Cordon waited to see where Carlin was headed; watched as, at the gate to number seventeen, he fumbled out his keys. Dark curtains were partly drawn across the windows of the downstairs bay. In the garden, a gnome, three foot high, wore a black beret at a rakish angle on its head, dark glasses covering half its face, a Ban the Bomb symbol painted in psychedelic colours on its chest. A few desultory snowdrops gathered in a cluster beside the gravelled path.
Cordon waited until the front door had opened and closed.
The gate squeaked a little at his touch.
No bell, he knocked.
Carlin opened up with a flourish, prepared to repel some unwanted vendor of overpriced homeware or charity beggar lobbying on behalf of a home for blind donkeys.
The sight of Cordon knocked him back, but not for long.
âDecided to catch a later train?'
âSomething like that.'
âIt's not about the book? Changed your mind? Because if it is, we open again tomorrow at ten. Fifty per cent of the cover price if you return it within six days. Twenty-five thereafter.'
âIt's not the book.'
Carlin nodded, gave a little tug at his wisp of beard. âShe's not here, you know.'
âSo you say.'
Carlin held his gaze, then stepped back inside, leaving the door wide open. Cordon followed him, clicking it closed at his back.
There were posters from various rock concerts framed on the walls; photographs of singers and musicians Cordon mostly failed to recognise. In a gilt frame above the empty fireplace was a self-portrait of Peter Blake holding a copy of
Elvis Monthly
. Not the original.
Books were everywhere: in piles on the floor, haphazard on the table, wedged along the window ledges, seated on chairs. A collection of poems by Frank O'Hara, the cover a mass of sharply angled reds and blues;
Beats, Bohemians and Intellectuals
by Jim Burns. A ginger cat with a large head and a bushy tail sniffed at Cordon disinterestedly and padded away.
âTea or coffee?'
âEither. Whichever's easiest.'
It turned out to be tea. Wagon Wheels in the kind of wooden biscuit barrel he remembered from his gran's sideboard.
âDidn't know you could get these any more,' Cordon said, helping himself.
âRelaunched in 2002. Any smaller, mind, they'd bloody disappear.'
It was true: two bites and gone.
âYou can search the place if you like,' Carlin said. âFor Letitia. If you don't believe me.'
Cordon said nothing; waited. Drank some tea.
âAfter her mum and I split up,' Carlin said eventually, âI didn't really see her for years. Oh, at first I tried, you know, going back down â I was in Bristol then, working in this music shop, guitars mostly. But Maxine was out of her head half the time and there were always other blokes around. We were still married, officially anyway, not that it mattered to her, not one bloody scrap. Then, when she had the first of the boys, and moved in with his dad, some druggy living in a squat in Penzance, things turned nasty and I kept away. Wasn't as if Rose â that's what she was then, Rose â wasn't as if she paid much heed if I was around or not. Least, that was how it seemed.'
He looked at Cordon for some sign of understanding. Men together, something of the kind.
âDidn't see her for years after that. Not from when she was four or five up till she was near thirteen. I was in Brighton, then. My first little shop. Down the Lanes.'
He lifted his cup, but didn't drink.
âRun away from home, hadn't she? Got my address from some card or other, birthday, something of the sort. Stayed for a couple of days till I put her on the bus back home. Turned up regular after that â not often, but regular. Every eighteen month or so, couple of years. Whenever things got too rough at home, out of hand. Whenever she reckoned as how she couldn't cope. Letitia, by now. Using God knows what. Track marks on her arms. Did what I could to talk her out of it, but it weren't no good. Small miracle she saw twenty-one, but she did.'
He drank his tea then; sat back and crossed his legs at the ankles, searching Cordon's face. âWhat kind of a friend exactly? You never said.'
âWe crossed paths a few times.'
What was he going to say? She used to walk my dog?
âLine of duty?'
âSometimes.'
âThis, though, not official?'
âNot official.'
âPersonal, then?'
âHer mum â¦'
âMaxine.'
âMaxine asked me, see if I could find her. After she never showed here. She was worried.'
âAbout Letitia?'
âYes.'
âNot before time.'
Cordon spread his hands, palms up.
âAnd now that you've not found her?'
âThe card. The Lakes. Seems as if she's probably okay.'
âI didn't fake it, you know.'
âThe old postcard trick.'
âHere, I'll show you. Take a look at the postmark.'
âI did.'
âStill you came round here.'
âMistrustful bastards, police. Case of having to be. Goes with the job.'
Carlin gestured towards the door. âSure you don't want to look around? In case I've got her stashed away upstairs after all?'
âIt's okay.' Cordon set down his cup, got to his feet. âCuriosity satisfied. But if you do hear from her, you will let me know? Ask her to call me, at least.'
âOkay, no problem.'
âMaybe I'll see you at the funeral?'
âMaxine's?'
âThere'll be an inquest, of course. Bound to be. But the way everything's pointing, accidental death, straightforward enough. Shouldn't be long before the body's released for burial.'
âI'm not sure,' Carlin said. âMaxine and I, we said our goodbyes a long time back.'
âFair enough.' Cordon moved towards the door. âThanks for the tea.'
On the walk back into town he ran over what Carlin had told him, what he'd learned. The date Wagon Wheels were reintroduced aside, maybe not a great deal. He'd pass on the details of Maxine's funeral to Carlin just in case, time and place. They might even find their way on to Letitia, now they were sort of back in touch.
The next London train was due in thirty minutes and he bought a newspaper to while away the time. More troops promised for Afghanistan. Failing bank to pay New Year bonuses in excess of fifteen million after all. Four-year study shows that children of families with only one parent living at home are less likely to go on to university. How many hours, how many thousands, Cordon wondered, did it take for them to come up with that?
He found a window seat on the train without difficulty, leaned back and opened his book but failed to read more than a few lines. No fault of the author's. Letitia happily working at a hotel in the Lake District, welcoming guests, supervising, perhaps, the change of bedlinen, the servicing of rooms, arranging taxis to the station, excursions to Beatrix Potter's house or William Wordsworth's grave â what was wrong with that picture?
22
Paul. Paul Milescu. Were it not for Google, Karen would never have known that Paul was the fourth most popular male name in all of Moldova. How had Clare Milescu put it, harking back to the time she spent in the country working for the UN? A directive urging them to engage with members of the government, one she'd taken all too literally. Paul Milescu had been something important in the Ministry of Justice and, despite being married, he had become popular with her, too.
Now they were separated, going their different ways. Clare still fighting the good fight, following her conscience, working with refugees, while Paul, once in London, had used the connections he'd built up and gone into business. Nothing wrong with that. Except now it seemed he'd tried using those connections to bring pressure to bear on Karen's investigation; pressure enough to get a detective chief superintendent out trawling the streets of north London at night like something out of Len Deighton or John le Carré.
Explicable enough, in a way; commendable, even â a father's natural instincts, offering protection to his son, wanting to keep him from trouble. Or was it more? A pre-emptive move to keep the police at arm's length from himself, his family, his business?
What was his business?
Here Google didn't really help. Import/export, that and not a great deal more. Importing and exporting what? No details, certainly. Maybe, like Terry Martin, it was sportswear, women's clothing. And possibly Martin was right, Karen thought, it was all we did in this country any more, import stuff made cheaply elsewhere now that we made hardly anything ourselves â and what we did seemed to be owned by someone else. The Americans, despite their fading economy, had controlling shares in everything from chocolate to Liverpool Football Club; the Russians had a football club of their own and half the expensive properties in London, while just about everything else was being snapped up by the Chinese.
She looked again at the paucity of information on the screen.
A PO box address, phone number, fax, email. Perhaps she should simply pick up the phone, dial the number, ask him outright?
Hey, Paul â¦
Then again, perhaps not.
She had a friend, Tom Brewer, in the Intelligence Unit of Economic and Specialist Crime â sort of a friend, they'd met on a Home Office course a few years before, shared a few drinks, he'd asked her out, she'd said yes and then said no â she'd give him a bell. No favours to call in, just a hint of what might have been. Brewer newly married she'd heard, two stepsons and a semi-detached in Child's Hill.
She left a message, didn't have to wait too long for him to respond.
âKaren, long time no see.'
âA small favour, Tom, that's all.'
He rang back in a couple of hours. âMilescu, everything pretty much above board as far as I can see. Connections with a couple of firms exporting bauxite and aluminium; partners in Russia and Romania. Some export trade seems to be tied up somehow with Italy; exactly how isn't too clear. Then there's a quite profitable import business in chemicals linked to the Ukraine.'
âNothing chancy?'
âNot that you could lay a finger on. Ever since the country joined the World Bank in '92, trade has blossomed â from a very low base admittedly â and Milescu's just ridden the wave along with it. The fact that he's clearly got connections close to the heart of government probably hasn't done him any harm. Contracts put out to tender, he's going to be near the head of the queue more often than not.'
âBut nothing illegal?'
Brewer laughed. âDown to your definition of illegal. But in a way that might be of interest to us, officially, I'd say no, pass.'
âThanks, Tom.'
âMaybe we could meet up for a drink some time? It's been a while.'
âSure, I'd like that. You could bring your wedding photos for me to have a look at.'
He laughed and called her something not very nice.
The next time her mobile went it was Carla, who'd texted her twice already: Ronny Jordan at the Jazz Café, she had to be there.
âCarla, I can't.'
âCome on, girl. That guitar. “After Hours”. That sound. Sex on six strings.'
âYou know what? I'd love to, butâ'
âBut nothing. No excuses, come on, I'll see you there. Ten thirty, eleven, that's when it kicks off. Okay?'
âI don't know, Carla, I'll see. Maybe. But no promises, right?'
Ten thirty, eleven: by then, most nights Karen reckoned to be tucked up in bed with a glass of red and a good book.
She glanced at her own reflection in the darkening window. She didn't believe she'd just told herself that, but she had. Girl, as Carla would say, you're getting old. Old before your time. She should make the effort to get down there after all: race home, get changed into something suitably funky and cab it to Camden.
Ronny Jordan: âThe Jackal'; âA Brighter Day'.
Tempting as it was, she knew she'd do no such thing.
Carla was standing in line, the crowd thickening around her; stop-start of traffic at the lights, exhaust fumes dispersing pale grey into the night air. If the temperature dropped much more it would be freezing hard by the time they emerged the far side of midnight.
She hunched up the collar of her padded coat and shuffled a few short paces forward, even though they were not really moving, the queue simply becoming more compressed. Someone's elbow poked into her back and she turned, the man's face an apologetic leer.
âSorry, darlin'.'
Sorry, darlin', who spoke like that any more? Outside of
EastEnders
, that is? The East End itself, mostly Bangladeshi now as far as she could tell, other than a few smart young Metropolitans busily rebranding it with artists' studios and architect-designed apartments.
âSeen him before, have you? Ronny? Fuckin' brilliant.'
His nose pushed, like a chisel, down from the centre of his face, his teeth, when he smiled, were large and yellow â horse's teeth.
With a quick, dismissive shake of the head, Carla edged forward. This guy was actually hitting on her. Unbelievable!
Unable to move farther, she squeezed herself towards the wall.
As well she did.
In retrospect, she heard the car approaching fast, faster than was safe; the sudden braking, shouts and screams from those positioned near the kerb, and then the shot. A single gunshot. Loud. Close. No backfire. Little doubt what it was.
Someone cannoned against her from behind and, as she turned, stumbling, something splashed, warm, stickily wet, across her face, and the man with the chisel face was suddenly in her arms. Close up, hissing through yellow teeth, before, heavy, he fell away, and Carla, stooping, aware â amidst the shouting, the panic â of three more shots, one echoing into another and then the squeal of brakes, a car door slamming, the engine accelerating fast away.