.’
Katherine fiddled with a strand of hair. ‘If he doesn’t, though; if I do have to give evidence, promise me you won’t be there. In court.’
‘Kate…’
‘Promise me.’
‘All right.’
That night, Elder was awoken by the sound of his daughter’s screams and when he pushed open the door to her room, she was sitting up in bed, the covers strewn around her, sweat like beads of marble on her cheeks and brow. Her eyes were closed tight as if something sharp was slicing deep into her skull.
‘Katie… Kate…’
When she opened her eyes she saw nothing: blinded by the memory of the pain.
‘Katherine…’
Carefully, Elder took hold of both her hands and spoke her name again and then she saw him and let herself fall back against the pillows. He fetched a towel and wiped her face and sat with her a while longer, not speaking, then when he thought it was all right to do so, went downstairs and made tea while she changed her clothes, sweat pants and a clean T-shirt.
‘How long have you been having them?’ Elder asked. ‘The dreams.’
‘Ever since it happened. Since you found me.’
The same moment, Elder thought, that my dream was broken. Disappeared.
‘How often?’ he asked.
She looked back at him with a wan smile. ‘Often enough.’
He poured more tea into her cup, added milk and sugar, stirred.
‘Those huts,’ Katherine said, ‘on the beach – were there cats?’
‘Yes. A few. Wild, I suppose.’
‘I wasn’t sure if they were real or part, you know, of the dream.’
‘No, they were real enough.’
‘You remember when I was a kid I always wanted one, a kitten?’
‘I remember.’
‘I must have driven you and Mum crazy.’
‘Your mother was allergic.’
‘I thought that was just to you.’
‘Very funny.’
Katherine laughed, then shook her head. ‘She’s miserable, you know.’
‘She’ll get over it. Find someone else, I’d not be surprised.’
‘You think so.’
‘I don’t see why not.’
‘Or Martyn will come crawling back.’
‘Probably.’
‘You don’t care, do you?’
‘I don’t want her to be unhappy.’
‘I think,’ Katherine said, ‘I’ll go back up to bed.’
‘Okay. I’ll just rinse these cups.’
Near the top of the stairs, Katherine stopped and called back down. ‘These dreams, they will go, won’t they? I mean, with time.’
‘Yes.’ He looked up at her from below. ‘Yes, I’m sure they will.’
‘Yours did, after all.’
‘Yes, mine did.’
She smiled. ‘Good-night, Dad.’
‘Good-night, love. Sleep well.’
‘You too.’
He waited till he heard the door click before going back into the kitchen. There was an almost new bottle of Jameson’s in the cupboard and he poured generously into a glass. It was not so far short of four by the clock. Outside it was still dark and he had to stand there for some while before he could make out the edge of stone wall, the shapes of cattle in the field. If he stood there long enough it would begin to get light.
Acknowledgements
Everyone needs a helping hand and in the writing of this novel I’ve gratefully grasped more than a few.
My special thanks are due to my agent, Sarah Lutyens, and to Andy McKillop, Susan Sandon and Justine Taylor at Random House (UK); to Detective Superintendent Peter Coles (retired) and Caroline Smith, Senior Development Co-ordinator for UK Athletics; to Michael O’Leary, proprietor of the Pukapuka Bookshop in Paekakariki and other friends in New Zealand; to Sarah Boiling and, most especially, to my friend and adviser, Graham Nicholls.

Read on for an extract from John Harvey’s compelling
new novel, coming soon…

Good Bait

When a seventeen-year-old Moldovan boy is found dead on Hampstead Heath, the case falls to DCI Karen Shields and her overstretched Homicide and Serious Crime team. Karen knows she needs a result. What she doesn’t know is that her new case is tied inextricably to a much larger web of gang warfare and organised crime which infiltrates almost every aspect of London society, from the back streets and high rises of Tottenham to the multimillion-pound hideaways of the new international entrepreneurs.

Several hundred miles away in Cornwall, DI Trevor Cordon is stirred from his day-to-day duties by another tragic London fatality. Travelling to the capital, determined to establish the cause of death and trace the deceased’s daughter – an old acquaintance from Penzance – Cordon becomes entangled in a lethally complex situation of his own. A situation much closer to Karen’s case than either of them can imagine.

Brilliantly plotted and filled with rich, subtle characters, John Harvey’s latest novel reveals him once again as a masterful writer with his finger firmly on the pulse of twenty-first-century crime.

1

THE FACE LOOKED
back up at her from beneath the ice. Dead eyes, unblinking, their focus defused as if through bottled glass. Off to one side, a small covey of ducks, uncomprehending, shuffled this way and that. In places, Karen Shields thought, the skin would have stuck fast: the forehead, the bridge of the nose, the chin. Little doubt the substance that had pooled close alongside the head, then frozen, was blood. That wanker, she thought, the artist – what was his name? – a small fortune for slicing animals in half and shoving them on display, pickled in formaldehyde.

Officers in protective clothing were cordoning off the path that ran down between the ponds with tape, no urgency now, time theirs to take. A brace of early runners stymied in their tracks, hats and gloves, jogged up and down, looking on; Karen could see their breath bobbing in the air.

When the call had come through she’d fumbled uneasily awake, mobile falling between her fingers and down on to the bed.

‘Hey!’ A shout as she leaned her elbow against something soft in the shape alongside. ‘Hey! Go easy, yeah? Chill.’

She had almost forgotten he was there.

She spoke briefly into the phone then listened, the man beside her moving grudgingly to give her room, whatever was tattooed between shoulder blade and neck starting to fade into the natural darkness of his skin. She wondered if she would pick him out again in a crowded bar. If she would want to.

‘Twenty minutes,’ she said into the phone. ‘Thirty, tops.’ No way she was leaving without a shower.

‘What’s all the fuss?’ the man asked.

Scooping up his shirt and trousers from near the end of the bed, she tossed them at his head. ‘Dressed, okay?’

She arrived as the Crime Scene manager and his team were assembling: no agreement as yet on the best way to free the body from the ice. Someone from the Coroner’s Office would decide.

Where the ground rose up beyond the pond’s edge, threads of trees were laced against the sky. Christmas in four days. No, three. Presents bought for her family in Jamaica but still not sent. Come spend it with us, her sister had said, Lynette, the one in Southend with the twins. You don’t want to spend Christmas on your own.

‘Ma’am.’ Without his helmet, the young PC barely topped her shoulder. ‘The Chief Super, he wants a word.’

Karen looked up.

Burcher was standing on the broad slope of path that led on to the Heath, beyond the point where the route for entry and exit to the scene was marked. Overcoat unbuttoned, green wellingtons protecting the trousers of his suit, pale yellow gloves. Detective Chief Superintendent Anthony Burcher, previously with Covert Intelligence and now head of Homicide and Serious Crime Command. Twenty-four Homicide teams under his control, one of them hers.

‘What the hell’s he doing here?’ Karen asked.

No reply.

Burcher stood with one glove removed, as if he might want to shake her hand. Waiting for her to come to him.

‘All under control?’

‘Sir.’

‘No idea yet, of course, who …?’

Karen shook her head.

‘Yes, well …’ His gaze slipped past her, attention caught for a moment by something at the farther side of the pond. ‘I was in the area, last night, friends. Picked up the call first thing.’

There were more people gathering now, peering interestedly before being moved on: cyclists on their way to work, solitary walkers, joggers, people with dogs, too many dogs. The gravel was deeply freckled with frost.

‘Much on your plate right now, Chief Inspector?’

Her plate. Oh, yes. A double murder for starters. Holloway. Mother and child. The mother only seventeen, little more than a child herself. Battered, then stabbed: edge of a stool, underside of a saucepan, a kitchen knife, whatever had been to hand. The child, a girl, suffocated with pillows, three years old. The estranged father had been seen hammering on the door of the flat two days before. ‘I’ll kill you, you bloody bitch! Bloody kill you!’ The neighbours had heard it all before, shut their windows fast, turned up the volume on the TV, made yet another cup of tea. Karen had seen it, too. Too many times now. Inadequate men unable to cope without anger, lashing out. Family life. The police were, as the phrasing went, anxious to speak to the father, Wayne Simon, in connection with both deaths.

So far there had been sightings in Sheffield, Rotherham, Leeds. Rumours he’d slipped abroad. Karen would still not be surprised to find he’d strapped himself into his car in a lock-up somewhere, sucking down carbon monoxide; either that or hanged himself from a length of flex; walked off the edge of a cliff. Beachy Head, that was popular. More often than not, it was what they did, men like that, men she despised, too cowardly to face the consequences of their actions, the way they’d lived.

More recently there’d been a shooting in Walthamstow. All the appearances of a drug deal run sour. The teenage victim gunned down as he ran. Some disagreement still as to how involved he had been, mistaken identity a possibility, the family swearing by his good name – a lovely boy and loving son, a grade A student, college place secured. So far, there had been two arrests, both men – Liam Jarvis and Rory Bevan – released, insufficient evidence to charge.

Before that a fatal stabbing in Wood Green. An argument over nothing that had ballooned from threats to fists, fists and boots to knives. By rights it should have been handed over, lock stock and barrel, to Operation Trident, which dealt with violent crime in the black community, but since the new government had taken power Trident’s resources had been cut and they were already overstretched. Sixteen murders in London the year just ended, none of the victims older than nineteen.

‘Enough, sir,’ Karen said.

‘Handle this yourself then, or …?’

‘A reason why I shouldn’t? Sir?’

Something interested him near the toe of his boot. ‘See how it develops, but at the moment I can’t see any need …’

‘Need?’

‘You know, delegate. Reassign. Besides …’ Inclining his head towards her, he smiled. ‘Can’t go on plundering the minority thing for too much longer. Good result now, not go amiss. Been a while.’

‘Which minority thing is that, sir? The gender minority or the black?’

‘Either. Both. You choose.’ The smile had disappeared.

Fuck you, Karen thought, the words unsaid.

Burcher heard them nonetheless, read them in her expression, her stance.

‘Don’t let me keep you, Chief Inspector.’

A magpie startled up raucously from a branch as she walked away.

Back down at the pond, they were gingerly breaking the ice in a broad circle around the body, preparing to float it closer to the shore.

All the way back to the office it nagged at her, a good result, not go amiss. Knowing it to be true. She remembered the first time she’d been introduced to him, Burcher, some function not long after he’d been confirmed in post; the way he’d looked at her, appraisingly, so much prime meat.

She’d seen the victim’s face freed from its frozen mask before she’d left, the last drops of moisture caught along his upper lip, hair that curled against the nape of his neck: a young man’s face, eighteen at most. Younger. The body stripped naked before immersion. Two knife wounds in his back, either one deep enough to have punctured his lungs. Bruises. Other marks. The second finger of his left hand missing, severed below the knuckle. Expediency? Identification? A stubborn ring?

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