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Subject: Oh, I'm a bad bad girl


Author:
~delle
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Date Posted: 19:41:33 09/21/02 Sat

I'm sooooooo freaking tempted to start posting this thing, even tho it's NOT done and that's like one of Shan's cardinal rules, right? I think I've got that feedback-itch-thing going.

Not to mention my *very* favorite author has just put up another story. :-(

So, To prevent making an ass of myself on the storyboards, I'm going to put up as much of Hide in Plain Sight as I've got done. The last section is still rocky, still needs polishing. I'm hoping putting it up (and spending the better part of this afternoon hammering out this last bit) will spur me to finish it.

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight Prologue


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:44:16 09/21/02 Sat


Prologue


It should have been so simple.

Just... walk on by.

It was the flicker of movement down the winding twitten that first caught his attention. Then the noise: the sickening, never-to-be-forgotten sound of fists striking flesh, followed by the grunts and gasps of a human being under attack.

Go, walk on, keeping moving... There were other people nearby, he thought, attempting to suppress his instinctual reaction. Someone else will call the police; someone else will help her. Someone else will...

Then the woman screamed, full-throated in panic and pain and fear and he couldn’t turn away.

It was Elena’s scream: the raw, primordial agony of a woman watching her husband and her father dying before her eyes.

The body position, cringing and cowering: it was Simone, huddled terrified in a corner. Hands raised in a pleading defensive pose, all traces of the strong capable woman long since destroyed by years of torture and abuse.

It was Nikita: body swaying under the blows, mutely appealing for his help and simultaneously resigned to the fact that his assistance would not be forthcoming.

He couldn’t walk away... he couldn’t risk the exposure…

He paused, balanced between what he should do and what he couldn’t risk.

Then the woman cried out again and he was in motion with no conscious realization of a decision.

The first one yielded quickly. Even several months out of practice, with muscles grown lax from lack of exercise, it was surprisingly easy to lift the man’s body up and send him crashing against the brick wall.

The second attacker, having a moment’s notice of the interrupting presence, rose rapidly to his feet and directed the punch at him instead of the woman lying crumpled below. It was easy – ridiculously easy – to sidestep the fist and bring his interlocked hands down on the assailant’s head. He felt the neck bones cracking under the force of the blow before the man buckled bonelessly to the ground.

Breathing heavily – like it or not, he was out of shape – he bent over the woman’s body. His fingers hovered over her in momentary indecision; then he reached for her throat, seeking the carotid pulse. It took a few moments, seconds in the cold objective recesses of his mind he knew he didn’t have to spare, to locate the thready pulse. She was unresponsive, but alive.

Self-preservation now became the priority. He rose and turned, finding the entrance to the alleyway clogged with spectators. Behind him, around him, the wail of the police siren was increasingly loud. He began to shove through the crowd, using his elbows and shoulders to force through the throng. Too late, no time, he thought, hearing the squeal of tires as the police car pulled up to the curb, followed closely by an ambulance, roof lights slicing the foggy mist with brilliant reds and blues.

A short heavy-set man took his arm in a firm grip. Startled, he had to curb his instinct to pull away. I’m out of practice in more ways than one.

“Well done, man, well done!”

Now he did jerk his arm free. “It was nothing,” he mumbled, increasing his accent. “Pas de tout. I will be going now, Monsieur.”

“Nonsense, nonsense!” Well-meaning as he might be, the man was now becoming an annoyance as the pudgy fingers reestablished their hold on his arm. “Constable! Here’s our hero of the hour…”

Perhaps he was outweighed, but he was certainly taller and in better condition. It was not difficult to extricate his arm from the leech-like grasp and he took a step back, preparing to melt into the faceless crowd. He bumped into a solid body directly behind him.

“Pardonez-moi,” he said, his head down and his voice low. One step, two...

A loud voice boomed in his ear from the man he had just struck. “Well, now, what’s all this here?”

Too late.

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 1


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:45:25 09/21/02 Sat

“Martin, you’ve got a phone call.”

Graeme rubbed his forehead, trying to rid himself of an incipient headache. “Please tell me it isn’t Mrs. Sheffield again.”

Across the aisle, Sullivan chuckled. “Sorry, mate.”

“Shit.” Graeme took a brief second to control his irritation before picking up his desk phone. “Martin here.”

“Auberie Sheffield, Constable Martin. Have you heard anything?”

“No, Mrs. Sheffield, I’m terribly sorry. There’ve been no new developments.”

“It’s nearly Christmas, Constable. You must find Malcolm. We always spend it together as a family. Our daughter is coming home from London and our youngest boy down from Chester, with our grandch-“ Her voice broke on a sob. “You simply must find him for us.”

“Ma’am, we’re doing everything we possibly can. You know this. We’re looking for your car; we’re tracing his movements. I just don’t have anything new to tell you yet.”

“He wouldn’t have run away from us, Constable! You can’t think that, please, you must believe me. He loves his family, he has his job…” Martin let Auberie Sheffield ramble on, repeating all the information she had told him time and time before: good family man, employed as a low-level government accountant, wouldn’t ever do this to them…

Reprieve came in the form of the desk lieutenant, waving a hand at him from across the office. “Ma’am, I have to go now. Another case. Yes, ma’am, I’ll be sure to keep in touch with you, will call you as soon as I have anything to report.”

“Sorry to interrupt your phone conversation, Martin.” The lieutenant grinned at him when Graeme approached.

“God, thank you sir. Mrs. Sheffield again.”

“Those are the worst. She just doesn’t want to believe the evidence of her own eyes. The man’s found himself another birdie to nest with.”

“Maybe, sir, maybe. But he hasn’t touched the bank accounts.” Martin shook his head and put the disappearance of Malcolm Sheffield to the side. “You wanted me sir?”

“Got an interview for you, Martin. Odd duck. Homeless man, a Frenchy, breaks up a mugging and puts both assailants in hospital. Wanna take a crack at him?”

Graeme flipped through the meager file handed to him. “For getting me off the phone, sir, I’ll be happy to talk to the gentleman.”



Through the one-way mirror he could see the occupant in the interview room. The man didn’t seem very threatening sitting quietly with his hands folded in his lap. Fairly tall, but not overly so, trim with a lean implied strength rather than an overtly muscular build. Long hair hung limply around his face, past shoulder length and obviously in need of a good shampoo and cut.

He looked like what he was: a man down on his luck, one of the hundreds of anonymous transients that passed through Horley every year. Certainly not the type of man to do the amount damage itemized in the file in Graeme’s hand: a broken neck on one, crushed vertebrae on the other. Both men were in critical condition, neither with a good prognosis.

A skittering sensation ran down Graeme’s neck, a nagging sensation that something didn’t quite add up. Who are you, mate?

He was French he said, so that’s how Graeme would play it. He opened the interview room door, exuding his best British joviality.

“Bonjour, monsieur. Je m’appelle Police Constable Graeme Martin, Surrey Police. Comment vous appelez-vous?”

“Dian. René Dian.”

“Vous êtes Français?”

“Suisse et Français. Ma mere est Suisse, mon père est Français.”

“Eh bien.” Martin reached over, pulling the small tape recorder to the center of the table, between them. “En Anglais, maintenant, pour le magnétophone: your name please sir?”

“René Dian.”

“Monsieur Dian: please tell me what happened in the alleyway tonight.”

Dian stared at his interlaced fingers. “I was on my way to the shelter… I am homeless, yes? I see the poor woman being assaulted by two men. It…” he paused and shrugged, raising his gaze to Martin’s face. “She was one woman. They were two men. It seemed the right thing to do.”

Graeme eyed him sharply. Dian’s face was completely expressionless, his eyes steady on Martin’s own. No telltale flicker to indicate nervousness or dishonesty, and yet… something still tickled the back of Martin’s mind. That shrug, for example. Although it appeared to be the classic Gallic mannerism, there was the slightest hesitation; the minutest stiffness that indicated the movement wasn’t quite as habitual as it first appeared.

“Tell me about your background Monsieur Dian. You have put both men in hospital, in critical condition, and haven’t suffered so much as a scratch yourself.”

“There is not much to tell. I have the military experience, like all Swiss men. After the army, I worked a few jobs, got married, got divorced…” Another taut shrug, his gaze drifting over Martin’s shoulder. “Eh bien. Here I am.”

“What brought you here?”

Dian shrugged, turning his long-fingered hands palm-up and answered the question with a question. “How is the woman?”

Graeme glanced up quickly from his notes; no one’s fool, he was immediately aware that Dian had dodged the question. “She’s still comatose. Her prospects don’t look good though, the hospital has very little hope she’ll regain consciousness soon.”

“That’s unfortunate.”

“Yes, it is. Thank you for your time, Monsieur Dian,” Martin rose to his feet and extended a hand across the table. “I trust you will remain here in Horley for a few days? A week, perhaps? Just to give me time to sort through this mess.” A sweep of his hand encompassed the tape recorder and the stack of papers on the table.

“Certainly. I trust it will not take long.” Dian took the offered handshake.

“No, not long, I assure you.”

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 2


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:51:55 09/21/02 Sat

Graeme sat in his worn office chair, absently spinning it first one way, then the other. Something about Dian tickled his brain, just didn’t fit. He couldn’t put his finger on the discrepancy, but he trusted his judgment. He’d been on the force long enough to know his hunches were usually accurate.

On a whim, he logged into his computer with his right hand as he dialed the hospital again with his left. The flat, impersonal voice at the other end informed him that no, Mrs. Stapleton had not yet regained consciousness. Yes, the doctor would get the message to call him back at his earliest convenience. Graeme rolled his shoulders, releasing the tension in his back and neck. Dealing with hospital bureaucracy was almost as bad as dealing with solicitors.

On his computer screen he requested a search on any and all René Dians. Surrey Police came up empty. He expanded the search to all interagency UK police files. Still nothing.

He sat back, considering. He could be wrong, obviously, but the feeling in his gut couldn’t be logicked away. What the hell, he decided, he’d already struggled with the medical establishment. Why not spend a few more minutes fighting Interpol bureaucracy? His fingers quickly entered the required information at Interpol’s site. When the [feds, but it wouldn’t be feds. What do the bobbies call Interpol?] were satisfied he was who he claimed to be, he could finally request any and all information on René Dian.

And whistled quietly at the number of hits returned.

“Somebody’s been a busy little boy,” Graeme murmured, scanning down the list of known and suspected terrorist activities attributed to one Monsieur René Dian. At the bottom of the screen was a notation that Dian had disappeared approximately three years ago and the distinct possibility that he was dead.

Interesting. Could his man simply share an unfortunate name with a deceased terrorist? Martin requested a photo of the suspect.

As he waited for the download, he tipped his chair back and scanned the precinct/district [?] office. “Crickter,” he called to an older detective sergeant a few desks away, “what do you know about L’Heure Sanguine?”

Crickter pushed back from his desk and scratched his bald head consideringly. “L’Heure Sanguine? Some froggy terrorist group from, what, twenty years or more ago. Liked to bomb government buildings to prove their moral superiority. I’ve got a file on them in storage somewhere, brought it down with me from Hampstead. Why’d you ask? They’re long gone, disbursed or dead.”

The computer at Martin’s elbow beeped as the download was completed. He glanced over at the face on the screen: long stringy hair brushed off a high sloping forehead, brilliant blue eyes and a small mouth. The difference from the man in the interview room couldn’t have been greater. Martin’s reaction was a strange mixture of both relief and regret. This Dian was not his man, obviously. Which still left the loose end of his Dian to contend with.

Idly, he clicked on the link to download more pictures of the long-gone and most probably deceased M. René Dian.

“A dead end,” he looked back over at Crickter. “Literally. Never mind.” He returned his attention to his screen, now filled with blurry black and white photos from the Parisian student revolts in the mid-1980s. One photo in particular caught his eye. Without breaking his stare his right hand found the mouse and clicked to enlarge it.

There was the terrorist Dian again, full face to the camera. And slightly behind him, face turned to profile and partially screened by the fall of shoulder length hair, was his man. Those high cheekbones and strong jaw were unmistakable.

Martin stared at the image on his computer screen. Eureka. So who the hell are you? “Crickter, can I trouble you to find that file for me, mate? L’Heure Sanguine may not be as obsolete as we thought.”




Two hours later Graeme was sitting on the floor, up to his elbows sorting through a file storage box, fighting off the sneezes triggered by the release of dust. Several pictures of René Dian – the real René Dian – were scattered on the floor beside him as he thumbed through musty articles. Above him, his desk phone rang and he scrambled to his feet to find the receiver, banging his head on an open drawer on the way up.

“Martin,” he mumbled, rubbing his sore scalp and scanning the Le Monde clipping in his hand.

“Constable Martin, Dr. Newsome from Gatwick Park Hospital. I regret to inform you that Mrs. Stapleton died a few minutes ago, without ever regaining consciousness.”

“Damn.” His case was now a homicide and his preeminent witness would be a homeless man with possible terrorist ties. This day couldn’t get any worse. “Thank you for informing me, Doctor.”

“Martin...” Over the phone line he heard the pause and intake of breath. That irksome twitchy sensation roared back, stronger than ever.

“Yes? I’m going to investigate her case, Doctor, please don’t hesitate to tell me anything you think might have a bearing on it.”

“It’s not about her death, really… but I think you might want to know that MI6 is here, waiting to speak to me.”

Vauxhall. His day did just get worse. What the bloody hell is going on here?

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 3


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:54:48 09/21/02 Sat

Dusk was gathering and the air was thick with the ripe scent of the river, overhung with the odor of rotted fish. The Salvation Army Men’s Shelter was on the seedier side of town, only one block removed from the Mole. Martin locked his car and left the blue police light on the front seat as added insurance. It would take a braver man than most of these homeless wretches to tinker with an official police vehicle.

He entered the rundown building, nodded to the Major stationed by the door.

“Good evening, Ma’am.” Discreetly he showed her his badge. “I’m looking for one of your gentleman. I believe his name is René. He’s about two metres [spelling?] tall, rather slender, long dark hair.”

“We don’t ask our guests’ names, Constable… Martin, was it? … but I think I know who you’re looking for. Is he in some trouble?”

“No, ma’am, not at all. Just following up on some personal business I have with him.”

If the Major wondered what kind of business a Swiss homeless man and a Horley PC might have, she politely kept them to herself. She tipped her head toward the back of the room. “All the way in the back, closest to the kitchen. You’d think he’d be stuffing himself at that position, but he barely eats enough to keep a bird alive.”

Martin nodded his thanks and moved quickly and quietly through the gathering crowd of men. Dinner wasn’t being served yet, but given the clatter and the bustle coming from the kitchen, it was well on its way.

René – or whatever the hell his name was – saw him coming across the room. Martin suspected there wasn’t much the man didn’t see. He settled back in his chair and folded his hands in his lap, waiting as Martin approached.

Martin stuck his hand out. “Hullo, René.”

Grey-green eyes flickered over Graeme’s face even as the hand was accepted. “Martin,” he said neutrally.

“Thought I’d take you out for some fish and chips, unless you’re really set on having dinner here tonight.”

The other man’s mouth lifted in a tiny smile. “Fish and chips sounds good.” It took only a moment to shrug into his threadbare coat and scoop up the battered backpack that lay on the ground at his feet. “But I’ll want a beer to go with the food, yes?”

Martin took a strong grip on what’s-his-name’s arm as soon as they were clear of the shelter. “I need to speak to you,” he said, low and urgent. Beneath his fingers he felt the wiry strength of muscles tensing. “Don’t run, don’t do anything stupid. What’s in your pack there? Tell me you don’t have a gun.”

“I don’t have a weapon. Most shelters disapprove of them.”

“And it might attract attention to you.”

“It might.”

Graeme’s mouth twisted wryly. “And it’s not as though you can’t defend yourself.” His companion only shrugged. ”Just stay close. Let me buy you a decent dinner and we’ll talk.”

Those haunting pale eyes scanned him up and down. “Are you armed?”

“Of course.” Beneath his overcoat, the comforting weight of his service revolver nestled against the small of his back.

“I may be fast, but I can hardly outrun a bullet.”

“Point well taken, but don’t think that means I trust you not to try.”

A silent tilt of the head was his only reply. Martin dropped his hand, but remained tight by “Rene”, leading him a few blocks away to the nearest pub.

The Recumbent Lion read the peeling gold paint on the hanging sign. Martin politely held the door open for his companion; the glaring lights and hubbub of the restaurant flooded over them as they entered. By unspoken agreement, they headed for the very back of the pub, choosing a table where they could both sit and watch the door.

Resting his elbows on the scarred wooden table, Martin ordered two plates of fish and chips and two pints of bitter from the harried-looking waitress and waited for her to step into the kitchen before speaking.

“So who the hell are you?”

That intriguing face gave nothing away. “You don’t know?”

“You’re not René Dian. That much I know.”

Their beers thumped on the table before them. Martin’s companion settled back in his chair, knuckles rubbing his lower lip thoughtfully. A long pause fell between them, broken only by the arrival of their dinners.

“Don’t look for me,” he said finally, his voice barely audible over the clamour pulsating around them.

“Then tell me who you are,” Martin demanded.

Another slow perusal from those pale eyes; Martin felt himself being assessed, risks weighed. “My name is Michael.” He leaned forward again, his voice intense. “Take this very seriously: do not look for me. It is dangerous.”

“Witness protection?” It was the only logical solution Graeme could think of.

“Something like that.”

“Would that explain why MI6 is crawling all over the hospital this evening? Mrs. Stapleton died, by the way.”

Michael’s eyes locked on Martin’s. “MI6 is investigating? Why?”

Martin shrugged. “You think they bother to tell me? But something stinks to high heaven here. Why in the hell is MI6 interested in the unfortunate death of a mugging victim?” He took a bite of the fried cod, his eyes never leaving his companion’s. “Are they looking for you? But why would the Friends be interested in a homeless Swiss man? Even one with… shall we say, unusual abilities?”

Michael’s gaze drifted off over Martin’s shoulder. “They aren’t looking for me.” His voice was unequivocal. “You know I can’t testify, can’t appear in court at all.”

“I suspected as much, when I started researching L’Heure Sanguine. You turned state’s evidence, disappeared, something, and you can’t be found now. Is that about it?”

“More or less.” Several minutes passed in silence.

Martin finished off his pint, wiped the back of his hand over his mouth. “So now what? I still have two muggers that murdered an innocent woman. Without your testimony, what do I have?”

“You still have the witnesses; they will probably do better for you in court than a homeless man.” Michael’s eyes narrowed contemplatively. “But why is the government looking into your case? Who was this Stapleton woman?”

Graeme shrugged. “I haven’t had a chance to research her yet. And if I start looking now, won’t that tip my hand to MI6?”

“It might.” Michael’s hand crept to his chin, rubbed it absently. Graeme finished his chips thoughtfully.

“Why Dian?”

Michael’s eyes focused sharply on his again. “What?”

“Why Dian? Why did you give that name?”

“It was stupid.” Michael stared down at the ale in his glass for a long moment. “Too many ghosts.”

He hadn’t meant to let that out, Graeme realized immediately. Rather than reading Michael’s reaction, Graeme found he had to read the lack of one as Michael’s face went completely still and his eyes became opaque. A man accustomed to hiding emotions, a secretive man who didn’t trust easily, if at all.

Time to push a little harder. Graeme leaned forward. “You were in L’Heure Sanguine with Dian.” The resultant silence was answer in itself. Michael’s piercing stare nailed him as securely as a butterfly in an entomological display, giving nothing away. “I need more. You tell me what you know, I’ll stay out of L’Heure Sanguine.”

“I can’t tell you anything.”

“Because why?” Michael’s face remained blank and unreadable. “ ‘If I tell you, I’ll have to kill you?’ That’s a little trite, don’t you think?”

“There are things you don’t know. Things I can’t say.”

Graeme pursed his lips as a new thought hit him. “People in witness protection programmes don’t hide in homeless shelters.” Across the table, Michael blinked and his gaze drifted over Graeme’s shoulder to the door. “Where are your handlers, Michael? Gave them the slip, did you?”

“You could say that.”

“And if I dig into L’Heure Sanguine… well, someone might put two and two together and start wondering why I’m so interested in a long forgotten French terrorist, hm?”

“He wouldn’t like to think he’d been so easily forgotten.”

“What?”

“René. He would have liked to think he made a difference, was remembered.”

“You’re speaking in the past tense. It’s not certain he’s dead.”

“He’s dead.” Definitive.

“And you? Did you make the difference you wanted to?”

An indefinable sadness crept into Michael’s face. “I don’t know.”

“Who remembers you, Michael?”

“No one.”

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:56:11 09/21/02 Sat

The walk back to the shelter was a silent one, both men deep in their thoughts. As they rounded the last corner, the flashing police and ambulance lights ahead of him wrenched Graeme from his reverie.

Michael had seen the same thing and stopped immediately. Graeme took his arm, feeling the taut muscles beneath the shabby coat.

“My car, now,” Graeme hissed. It was only a few steps to the grimy Fiesta and both men slipped quickly inside. They sat silently, observing the movement of uniformed police and several dark-suited official-looking types around the exterior of the shelter.

“I need to check it out,” Graeme decided. “You,” he poked Michael in the arm, “need to stay here and not do a bloody disappearing act on me.”

Michael turned shrouded eyes on Graeme. For the second time that evening, Martin found himself confronting a total lack of expression.

“Michael, I mean it. Give me a minute to go find out what the hell is going on in there before you do your Houdini routine. I have a nasty suspicion those suits belong to MI6 and they’re the last people you want to be running into right now. Stay here; just give me a few minutes. I swear to you Michael,” he added when no response was forthcoming, “that if you go now I’ll dig so deeply and so loudly into L’Heure Sanguine that whomever you’re protecting will be sitting smack in the center of someone’s crosshairs.”

Michael eyed him. Graeme had the same feeling as before, the sensation of being evaluated, options weighed and considered. Finally he nodded. “I’ll wait.”

As he exited the car, Graeme tucked his badge into the outer breast pocket of his overcoat, the shield shimmering in the flickering red and blue lights. The perimeter bobby was a local man, the younger brother of a school classmate, and Graeme greeted him easily.

“Hey, Tommy, what’s all the fuss about?”

“Evening, Martin. Some transient got stuck with a knife. Quite the fuss. Weapons aren’t supposed to be taken into the shelter and no one’s really sure how it happened or even who did it.”

“Huh. Looks like more than just Surrey PD got called in here.”

“That’s the weirdest thing. Got suits, but they won’t say who they are. Top secret. Pretty bizarre, you ask me. Why would Her Majesty’s spooks be interested in some knifing at the local shelter?”

“Dunno. That is odd, though. The Major around?”

“From the shelter? Yeah, she’s over there, by the building somewhere.”

Graeme walked casually, glancing around from the corners of his eyes rather than taking the risk of appearing too interested by turning his head. The Major stood by the doorway where he had met her, arms crossed on her chest, hands tucked in tight, hugging herself close. The streetlights winked on her shoulder epaulets as he approached.

“Major? You remember meeting me earlier tonight?”

She nodded. “Martin. You came to take one of the men to dinner. Where is he? Is he all right?”

Graeme winced and barely stopped himself from scanning around for eavesdroppers. “He’s fine, ma’am, we finished dinner a good hour ago.” He stared meaningfully into the Major’s eyes. Don’t question the timeframe, Major, just let it go. She matched him stare for stare for several long seconds before nodding almost imperceptibly.

“You know I’m Surrey PD, Ma’am. Would you please tell me what happened here tonight?”

“A man was killed here tonight, Constable. I – we – that is,” her voice trembled as she paused and visibly brought herself back under control. “After dinner and before the prayer service, one of our gentlemen decided to lie down. When I went to rouse him for the service,” she displayed her hands, palms up. Graeme could see the scarlet smears of blood that had not yet been washed off. “When I went to get him, he was dead. Someone had stabbed him, right here, in the middle of my shelter. In the house of God.” She tucked her hands back in, shuddering.

“I’m very sorry for that, Ma’am. What can you tell me about the man that died?”

“He’s not been here often. Lenny, the other men called him. Quiet man, never any trouble to us.”

“Did he have friends, regulars, anyone he interacted with here at the shelter?”

“I… Constable, I don’t know. There are so many men that come to us in need, some that stay, some that go…” Her voice trailed off and even in the uncertainty of the streetlight and flashing strobes of the emergency vehicles he could see how pale she had become.

“Major, are you all right? Would you like to sit down?”

“No… yes. I think I’d like to sit down inside.” Graeme offered her an arm for support as they entered the shelter. To his surprise, her grip was firm as she tugged him closer to whisper. “I need to speak to you, alone.”

The dining tables had been folded up and cots laid out neatly for the men. Off to one side, the forensic team was huddled over the shrouded corpse. Graeme glanced around, both to find a chair for the Major and to determine their privacy. He led her toward the kitchen door where a lone folding chair still stood sentry.

“Are you all right, Ma’am? Can I get you a glass of water?” Martin spoke slightly louder than usual, assuring his voice would carry to the men at the other end of the room.

“No, thank you Constable. I just needed to sit down.” Following his lead, the Major had also raised her voice. At her gesture, Graeme crouched down. She lowered her head to a whisper to him. “You need to know, Constable, that Lenny had taken your gentleman’s bed.”

“Ma’am?”

She nodded toward the forensic team. “That’s where your gentleman had been sleeping the past few nights. I don’t know if it means anything, but I thought you should know. And perhaps it would be best if he doesn’t return here for a few more days?”

“Major, I think you missed your calling. You’d have made one hell of a cop.” Rising, Graeme brushed off his jeans and extended his hand, lifting his voice again. “Ma’am, thank you for your time. I’m sorry this happened in your shelter and I’ll be sure to get back to you as soon as possible with any progress we’ve made.”

Lifting his hand to acknowledge Tommy as he passed, Graeme thoughtfully headed back to his car. Obviously the Major thought there was more here than a simple murder. He’d have to tread carefully on this; it wasn’t his case and if the Major was right and the intended target was Michael, too much interest on Martin’s part might direct the Spooks’ attention in the wrong direction. His direction.

As if his thoughts had conjured him up, a Suit was hovering around his Fiesta as Martin approached. “Good evening, sir,” the Suit said in a precise Oxbridge accent, “may I see some identification please?”

Martin flicked a finger to the badge hanging on his breast pocket. “Graeme Martin, Surrey Police. And you are?”

The Suit ignored his question. “And what brought you here tonight, Constable Martin?”

“It’s a small town. Call like this gets every cop’s attention. You didn’t tell me who you’re with.”

The Suit smiled thinly. “No, I didn’t. Good night sir.”

“Bastard.” Martin opened the car door after the Suit had walked away, not wanting the dome light to illuminate Michael. An unnecessary precaution, as the car was completely empty.

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 5


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:59:09 09/21/02 Sat

“Bugger!” Graeme slapped the steering wheel in exasperation.

Martin’s bad temper had not dissipated in the two hours he had spent in the precinct office. Crickter’s files had concentrated on active members of L’Heure Sanguine, not shadowy confederates in already in custody. The best he had been able to find was a vague reference to “several terrorists” arrested after a particularly nasty bombing left dozens of civilians dead and injured. No names, though, and another search of Interpol had been equally fruitless: by the mid 90’s, L’Heure Sanguine was considered dormant and very little information had been uploaded when Interpol entered the computer age.

“Bugger!” It took several exasperating minutes circling his block before he found a parking place. Then to add insult to injury, he dropped his apartment keys in the dark grass and spent more frustrating time on his hands and knees before he located them. Slamming his front door behind him was a mild release, although he was quite certain of hearing complaints from his elderly next-door neighbour in the morning

The flat was dark; as usual he had neglected to leave a light on when he left that morning. He reached unerringly for the lamp next to the couch and instead found his arm seized in a strong grip.

“Jesus Christ!” Martin’s left hand was on the butt of his service revolver before he recognized the voice that answered him.

“Don’t turn on the light yet.”

“Son of a bitch, Michael, I’m a fucking cop!” He wrenched his hand free. “I’ve got a goddamn gun waiting to blow your fucking head off!”

“You wouldn’t have shot me.” Michael’s answer was infuriatingly calm. “Close your blinds.”

“Fucking hell – how do you know that? You took a hell of a chance on that!”

"Cops don't shoot first. It's a weakness. Terrorists don't wait for an I.D." He paused. "Close your blinds."

Martin did as he was instructed, crossing the darkened room to pull the curtains shut. “Motherfucking bastard… you got a death wish, Michael, don’t use me to do it, OK? Shoot your own fucking ass.”

“What did you find at the shelter?”

Martin turned as the light flickered on. Michael sat on his couch, completely at ease as if they were having high tea, rather than discussing the brutal murder of an innocent transient. ”Goddamn it, does anything get through that thick skull of yours?”

His face devoid of emotion, Michael waited silently. Martin stalked across the room and snatched a beer out of his refrigerator. Keeping his back defiantly turned, Graeme wrenched off the cap and guzzled half the bottle in one long gulp. It took several minutes to slow his pounding heart; leaning against the kitchen counter he continued to sip his beer as he composed himself.

Taking a deep breath he finally submitted to the inevitable and returned to the living space, flopping down on the nearest chair and belching loudly. “For Christ’s sake, Michael, don’t do that again. I could have blasted your brains out. That’s a relatively new couch and I really hate to paint. So don’t scare the shit out of me like that.” He sighed and rolled the nearly empty bottle between his hands. “Major from the shelter reports that our stiff had decided to make free with your usual sleeping place. Got himself stuck for his trouble.” He glanced over to gauge Michael’s reaction. Nothing. “Shit, I’m getting accustomed to your stoic look. Remind me never to play poker against you.” Still nothing. “You know, Michael, it’s generally easier to have a conversation when the other person bothers to react now and then.”

“Who were the Suits?”

“Hmph? The spooks? MI6, I suppose. Don’t know for certain.”

Michael nodded. “Probably.”

“Who knows you’re here?”

“No one.”

“You’re sure you weren’t followed?”

“Positive.”

“So the question becomes which of you was the target? You specifically, or you, the witness to Mrs. Stapleton’s mugging?”

“The witness.”

“Yeah?”

“They wouldn’t have bothered to kill someone else if they were looking for me. They’re not sure who they’re looking for. They didn’t identify me.”

“Well, neither did I. You’re remarkably hard to pin down.”

“I know.”

“So, if the target was the mugging witness, how did they track you to the shelter?”

“Why was the Stapleton woman killed?”

Martin blinked and focused on Michael’s pale eyes. “Killed? She was mugged… wasn’t she?”

“Why else would anyone bother to track and kill the witness to a mugging?”

“Hmph. So you’re proposing she was the ultimate target. You just happened to interrupt their mission.”

“The wrong place at the wrong time.”

“Hell, yeah.” Martin let his gaze wander and sank deeper into his chair as the beer began to buzz through his tired system. “So who the hell was Mrs. Stapleton and how the hell do we find out?” He closed his eyes and began to run through several different scenarios in his mind. None of which ended with achieving his goal of the Stapleton file.

It took him a moment to realize Michael had spoken. “Hmph?”

“I said, do you have a laptop at home?”

***

A policeman’s salary didn’t go very far, even in small-town England, but Graeme did have a simple PC in his home. Michael sat at the rickety dining room table, carefully hacking his way through the Internet. Long fingers flew over the keyboard, circumvented a firewall, and slipped through another barrier.

“You’re very good.” Martin leaned over his shoulder, eyeing the flow of information on the screen. How’d you learn to do that?”

“I had a very good teacher.”

“Hmph. You should introduce me sometime. Hacking is a useful skill.”

The lines around Michael’s eyes deepened, making him look suddenly older than his years. “He’s dead.”

“A lot of that going around.”

A few more keystokes. “You’re in.”

“In? In where?”

“CIA.”

“Why CIA?”

“Safer than MI6.”

“True.”

“We can’t stay in long and we’ll need to use other computers in other locations later.” Michael shifted in the chair, preparing to rise.

“Stay. You’re obviously much better at this than I am.”

Michael gave a tiny nod as he typed rapidly, sliding into another section of CIA files. “Name?”

“Stapleton, Maureen. Age 62. Height...” Martin rummaged through the pockets of his overcoat to find his notebook, flipped through the pages to find the information. “Height 1.6 metres, weight 69.4 kilograms. Brown eyes, graying brown hair.”

“Associated with MI6,” Michael added.

“Yeah, let’s assume that,” Graeme agreed, leaning over as Michael hit the “enter” key.

The computer churned briefly, the ubiquitous hourglass wait sign blinking every few seconds, before the screen filled with thumbnail pictures. Michael sat back, folded his hands in his lap and studied the faces.

“Try that one.” Graeme pointed to a thumbnail.

Michael clicked and enlarged the picture. “No, the cheeks aren’t right.”

“How good of a look did you get?”

“Good enough. I checked her pulse. You?”

“Didn’t see her at all. She was in hospital, then at the coroner’s. Paperwork hasn’t finished processing yet, so I don’t even have a copy of her driver’s license yet.”

A long finger [is it clear this is Michael’s?] slid over the computer screen, touching each face briefly. Michael’s eyes crinkled slightly in the corners, lids slightly drooped as he stared in concentration.

“There.” He tapped the screen before clicking the mouse. “This one.”

Rosalind Jane Meath-Baker read the screen. The enlarged photograph showed a quintessential British matron, complete with upswept graying hair and the requisite brooch on her wool-clad shoulder.

“And who the hell were you, Rosalind?” Graeme murmured.

“Now we’re going to have to get into MI6,” Michael said. “Not from your home, though.”

Graeme straightened up and fatigue rocked him from head to toe. “I’ll call the library in the morning; reserve a time on the public access computers. Can you get in there from one of their units?”

Michael leaned back, looking as exhausted as Graeme felt. “I can get what we need.”

“What we need now, mate, is sleep.” Graeme stifled a yawn. “You can bunk on my couch, provided you don’t pull another damn vanishing act on me.”

“Not tonight.” Graeme could have sworn there was a hint of black humour in the glance Michael shot him.

“Yeah? How do I trust you?”

Michael paused, thinking [POV?]. “You don’t. But I’ll give you my word that I’ll not – how did you put it? – do a Houdini on you until we’ve figured out exactly what happened to Rosalind Meath-Baker and why.”

“Fine. I’m a bleeding idiot, but I’ll take your word.” Graeme shuffled toward the hallway that led to his bedroom, then turned around. “Michael? Do me a favour. Take a shower in the morning. You stink like the shelter.”

This time there was no question; Graeme definitely saw the glint of amusement in Michael’s eyes. “Good night, Graeme.”

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 6


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 20:02:15 09/21/02 Sat

By the time Graeme arrived at his desk the next morning, there was already a stack of pink messages waiting for him. Three of them were from Mrs. Sheffield; with only a slight twinge of guilt Martin moved them to the bottom of the stack. He’d need to call her, but not right now.

There was also a sticky note from the desk lieutenant: Stapleton. See me. Martin deposited his coffee cup on his desk and crossed the room with the yellow Post-It in his hand.

“Sir?”

“Martin, I need all files you have on the Stapleton mugging.” The lieutenant gave him a uncompromising glare from under heavy black eyebrows.

“That’s my case, sir. May I ask –“

“It’s being reassigned, Martin,” the lieutenant interrupted, his face mirroring the irritation that Martin knew was written over his own. “The file’s being sent out. This order came from above, neither you nor I can do anything about it. Pull the paperwork together and put the file on my desk in the next hour.”

Hopeless or not, Graeme wasn’t going to give up his case without an argument. He opened his mouth to respond and the lieutenant [stopped] him with a slashing hand movement. “I don’t want to hear it, Martin. Do what you’re instructed [told?]; then I have a case for you that needs immediate attention.” That caught Martin’s attention. “A missing boy, disappeared last night. The parents are here waiting to talk to someone. It’s your case.”

The Stapleton file was pathetically thin; only the transcript of Martin’s interview with the witness and the coroner’s report on the cause of death. Martin scribbled a quick note that Rene Dian had disappeared from the Salvation Army shelter overnight - let’s see what MI6 makes of that! - and was back at the lieutenant’s desk in minutes.

“That’s it?” The lieutenant gave him a sharp look.

Martin raised his eyebrows innocently. “I didn’t have a lot of time to work it, did I? The woman only died late yesterday.”

“That’s true.” Neither man mentioned the notebook in Martin’s overcoat, now draped over the back of his desk chair. The lieutenant wasn’t any happier than Martin about having cases pulled from their jurisdiction by Vauxhall. [POV?] “Here’s your file. Parents are…” he flipped open the manila folder by his right hand, “John and Frances [name]. Here’s the preliminary paperwork, they’re in Interview Two.”

Interviewing grieving frightened parents was one of the nastier aspects of policework. It took Graeme more than an hour to get a description of Colin [name], a list of friends to contact and an idea of the boy’s daily routine. Another hour was spent doing basic research on the family. John [] was a welder in a local factory with a good work history and no police record. His wife Frances was the secretary at the local comprehensive school Colin attended. There were no indications of unusual family stress, no history of domestic violence or running away and Colin was, for all he could see, an average teenage boy with middling grades and no police record. He had simply disappeared overnight.

As the boy was sixteen and in no apparent danger, Martin’s request for an assisting bobby was denied. Before leaving the [precinct], he took a few seconds to call the Crawley library and reserve a public-access computer in the name of Pierre Bonnière. In the bright light of morning it had seemed safest to do the next stage of hacking away from Horley. How Michael was going to get himself the ten kilometers to the neighboring town was not his problem; Martin put the Stapleton matter aside and concentrated on Colin []’s disappearance.

The first interview was with Andrew []. The [] house was an older 18th Century home on the outside of town, set on beautifully manicured lawns. He was met at the door by Mrs. [], a tall, overly-slender woman dressed in pearls and (from what he could tell) designer clothing even on a Thursday afternoon.

“Mrs. {}? I’m PC Martin. I contacted you this morning about the disappearance of Colin [].”

Donica [] fluttered her hands nervously as she gestured him in. “May I offer you tea? Something to eat?”

“Thank you, ma’am, but no. Is your son Andrew home from school?”

He was answered by the appearance of the young man in the doorway. Andrew [] was a hulking, broody sort of teenager with broad shoulders and heavy brows. Made for rugby rather than Eton, Graeme thought, and wondered what Colin had had in common with him.

“Why are you here?” Andrew’s voice was low and grating, as if speaking was painful.

“Have you seen your friend Colin in the past few days? It seems he’s gone missing.”

“No.” Andrew turned around and walked away. Graeme followed him into a comfortable, well-appointed library. The telly was blasting some rock video at full volume; the teen dropped ungracefully into a large overstuffed chair and picked up his game boy.

“Andrew,” Mrs. [] twittered ineffectually, “please talk to the Constable. This is important.”

Graeme could read the contempt in Andrew’s eyes. “I realize that, Mother. I haven’t seen Colin.”

“Was he at school yesterday?”

“I’m not his truant officer. Ask the school.”

“Was Colin in trouble at school often?”

“You mean, would he run away? Nah. He’s too much a coward. Under his mummy’s and daddy’s thumb.” Mrs. [] wrung her hands and dropped her eyes at the [look of loathing] her son directed at her.

“If he did run away, where would you suppose he would go? Did he have a girl?”

Andrew sneered. “Not hardly.”

You think you’re such a tough guy. “So, what’s your take on this? Where do you think Colin is?”

“I don’t know and I don’t care.” Andrew grabbed the remote control and raised the volume on the TV, effectively ending the interview.


Next on the list was Lionel []. The [] residence was across town, on The Ridgeway, in the shadow of Gatwick Airport. Landing planes flew low enough to read the serial numbers stenciled on their metal bellies and the roar of the jet engines was deafening. Rather than try to speak over the noise, Graeme simply held his badge up when the door was answered and was quickly ushered inside.

Sitting between his parents on the worn davenport, Lionel looked smaller and thinner than he truly was. His mother sat on his left, clinging tightly to his hand, ashen-lipped and drawn. Lionel Sr. sat rigidly on his son’s other side, hands clasped so tightly that his knuckles showed white. The boy himself was red-eyed and definitely green around the gills. And Graeme knew what had happened before he asked a single question.

“Where’s Colin, Lionel?” He pitched his voice low and gentle.

The boy shook his head wordlessly; his eyes lowered and fixed on his clasped hands.

“Lionel.” Graeme hardened his tone. “You stink of stale whiskey, I can smell you from here. You were drinking last night with Andrew and Colin and now Colin hasn’t come home. What happened? You need to tell me.”

Lionel opened his mouth, paused and remained silent.

Impulsively, Graeme crossed to him and crouched at the boy’s knees. “Look at me,” he ordered quietly. Lionel raised tear-filled blue eyes. “His parents need to know where he is. You owe them that. Let them bury their son.”

Mrs. [] stifled a sob.

“He’s in the river,” Lionel said softly.

“All right.” Graeme nodded. “Can you tell me what happened?”

“We snuck out last night.” Lionel glanced fearfully at his father.

“You’ve done this before?” Graeme interjected, to bring the boy’s attention back to himself.

“Yes. We meet at the sports field, over by the church?” Graeme nodded encouragingly. “So we were sitting on the pier on the river, passing a bottle. And Colin... he just slipped off the dock into the water. We thought he was joking around so we waited for him to come back up.” Lionel took a shuddering breath.

“But he didn’t.”

“No.”

“What did you do then?”

“We waited, oh god, we waited for so long. And it was dark and we couldn’t see him and we couldn’t hear him splashing or calling for help.” A lone tear began to trickle down his cheek. “Andrew said we had to go. We had to go home and not say anything. He said we’d get in trouble, we’d get expelled, we’d go to jail.”

“So you came home.”

“I didn’t know what else to do.”

“Why didn’t you call the police?” Lionel Sr. exploded in fury. “Why didn’t you tell us? You left him to die?”

“I… I didn’t know what else to do.”

“OK, Lionel, OK,” Graeme soothed. “Mrs. [], could you get Lionel a glass of water? Sir, would you speak privately with me for a moment?” He drew the father aside. “Sir, your son was not at fault here. It was an accident.” He held up his hand, forstalling the impending argument. “Yes, they should have called the police. I doubt that it would have changed the outcome. He’s your son and yours to discipline as you see fit, once I’m done with him. But you have to let me interview him now.”

They found the body of Colin [] in the shallows of the Mole River, in the shadow of the old Norman church where he had been baptized. A cursory post-mortem inspection indicated that Colin had struck his head – whether on the pier or on a rock – when he went into the water. In the dark, his companions never had a chance to find him. He had, most likely, drowned right under their feet, in the shadowy depths under the dock.

It was past dark by the time Martin finished his reports. No charges would be filed; as much as he would have liked to arrest that pissant Andrew []. Andrew had bought the liquor, Andrew had been the prime motivating force behind the drinking sessions, he had determined Colin’s disappearance shouldn’t be reported. But that didn’t make him guilty of the boy’s death.

Unfortunately.

[ Post a Reply to This Message ]
[> [> Subject: Hey! Cool!


Author:
Shan
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 21:07:02 09/21/02 Sat

Hey, delle! Glad to see you are working on this. Keep hammering away! I wanna know how it ends, darn it.

I take it you didn't really want a hard beta on this right now as I see a few places where you haven't filled in names and such. If you just want to know about flow to this point...well, you've hooked me. I want to know why MI6 is looking into this and I want to know how Michael's to get out of it. Keep writing!

I'm interested. =D

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[> [> [> Subject: hey sweetie!


Author:
~d
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 21:15:44 09/21/02 Sat

yeah, basically that's what I want to know: is this going OK? and a few ego-boos... LOL! because I want to post this terribly and yet I can't - as you can see, I've got research to finish (god! i've spent the last 2 weeks researching police departments and small towns in England to get a setting) and such....

thanks for the kind words. I'll keep hammering (that's certainly what it felt like today! but YEAH got 1,000 words down for the first time in a LOOOONG time)

hugs
~d

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[> [> [> [> Subject: Some Brit slang. I have no idea if you'll find it helpful or not....


Author:
jean
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 21:31:57 09/24/02 Tue

Phil, the kind gentleman who sits behind me in my *oh my god this class SUCKS* writing class, happily gave me what he knew about terms regarding cops and law enforcement in Britian.

C.I.D. = Criminal Investigation Department. He says they're called the C.I.D., and they investigate violent crime. Not unlike detectives (as opposed to uniform patrol cops).

R.C.S. = Regional Crime Squads. Phil says they're like the FBI; they investigate gangs, organized crimes, serial killers vs. single homicides, etc.

Sweeny Todd = "Sweeny Todd, Flying Squad". Phil says it's 'rhyming slang', which I had no idea what that was. He said it's a Cockney thing. Crooks used whatever rhynming slang was to make up a code. theoretically, said Phil, they could talk about stuff in public and people wouldn't have a clue. Anyhow, the name for the Flying Squad, which is the London-based R.C.S., has since stuck, and they're called "Sweeny", yes, by the C.I.D. and cops.

Phil says there is competition between the C.I.D. and R.C.S. departments.

And that's all we got to talk about during break before Teacher had us return to our seats so we could form groups and re-write 'Hansel and Gretel' by each person taking a differnet POV. I had the evil stepmother.

God, I hate this class.....

Hope the info helps, though, delle. I really look forward to seeing the finished product!

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[> [> [> [> [> Subject: oh, god, I've *got* to find a way to use that... you're an angel! still sorry about the sucky writing class tho...


Author:
~delle
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 22:39:41 09/24/02 Tue


[ Post a Reply to This Message ]
[> [> Subject: Re: Hide in Plain Sight 6 (revised)


Author:
~d
[ Edit | View ]

Date Posted: 19:22:47 10/24/02 Thu

By the time Graeme arrived at his desk the next morning, there was already a stack of pink messages waiting for him. Three of them were from Mrs. Sheffield; with only a slight twinge of guilt Martin moved them to the bottom of the stack. He’d need to call her, but not right now.

There was also a sticky note from the desk lieutenant: Stapleton. See me. Martin deposited his coffee cup on his desk and crossed the room with the yellow Post-It in his hand.

“Sir?”

“Martin, I need all files you have on the Stapleton mugging.” The lieutenant gave him an uncompromising glare from under heavy black eyebrows.

“That’s my case, sir. May I ask –“

“It’s being reassigned, Martin,” the lieutenant interrupted, his face mirroring the irritation that Martin knew was written over his own. “The file’s being sent out. This order came from above, neither you nor I can do anything about it. Pull the paperwork together and put the file on my desk in the next hour.”

Hopeless or not, Graeme wasn’t going to give up his case without an argument. He opened his mouth to respond and the lieutenant [stopped] him with a slashing hand movement. “I don’t want to hear it, Martin. Do what you’re instructed [told?]; then I have a case for you that needs immediate attention.” That caught Martin’s attention. “A missing boy, disappeared last night. The parents are here waiting to talk to someone. It’s yours.”

The Stapleton file was pathetically thin; only the transcript of Martin’s interview with the witness and the coroner’s report on the cause of death. Martin scribbled a quick note that Rene Dian had disappeared from the Salvation Army shelter overnight - let’s see what MI6 makes of that! - and was back at the lieutenant’s desk in minutes.

“That’s it?” The lieutenant gave him a sharp look.

Martin raised his eyebrows innocently. “I didn’t have a lot of time to work it, did I? The woman only died late yesterday.”

“That’s true.” Neither man mentioned the notebook in Martin’s overcoat, now draped over the back of his desk chair. The lieutenant wasn’t any happier than Martin about having cases pulled from their jurisdiction by Vauxhall. [POV?] “Here’s your file. Parents are…” he flipped open the manila folder by his right hand, “John and Frances [Parsons]. Here’s the preliminary paperwork, they’re in Interview Two.”

Interviewing grieving frightened parents is one of the nastier aspects of policework. It took Graeme more than an hour to get a description of Colin Parsons, a list of friends to contact and an idea of the boy’s daily routine. Mrs. Parsons sat pale and red-eyed, stammering over her words as she fought back tears. Her narrow hands were never still; they coiled in her lap, twisted locks of faded blonde hair or fumbled with her purse as she pulled out a list of names, the school directory, a Kleenex to wipe her eyes. Mr. Parsons barely spoke; only smoked cigarette after cigarette, lighting one from the previous with large calloused hands that trembled uncontrollably. Another hour was spent doing basic research on the family. John [Parsons] was a welder in a local factory with a good work history and no police record. His wife Frances was the secretary at the local comprehensive school Colin attended. There were no indications of unusual family stress, no history of domestic violence or running away; Colin was, for all he could see, an average teenage boy with middling grades and no police record. He had simply disappeared overnight.

As the boy was sixteen and in no apparent danger, Martin’s request for an assisting bobby was denied. Before leaving the [precinct/district], he took a few seconds to call the Crawley library and reserve a public-access computer in the name of Pierre Bonnière. In the bright light of morning they had determined it safest to do the next stage of hacking away from Horley. How Michael was going to get himself the ten kilometers to the neighboring town and prove himself to be Bonnière was not his problem; Martin put the Stapleton matter aside and concentrated on the [Parsons] disappearance.

The first interview was with Andrew []. The [] house was an older 18th Century home on the outside of town, set on beautifully manicured lawns. He was met at the door by Mrs. [], a tall, overly-slender woman dressed in pearls and (from what he could tell) designer clothing even on a Thursday afternoon.

“Mrs. {}? I’m PC Martin. I contacted you this morning about the disappearance of Colin [Parsons].”

Donica [] fluttered her hands nervously as she gestured him in. “May I offer you tea? Something to eat?”

“Thank you, ma’am, but no. Is your son Andrew at home?”

He was answered by the appearance of the young man in the doorway. Andrew [] was a hulking, broody sort of teenager with broad shoulders and heavy brows. Made for rugby rather than Eton, Graeme thought, and wondered what Colin had had in common with him.

“Why are you here?” Andrew’s voice was low and grating, as if speaking was painful.

“Have you seen your friend Colin in the past few days? It seems he’s gone missing.”

“No.” Andrew turned around and walked away. Graeme followed him into a comfortable, well-appointed library. The telly was blasting some rock video at full volume; the teen dropped ungracefully into a large overstuffed chair and picked up his game boy.

“Andrew,” Mrs. [] twittered ineffectually, “please talk to the Constable. This is important.”

Graeme could read the contempt in Andrew’s eyes. “I realize that, Mother. I haven’t seen Colin.”

“Was he at school yesterday?”

“I’m not his truant officer. Ask the school.”

“Was Colin in trouble at school often?”

“You mean, would he run away? Nah. He’s too much a coward. Under his mummy’s and daddy’s thumb.” Mrs. [] wrung her hands and dropped her eyes at the [loathing glare] her son directed at her.

“If he did run away, where would you suppose he would go? Did he have a girl?”

Andrew sneered. “Not hardly.”

You think you’re such a tough guy. “So, what’s your take on this? Where do you think Colin is?”

“I don’t know and I don’t care.” Andrew grabbed the remote control and raised the volume on the TV, effectively ending the interview.


Next on the list was Lionel Weekes. The Weekes’ residence was across town, in a housing development on The Ridgeway, under the shadow of Gatwick Airport. Landing planes flew low enough to read the serial numbers stenciled on their metal bellies and the roar of the jet engines overhead was deafening. Rather than try to speak over the noise, Graeme simply held his badge up when the door was answered and was quickly ushered inside.

Sitting between his parents on the worn davenport, Lionel looked small, thin and substantially younger than his true age. His mother sat on his left, clinging tightly to his hand, her face ashen-lipped and drawn. Lionel Sr. sat rigidly on his son’s other side, hands clasped so tightly that the knuckles showed white. The boy himself was red-eyed and definitely green around the gills. And Graeme knew what had happened before he asked a single question.

“Where’s Colin, Lionel?” He pitched his voice low and gentle.

The boy shook his head wordlessly; his eyes lowered and fixed on his linked hands.

“Lionel.” Graeme hardened his tone. “You stink of stale whiskey, I can smell you from here. You were drinking last night with Andrew and Colin and now Colin hasn’t come home. What happened? You need to tell me.”

Lionel opened his mouth, paused and remained silent.

Impulsively, Graeme crossed to him and crouched at the boy’s knees. “Look at me,” he ordered quietly. Lionel raised tear-filled blue eyes. “His parents need to know where he is. You owe them that. Let them bury their son.”

Mrs. Weekes stifled a sob.

“He’s in the river,” Lionel said softly.

“All right.” Graeme nodded. “Can you tell me what happened?”

“We snuck out last night.” Lionel glanced fearfully at his father.

“You’ve done this before?” Graeme interjected, drawing the boy’s attention back.

“Yes. We meet at the sports field, over by the church?” Graeme nodded encouragingly. “So we were sitting on the pier on the river, passing a bottle. And Colin… he just slipped off the dock into the water. We thought he was joking around so we waited for him to come back up.” Lionel took a shuddering breath.

“But he didn’t.”

“No.”

“What did you do then?”

“We waited, oh god, we waited for so long. And it was dark and we couldn’t see him and we couldn’t hear him splashing or calling for help.” A lone tear began to trickle down his cheek. “Andrew said we had to go. We had to go home and not say anything. He said we’d get in trouble, we’d get expelled, we’d go to jail.”

“So you came home.”

“I didn’t know what else to do.”

“Why didn’t you call the police?” Lionel Sr. exploded in fury. “Why didn’t you tell us? You left him to die?”

“I… I didn’t know what else to do.”

“OK, Lionel, OK,” Graeme soothed. “Mrs. Weekes, could you get Lionel a glass of water? Sir, would you speak privately with me for a moment?” He drew the father aside. “Sir, your son was not at fault here. It was an accident.” He held up his hand, forestalling the impending argument. “Yes, they should have called the police. I doubt that it would have changed the outcome. He’s your son and yours to discipline as you see fit, once I’m done with him. But you have to let me interview him now.”

***


The Mole is a fast-moving river, deep and murky. Graeme stood on the pier, shading his eyes against the lowering sun as he watched the divers search the water. A wet-suited form broke the surface, waved at Martin before using the tether rope to pull himself to the side of the wharf.

Graeme crouched down. “Found him?”

The diver removed his breathing apparatus, spat to clear his mouth. “Yeah. They’ll be bringing him up momentarily.”

Weary, Graeme rubbed his forehead. Damn. “God. I knew you were going to find him and yet I still kept hoping…” He paused and gathered his thoughts. “ I’ll get the coroner over here. He’s on the bank, somewhere.”

Colin [Parsons]’s body was bloated and discolored from its hours in the water. “Look here, Martin,” Dr. James said, pointing, “here’s where he struck.” The coroner held the dead teen’s head gently as he rotated it to display the large bruised contusion over Colin’s right ear.

“What did he hit, do you think? The pier, a rock, or what?”

“No way to tell. But it’s a substantial injury. He would have been knocked unconscious immediately.”

“Which explains the lack of struggle or a cry for help.” Martin sighed and brushed his hands on his jeans as he rose. “In the dark, the other boys never had a chance to find him. He most likely drowned right under their feet.”

“When will you tell the parents?”

“Soon. I’m going to collect Father Blaxson to go with me.”

“Tough call.”

Martin looked over to the water, where the sun was slowly sinking into the shadows of the trees. “Yeah, it is. The worst.” As he watched the remaining divers exit the water, he pulled out his cell phone and dialed up the Police Chaplain.

[more here?]

“Martin.” The lead diver grabbed his wrist as Graeme turned to go. “There’s more down there.”

“More?”

“A car. There’s a car at the bottom of the river.”

“Oh, for Christ’s sake. What is this, suicide week?” With a sigh, Martin withdrew his cell phone again and called {Headquarters]. “We’ve found a car in the Mole. Will you send a crane round tomorrow morning and fish it out for me?”

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[> [> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 7


Author:
~d
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Date Posted: 19:24:00 10/24/02 Thu

It was full dark and Graeme was more than halfway through the bottle of [brand] whiskey before he heard the scrape of a key in the lock. Light speared into the darkened flat, causing Graeme to squint painfully.

“Close the goddamn door, would you?”

“Turn on a light,” Michael replied.

Martin reached over to flick on the table lamp before slumping back into his chair. “Shit, that’s bright.”

“You often sit in the dark drinking?”

“I do when I have to tell parents their sixteen year old son drowned the night before.” When I have to see the look on his father’s face when he answers the door and sees me there with the priest at my shoulder. When I have to hold his mother as she sobs. When I can’t – as much as I want to – haul that pissant [Andrew’s last name] off to jail, because it’s not illegal to be an asshole. Michael crossed in front of him, removed his suit coat and settled comfortably on the couch. Graeme eyed him up and down. Michael’s hair was clean and smoothed back into a neat ponytail, giving him a polished continental appearance only enhanced with the obviously expensive suit. “You sure clean up well for a transient. What store did you knock over to get your hands on that get-up?”

“It’s mine.”

“Yours? You can afford clothes like that – is that a custom-made suit, by the way? – then why the hell are you sleeping in a homeless shelter?”

“It is convenient.”

“Oh, yeah, sure, the Salvation Army is well known for its amenities. Don’t bullshit me, Michael, I’m not in the mood.”

“What does the beggar look like, the one that works your corner?”

“Eh?” Graeme paused, the bottle halfway to his mouth.

“There’s a man that sits panhandling on the corner outside your building every day. What does he look like?”

“I haven’t…. ah. I take your point. A nice way to remain invisible.”

“People tend not to make eye contact with the homeless, even if when giving them money.”

Graeme tipped back the bottle, draining the remaining whisky. [There was a knock at the door.]

“I’m not expecting anyone.”

“Yes you are. It should be dinner.” Michael rose and stepped behind the door, drawing a gun from his belt as he did.

“What the hell are you doing with that?”

“Answer the door.”

Martin looked out the peephole, it was the delivery boy from his local Chinese restaurant. Casting a quick glance at Michael – and the pistol – Martin opened the door and greeted the boy easily.

“Here’s your order, Mr. Martin. You havin’ company tonight?”

“Yeah, [name, Jimmy?], got a hot date with a new lady. I’m going to tell her I made this myself.”

The boy smirked. “She’ll have to be really dumb to buy that line.”

“We’ll see, won’t we? Thanks [name].” Martin paid the bill and gave the boy a hefty tip, before closing the door with a bad-tempered snap. “Is it really necessary to lurk behind the door with a loaded gun? What the fuck are you doing with a weapon, anyway?”

Michael flicked the safety and returned the pistol to his waistband. “The Moo Goo Gai Pian is mine.”

“Jesus, Michael.” Martin let the argument drop; he was suddenly famished and it wasn’t worth trying to argue with the man when he wouldn’t fight back.

Michael wielded the chopsticks with the ease of a native. Graeme contented himself with a fork from the kitchen. “You still didn’t answer the question,” he mumbled between bites of Kung Pao Beef. “Where did you get the gun from?”

“The same place as the suit.”

“Oh, yeah, the local designer-suit-and-gun-shop around the corner. Can I get a straight answer from you?”

“The gun is mine, the suit is mine. I didn’t rob a store or steal an old lady’s purse. That’s all you need to know.”

“Jesus. You sound like the military – ‘need to know’ my ass.”

“Do you want to hear what I found out [discovered] or would you rather throw a tantrum?”

“Tell me, by all means. God knows you’re not going to answer my questions.”

Michael reached into his suitcoat and pulled out a sheaf of papers, handing them across to Martin. “I downloaded this from MI6.”

“Anyone look or act suspicious?”

“Other than the three agents that walked in the library just as I logged off?”

“Shit. They tracked you?”

“Not exactly. These files were protected by extremely tight computer security. MI6 knows something was touched, but they don’t know which files, or by whom.”

“How can you be so certain of that?”

Michael gave him another of those infuriating blank stares. “They don’t know what was taken. Look at the files.”

“Why the hell do I try to have a fucking conversation with you?” The whiskey was buzzing pleasantly in Martin’s system now, taking the edge off his frustration and anger. He began to scan the first page on the stack, then his head snapped up and he met Michael’s eyes in amazement.

“Holy fucking God. She was the personal secretary to some mucky-muck in MI6?”

“Keep reading.”

“Screw you, Michael,” Graeme said mildly even as he obediently continued to read. Two pages later he felt the world lurch under him and it wasn’t due to the liquor. Speechless, he met the placid gaze across from him.

“Not just the secretary,” Michael said softly, “she was the Director of Personnel and Administration.”

Martin reread the personnel record again, just to be sure his eyes hadn’t deceived him.

Educated at Cambridge. Joined SIS in 1966. Postings in Nairobi, Paris, Geneva and Washington. Broad-ranging operational career has given her particular experience of working closely with national and international intelligence, security and law enforcement agencies. In 1998 became Director of Personnel and Administration of MI6.

“Jesus H. Fucking Christ,” Martin breathed. “You think they knew this when they attacked her?”

“What better way to kill an intelligence officer and not have it investigated?”

“Make it look like a random act of violence. Jesus,” Martin shook his head slowly, feeling the room rock with the movement. “Why?”

“That’s the next question.”

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