‘This is so nuts,’ she replied.
‘No. This is psychological warfare. He needs to know that his adversaries are at least as smart as he is.’
‘Sounds like macho bullshit to me.’
‘Whatever, it works.’
They poked around the downstairs, moving furniture, opening drawers, before Heck headed up to the first floor. Lauren followed, increasingly tense. They’d been here several minutes already, which felt as though they were stretching their luck absurdly. They searched the bedroom shelves but found nothing of interest.
‘Know anything about hacking?’ Heck asked, eyeing the bedside computer.
‘No.’
‘Neither do I.’
He tried to access the system anyway, but the password defeated him. While he was thus engaged, Lauren brushed against the wall, only for it to creak as though made from flimsy material. Heck heard this and got to his feet. They examined the wall carefully. Now that their attention had been drawn, it became apparent that this portion of wall had been left accessible. There was no furniture against it; it had no skirting board. Heck tested it with his fingers. It creaked again.
‘This is just soft-board. Ah hah …’
He’d found a tell-tale slit in the paper, which, when he followed it, described a rectangle about six feet tall by three wide. He pushed hard. There was a click as a catch was released, and the rectangle swung outward. A bare wooden stair lay beyond.
‘What the hell’s this?’ Lauren said.
‘Fifty years ago it would’ve been Deke’s ascent to the gallows.’
The stair connected with the loft, or with a room that had been constructed inside the loft. It was small and square, with only the roof’s south-facing slope serving as its ceiling. There were no windows, so Heck felt it safe to flick a switch. An electric light came on, revealing another desk, another computer, a filing cabinet and a wall-cupboard.
‘Now we’re getting somewhere,’ he said.
He opened the cupboard first. Inside it there was a steel rack containing a variety of automatic weapons. Various pistols and revolvers were ranged along the top: Glocks, Brownings, Berettas. Below those, there were heavier-duty items: rifles and submachine guns. Heck recognised a Kurtz, two Armalites, a Kalashnikov, even a high-powered Dragunov sniper rifle.
‘Good God,’ Lauren said slowly.
Heck turned to the filing cabinet and yanked open its drawers. They were packed with paperwork filed in buff folders. A reference code had been scrawled on each one with felt pen. The codes were the sort you used when listing electronic data and wishing to keep it orderly and chronological; for example, ‘a’ through to ‘z’, followed by ‘za’ through to ‘zz’, followed by ‘zza’ through to ‘zzz’, and so on. There was also a leather-bound ledger. Heck flicked it open. It was filled, page after page, with lists of scribbled notations. At first glance it looked like gibberish, but there were numbers in there with pound signs attached, big numbers, each one struck through with biro (possibly to indicate that the full fee had now been paid). On one occasion, Ezekial – because this was evidently a ledger of his accounts – had earned twenty-five thousand pounds for a single job. On another he’d earned forty-five thousand pounds.
Lauren stiffened. She thought she’d just heard movement outside the house.
Heck continued to flick pages. Each separate list clearly referred to a different employer – at least that was the way it appeared. She hooked his arm with her hand. He shook her loose; he was too preoccupied.
‘Someone’s coming in,’ she whispered, dashing to the top of the loft stair. She strained her ears to hear more – a key was turning in the front lock. This time Heck heard it too.
‘We’ve got to go!’ Lauren hissed.
He nodded, but his eyes scanned quickly down the very last page in the ledger. At the bottom of the final list, the reference to the most recent job was ‘RO’.
Ron O’Hoorigan?
The figure alongside it read ten thousand pounds.
‘Heck!’ Lauren had been halfway down the stair and now stuck her head back into the room.
He glanced at the top of the list. Whoever these particular jobs had been performed for, he – or they – were referred to simply as ‘Nice Guys’.
‘Heck, for Christ’s sake!’
He nodded, switched the light off and followed her down the stairs.
Just as they did, the cottage’s front door slammed open, and yellow streetlight flooded into the darkened ground floor. Lauren dashed across the sleeping area on cat-like feet. She made straight for the bathroom, but Heck didn’t immediately pursue. He paused halfway, and moved towards the balustrade. Even the sound of someone blundering around downstairs, and then the loud clack-click of what could be a firearm being cocked made no apparent impression on him. He loitered there as though uncertain about something. It took Lauren to hurtle back in, grab him by the collar, haul him into the bathroom and push him out through the window.
They both landed on their feet, and raced down the garden towards the rear gate. As they reached it, full lighting came on in the house behind. They didn’t glance back, but crashed out into the alley and raced away into the London night.
They ran north up Kingston Road, crossed the river at Teddington Lock and only slowed to a walk when they reached Petersham Road. By now they were sweaty-faced and panting. The few late evening pedestrians gave them a wide berth.
‘Why did you hesitate like that?’ Lauren asked.
Heck shook his head.
‘You’re not going to start going barmy on me, I hope?’
‘He was there, wasn’t he? Right there, right in our grasp. If we’d jumped him then, it could’ve been the key to everything.’
‘You’re kidding, right? You saw the way he beat the shit out of those idiots in Salford. Besides, it sounded like he was armed.’
‘Yeah, that might’ve been a problem. But we could still have nabbed him if we’d been canny. The thing is … it’s not him we’re after. It’s whoever’s paying him.’
They were now entering Richmond. At weekend these privileged streets would be alive with well-heeled revellers, even late at night. But midweek it was quiet, its jazzy bars and swish restaurants closed and silent. A mist was forming, rolling in from the river. They glanced behind them a couple of times, but there was no sign anyone was following.
‘This is a lot bigger than I thought, Lauren,’ Heck said. ‘This guy, Deke … I don’t think he’s just some brainless bit of underworld muscle. I think he’s a hit-man. A proper one, a pro.’
‘Yeah?’
‘Doesn’t it make sense, with the weapons he had? The fact that he’s ex-special forces supports that theory.’
‘In which case, doesn’t it rule him out of our investigation?’
‘Not necessarily.’
‘But we’re just looking for a missing woman.’
‘Look, Lauren …’ He mopped his sweat-damp hair from his forehead as they walked. ‘There’s something you need to know … I haven’t been entirely straight with you about this. I’m not just investigating Genene’s abduction. A whole bunch of women have gone missing in similar circumstances in the last few years. Genene’s only one of them.’
She