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Henry’s voice carried and reverberated around the hallway. He repeated his words. Again, no reply. The hairs on the back of his neck tingled. To find the door unlocked at this time of day, no security chain across, no sign of an alarm having been set, was disconcerting. He imagined the captain would be one of the most security conscious people on the planet, especially in his volunteer role. There would be no way he would leave his home unlocked.

Henry walked down the hallway of the flat, his radio in his right hand.

The smell of death hit him.

‘Damn,’ he whispered under his breath, jumping to the conclusion that he was about to discover that a natural sudden death had occurred, that the old guy had popped his clogs which had been the reason why Taylor had been unable to rouse him. Already he was angry at the temerity of the man to die without a thought for the murder investigation.

Where would he be, Henry wondered. In bed? On the bog? Many elderly people died while straining on the loo.

He opened the living room door and fumbled for the light switch. Then froze. This was no natural sudden death.

Blackthorn’s body was on the hearthrug in the middle of the room, in the space between the settee and the fireplace.

Like Joey Costain he had been gutted like a fish. His insides were flipped out, wrapped around his head and neck. Henry squatted down next to the body and inspected it without touching. His eyes roved round the blood-splattered room and spotted a walking stick resting against the settee. In blood, the word ‘grass’ had been scrawled.

‘Gill must have been here,’ Henry hissed, remaining down on his haunches. His thought processes whirred and clicked, going back to only moments before when he had reflected on the likely security consciousness of Captain Blackthorn. There was no sign of forced entry on the door, although it was possible an intruder could have entered by other means, such as a kitchen window. Failing that, someone had been invited into the house, someone Blackthorn knew and/or trusted. As was the case for Joey Costain who had turned his back on someone he knew or trusted or thought he could trust. And to confirm it, Henry saw two mugs of tea on the coffee table. Two mugs.

Henry was aware of movement behind him: PC Taylor.

Henry stayed where he was down by the body and hoped that his thoughts had not transferred themselves to his body language as his skin chilled. God, he hoped he was wrong, but he was sure he was not.

Taylor was behind him still. Not good. Henry sensed him to be by the living-room door about six feet away, a little bit of distance.

‘Where’s Jane Roscoe?’ Henry asked quietly. He stood up slowly, his knees cracking, betraying his approach to middle age. Taylor was immobile by the door. Henry had it in his mind that if he was wrong, he could just say he asked the question rhetorically, out of frustration, but when he looked at Taylor, he knew he was right, so he said it again. ‘Where is Jane Roscoe?’

Taylor smiled confidently. A transformation from the ‘big softie’ he had been described as. His face had a dark shadow over it. He was not the person Henry had come to know recently.

‘I made two mistakes,’ Taylor said quietly. ‘One, reading the Sunday Times. Two, leaving you that note and pretending to be the keen constable. Very foolish of me. I should have known you’d not accept it at face value. I was hoping it would put you off for a few days, give me time to do what I have to do, then disappear. As it is, you’ve given me even more things to do now. I need to kill you, Henry.’

Taylor’s right hand appeared from around his back, holding a baton. He did not say anything, just maintained that enigmatic smile.

Henry brought his radio up to his mouth and pressed the transmit button. Nothing happened.

‘Don’t bother,’ Taylor said. ‘I’ve changed the channels. By the time you tune it back to Blackpool, you’ll be dead.’ He raised the baton. For the first time Henry saw it was an electronic-shock baton. ‘High voltage, low amperage, non-lethal shock,’ Taylor explained. ‘Just enough to put you down long enough for me to slit you open like all the rest.’

‘Like Mark Evans? Louise Graveson?’

Taylor shrugged. ‘Something like that.’

Henry’s mind spun. He tested the water: ‘What about Mo Khan?’

Taylor smirked. ‘I finished off what Joey started. He left Khan bleeding, but I whacked him to death, very satisfying,’ he said with pride. ‘Then I killed Joey before I came into work that evening. I phoned in about his death from the hospital; remember when I was supposedly vomiting at the thought of letting the prisoner in my charge die? I was telling communications all about Joey being a mess. And that nice Sergeant Byrne was being so caring. You weren’t, though, were you? Nasty man!’ He smirked cockily. Henry’s hands bunched into tight fists which he wanted to smash into Taylor’s face. ‘Joey was an imbecile and we used him.’

‘We?’

‘Hellfire Dawn — the saviours of this second-rate country.’

‘And Jane Roscoe? Where the hell is she, PC Taylor?’

‘I’m not PC Taylor at the moment,’ he came back stiffly. ‘My name is David Gill.’

‘Really?’ Henry guffawed, picking up on the brittleness in Taylor’s voice. ‘My understanding is that David Gill is lying in the mortuary defrosting like a frozen lamb.’

Taylor pointed the baton at Henry. ‘Wrong. He is who I have become. He is me, when I need him. He is my raincoat, my comfy pair of slippers. He was just a shell waiting to be inhabited, a good for nothing loser, better off with his throat cut. At least he now has a purpose in life.’

‘Well that’s fine and dandy for the judge and jury: I become someone else so I am therefore not responsible for my actions — fuck that,’ Henry spat. ‘You can convince them that you’re Jekyll and Hyde for all I care, but I guarantee you’re still going down for a long time. You can take my regards to Ian Brady.’

‘I don’t think so. You see, no one knows I’m here with you, do they? So once you’re dead, I’ll go and do the business with Janey, then my piece de resistance, then I’ll be gone. I’ll find some other shell to inhabit, rather like that nice, but sensitive policeman PC Taylor, so deeply affected by the sight of blood and death and a little bit soft — PC Taylor — who the hell was he but a shell?’

‘There’s a slight hitch in your plan,’ Henry said. His voice held, but he was starting to feel it going, starting to quake as, with his right hand, he fumbled with the channel selector on the radio. ‘I’m not dead — and I don’t intend to be.’

Taylor moved into the room proper and closed the door behind him.

Henry stepped back over the captain’s dead body, his feet slipping in the blood, which had a crusty top on it, but a slimy underbelly. He wanted to keep his distance from Taylor and the shock baton.

‘There’s quite a bit of a difference here,’ Henry pointed out, ‘between you and me.’

‘Oh? You victim, me killer,’ Taylor said. ‘Where’s the difference?’

‘Difference is that I’m expecting you. None of your previous victims were ready for you, were they, PC Taylor? You either surprised them or got them to trust you, then you whacked ’em. I’m not surprised and I don’t trust you, PC Taylor.’

‘Gill, David Gill,’ Taylor corrected him sternly. ‘Call me David.’

‘Bonkers, more like,’ Henry said. ‘So come on then, let’s have a bit of action here. You don’t like this, do you? Face to face, level terms, with someone who’s going to disarm you and beat you. How does that feel, John?’ He emphasised the name blatantly. ‘Gonna wrap me up like a parcel?’ Henry taunted. ‘Just put the baton down and any other weapon. Make this easy on yourself.’

Taylor hesitated. Henry stood there giving the impression of composure, which underneath he did not feel.

‘Fuck you!’ Taylor screamed. He shook the baton angrily and stepped towards Henry.

Henry moved back to keep out of range.