at the dozens of empty chairs. Already the men and women who had just left them would be settling down at computers and picking up phones; doing everything that could reasonably be done. But Thorne was beginning to sense that real progress was going to depend on the man they were after giving them something more to work with.
âI might be wrong,â Thorne said. âIt might be piss-easy. One look at the stuff these Leicester boys have got and everything could get sorted.â
âChrist, I hope so,â Brigstocke said.
Thorne hoped so too, but he could not shake the feeling that this was one of those cases where a break would mean another body.
SIX
Thorne picked up a takeaway from the Bengal Lancer on his way home. He hadnât bothered phoning ahead with the order, had looked forward to the cold bottle of Kingfisher, the complimentary poppadoms and the chat with the manager while he was waiting.
Louise was slumped in front of some celebrity ice-skating programme when he got back. She seemed happy enough, a fair way into a bottle of red wine.
âEvery cloud,â she said. She raised her glass as though she were toasting something. âNice to have a drink again.â
Thorne went through to the kitchen, began dishing up the food. He shouted through to the living room, âYou should,â then pushed the empty cartons down into the bin.
When he turned round, Louise was standing in the doorway. âShould what ?â
âShould . . . have a drink . . . if you want. Relax a bit.â
âGet pissed, you mean?â
Thorne licked sauce off his fingers, stared at her. âI didnât mean anything, Lou . . .â
She walked back into the living room and, after a moment, he followed her with the plates. They sat on the floor with their backs against the sofa, eating off their laps. Thorne poured himself what was left of the wine; a little over half a glass.
âWhoever killed the woman in Finchley,â he said. âLooks like heâs done it before.â
Louise chewed for a few more seconds. âThat Garvey thing you told me about?â
âWell, that girl, yeah. Sheâs not his first.â
âShit . . .â
âRight, all I need.â
She shrugged, swallowed. âMight be exactly what you need.â
The food was as good as always: rogan josh and a creamy mutter paneer; mushroom bhaji, pilau rice and a peshwari nan to share. Louise ate quickly, helping herself to the lionâs share of the bread. Almost done, she moved her fork slowly through the last few grains of yellow rice. âSounds like youâre going to be busy.â
Thorne glanced across, searching in vain for something in her face that might give him a clue as to how she felt about it. He hedged his bets. âItâs a hell of a big team, so weâll have to see.â
âOK . . .â
âListen, shall I open some more wine?â
âI really donât mind.â
Thorne looked again and saw nothing to contradict what sheâd said. He carried the plates back to the kitchen and fetched another bottle. They settled down on the sofa and watched TV in silence for a few minutes, Louise laughing more readily than Thorne when a former glamour model went sprawling on the ice. Once the show had finished, Thorne flicked through the channels, finally settling on a repeat of The Wild Geese , a film he had always loved. They watched Richard Burton, Roger Moore and Richard Harris charging about in the African bush, the three just about believable as ageing mercenaries.
âI talked to Phil,â Thorne said. âI meant to say.â
âDid you tell him what happened?â
âI didnât have to.â Thorne waited to see if she would pick up on it, say something about having confided in Hendricks about the pregnancy. âHe said you should call him, you know, if you want to talk.â
âI spoke to him last night,â she said.
âOh,
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