James Hawkins - Missing - Presumed Dead

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“No — I don’t believe I did. I suppose he may have done, but all I said was that I hadn’t seen him …”

“ … Since Suez,” he interjected, suddenly remembering that it had been the matron of the nursing home who’d mentioned Scotland. “Actually, I wanted to ask you about that. It struck me as strange afterwards. Why Suez, what made you think of that?”

A look of consternation clouded Daphne’s face and he worried he had offended her in some way. Putting down her can of spray polish, she scooted across to the door and checked the corridor with exaggerated care. As she returned to his desk her thoughtful expression suggested she was considering the wisdom of revealing some great secret, but she shelved the idea at the last moment, saying, “I’d rather tell you tonight — if that’s alright — at dinner.”

“In that case why not let me take you somewhere posh as promised — I could do with something to cheer me up.”

The implication that her leg of lamb would not have cheered him smarted, but she rationalised quickly. “Thank you, that would be nice — at least I won’t have to wash up.”

Bliss was still trying to piece together the newly acquired information from Scotland as Daphne dragged her vacuum cleaner into the next office, and he wandered thoughtfully around the room abstractly picking at files and boxes.

“Whoomph,” the low boom of an explosion shook him out of his thoughts and left him trying to identify the sound. The backfire of a car, was his first thought, but the frequency was too low — so low it was tangible rather than audible — more like a pressure wave pulsing through the atmosphere. The following silence was almost as tangible as the boom of the blast, leaving him wondering if he’d heard anything at all, even dismissing it and fleetingly returning to his inner debate over the Dauntsey murder.

Twenty seconds later he’d reached the part in his hypothesis where Jonathon was grave-side, unrolling the duvet from the body, when a second explosion hit. An explosion of instantly identifiable sounds — the pandemonium of disaster: shrieking alarms, sirens and bells; shouting men; thundering feet; slamming doors; screaming engines and squealing tyres.

Swept up in the excitement, Bliss rushed to the control room where half a dozen shirt-sleeved operators were electrified by the madly pulsating warning lights and flashing computer screens. At lightening speed the control officers were tapping buttons and flicking switches as they struggled to deal with a flood of incoming calls and alarms. And, above the electronic hum, the enlivened buzz of their voices — asking, ordering, directing, informing.

“What’s happening? Where are you? Do this, do that, go there, stop the traffic, secure the area — fire services are en-route, hospitals are being alerted.”

“What’s happening?” whispered Bliss, leaning over one of the women, trying not to interrupt her.

“Shush,” she waved him off with an irritated flick of the wrist and continued calling into her microphone. “Alpha five-niner — location, over?”

“What is it?” he tried again, a note of insistence adding authority to his tone.

She ignored him. “Alpha five-niner,” she continued to call, “State your location — over? I’m getting nothing from fifty-nine, Serg,” she shouted at the man on an opposing console.

“What’s happening, Serg?” called Bliss, but was blanked out as the sergeant stared straight past him, treating him like an inconvenient post.

“Try fifty-four …” he shouted to the controller. “No, belay that, I’ll do it myself.” He picked up the microphone. “Alpha five-four, alpha five-four. What’s five-niner’s ten-twenty?”

“Am I invisible?” Bliss questioned flippantly. Have I died? Did he get me? Then his thoughts darkened and left him pondering — Is this what death is like? What was that explosion? Maybe I am dead — maybe he did get me. “Sergeant!” he bellowed in something of a panic.

“I’m busy — what do ye want — who are you?”

The loudspeaker cackled overhead. “Alpha five-four to Delta Alpha — I’ve no idea where five-niner is. We’re just arriving at the scene — looks a mess-over.”

Unable to wait any longer Bliss harshly grabbed the sergeant’s shoulder, “I’m D.I. Bliss. Will somebody tell me what’s happening?”

“Sorry, Guv — There’s been an explosion. One of our uniformed …”

“Where?” insisted Bliss, cutting him off.

“Mitre Hotel in the High Street.”

Bliss felt his knees giving — his hotel, the hotel he’d left only thirty minutes earlier. The hotel where he would have been shaving or showering had he waited for the receptionist’s early call. “Oh God!”

“Are you alright, Guv?”

Now what? Admit I know who did it? Admit it was my fault — again?

“Yes … yes … I’m alright. I suppose I’d better get down there. Have you called the Super?”

“Everything’s under control, Guv.”

Not in Bliss’s mind it wasn’t. His brain was exploding with questions. How did he find me so quickly? How did he know I was at the Mitre? Why can’t he leave me alone?

Snatching the keys to one of the C.I.D. cars off a pegboard he paused deep in thought. What if it’s a trap — what if he’s waiting to pick me off? But he quickly shook off the notion of an ambush and ran for the car park, telling himself that the killer wouldn’t risk it with the area swamped by uniformed officers. He will have been long gone, he told himself. Why hang around when the bomb’s achieved it objective?

The car was already on automatic pilot as he shot out of the car park, piecing together the likely scenario in his mind: timed device almost certainly — cheap chain-store alarm clock — made in Hong Kong or Taiwan. That’s prophetic, he thought — identical ones would be waking a million people around the world and this one, attached to a battery, detonator and a lump of Semtex high explosive, had woken an entire city.

He took the roundabout at high speed, slackening off the throttle as the tyres protested. It must have been planted last evening, he mused, under the bed while I was in London — careless, I should have checked. But how did he get in? Slamming the car into fourth, he pictured it in his mind as he tore along the quiet street: a fairly ordinary looking workman in blue overalls carrying an official looking toolbox. “Come to check the plumbing in 203 — you got a leak apparently,” he says to the pretty Swedish receptionist who had charmed Bliss with her brilliant smile and oddball English.

“Oh. I have no understanding — I think maybe I should call to the manager?” she replies, reaching for the phone.

“Well I ain’t hanging around, girl,” he says, turning on his heals. “Maybe I should come back tomorrow when the place is flooded out — I can make more money that way.”

“No, please — it is alright, I am sure,” she pleads, handing over the keys — even placating him with the offer of a cup of tea or a miniature from the courtesy bar.

The High Street was blocked, jammed by the haphazardly abandoned emergency vehicles and the detritus of catastrophe. Bricks, tiles and baulks of timber carpeted the roadway. Broken glass had spewed everywhere, turning summer to winter as Bliss’s footsteps crunched through the glistening ice-like crystals. But he couldn’t hear — every burglar and fire alarm in the street was blaring; police, fire and ambulance. Sirens were still screaming in the distance, clearing a path through thin air as they raced through the deserted streets.

He ducked under the hastily strung fluorescent tape and stopped, perplexed. The Mitre Hotel seemed intact, normal even, apart from the snake of shell-shocked patrons streaming out of the door, clutching themselves in blankets and dressing gowns, and being hurried away by ambulance and fire officers. Still confused, he made straight for a fireman, his helmet and shoulders weighed down with gold stripes.

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