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"I just left my job, actually. I was working at the Place of Safety Shelters."

"Right?" Kilty nodded, recognizing the name. "Why did you leave?"

Maureen tried to think of a way to disguise it but gave up. "I was shite at it and I was about to get rumbled. Plus I hated it. Never seeming to get anywhere and the administrative grind, all that bollocks."

"Not enough drama?"

Maureen nodded and sipped her Coke.

"Know what ye mean," said Kilty. "When I started I wanted to run into burning buildings and wrestle wild animals, not fill out forms to great effect. It's a bit of a disappointment, really." She finished the last bite of her burger and brushed her hands clean. "Do you have any cigarettes?"

Maureen got out her packet and put them on the table. Kilty took one, watching the tip as she held it in her mouth, and lit it with Vik's lighter, sucking the smoke into her mouth, exhaling it and immediately sucking again. Maureen watched her. "You don't smoke much, do you?"

Kilty shook her tiny head. She stopped and looked at the cigarette. "I so want to be a cynical smoker. I keep trying but I can't get the hang of it."

Maureen reached out and took the cigarette off her. "Give that to me before you hurt yourself. Who were you waiting for in the lawyer's?"

"Client," said Kilty, sitting up straight and responsible. "Young guy. Spot of bother."

Maureen nodded. "See, as a social worker, would you know a lot about the benefits system?"

Kilty looked at her, wary and guarded. "Why?"

"What I'm actually doing here is," said Maureen, wriggling forward in her seat, "I'm looking for someone."

Kilty's eyes urged her on.

"She came to us in Glasgow," continued Maureen, "came to the shelter in a terrible way, and then she disappeared but she was seen down here."

"Are you trying to make sure she didn't go back to the man who beat her up?"

"Yeah," said Maureen, relieved that her story was scanning out.

"Well," said Kilty, "what are you doing in the lawyer's office asking about changes in the partnership and Mr. Headie, then?"

Maureen had forgotten all that. "Oh, see, she got a letter from the firm on the wrong headed notepaper-"

Kilty interrupted. "But if you're looking for her, who's the little Scottish man?"

Maureen couldn't think of another silly lie to cover up the other silly lies. "I thought art-school people were meant to be thick," she said.

Kilty raised each of her eyebrows alternately, wiggling them.

"I can't tell you all her business," said Maureen, watching the eyebrows, hoping she'd do it again. "I'm not in a position to do that."

Kilty looked unreasonably annoyed. "I'd better get back," she said, standing up and gathering her fur and her handbag.

"What are you up to tomorrow?"

"Working," said Kilty.

"On a Saturday?"

"I work Saturdays."

"D'you want to meet for lunch?" Maureen was talking quickly and sounded desperate. "I don't know this area at all and she disappeared somewhere around here."

Kilty was standing over her, looking suspicious.

"I just thought you might know people," said Maureen. "Never mind."

Kilty pulled her coat on and stepped out of the leg-trap table. She lifted her bag strap and swung it over her head. "In here, tomorrow at twelve?"

"Yeah." Maureen brightened. "Twelve."

"Sounds like you're sitting on a high-drama story." Kilty slipped past Maureen to the heavy glass door. "I'll wheedle it out of you." She stepped out into the street.

Maureen dug out Ann's sister's phone number and headed for a pay phone. Pornographic photographs of vulnerable young women were papered over the inside of the box. The calling cards said the girls were schoolgirls, bad girls, dirty girls, barely legal, French and Swedish, call now.

"Hello, Mrs. Akitza?"

"Yes?"

Maureen said that she had come to London on behalf of Jimmy Harris's family and she'd be looking around for the next few days, maybe a week. She wanted to come and see her in about ten minutes but she didn't know the area and she didn't know how to get to the house. The voice hesitated and gave her directions from the tube station. Ann's sister didn't seem very excited about seeing her. She hung up on Maureen without saying good-bye.

Chapter 29

GRAVEL

James Harris had been staring at his feet for twenty minutes. A prominent purple vein throbbed under his eye. Bunyan and Williams stood near him, asking questions and waiting for answers that never came. The only times Harris seemed alive were the four times Alan had come back downstairs, banging loudly on the living-room door before opening it and coming in. The first couple of times he claimed he had forgotten something and went back upstairs slowly, carrying a broken toy or a pen. Then he started coming down to get things for the babies, a drink of juice and a bit of bread. Harris sat up when the boy came in, waking up, sitting tall and giving his eldest son trouble for coming back to save him. At the last visit Alan started crying in the kitchen and wouldn't tell anybody why. He climbed onto his father's knee and refused to get down. Williams took Bunyan into the hall. "Phone Carlisle on your mobile," he muttered. "Tell them we might need an interview room. And try and get hold of the emergency social work here, tell them about the kids."

Bunyan looked back into the living room. "Why won't he talk?"

"Jesus, I don't know, but he's obviously got something to say, hasn't he?" He stepped back into the room. "Mr. Harris, we're going to phone the social-work department so that someone can sit with the boys for a while, and we'd like to take you to Carlisle police station to conduct a formal interview."

Harris stood up, letting Alan slide down his legs. "No," he said weakly. "No. Don't. Please don't."

"We need you to talk to us and we can't talk here with the boy coming in and out."

"I'll talk," breathed Harris. "I'll talk. Isa'll sit with them. Try Isa." He bent over and picked up the cushion on the chair. Underneath, in the hollow that springs should have filled, was a shallow pool of correspondence and bits of paper. Harris lifted some pages and found an unfolded fag packet with a number written in pencil. "Here," he said. "She'll come."

Bunyan slipped out into the hall and tried the number on her mobile but it rang out at the other end. She looked up. Williams and Harris were staring at her.

"Isn't there anyone else?" she said. "A neighbor or someone?"

"Is she not in?"

"There's no answer."

Alan stood on the chair and lifted up his arms. "Mrs. Lindsay's a neighbor," he said simply. "She's got babies anyway and I'll give her a hand. She likes my drawing as well." He smiled up at Williams.

"Right," said Williams hopefully. "What number house does she live at?"

"Next door," said Alan, trying to get between his father and the big policeman. "I'll go an' chap her for ye."

"Maybe your daddy should do that."

They all looked at Harris. He walked over to the door with the energy and bounce of a sleepy octogenarian.

"I'll just come with you," said Williams, trying to sound light-hearted so as not to frighten the boy, taking hold of Harris's arm as he came past.

Bunyan could hear them on the veranda, walking along to a door and knocking, waiting for the answer. In the street below someone was shouting as an engine revved furiously. The next door opened to a gruff female voice. Alan smiled up at Bunyan, a cluster of sharp teeth set in a little pink face. "I'm not well."

"You've got a cough," said Bunyan.

"How can a lady be a debt man?"

"D'you think we're debt men?"

"Aye." He was grinning, trying to appeal to her.

"Nooo," she said, and felt her voice changing. "We're not debt men, we're policemen."

Alan's face fell and his eyes flickered to the front door. "What do ye want him for?" he said quickly.

"Just a chat."

The boy seemed panicked. His eyes darted around the room. If Alan had been older Bunyan would have thought he was looking for a weapon.