‘They did. I’ve got someone working on them now, comparing them with partials we found at the hangar. But if anything does jump out at you, let me know.’
‘Will do.’
‘We’ve got a couple of suspects in the theft of a penetrating bolt gun from a big abattoir up north. We’re trying to track them down, of course, but any help you can offer…’
Burgess took his notebook out again. ‘Give me their names.’
‘Ulf Bengtsson and Kieran Welles.’
‘Scandinavian is he, this Bengtsson?’
‘Swedish.’
‘Thought so. If my memory serves me well, he’s dead. I’ll check, but I’m pretty sure his name was Ulf something or other. Everyone knew him as “The Swede”.’
‘Oh?’
‘Don’t get your hopes up, Banksy. It was natural causes. He was sleeping rough, had a serious alcohol problem. One morning some tourists found him under a bridge near the Embankment. Lights out. Liver and heart failure.’
‘How do you know this? Surely there wasn’t an investigation?’
‘I try to keep up. It’s my city. As a matter of fact, hypothermia was involved. It had been a very cold night, and questions were asked in parliament. How could our society… blah, blah, blah… You ask me, people want to sleep out on the streets and beg instead of getting a decent job and somewhere safe and warm to kip down, good luck to them.’
‘You haven’t changed much, have you?’
Burgess winked. ‘Governments come and governments go, but basic truths remain the same.’
‘And so does Dirty Dick Burgess. And the other? Kieran Welles.’
‘Don’t know anything about him. Kieran’s an Irish name, though, isn’t it?’
‘Sounds like it to me.’
‘Hmm. I’ll see what I can find out.’ He sipped his drink. ‘Sometimes it’s like pissing in the wind, this job. Christ, don’t you long for the old days, Banksy? You were down here then. Out on the mean streets. You had a bit of a reputation. Took no prisoners, as I remember.’
‘Different times.’
‘Too true. But let’s not get all nostalgic, hey?’ He hoisted his glass and they clinked. ‘To old friends.’
‘You sentimental bastard.’
‘Go carefully,’ Burgess said. ‘I mean it. People like Havers, and perhaps even your Beddoes, for all I know, look harmless on the surface. They’d run a mile if you raised your fist to them. But they don’t have to deal with that end of the business themselves. They use people like your Kieran Welles, and they don’t care what damage they do. Do you think Welles is behind the killing?’
‘Off the cuff?’ said Banks. ‘I don’t know Kieran Welles – don’t even know if he was the one who stole the bolt gun. All I know about him is that he was cruel to animals in an abattoir, if that doesn’t take the biscuit. There’s a couple of others – Ronald Tanner, who threatened a witness, and a mate of his called Carl Utley, who we think might have driven the van with the tractor away from the scene and dumped it outside Dover. We’re looking for him. I don’t rate Tanner. He’s a bruiser. He’s never worked in an abattoir, and we’ve found no trace of a bolt gun at his house.’
‘He could have dumped the body.’
‘Oh, he’s involved somehow, but the impression he gives me is that he’s just low-level muscle. Bruises and fractures, maybe, but not whack jobs, to use the correct parlance. I hope not, anyway. We had to cut him loose today.’
‘Why?’
‘Cassandra Wakefield.’
‘Bloody hell! Is that gloriously shaggable bitch still putting criminals back on the streets?’
‘Indeed she is.’
‘Talking about shaggable, that DI MacDonald you’ve got up north on Operation Hawk is quite tasty, isn’t she?’
‘You know her?’
‘We’ve met at a couple of meetings. Bit frosty at first acquaintance, but those types often turn out to be the loudest screamers. I’m not treading on your toes, am I, Banksy? She did mention your name. But I heard you’d got a bit of young Italian crumpet on the go.’
Banks smiled. He hadn’t heard the word ‘crumpet’ for years. Trust Burgess. ‘I have a girlfriend, yes, and her family’s Italian. I worked with Joanna MacDonald when she was Inspector Joanna Passero, that’s all. Before her divorce. She was in Professional Standards then.’
‘Bloody hell. Now you come to mention it, I can just see her doing that job.’
‘She didn’t like it. She’s happier now.’
‘A happy divorcee. Just friends, then?’
‘Just friends.’
‘Even after that dirty weekend in Tallinn?’
Banks gave him a look. Burgess held up his hands and responded with the closest he could get to feigning innocence. ‘OK,’ he said. ‘I’ll be in touch on the names and anything I can find out about your John Beddoes. And remember what I said. Adios amigo, and be careful out there.’
Banks finished his pint and stood up. ‘I will.’
It was just after dark when Alex decided to nip to the mini supermarket down the street. She was out of milk for the breakfast cereal, needed bread for toast, and there was no white wine left. Ian was playing a video game crossed-legged on the armchair with his console, and he didn’t want to stop while he was ahead. As the two of them, and their flat, were being watched over by the police, Alex knew there was nothing to worry about. They had said she was free to come and go as she pleased, to carry on as normal. She wouldn’t see them, but they would be watching her. Even so, she felt a bit nervous leaving Ian alone when she put her leather jacket on and picked up her handbag. It was the first time she had been out after dark since her visit from the man they had identified as Ronald Tanner. And she had seen on the local news just an hour ago that he had been released from police custody that morning, despite the fingerprint and her identification from the VIPER screen. Alex couldn’t really get her head around that. She knew criminals were always getting off, but this Tanner had so obviously done it. She guessed that the police were looking for more evidence, and she imagined they would be watching him very closely. He certainly wouldn’t want to give them any reason to put him back in jail by coming to visit her flat again.
Alex could hear hip hop coming from one of the flats on the floor above as she walked along the balcony towards the lifts. She had never been able to understand hip hop, though several friends and neighbours had tried to explain its virtues to her. She’d been to raves when she was a teenager, danced all night to pulsating, repetitive electro-pop, even popped Ecstasy on one or two occasions; she was open-minded, but she had never taken to hip hop, even when it wasn’t grime, or using ugly words to describe women and the things men should do to them. Still, she knew the kids up there and they were OK. It was probably just a matter of taste. She liked Beyoncé and Rihanna; they liked Tinie Tempah and Dizzee Rascal.
The lift was working, thank God, though the smell of piss was as bad as ever. It was just as likely down to the incontinent old geezer on the tenth floor as it was to kids. He’d been told often enough but he said he couldn’t help himself. It was quiet out on the street, the lamps giving out that eerie late twilight glow, just a few people walking about, heads down, the smell of someone’s cigarette drifting on the damp night air, mingling with the hot grease and acrid hint of vinegar from the fish and chip shop. She glanced around but could see no signs of her police watchers. They were being very discreet. She stuck her hands deep in her jacket pocket, bag slung over her shoulder bumping against her hip. She could see the lights of the supermarket about fifty yards ahead, just across the street, see people coming and going. She passed a woman who lived on the same floor as her, and they said hello. The night was still and cold. Cold enough to freeze the puddles, Alex thought, with a shiver.