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‘Your feeling about it,’ Threlfall said. ‘Say, about this third person, perhaps?’

‘I don’t know anything about the third person,’ he said, dragging his dirty mind back from somewhere it should not have strayed to, back to the more mundane matter of global terrorism. Fleetingly, he thought that maybe he didn’t have the right mindset to be a serious high-ranking officer. Here he was in the middle of a serious debate finding himself thinking about sex. Would he ever mature? ‘But there is one thing,’ he said, visualizing the incident in the back alley, ‘confirmed by the slip Mr Anger just made about a wanted terrorist escaping.’

Anger blanched. ‘Eh?’

‘Which is?’ Threlfall asked, leaning towards him with interest.

‘When we hit the front door, why didn’t all three of them pile up into the loft? That front door had been reinforced and it would’ve taken us a fair bit of time to smash it down — time enough for them all to go, maybe. But it would have been a bit like the three stooges all climbing up there and racing through the rafters.’ Henry applied his mind to this. ‘I think the two who were arrested were ensuring that the third one got away. That’s it,’ he declared, ‘they were protecting him and were quite prepared to kill and die to ensure he escaped, which means …’ It all dawned on him.

But Threlfall finished up for him. ‘It means they were the pawns and he was a player … well thought out, Chief Inspector.’ The spook regarded him warily through half-lidded eyes.

‘I astound myself sometimes.’

The deputy grinned and looked down at her writing pad.

‘Who is he?’ Henry asked bluntly.

‘That’s not something you need to know,’ Threlfall said. ‘In fact, a decision has been made this morning that no mention will be made to the media of the suspected third person because we do not want speculation or scare-mongering.’

‘How do you mean?’

‘They could reach the same conclusion as yourself which could cause fear amongst the public …’

‘If it became known that we let him go, you mean?’ Henry said.

Threlfall looked at him with a pained expression. ‘We are simply going to say that two terror suspects have been arrested and keep it low key.’

‘How do you know who it was who escaped?’

‘One of our experts has already looked at the suicide bomb the lad was wearing … and he believes it’s one built by the man we are after. We also have fast-track DNA analysis equipment available, which proves he was in the house, too.’

‘So this whole operation was directed at catching this guy?’ Henry asked. ‘In which case, why was this not outlined clearly at the briefing?’

‘Ahh,’ Threlfall said. ‘It was, actually,’ he went on hesitantly, ‘but only separately to the firearms team who were raiding the house in which we thought he was.’

‘But not to the rest of us,’ Henry spluttered. ‘Talk about bloody pawns!’ Henry realized he was now in a world of spin and lies, which was always the case with the security services and shady government departments. He despised them and his expression probably said it all.

Ignoring Henry’s last words, the man called Beckham, who had said he was from the Home Office, opened his mouth for the first time. ‘What I am about to say to you goes no further than these four walls. Yes, you’re right, he was our prime target and our groundwork prior to the implementation of this operation may have been slightly flawed, but the overall intelligence driving it wasn’t. We have a terrorist of the highest calibre operating in Britain and it remains a priority to apprehend him. As you know, the American Secretary of State is visiting the north of England next week and the fact that this man is still at large is a big worry for us, as Condoleezza Rice is near the top of any middle-eastern terrorists’ assassination list. However, there is an ongoing operation up and running aimed at capturing this man, which is all you need to know. As regards what happened today, it suits us to keep this man’s details and the fact he was even in this region as secret and you are officially gagged, Chief Inspector. If you utter a word of this, then the bureaucratic force of the law and government will land smack-bang on your head. This also applies to all the individuals in the team that raided that house. They will be spoken to separately.

‘I cannot give you details of this man, but I will tell you he is highly dangerous, he has been behind many atrocities across the world, and his presence in this county is worrying. We missed a chance to bag him, but that’s how it goes sometimes. At least we have some trophies to display to the community and the world, thanks to your heroism this morning, Henry.’

‘I suppose the cheque’s in the post?’

Henry was given the elbow and he rose from the conference table, nodding at FB, catching Angela Cranlow’s eye, and giving the rest of the group a general gesture of goodbye. No one showed him out, not that he expected such courtesy, and he emerged tired, but relatively unscathed from the pit of fire, with the exception of Dave Anger’s remarks, into the bag-carriers’ office. All four members of staff were at their desks, including Henry’s best friend, Chief Inspector Laker.

Henry smiled at him, then swung out into the hushed corridor outside, where he leaned against a wall and breathed deeply.

‘Ah, dear,’ he said to no one and suddenly felt quite shaky and ravenously hungry. It was just after ten, meaning breakfast was still being served down in the dining room. He headed downstairs, his nose following the aroma of bacon.

The dining room was reasonably busy, but there were still plenty of seats and tables vacant. Being self-service, Henry heaped too much of everything on a plate, grabbed a coffee from the machine, paid, and steered a careful course to a free table in the far corner of the room. Because he was feeling unsociable, he sat with his back to everyone and faced a window overlooking the car park. After a few moments’ precise preparation of cutlery, plate, mug and napkin, he tucked into the huge meal which he knew would go a long way to shutting down his arteries, but would also cheer him up.

He scoffed it quickly, finishing off with a self-made toasted crispy bacon sandwich that he folded into his mouth. It tasted tremendous. He washed it down with coffee, then got a refill, and returned to his chair to watch the world of Lancashire Constabulary go by. A huge horsebox drove by, a four-wheel drive BMW traffic car purred past towards wireless workshops, and an array of less impressive police vehicles also passed his window.

His head shook involuntarily as he thought through the last few hours of his life, once again realizing how lucky he was to be sitting here eating a meal which would probably kill him anyway. Still, it was better than a bullet, or being picked up piece by piece. Perhaps it was safer in Special Projects, and he thought he would settle there now, carve a comfortable niche out for himself up on the top floor and hibernate until retirement.

‘Umph,’ he uttered without knowing, not really liking that prospect. Sitting in an office just wasn’t him, but his options were becoming increasingly limited.

Dave Anger sat down opposite him. Henry had not seen him enter the dining room.

The two men regarded each other.

‘I don’t want you thinking that just because you were involved in today’s job that you will be doing any further work concerning it.’

‘God forbid. I know when I’m frozen out. I was just planning a dry flower arrangement for my desk in Special Projects.’

‘Good … I didn’t think it was clearly stated upstairs. You have no further involvement, OK?’

Henry eyed him with disdain. His breakfast was a mere memory. There was an unpleasant taste in his mouth now. He picked up his coffee, stood up and walked across to the far side of the room to a vacant table, having no wish to get involved with Anger. When he sat down, he saw that Anger had already left. He hunched over his mug and stared at the coffee, then yawned.

‘My, that’s a big one,’ a female voice said from behind. Henry clammed up and turned quickly. It was Angela Cranlow, the deputy chief, mug of tea in hand, bacon barm in the other. ‘Mind if I join you, Henry?’