Al Major jogged up and saw the damage. âSomeone call an ambulance.' One of the team responded and dashed back into the unit.
Jo gently removed her colleague's helmet and placed her thigh under his head for him to rest on.
âThis doesn't half cock things up,' the biker said with a wan smile. Beads of pain-induced sweat cascaded down his forehead. âBugger,' he added, then passed out.
Turner kept to the speed limit on the motorway, just cruising, enjoying the ride, letting everyone pass him, not wanting to draw attention to himself. He peeled off the M61 and picked up the road into Salford, taking extra care to keep his speed down again on a stretch of road populated by speed cameras. Once in Salford, on the edge of the city, he worked his way to an area behind the police station on the Crescent to a block of small industrial units. He drove the Mercedes into one of the units, a one-man car maintenance business owned by one of his friends, a guy called McNally.
âMac,' Turner greeted the owner of the garage as he climbed out of the Merc.
Dressed in oily overalls, McNally wiped his hands on rag, emerged from underneath a car on the ramp and sauntered towards Turner. Something in McNally's manner did not sit quite right with Turner, who was always switched on to body language. His intuition had saved his skin a number of times. McNally seemed edgy, nervous, his smile sheepish and obviously forced.
âAndy, how goes it?'
âMmm, good,' Turner responded cautiously. His inner warning bells sounding caution. âGonna leave the motor here as usual,' Turner said, thumbing towards the Merc.
âNo probs.'
The two men were standing close to each other. Turner's face changed, became serious and hard. âAnything you'd like to tell me, Mac?'
McNally was taken aback â and it showed. âEh? No, no . . . what do you mean?'
âI mean I'm good at reading people. That's why I'm still alive, Mac, and I can see you're not one hundred per cent.'
âOh, yeah, suppose not.' McNally relaxed and breathed out a sigh. âJust struggling really. Been chasing some bad debts all day, some real hard bastards. Just pissed off that's all.'
âI'm pretty good at bringing debts in,' Turner said with a nasty smile which was chilled by McNally's explanation. Turner was easily spooked by other people's behaviour, even if it was rooted in innocence. He trusted no one and was always searching for signs of betrayal.
âNo, it's all right,' McNally said. âI'll sort 'em. It's a legit debt, if you know what I mean?'
Turner shrugged. âJust ask if you need any help.'
âI'm obliged â thanks, Andy.'
Turner did a quick check of his watch. âI'll be back to pick this up as and when,' he said, referring to the Merc. âSee how the day pans out.'
âGot your keys for this place?' McNally asked. âI won't be here after six.'
Turner nodded. He pulled his change of clothing from the boot of the Merc.
A dull-grey Peugeot 405 drew up outside the unit. Turner gave McNally a wave, strode out to it and slid into the passenger seat. He rarely took the Mercedes into the city when he did business. It turned too many heads, was too recognizable and telegraphed to people that he was about. Today he wanted to keep a low profile and parading about in a âbig fuck-off Merc' as he called it, was no way of doing that. Even the hot-headed Turner knew that much. Today was a day for discretion. Eventually.
It took almost forty minutes for the ambulance to arrive on the scene of the accident. During that time the injured biker drifted â worryingly â in and out of consciousness. Jo Coniston stayed with him throughout, comforting and reassuring him, until two very apologetic paramedics eventually carried him into the ambulance. He was rushed to hospital, accompanied by one of the other team members, thereby further reducing the numbers for the surveillance job on Andy Turner.
Jo's knee joints had almost seized up by remaining folded in one cramped position for such a long length of time. She stood up stiffly, hopping painfully as blood surged back into her lower legs.
Al Major moved in and assisted her to keep balanced.
âThanks,' she said begrudgingly, easing her elbow out of his fingers.
âYou were very good there,' he told her. âShowing you care for someone â but you haven't shown you care about
me
, have you?' His voice was tinged with anger.
âDon't start Al, just DO NOT START,' she warned him.
âYou ready to roll now?' Dale O'Brien piped up from the garage door.
âComing,' she chirped and walked away from Major.
Major hissed two words into her ear as she passed. âSelfish bitch.'
Stern-faced, she ignored him and made her way back to the car, in which O'Brien waited, engine idling. She dropped into the passenger seat and slammed the door. âLet's friggin' go,' she growled. âAnd you can run that bastard down if you want.'
They drove out. Major stepped aside and, bowing like a matador, waved them through. Jo stared dead ahead, but she could feel Al's piercing eyes burning into her temple. Only when they had turned out of the compound did she realize she was holding her breath. She exhaled with relief, turned brightly to O'Brien with a wide smile, happy to be out on the road, tracking a crim.
âI don't know about you, Dale, but I could murder a brew.'
For Andrew Turner that evening was about matters of credibility. So that there would be a record of events, the driver who picked him up from McNally's garage was equipped with a digital camera to keep a contemporaneous record. At the end of the day, once credentials had been established, the camera and its contents would be destroyed completely.
Turner was driven from Salford, edging around the city centre, out to Crumpsall, to the area around North Manchester General Hospital â a building, Turner thought with an evil smirk, which might just come in useful. Especially the A & E unit.
Sitting there in the passenger seat, he started to get twitchy with anticipation.
âGot me a “whacker” then?' Turner asked the driver, whose name was Newman.
âUnder the seat.'
Turner reached down between his legs. His fingers alighted on a wooden baseball bat, which he drew out and tested for weight and balance by smacking it firmly into the palm of his hand. It felt good.
âNice,' he commented.
âIt's got a lead core,' Newman said.
Turner slid it back, then reclined the seat, closing his eyes for a few moments. His mind slipped back to the night before, thinking about the woman he had picked up at Tokyo Joe's nightclub. She had been a good fuck â twice â but what a silly, pathetic bitch! Hanging around outside the apartment like a love-struck teenager. Immature, that's what she was. Why did it have to be anything other than a good shag?
His eyelids clicked open. His inner warning bells â an instinct he had grown to trust â clanged a few times.
The prospect of her hanging around after he had gone made him feel slightly wary. Maybe he should have picked her up and dumped her in town . . . got her away from his pad . . . too late to worry now.
âIs Goldy likely to be at home? We're not going to end up chasing round like a pair of blue-arsed flies, are we?'
âHe'll be there,' Newman assured him. âHe's expecting a delivery from his supplier, so I'm told, so he'll be geared up for it. Won't be going out.'
âLooks like he's going to get more than he expected,' Turner laughed cruelly. He put his seat upright. âYou OK with that digital camera?'
âYeah. Been practising on Lesley.'
âIs she a good subject?'
âDepends how pissed she gets.'
âWell, this is gonna be fast and hard, so you'd better be ready to click away. I won't be hanging around: in and out. Forty whacks, then I'm gone straight after the lecture. You'd better be right behind me.'
Newman shrugged. âI'll be there.' He slowed and turned into a leafy side road of old, well-constructed terraced houses, most now bed-sits or flats. Newman drove down the road, maintaining the same speed. âIt's that one â number eight,' he said without pointing or looking. âGoldman lives on the first floor. The door to his flat is the first one you come to on the landing. He keeps it well locked. We won't be able to boot it down. It's made of toughened steel but painted to look like wood. He only lets in people he knows. Got a good peep-hole and there's plenty of locks behind it . . . not easy to get through.' Newman pulled in a hundred metres down the road. âThat means we have to get him to open it for us.'
âDoes he operate alone? Will anyone else be in the flat?'
âHe's alone,' Newman confirmed.
âMmm,' Turner ruminated. âShit.'
âDon't worry though. I know somebody he knows.' Newman grinned, showing cigarette-stained teeth. âSomeone who'll get the door open for a ton.'
âA ton?' blurted Turner.
âWorth every penny . . . have you got it?'
âYeah, yeah . . . so where is this guy?'
âIt's a bird, actually.' Newman looked across the road. Leaning on the gable end of a house was a scrawny-looking young woman, early twenties. She wore a T-shirt which showed her tummy and the ring pierced through her navel, and a pair of jeans. She was smoking nervously, flicking back scraggy unwashed hair from her drug-ravaged young face. âThere.' He wound his window down and beckoned. âDenise, luv, c'm'ere.'
She continued to glance anxiously around as though she had not seen or heard him. Maybe she hadn't. Maybe she was trapped in her own world. Then she set off across the road, tossed the cigarette away, and folded her arms underneath her small breasts. Newman reached over his seat and unlocked the back door for her. Her thin body entered the car. She looked defiantly at the two men in the front seats, her eyes wild at first, as though she blamed them solely for her predicament. Then they glazed over to become lifeless. Turner saw the scars on the inside of her spindly arms, more visible evidence of heavy drug abuse and self harm. She looked like she attempted suicide on a regular basis. Turner knew the type. People like her were the epitome of his usual customer.
âOK, sweetie?'
She nodded reluctantly.
âYou up for this?' Newman went on.
She shrugged. âYeah, whatever.'
âThis is Andy.' Newman indicated Turner. Denise gave him a crooked smile. From somewhere on her person she produced a hand-rolled cigarette, lit it and blew grey smoke into the car.
âHundred quid. No negotiation,' she said as a lungful of acrid smoke left her nostrils and mouth.
âFine,' Turner said. âYou do the job, you get the dosh.'
âUp front.'
Newman and Turner exchanged glances. Turner shrugged and dug into a pocket, pulling out a wodge of twenties. He peeled five off and held them out to her. Her eyes suddenly became alive again, focusing on them hungrily. She did not try to take it. Too many people had teased her with money, only to play snatchey-snatchey with her.
âYou get the door open, get out of the way. That's all you have to do,' Turner said. âDead simple. Money for old rope.'
âI know.'
He tossed the money on to her lap. She took it and eased it into the back pocket of her jeans.
âWhat you gonna do?'
âThat,' Turner said, âyou don't need to know.'
She shrugged. She did not give a shit, even though she had enough imagination to guess. The pairs of disposable latex gloves each man was easing on to his hands were a bit of a giveaway.
âWhat is it with you and Al?' Dale O'Brien asked Jo innocently enough, but she could see he was burning with curiosity.
They were sitting in a Little Chef, not far away from Manchester Prison, more famously known as Strangeways, drinking exorbitantly priced cups of tea â which would be claimed back on expenses at the end of the month.
Jo took a sip of hers, savouring its expense. âJust crap,' she said.
âYou been having an affair?' O'Brien asked directly.
Jo spluttered on the tea, placed the cup down and wiped her mouth. âBit to the bloody point, that, Dale!'
âSorry.'
âWell, anyway, yeah . . . you could say that. We were an item.' She tweaked her fingers on the word âitem'. She sounded wistful. âBut it didn't work out.' She finished her tea and said, âLet's move.'
âOnce she's in, give her half a minute,' Newman said, looking into his rear-view mirror. He watched the girl walk towards the front door of the flats, and press a button on the intercom. She leaned on the wall and talked into the speaker, then stood upright for a moment before pushing the door open.
âShe's in,' Turner said. He was contorted round in his seat, also observing Denise's progress. He spun around and picked up the baseball bat, which he concealed underneath his jacket when he got out of the car.
He and Newman crossed the road and walked side by side down the pavement to the door.
âWhat a good girl,' Turner said. As promised, Denise had wedged the door open with one of her trainers. Turner muscled his way in, followed by Newman. They stopped at the foot of the stairs leading up to the first-floor landing. Turner motioned Newman to complete silence by touching his lips with a finger and withdrew the baseball bat from its place of concealment. He positioned a foot on the first step.
The sound of the girl's voice filtered down to them.
âYeah, I know I'm early, Goldy, but I'm fuckin' desperate. I need it now and I've got the cash . . . look.' It was obvious she was talking through the steel door to the dealer, who was all nice and snug and safe in his little fortress.
There was a muffled response from Goldman which could not be made out down at ground level.
âYeah, thank fuck for that, Goldy,' Denise said.
What could be heard on the ground floor was the unmistakable sound of bolts being drawn back and a key in the lock.