Table of Contents
Cover
By Judith Cutler
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
By Judith Cutler
The Kate Power Mysteries
POWER ON HER OWN
STAYING POWER
POWER GAMES
WILL POWER
HIDDEN POWER
POWER SHIFT
STAYING POWER
A Kate Power Mystery
Judith Cutler
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain in 1999
by Hodder and Stoughton
A division of Hodder Headline PLC
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH
This eBook first published in 2013 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Ltd.
Copyright © 1999 by Judith Cutler
The right of Judith Cutler to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
ISBN-13 978-1-4483-0109-6 (ePub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
For Robert,
remembering Florence:
the Duomo, the piazzas, the food
– and the snow and the flu and the en suite bathroom down
the hotel corridor
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book could not have been written without the help and co-operation of West Midlands Police, especially Dave Churchill, Rona Gorton, Terry Street and Yvonne Williams. Angie King and Jayne Coyne shared with me their invaluable experience. Edwina Van Boolen and Frances Lally have been constant sources of support and criticism. Thank you all.
PROLOGUE
‘Go on, take one. You have to keep swallowing or those tubes in your ears’ll get bunged up.’
Kate dragged her eyes from the Italian coastline, still just visible beyond the edge of the wing, and put down her sodden tissue. ‘Sorry?’
‘You have got a snorter, haven’t you?’ It was the youngish man in the next seat. ‘Here, I said have one of these: you must keep swallowing or your ears’ll give you hell when you land.’ He was offering her a paper bag.
She took one of the sweets – old-fashioned barley sugars – and smiled her thanks. She was afraid that more would encourage him to chat, and there was nothing she could do to escape if she wanted to.
‘I’m sure I saw you somewhere back there.’ His head jerked at the receding shore.
‘Heard me sneeze, more like. Most people get designer leather in Florence. I get a designer cold!’
‘You still got something nice in leather, though.’ He laughed. ‘I can smell it from here. The name’s Alan, by the way. Alan Grafton.’
‘Kate Power. Oh, I bought a bag,’ she admitted, burrowing for it. She needed another tissue anyway.
‘Mind if I look at it?’
Her eyebrows shot up.
‘Oh, only the outside. I wouldn’t dream of asking to see the inside of a lady’s bag.’
She prepared to grind her teeth.
He continued, ‘No, it’d be too like looking at the bottom of my case. All that stuff you always mean to deal with one day. But your bag wouldn’t have had time to silt up yet, would it?’
In spite of herself, she laughed. Her chest rattled alarmingly as the laugh became a cough.
‘You’re going to have to see a doctor about that,’ he said.
She shook her head. She was only just off sick leave, for goodness’ sake. The holiday in Florence had been to celebrate the return of her knee to normality. She’d injured it while she and her colleagues were raiding a house. It had also been something of an order from her boss: ‘Make sure you come back fit,’ Detective Inspector Cope had said. ‘Don’t want any passengers in my squad.’
His boss, Graham Harvey, had said much the same thing, though in kinder terms. ‘You’ve had a dreadful time this year, Kate. Go and get some sun and put some good food and good wine inside you. Make sure that cousin of yours looks after you.’
She’d not bothered to pass the last instruction on to the cousin, who’d feel – as a war correspondent – that it was she who needed any cosseting going. But Kate had enjoyed her week. They’d done all the touristy things in Florence, walking everywhere, even when her cold had struck.
‘The weather can’t have done you any good,’ the man continued. ‘Fancy, snow in Florence in November!’
‘Pretty well December.’
‘Even so … I don’t know about you, but I only brought autumn-weight clothes. But that wind provided a wonderful excuse to buy cashmere sweaters,’ he added.
He plainly wasn’t going to shut up. She glanced sideways again. He’d be in his mid-thirties, lightly built. He was indeed wearing a beautiful sweater.
‘Why the interest in my bag?’ Perhaps she was leading with her chin.
‘Because I’ve just ordered five thousand pounds’ worth of them. And three thousand pounds’ worth of sweaters, like this. I’d already bought the most beautiful shoes and briefcases on my last trip’
‘Do you have a shop?’
‘No, no, I’m a middle man. I have these wonderful trips abroad and buy all these lovely things, and I sell them on to distributors. Who no doubt shove a huge mark-up on to them. Not that they’re cheap, anyway. Even with the pound at its present level. Now,’ he said, grasping the bag, ‘this is a nice bit of leather. But what’s it lined with?’
She’d hardly registered. ‘Fabric, I think.’
He passed it back. ‘And you’d have bought it from one of the outdoor markets, not the Leather School or one of the boutiques.’
She nodded. Even a sergeant’s salary didn’t run to that sort of price.
‘Well, mine are leather lined. As are the shoes I’m after. Did you buy any shoes?’
‘Two pairs. Comfortable as gloves.’
‘Lined?’
‘One p
air, I think.’
‘Well, the others’ll stretch, you mark my words. They’ll be useless in three months. Gloves? Now those are nice. Silk-lined. Tell you what, you must have shopped for England!’
Their conversation continued intermittently all the way across the Alps. From time to time he’d press another barley sugar on her, making an opportunity to talk about his plans.
‘If this deal delivers what I hope it’ll deliver, I shall move into silk scarves. Then designer clothes. It’s all a question of the right outlets. And quality control. I’m going to have to be meticulous about quality control …’
She let him run on. It was nice to meet people with passions about things, even if you couldn’t imagine sharing the passion. And it meant she didn’t have to talk much. She wondered how he’d react when she told him about her job. Experience had taught her it was often better to wait till people asked her what she did, rather than volunteer the information officiously. At last, when they were free from plastic food trays, he got round to it.
‘I’m a police officer. I work for the CID in central Birmingham.’ This was usually the cue for silly quips; she was sorry she couldn’t look at him full-face to watch his reaction.
Whatever his eyes might have revealed, his spoken comment was predictable enough: ‘Goodness me, I must watch what I say, mustn’t I?’
‘Not if what you’re talking about is legal,’ she laughed.
‘Well, it certainly is my end,’ he said. ‘And I’ve run these credit check things on my clients – I know their money is good. So I should be all right.’
Was there a tiny note of doubt in his voice? If only she could hear properly: the cold had left her deaf in one ear – the one nearer to him.
‘Have you had any exciting cases lately?’
She couldn’t tell him about the most recent one. Apart from anything else, investigations had still been going on when she went on leave. ‘A lot of car theft,’ she laughed. ‘And while I was away I think they were going to do a major job rounding up stolen mobile phones.’
‘No juicy murders?’
‘Not a lot, thank goodness.’
‘But aren’t they exciting?’
She reflected on the sights and smells of a murder scene, and shook her head. ‘Not for the victim, that’s for sure. And for those of us trying to solve the crime there’s just a hell of a lot of dogged work.’
‘You’ve got all this scientific stuff to help you, haven’t you?’
She nodded. ‘In the end, it comes down to asking the right questions and making sure you listen to the answers.’
Despite his sweets, landing at Birmingham Airport closed down her hearing almost entirely.
‘No, keep your fingers away! You can damage your ears that way. Keep swallowing. They’ll click eventually.’
She shook her head. My God, if they stayed like this! Even after the carousel had finally trundled out her case, she was still at the bottom of an auditory ocean.
‘Have you got transport?’ he asked. ‘Transport? Or are you on the train? On the train?’
They set off for the station together.
‘No point me asking you out for an intimate dinner, I can see.’
‘Not this week!’ Her voice was distant, echoing.
‘OK. Next week. What’s your phone number?’
She fumbled for her police business card. He struck her as the least dangerous of men, but she wasn’t about to hand out her home number.
He flipped out one of his.
The train for the city was bulging with football-scarved passengers. It was clear they were going to be separated.
‘Take care of yourself!’ she shouted.
‘Don’t worry – I always do.’
Chapter One
‘Look what the cat brought in! Buenos noches, DS Power. God Almighty – keep your distance, woman. I don’t want the whole bleeding squad infected. It’s bad enough with young Fatima, here, giving us all the willies not eating. DC Khalid doesn’t let anything past her lips on account of it’s Lent or whatever these people have. And then you come in here looking like a death’s head on speed.’
‘Morning, Gaffer,’ Kate said equably. ‘Always nice to have a warm welcome home.’ There was nothing new about DI Cope’s wet-Monday, bad-traffic mode. She dumped her bag and case and leaned over to the new woman’s desk. What had the Gaffer said her name was. Ah, that was it. ‘Hi, Fatima! I’m Kate Power.’
The new constable – probably, like Kate, in her late twenties – stood up, embarrassing Kate by her formality. Her handshake was firm and pleasant, and if she’d been irritated by Cope she showed no signs of it. She had to look up to Kate, who felt that even at five foot five she was towering over her. And she was so slightly built Kate wondered how her frame stood up to the month of Ramadan dawn-to-dusk fasting.
‘I’ve put her with Selby,’ Cope announced. ‘Now you and Colin seem to have become partners and Sally’s gone back to Wales, there’s no two ways about it.’
Kate thought there might have been several ways. There’d be other new people coming into the squad. One at least. A replacement for Reg. Surely it would have been better to wait. This was the worst case scenario. Sure, she liked working with Colin, and he with her, but she was sure that either of them would have been prepared to partner Selby – temporarily at least – simply to spare Fatima. Not that Selby would have wanted to work with Kate. There were unsettled scores, weren’t there?
‘I’m sorry it’s Ramadan,’ she said to Fatima. ‘I’d have asked you out for a coffee at lunchtime.’
‘So long as you don’t mind me watching you drinking—’
‘Done.’ Kate smiled and returned to the tip that hid most of her desk. She could tell which paperwork had been left by Colin – it came in files and stood in a neat stack. The rest had been apparently dumped by a mechanical digger.
She stripped off her coat and slung it on the back of the chair. She wouldn’t be sitting for some time, the pile was so high. She opened the top drawers on either side of her desk to act as further filing space and picked the first item from the pile. It looked ominous. An internal mail envelope. Sealed.
Slitting the Sellotape, she found a sheet of memo paper.
Kate
My office. Before you even think about starting on this lot.
GH
She grabbed her bag, cramming in extra tissues.
‘Ah, not staying long, I see, Power. Before you go, the boss might like to see you.’
She nodded to Cope and headed down the corridor. She stopped and looked around her. Somewhere the police authority had found enough money to fit new name plates on senior officers’ doors, white lettering on apparently removable blue metal strips. Someone could have a wonderful malicious time, changing them around. Where did managers get these ideas?
At least no one had tampered with DCI Graham Harvey – yet.
She tapped and waited.
‘Come on in, Kate!’
How on earth did he know it was her?
Graham waved her to a chair – she took the comfortable one, since he was already making tea, a sign of good humour. ‘I recognised your footsteps.’ He smiled as he passed her the mug, sliding an empty envelope to use as a mat. He looked her up and down a moment before he continued, ‘And I thought a holiday would do you good!’
‘Oh, it did. I loved the place. Have you ever been, Gaffer?’
Wrong question. His face clouded. ‘My wife doesn’t like travelling. There’s her diet, for one thing. And she gets travel sick.’
‘So does my cousin. But she bought these acupuncture wrist bands.’
He grimaced. ‘Her job involves travel, doesn’t it? She doesn’t have any choice. Where’s she off to now?’ He came round her side of the desk, half-perching on it.
‘Central Africa again. Checking out the famine in the war zone. She says it’s a good way to diet. All that Italian food – she reckons she put on half a stone last week.’
‘I
t doesn’t look as if you did. God, don’t take that the wrong way, will you? I’ve just been on this anti-sexism course. All about not calling people ‘love’ and not making personal remarks about what people are wearing. So I mustn’t say you look extra nice – I mean smart – this morning.’
‘Present from Florence.’ She smoothed the skirt. ‘To celebrate the snow.’
He nodded. ‘I saw. On Ceefax.’
What sort of life must the poor devil lead, to have time to watch Ceefax! Or – she fought down the suspicion – he might have wanted to know how she was getting on.
‘Anything interesting been going on here? Apart from the arrival of Fatima?’
‘Whom Cope has paired with Selby. While I was away on that course. Well within his authority, of course.’
‘So it’ll be difficult to unpair them.’
‘But impossible to leave them paired. I’d like to think,’ he added, turning his attention to his tea at last, ‘that Cope hoped spending time with an intelligent, articulate woman like that would civilise the man.’
‘Oh, I’m sure they’ll find so much to talk about! What’s her degree in again?’
He consulted a file. ‘Philosophy. She got a first. And she did her doctorate at Manchester – isn’t that where you did yours?’
She nodded. ‘But I only did a master’s.’
‘No wonder you’re feeling one degree under! Oh dear, I suppose you’re too young to remember the adverts. Some cold cure or something. Anyway, young Fatima—’
She nodded. ‘Maybe we shouldn’t worry too much. She must have a hell of a lot going for her. Not just to do what I’ll bet her community disapproved of, but to rise so fast in the Service. Perhaps she’ll just lacerate him.’
‘And if she does, how will he respond? Keep an eye on things, Kate. And remember, if there’s any indication he’s started on his clever games, I’ll have him out of the squad before he can blink.’
‘Games’? Was that what they called bullying on that course of his? She nodded again, grimly. ‘Any other news?’
‘None. Everything in that last case of yours progressing nicely. Here – have a read through this at your leisure.’ He passed her a thick file.
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