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“It’s still just going to look like meat, though, innit.” Darren Green insisted.

Tom Blackett shook his head. “Trust me, we can spot the difference.” He flicked his pad over to a clean page and began to draw. “Human beings are bipeds, not quadrupeds. Our shoulders and our upper leg muscles are very different from those of a cow or a deer. Particularly the leg. If you take a transverse section through the middle of the thigh, taking off the head of the femur, which is far too obvious to leave in place…” He pointed to the rough sketch he’d made. Darren Green leaned over and looked suspiciously at it. “You’ve got the rounded outline of the shaft of the femur here. In front of it, you’ve got the anterior group of muscles, the rectus fe moris and the vasti. Behind it you’ve got the posterior group, the adduct or magnus and the hamstrings. And here, on the inside, you’ve got the medial group of muscles, which is where most of the blood vessels and nerves are also situated. The chances are you’re also going to have a lot more fat than on the average animal carcass.”

Green’s face broke into a smile as understanding dawned. “Right,” he said. “That arrangement of meat, it’s nothing like what you’d get on a leg of beef or venison.”

“And of course, a joint of human beef is going to be a lot smaller than the corresponding cut from a cow or a deer,” Blackett continued. “Which is something any butcher would recognize at once, I presume?”

“I dare say,” Green said cautiously. “But even if a group of us do help you out with this search, it’s still going to take forever to cover the ground. We’ll never get it done and dusted before the morning’s trading begins. Don’t forget, it’s not like a shop that opens at nine o’clock. We do most of our business between four and seven in the morning.”

“If we were talking about searching the whole market, I’d have to agree with you, Mr. Green,” Duvall said. “But we do have information that will narrow the targets down considerably. We’re looking for freezers that are not in everyday use. Ones that are for more long-term storage. Probably ones that are locked up. That’s why we need the full cooperation of your members. We don’t want to have to go around breaking into their property. So what I need you to do is to contact everyone who has a unit in the market and ask them to make sure they’ll have staff on the spot tonight who can give us access to all their storage. And that they’ll be there all night if need be.”

“Bloody hell,” Green protested. “That’s a tall order.”

“If you don’t have the resources to do it, I can second some of the market police officers to you. But it has to be done,” Duvall said, her voice adamant as her face was implacable.

“They’re not going to like this,” he complained.

Daniels took over. “We’re not doing this for fun, Darren. This is a very serious matter.”

“That’s right,” Duvall said grimly. “Now, I need you and your volunteers at Snow Hill police station for nine o’clock so Professor Blackett can give you a full briefing on what you’ll be looking for, and so you can be assigned to the officers you’ll be assisting. I intend to commence operations at ten precisely. I have no desire to disrupt your night’s trading. But that depends on you and your members. I suggest you get on with it.” The smile on her lips did nothing to diminish the force of the command. With muttered complaints, Green left the others.

“What do you think, Ron? Will it work?” Duvall asked.

The big man nodded. “I think you’ll get all the cooperation you need. I’ll have a word with Darren, make sure he lets people know that the traders aren’t under any suspicion at this point.”

Duvall nodded. “You seem very confident that you can spot what we’re after, Professor,” she said.

“If I’d sounded as dubious as I feel, your Mr. Green would have been as obstructive as possible. It’s not easy to identify human flesh by sight, Chief Inspector. It’s simple enough to run tests to confirm it once we have something suspicious, but whether we find anything depends entirely on how good your killer is.” Blackett paused, then raised his eyebrows. “Always providing he exists.”

THIRTY-EIGHT

Detective Constable Neil McCartney was tired. Watching Francis Blake for twelve hours a day was a killer assignment, in no small part because the man led such a bloody boring life. Sometimes he wouldn’t see hide nor hair of his target for the whole shift. At least Neil had swapped over on to days, ten till ten, which was slightly less desperate than the long nights when all Blake seemed to do was watch videos and sleep. But Neil knew this was only a brief respite. With Joanne stuck in the office bashing the computer, it wouldn’t be long before John was hassling to get the day shift again. It wasn’t unreasonable he had a wife and young kids who didn’t want to be quiet all day because daddy was sleeping.

That could have been his life, Neil thought with an edge of sourness. If he hadn’t been stupid enough to choose the wrong woman. He’d met Kim on the job. She was bouncy and vivacious, the life and soul of every party. Not the sort he’d normally have gone for, being a quiet sort of bloke, really. He’d thought the looks he got were envy. It was only a long time later that he realised they were pity. He was her alibi for her affair with one of the custody sergeants, the perfect distraction to fool the man’s wife at every police function. And the best possible alibi was marriage.

At first, his bitterness had been turned on himself. But there was no point in being sour about Kim; she was the woman she was. So his search for somewhere to put the blame had ended with the job.

He could so easily have turned into another rancorous copper, taking out his spite on those he came into contact with professionally. But the transfer he’d sought had taken him into plain clothes and on to Steve Preston’s team. And that had saved him. It had reminded him of why he’d joined the police in the first place. Putting villains away, that was what it was all about, and to hell with the office game-playing. That was how Steve ran his squad, and officers who couldn’t live with that didn’t last long.

So now Neil’s loyalty, first and last, lay with his boss. That was why, however tedious the surveillance got, he was prepared to stick it out. The fiasco of Francis Blake’s entrapment and subsequent trial had only stiffened his resolve. That was what happened when politics got in the way of policing, and he was as determined as his boss to set the record straight and catch Susan Blanchard’s killer. So he stifled his doubts about the point of what he was doing and stuck to Blake like chewing gum.

He yawned. The rain drizzled relentlessly down his windscreen. It seemed a fitting counterpoint to the lack of excitement in his and Francis Blake’s lives. If he had the kind of money that Blake had trousered over his newspaper deal, Neil was bloody sure he’d be living somewhere with a bit more class than this. No two ways about it, this was a dump.

The flat Blake had rented on his release was less than a mile from his old place in King’s Cross. The new place was in a busy but faintly seedy street off the Pentonville Road, the sort of place where the locals were off-duty hookers, the hopelessly unemployed, the elderly poor and the mentally ill. The best you could say about it was that it was handy for public transport. Halfway up the road, some uninspired architect had designed a utilitarian block in grey brick that looked like it had been jerry built in the sixties. It was cut off from the neighbouring terraced houses by a service lane that ran up either side and round the back. On the ground floor were half a dozen shop units, a news agent, an off-licence, a betting shop, a mini market a kebab shop and a minicab office. The two floors above were divided into flats, and it was in one of these drab boxes on the second floor that Blake had taken up residence. It depressed Neil just thinking about it.