Marilyn Gould sat on a hard plastic chair at the other end of the corridor from Dan. She stared at the linoleum floors, polished to an unnatural shine and winced at the slap of rubber clogs and the squeak of rubber wheels. She wrinkled her nose at the attempt to disguise death with a flowery curtain and a can of air freshener.
Dan kept trying to catch her eye, but she avoided his gaze. He thought she was wondering why her husband had been shot and not him. And now Superintendent Oliver was in with Ian and wouldn’t let Marilyn in to see her husband. He checked his watch, it was gone half-eleven. Marilyn had been in bed when he rang. He gave her no details, just told her that there had been an accident and that someone would pick her up in an area car and take her to the hospital. The one question she had asked him was how someone gets shot taking the new DI out for a drink in Exeter. And that question he could not answer. So she blanked him.
The door to the side room opened and Julie Oliver came out. Dan watched her go up to Marilyn Gould, sit next to her and take her hand. They talked for a few moments until Marilyn stood up and went in to see her husband.
Oliver turned and looked at Dan. He couldn’t make out the expression on her face. She walked back towards him, and seemed to be struggling with what she was going to say. Her voice, when it came, was a flat monotone. ‘Ian has given me a statement. He insisted that I took it down there and then.’ She waved a piece of spiral notebook paper at him, the torn edges fluttering. ‘He claims full responsibility for the little prank you pulled this evening. He says it was all his idea, that he had to force you to go along with it and that you only agreed because he would have gone to the studio on his own anyway.’
She finally looked down at him. Dan started to speak but she cut him off. ‘Don’t even try. I know this whole mess wasn’t just Ian’s idea. I’m not stupid, but he has saved you from instant dismissal. There will, however, be serious consequences for your actions, Detective Inspector. I’m going now. Be in my office at nine tomorrow.’
Oliver turned, body erect, head held high, and strode away. Watching her back as she walked, he saw her shoulders slump as she passed through the swing doors.
Dan leant forward in the plastic chair and rested his elbows on his knees. He scrubbed his face with his hands. He should go but he didn’t really have anywhere to go. He had been in to see Chas Lloyd, who was alive but had fractured her back when she had landed on the corner of the reception desk. It was too soon to tell if she would walk again. She would be operated on in the early hours of the morning. He had held her hand until the doctor told him to go away and let her rest.
He’d been in to see Claire Quick. She was sleeping peacefully, lying on her back. They were going to let her out in the morning. The first bit of good news he’d had all day.
Abrams was in custody. If Chas had told him about the proposed nocturnal visit as soon as she left Dan in the pub, he’d had two hours to shift any stuff before they got to the studio. Thinking about it logically, Dan knew there had to be more to find and that they had been on the right track, otherwise why would one of the foreign gang have been there waiting for them? And why would he have been armed? What were the other two up to and where were they? Why had Chas betrayed him, and then tried to save him? Where was the van that Abrams had used to move the stuff? It had been outside the studio yesterday. He shook his head and rested his burning eyes in the heels of his hands, pressing his eyeballs until streaks of blue and orange light lit the darkness.
The injured foreign gang member was also in the intensive care unit. The blow to his temple had caused bones to crack and a small piece was embedded in his brain, causing a bleed. Part of Dan still wished he had killed him. On the other hand, it would be cathartic to see him punished for shooting Ian Gould. And it would be far better for Dan if he didn’t have an unlawful killing charge to face. He hadn’t bothered going to see the foreigner, who was under guard anyway.
He switched his phone back on and scrolled through the messages, trying to determine their importance by who had sent them. He sat back in his chair as he stared at Sally’s message from seven o’clock. He couldn’t believe it. Another one in hospital. Shaking his head, he slowly walked the short distance to the other end of the intensive care unit. Concerned about him, the nurse at the desk called out the young PC who had been set to guard Miles Westlake until he came round, or died. It was Lizzie Singh.
‘You alright, sir?’ she asked. ‘Only you’re not looking too good.’
‘No Lizzie, not alright at all. How is Westlake?’
‘Pretty good. He’s breathing on his own so he’ll live, but he swallowed all sorts of stuff, so they don’t know about organ damage. I think we got to him quickly, though, sir. And he’s young and fit.’
‘I’m sure you did everything you could. When are you being relieved?’
‘In about ten minutes. I’m pooped, I can tell you.’
‘You should go home and get some sleep then. I’ll see you in the morning. Briefing at eight am.’ He turned to go.
‘Sir, who’s in the bed down the corridor? There’s a guard on him, too. Is he something to do with our case?’ She looked up at Dan. She trusted him. Trusted that his decisions were wise ones, expected him to act as the leader of their team, to protect them and support and guide them. What a joke.
‘Yes, Lizzie, he’s got something to do with our case, but I’ll tell you all about it in the morning. Here’s your relief, off you go.’ He nodded at the newly arrived officer and set off back towards Ian’s room.
The sound of a quiet but insistent bell and urgent, whispered voices brought him round the corner at a run. The crash unit was in the side room. Marilyn Gould stood outside, the back of her fist in her mouth to stop herself from screaming. She glared at Dan with such venom he took a wide arc around her.
He got to the door just as the crash team disengaged the paddles from Ian’s ruined chest. One of them gave the time of death as four minutes past twelve, on Wednesday the 26th April.
Dan walked home. He didn’t know what else to do. He took off his shoes, lay face down on the bed and let exhaustion drag him into oblivion.
The slow creep of dawn in the intensive care unit disturbed the sleeping sick, setting up a chain reaction of groans, coughs, murmurs, sighs and turnings over. The staff nurse on duty rose from her chair, padded round the table and looked out along the corridor. A tired constable smiled up at her from the chair outside the door. She looked in at Mr Westlake and saw that he was awake. It was never easy to predict whether they would survive the night, and even harder to predict how they would cope with still being alive if they came round. Thanks to the police, the team had dealt with him promptly, a couple of hours or so after he’d taken the stuff, and he was young and fit. Suppressing a sigh, she opened the door.
Miles could only move his eyes at first. He felt like he was under water, with a great weight on his limbs. The slow rise to consciousness had been the hardest part. Most of him was fighting to crawl back down again. Because he couldn’t, really couldn’t, think about what he had done to his wife, to his daughter, and to Carly. Beautiful, talented Carly.
He also couldn’t work out how he had ended up in hospital. Somebody must have got into the house, yet he was sure he’d locked all the doors. He’d obviously made a mistake somewhere in his planning, but nothing would come clear.
They would take him to prison as soon as he was well enough. It would be in all the papers. He could see how it would pan out. His name on the news, his reputation ruined. Sophie’s reputation ruined. No, he couldn’t cope with that. He couldn’t cope with that at all. He tried to move his arms and felt them fight against him.
A nurse entered the room smiling at him.
‘Glad to see you’re awake, Mr Westlake,’ she said. He couldn’t answer. His voice was still refusing to respond and his range of movement was minimal. ‘Just take it easy, you’ll get a bit more feeling back over the next few hours. Then the doctor will be in to see you. You’re a very lucky man.’ She lifted him up onto the pillows and gave him water, which he kept down. She adjusted the speed of the drip to help rehydrate him more quickly.
He could see another shape behind her in the background, standing near the door. As the nurse moved to write on his chart, he saw it was a policeman. He was being watched, but they hadn’t handcuffed him or anything. The policeman left with the nurse and he saw him sit down outside the room. If he was to get out of here, and he was determined to get away one way or another, Miles was going to have to be a lot cleverer than the police. With gentle persistence, he began to flex his fingers and toes.
Two floors down, Chas Lloyd was also awake, having swum up through layers of nightmare to face the dawn. She would swear that she could feel the waves of morphine entering through the drip and strapping her as effectively to the bed as any material restraint. She knew that was a bad thing. You would only give someone morphine if they were seriously hurt. It was weird then, that she was seriously hurt but couldn’t feel anything at all. She flexed one hand and then the other. So, she had some movement in the top half at least.
With an effort, she remembered everything from the night in the studio up to the point where that Latvian monster had shot the policeman that she had thought was Dan. After that it was emptiness.
Chas knew that Dan had been to see her in the night, and held her hand and stayed with her. She felt tears prickle and leak from her closed eyes when she thought about how she had betrayed him. Betrayed him for so little. A few pathetic thousand quid towards her course at college. How cheaply that Latvian bitch had bought her.
Her mother had always said Chas would come to nothing, and this time she’d be right. She knew full well what the Latvians were like, and how scared of them Jed was. None of it was worth the taking of a life. None of it was worth betraying Dan for. In the deepest, darkest part of her, she had to admit she had done it for revenge, to ease her anger at the way he had responded to her the night before. And look how it had turned out. What kind of woman was she, that she could want revenge on a man who had simply treated her with respect?
Chas looked towards the doorway. She could see a doctor in scrubs talking to someone. Her mother and father had arrived. That meant they would be operating on her soon. She felt the tears begin again.