She beat a tattoo on the desk with her fingers, her eyes fixed to the screen. Temporary files were usually deleted when the original file was closed, but not always. With luck, the ones she needed were still lying low on Garvin’s hard drive.
And if not, she was all out of tricks.
The computer beeped. Her pulse quickened. She stared at the filenames listed on the screen:
VW-Stock.tmp
VW-Cargo.tmp
‘Harry?’
Something fluttered in Harry’s stomach. She fumbled with her mouse. Supposing they were just backups of the encrypted files?
Imogen appeared at her side. ‘You really need to take the call this time.’
Harry bit her lip. Then she pointed her mouse at the first file. Held her breath.
Double-click.
The file opened.
Crystal-clear plaintext filled the screen.
‘Harry, it’s the police.’
11 (#ulink_ee38df23-dd65-5dd0-a6e1-c4c4d28cdaf9)
‘What the hell do you think you’re playing at?’
Harry winced at Hunter’s tone. She wedged the receiver against her shoulder, her fingers working the keyboard. ‘I don’t play games, Detective.’
‘I could haul you in for this.’ His teeth sounded glued together. ‘You’re being deliberately obstructive.’
‘I’ve told you the truth.’ She browsed through the first of Garvin’s hidden files, VW-Stock.tmp. It looked like another stock-take of stones.
Hunter snorted. ‘From what I’ve heard, you and the truth don’t exactly hit it off.’
Harry breathed through her nose, trying to tune him out. She pecked through the data: numbers, customers, colours, weights. She frowned, backtracking a little. Could that be right?
‘You intentionally removed evidence from a murder investigation.’
Harry jerked her gaze away from the screen. She didn’t hold the moral high ground on much right now, but he wasn’t getting away with that one.
‘If you’re talking about Garvin Oliver’s laptop, then it was your officer who made the mistake, not me.’
‘You withheld evidence.’
‘I gave you the keys of my car.’
Hunter was silent for a moment. Then he said, ‘I want the laptop.’
‘Come and get it anytime you want.’
‘I want it now. We’re right outside.’
Dammit. ‘All right, I’ll come and buzz you in.’
She slammed down the phone, her eyes straying back to the numbers on the screen. Then she snapped the file shut. That would have to keep for a while.
Imogen hovered behind her. ‘Everything okay?’
Harry got to her feet. ‘Not exactly. I’ll explain in a minute, but right now, I’ve a pissed-off detective to talk to.’ She gave her friend a direct look. ‘Promise me you’ll stay out of things for the next few minutes? No matter what you hear me say?’
Imogen’s eyes lit up for a second, then she frowned. ‘What are you getting into, Harry?’
‘Just promise me?’
Imogen pursed her lips. ‘Okay. But that explanation better be good.’
Harry gave her an attagirl pat on the arm, then headed out to reception where Hunter was waiting behind the glass security doors. His shoulders were hunched, his hands shoved deep into his jacket pockets.
She took a deep breath, wondering how to compose her face for the ten-yard walk to the door. In the end, she settled for a self-righteous glare, which Hunter seemed to have no trouble returning.
She strode across the empty reception and punched the door-release button on the wall. Hunter swung in past her, a gust of cool, yeast-scented air riding in behind him. He wheeled round to face her, his cropped hair spiky from the wind.
‘Next time, I’d appreciate it if you would answer your mobile.’
Harry shot him a look. So that was one caller identified. No reason to think the other was a killer with a gun, but then, nothing today had exactly been rational.
He looked past her to the door. ‘You remember Detective Inspector Lynne, don’t you?’
Harry whipped round. A lean, dark-haired man was standing in the doorway. Forty-ish, neat grey suit, penetrating eyes. He stepped inside. She remembered how silently he’d always moved. Like a cat.
Lynne inclined his head, his eyes never leaving her face. ‘Ms Martinez.’
Harry managed a stiff nod. Then she turned on her heel and led them back through reception, her spine tingling with awareness of being watched from behind. Resisting the urge to accelerate like a fugitive, she coached herself to stay calm: Nice and easy, keep it steady, just give them the laptop and they’ll go. The diamond burned a hole in her side.
The last time she’d tangled with Lynne had been in a hospital corridor four months earlier. Her father had lain dying in the next room, eking out his last days on life-support machines. By then, his helpless body was as thin as a child’s, kept alive by tubes hissing air into his lungs. Lynne’s questions had been the same as always: What happened to the money from Sal’s insider trading? Did you help him to hide it? Why did you visit a bank in the Bahamas? Where’s the money now?
More persistent than his questions were the silences he waited for her to fill. But she never did. She never told him she still had the money, or some of it, anyway. She’d stolen it to protect herself, but afterwards, she’d kept it for her father. She’d wanted to give him something to wake up to. But then the doctors had told her that her father was going to die.
Harry squared her shoulders, warding the memory off. She snapped her security pass against the card-reader on the wall and marched into the Blackjack office. Maybe a brisk pace would make her look as if she was in control.
She gestured at the safe. ‘It’s in here.’
Imogen swivelled in her chair, eyes wide, mouth shut. Harry fixed her attention on Hunter as he stepped towards the safe. Up close, she could see that he needed a shave, the bristles glinting like iron filings on his face. He snapped a pair of latex gloves up to his wrists, his eyes trained on hers.
‘You’ve had the laptop for hours, why didn’t you say anything?’