Coran had been gone ten minutes when Mac got the call but Rina knew nothing about that. By the time teams had been mobilized, road blocks in place, the police operation underway, Coran and the children were long gone.
Stan, chafing at the delay, had the premonition that they had left things too late. Unable to settle, he paced the lay-by, even though Rina told him over and over that he should leave. He seemed unconcerned now that Mac might take him in. Chafing at the fact that he had been ready to act and then been talked out of action, the unused adrenalin would not let him rest.
Fitch, leaning against the car, watched him.
‘Take him away, Fitch,’ Joy said.
‘You want me to thump him like he did you?’ Fitch half joked. ‘I don’t see any other way of getting into the car without a full-scale row.’
Joy slumped back against the seat, not wanting her one-time enemy to risk himself any more.
‘He has the right to his own choices,’ Rina told her gently. ‘If he wants to stay and let the consequences play out, there’s not much we can do.’
Lights came up the lane and just before the third car pulled up in the lay-by, Stan slipped into the back of Fitch’s car and lay down out of sight.
DI Kendal emerged from the police car.
‘The redoubtable Mrs Martin, I presume,’ he said. ‘Mac said to tell you he was on his way, but you’re to brief me and Sergeant Tyson here first. He’s our chief firearms officer, he and his men will be the ones taking the risks so …’
Fitch briefed the officer, Kendal listened as the men fell into the shorthand of those used to military matters. Kendal opened the door and slid into the driver’s seat. ‘Hope you don’t mind but it’s bloody freezing out there and I’m feeling a bit surplus to demands.’
‘Join the club,’ Tim said. ‘Definitely spare part material.’ He stuck a hand between the seats. ‘Tim Brandon. Cold, tired, hungry and really desperate for something to do.’
The girl beside him laughed.
‘And I’m guessing you must be Joy Duggan,’ Kendal said.
‘Yeah, sure am. And feeling equally spare.’
The sergeant tapped on the window and Kendal got out again, conversed and then opened the door.
‘Go home, Mrs Martin,’ he said. ‘Spin the car around and go back the way you’ve come.’
Tim took his place in the driver’s seat, swung the car in the narrow lane and began to head back to Frantham.
‘What about Stan and Fitch?’ Joy asked.
‘So far as I can see they’re both in Fitch’s car,’ Tim told her glancing in the rear view. ‘I’m guessing Kendal chose not to see him dive into Fitch’s car, but I don’t imagine the reprieve will last.’ He sighed. ‘Rina, darling, am I the only one that’s feeling rather, well, deflated?’
‘Flat as a pancake,’ Rina told him.
In the back seat of the car, reaction seemed finally to have caught up with Joy Duggan and she began to cry.
Arriving back at Peverill Lodge another shock was waiting for them; the mess Haines’s men had left behind when they had come looking for Joy and Stan.
Rina stared at the smashed glass and the mud from the spilt pot plants, the torn curtains and slashed cushions.
‘We should call the police,’ Tim said wearily.
‘And have them do what?’ Rina demanded. ‘Compound the mess by flicking fingerprint powder all over the place. I think not.’
Stan had found the dustpan and brush and begun to sweep up the glass. Fitch, typical ex-soldier that he was, had made a beeline for the kettle.
‘Do you think we’re safe here?’ Joy asked a little tremulously. ‘What if they come back?’
‘I doubt they would risk that,’ Rina told her. ‘By now they know you’ve both been here and gone. They’ll have seen your wet clothes upstairs.’ She sighed. ‘Oh, I do hope they haven’t made too much of a mess. The Peters sisters will never cope.’ She stiffened her already ramrod back. ‘I’d better go and look.’
‘I’ll come with you,’ Joy said. ‘I’m sorry, Rina, I feel like it’s all my fault.’
‘What? For getting kidnapped?’ Tim asked, which, Joy figured, sort of put it in perspective. ‘Look, it’s just mess. I’ll get the vacuum cleaner out and when we’ve set things to rights I suggest we get some breakfast. I don’t know about anyone else, but all this excitement and all this let-down has left me starving.’
Fitch concurred as did Stan. Rina led the way upstairs and was relieved to find that the intruders had focused their efforts on the ground floor. ‘It could have been a lot worse,’ she said.
Joy nodded, then she flopped down on Rina’s bed and once more gave in to the tears.
Rina didn’t try to stem the flow. Pain had to find its way out of a body if the body was ever going to heal. Rina knew all about loss and pain. She sat down beside Joy and put an arm around her shoulders, thankful that all she had lost this time were a few possessions. Belongings could be fixed with a bit of glue, or failing that, consigned to the rubbish bin. It was the people who really mattered and who were, when it came down to it, the really fragile things.
Those in the farmhouse had been on high alert since Coran had left, not knowing what to expect.
One man was immaterial, but Coran had said that Stan was not alone. Did that mean just a single addition to expected company or, as Coran had suggested, did it mean that he had indeed co-opted Duggan’s people?
What they did not expect was a police car to come, bold as brass, down the narrow drive and be joined by a second.
Looking out of the side window, Grogan could see that they were not alone. Armed police in the field beyond the house and now in the outbuildings, right in the farmyard. Then overhead, the unmistakable sound of a helicopter.
Grogan swore, convinced now that Coran had betrayed them.
Kendal was in radio communication with Tyson but had been kept well back, frustratingly well back. Mac joined him at the end of the drive.
‘What do we know?’
‘Not a lot yet. There are at least six men and a woman inside, we’ve every reason to believe they’re all armed, but the location of the farmhouse doesn’t exactly lend itself to a subtle approach. We’ve just got to hope they’ll see sense and won’t use the kids as bargaining chips. Your friend Rina keeps some odd company, by the way. I’ve got the feeling I should have made a few arrests before we got this far.’
He looked speculatively at Mac, who shrugged.
‘I figured, better to deal with one problem at a time,’ he went on.
Mac nodded this time. ‘Generally the best way, I find.’
The radio crackled. Tyson telling them that so far there’d been no response from inside the house. They could hear Tyson’s voice echoing back down the narrow drive.
‘Armed police. Come out with your hands up.’
‘Last thing we want is a siege situation,’ Kendal fretted. ‘Not with kids inside. How are the parents holding up? Anything from Randall yet?’
‘Randall’s house mysteriously burned down an hour after his arrest,’ Mac said. ‘By the time the fire brigade got there it was too late to do anything but watch.’
‘You’re kidding?’
Mac shook his head. ‘Randall is refusing to speak until his solicitor arrives and as he’s coming in from London, we’re still waiting on that.’
‘And the Goldmans?’
‘Mrs Goldman told me what she could, but it wasn’t much. We’ve taken his computer, but like everything else to do with so-called information technology, I expect it will be a while before we get any. Information, that is. Mr Goldman is sitting tight, refusing to say a word until we’ve found his kids. I can’t say I blame him.’
‘Trying to make amends, is he? Bloody fool. If he’d come to us earlier …’
‘They’d be dead,’ Mac asserted. ‘If he’d come and fessed up to his first mistake, Haines would have had nothing on him, but that wouldn’t necessarily have ensured their safety. From what I hear, Haines is a vicious bastard and we might well have been dealing with two dead babies instead of two possibly dead children.’
‘Not a nice thought. You think there’s a chance they’re still OK?’
Mac didn’t know what to think. ‘In one sense,’ he said. ‘I’d be more reassured if we do end up with them trying to bargain. If they’ve got something to bargain with, it makes it more likely the kids will survive.’
From inside the house there was still no word. At the top of the drive, Tyson tried again.
Mac and Kendal waited, wondering if the continued silence was a good or dreadful sign. Mac glanced at his watch. It was seven fifteen.