22:30 hours

“You know as well as I do that calling it forced entry to preserve evidence isn’t gonna fly.”

Sergeant Ballhaus stepped back from the landing to let the SOCO get to work with the blood samples trapped in the U-bend. The scenes-of-crime officer was careful where he knelt as he unscrewed the waste pipe. He wasn’t dressed in the full forensic paper suit—this wasn’t a murder scene—but he didn’t want to get blood on his trousers.

Grant had bagged the bus pass for DNA testing himself to at least preserve the illusion of avoiding cross-contamination. Having the samples from the waste pipe and the bloody towel booked in by the same officer who had seized the bus pass at the crime scene would make it too easy for the defense solicitor to pick holes. There were enough holes already.

Grant stood in the doorway to the front bedroom.

“Worked, though, didn’t it?”

He pointed towards the bathroom.

“The evidence is preserved.”

Then he nodded at the bath panel, still open a few inches at the top.

“And I’m telling you, we’re gonna hit the evidence jackpot.”

Ballhaus let out an exasperated sigh and glanced over his shoulder to make sure that Jamie Hope had gone downstairs. He jerked a thumb towards the bedroom.

“Fuck me, Jim. Ways and Means Act doesn’t work anymore.”

Grant followed his sergeant into the front bedroom. He knew he was skating on thin ice but was confident that Ballhaus was a practical copper and not the pencil-pushing desk jockey that most supervisors became once they were off the frontline. A shift sergeant at Ecclesfield Division was about as frontline as it got.

“Sarge. There’s always a way of getting the job done. Nose to the grindstone trumps thumb up the arse every time.”

Ballhaus stood by the bedroom window and looked down at the sea of blue flashing lights. The paramedics had taken Adkins away but there were still three patrol cars and the divisional van choking the cul-de-sac. It was a testament to the code of the streets. When you called for backup, everyone responded. Ballhaus appeared to fill with pride that his boys honored that code. He turned back to face Grant.

“Jim. Grow up. This is the modern police force. There are more thumb-up-the-arse types than there are practical policing types. So let’s not give them anything to poke shit-fingers at.”

Grant nodded his understanding.

“Okay. Let’s shape this right.”

He rubbed his chin for a moment before clarifying the first point.

“Entry to preserve evidence is out. Right?”

“Right. There is no power of entry to gather evidence for a crime if there is no complaint of assault. The girl isn’t going to cooperate. Is she?”

Grant shook his head. He should be annoyed that Sharon Davis was unwilling to accuse Adkins of assault, but he understood her reasoning. Police officers could deal with confrontations, then go back to the safety of their own homes. People on Ravenscliffe estate had to live among the thieves and burglars. If they gave evidence against them, they were easy targets for intimidation. That was a lot to ask of a nineteen-year-old girl.

“What about entry to prevent a further breach of the peace? An officer—that’s me—fears for the girl’s safety. Forced entry to preserve life.”

Ballhaus smiled but shook his head.

“Good try. But the girl was taken away in the ambulance. Remember?”

Grant raised his eyebrows.

“I knew that. Could have been discharged after treatment, though.”

“At the BRI? You kidding? Takes three hours just to get through triage.”

Grant scratched his head since rubbing his chin hadn’t worked. Then he stopped and clicked his fingers.

“Okay. Evidence of an assault at the rugby club. Officer—that’s me again—believes a crime has been committed, which will only be disproved when Davis declines after treatment. Officer has reason to believe that Adkins committed that crime”—he held up the sealed evidence bag with the bloodstained bus pass in it—“and pursued the suspect to his place of residence. Suspect goes into house and locks the door. The officer, in continued pursuit of the felon, forces entry in order to effect the arrest.”

Ballhaus nodded his approval and finished the chain of evidence.

“After making a lawful arrest, search of any premises that the prisoner has control over is allowed to preserve evidence for that crime.”

Grant pointed at the SOCO under the sink.

“Including blood on the towel and in the sink.”

Ballhaus smiled.

“Eureka.”

Grant held up a hand. He wasn’t finished yet.

“And during that search, evidence is uncovered of other crimes, namely drugs and money pertaining to illegal supply of Class A drugs.”

Now that they’d got their story straight, Ballhaus stepped onto the landing and nodded towards the bathroom.

“You know, if you fell in a pile of shit, you’d come up smelling of roses.”

Grant squeezed past the burly shift sergeant and stood in the bathroom doorway. The SOCO had almost finished with the sink. Now it was time to draw his attention to the bath panel.

It took over an hour before Drug Squad detectives arrived at the house and took over. By that time SOCO had photographed the contraband in situ. Standard shots of the bath with the panel partly open, then with the panel removed. Then establishing shots of the sheer scale of the discovery followed by close-ups of the individual bags of white powder and rolled-up banknotes.

There were six large sealed bags of white powder, like five-pound bags of sugar only you wouldn’t want it in your tea. Behind the bags was a cardboard tray containing 150 dealer bags, little self-sealed plastic baggies with individual portions ready for sale. Beside the tray were twenty-five thick roles of banknotes held together by elastic bands.

Twenty-five thousand pounds, it would turn out later.

The lead detective looked excited but weary. There was hours of work ahead seizing and labeling the evidence. Counting the money. Weighing the drugs. Making sure that the chain of evidence was observed. SOCO would have to fingerprint the bath and the panel. The bags would have to be removed and examined. They wouldn’t bother with the money. Everyone who’d ever handled the banknotes would have left a trace.

This was a big find for a council estate. The value of the drugs would far outstrip the quantity of money they’d recovered. The rest of the house would have to be searched just in case there was more, but Grant told the lead detective there wouldn’t be any. Adkins kept the house spotless for just that reason—so that no visiting police officers could stumble across his stash by accident while harassing the local villain. Grant should know. He’d been harassing Adkins for over a year.

The blue lights in the cul-de-sac thinned out. The rest of the shift went back to chasing the radio calls. Grant had a quiet word with his probationer. The only thing that Hope needed to be clear about was the continued pursuit from the rugby club to the house, which wasn’t a stretch since Grant had come straight here after they’d taken the report. He left Hope watching the evidence being gathered in the bathroom and joined Ballhaus, who was still waiting in the front bedroom. The sergeant appeared to be having more fun than a shift supervisor normally got on a half-night tour.

Grant stood beside his sergeant in front of the window.

“Like they used to say in The A-Team.”

Ballhaus followed Grant’s train of thought.

“I love it when a plan comes together.”

The only thing Ballhaus was missing was a big fat cigar.

Grant let out a sigh.

“Thanks, Sarge. It’s nice to know the good guys get to win now and again.”

Ballhaus was about to reply, then his face stiffened.

“Thumb-up-the-arse brigade.”

Grant followed his gaze through the window.

“What the fuck’s he doing here?”

Down in the cul-de-sac an unmarked Astra pulled up behind Grant’s patrol car. A tall, well-dressed man got out and strode towards the house. D & C’s top bulldog, Inspector Nelson Carr. With two gold fillings in his false smile.

The question was, what was Discipline and Complaints doing at the scene of a routine drug seizure?