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Keith Dixon

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  • Herausgeber: Keith Dixon
  • Kategorie: Krimi
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2015
Beschreibung

He said, ‘Let’s be clear: there are two things that I want to come out of this. First, I want to be sure I’m being followed. Secondly, I want to know by whom. Do we understand each other?’ How difficult could this case be? Private investigator Sam Dyke soon learns, however, that Frank Wallace, the client, hasn’t revealed the whole truth. And in the world of secret intelligence in which Wallace has earned his living for the last forty years, it’s probable the truth has rarely seen the light of day. Dyke travels into London and out of his comfort zone, soon finding himself tangled in a web of deceit in which Government Intelligence services, mysterious blondes, private security firms and vintage Blues music are all bound together. Only he can clear a path through to find out what everyone really wants—and not just what they say they want. The Strange Girl, the last Sam Dyke thriller, was described as ‘diverting’ by trade bible The Bookseller, with Sam Dyke being ‘Crewe’s answer to Philip Marlowe’. The Secret Sharers is the latest exciting instalment in this action-packed series.

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Contents

TITLE PAGE

COPYRIGHT

INTRODUCTORY QUOTATION

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

CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

CHAPTER FORTY

CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

EPILOGUE

A NOTE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Also by Keith Dixon

THE SECRET SHARERS

by

KEITH DIXON

THE SECRET SHARERS

by

KEITH DIXON

A Sam Dyke Investigation

Copyright Keith Dixon 2015

First published by Semiologic Ltd

ISBN 13: 9781311140364

Keith Dixon has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work.

All rights reserved

This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph, photocopy, or any other means, electronic or physical, without express written permission of the author.

Any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental and to be deplored.

For information, contact: [email protected]

Cover image © Miles Heller

under Creative Commons License

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/legalcode

Design by Keith Dixon

For Holly

Subscribe to the Website at www.keithdixonnovels.com or the Blog at www.cwconfidential.blogspot.com to get The Private Lie

A secret agent who throws his secrecy to the winds from desire of vengeance, and flaunts his achievements before the public eye, becomes the mark for desperate and bloodthirsty indignations.

CHAPTER ONE

THERE WAS A MAN sitting in my office at nine o’clock that morning, and there were two things wrong with this picture.

First, he was sitting in my chair. And second, I’d locked the office door the previous night.

He added a third wrong thing by lying about it: ‘Hope you don’t mind, the door was open.’

He was a respectable-looking geezer somewhere in his sixties with a long, serious face and wearing a country gentleman’s outfit—a green Barbour jacket, a grey flat cap, and, poking out from under my desk, a pair of solid brown shoes, probably by Church. There was a thin walnut cane leaning against the desk. My desk. His eyes were steady and there was a slightly challenging air about the way he reclined in the seat and waited for my response.

I came into the room and closed the door and considered putting my hands on my hips to show how offended I was.

I said, ‘If you’re selling subscriptions to Country Life, I have to tell you I sold my horse and hounds pack last year. Couldn’t afford all that raw meat.’

He grinned. ‘I knew you were a witty man. When I read that interview with you in the Manchester Evening News I could tell you had a sense of humour.’

A few months ago I’d been involved in preventing a frustrated ideologue carry out a plan to gas commuters in Piccadilly Station in Manchester. My punishment had been a certain amount of notoriety for a week, including the kind of media exposure that you think is going to be good for business but never is. The public have such short memories.

The man went on, ‘I hope you’re not upset by my being here. When I found the door open I thought it much more sensible to come inside and wait rather than clutter up the corridor.’

‘You and I both know the door wasn’t open. There isn’t a mark on it, so it wasn’t forced. And I know I locked it last night.’

‘Are you certain? How can you be certain about anything?’

‘Can I have my chair back, please?’

‘Oh, certainly.’

He stood up and made great play of pulling the chair out and presenting it for me. Then he walked around to the other side of the desk and sat down in one of the upright client chairs. I took my seat, noticing that he’d left his walking stick on my side. I handed it to him and he accepted it with a gracious bow of his head.

He said, ‘So, Mr Dyke, I suppose we should get down to business now.’

‘I’m not looking for any more clients at the moment. My case load is full.’

He seemed taken aback at this and pursed his lips, which were white and thin.

‘That’s unfortunate. I suppose all the publicity you received as a result of your recent cases means that adulterers and fraudsters are beating a path to your door.’

‘Describing my work like that isn’t likely to dispose me towards taking on your case, is it?’

He raised his hands palm up in apology.

‘I’m sorry, I’m lapsing into stereotype.’

‘Look, what exactly is it that you want, Mr … ?’

He lowered his hands and looked at the back of them, as though surprised to find the liver spots and raised veins that confronted him. Then he lifted his eyes towards me and there was an urgency behind them that was new.

He said, ‘My name is Frank Wallace. And I want you to watch me.’

AFTER MY LAST couple of big cases I didn’t want anything complicated or even mildly dangerous. I’d basked a little in the respect I’d been shown in my local pub and at the garage when I’d bought petrol for my new car … but work-wise, I’d wanted tranquillity. For one thing, I’d had to organise the rebuilding of my house, which had been burned to the ground by some oriental thugs, taking my clothes, furniture and—not least—my CD collection with it.

So I’d gone back to the mundane jobs that had been meat-and-drink for me in the last few years—benefit fraudsters, rent-skippers, identity checks and so on.

On the rare occasions I thought about it, I realised I’d been bunkering-down, like a tortoise who’d had too much of the outside world and preferred his own shell to the glamorous temptation of the next lettuce leaf. I hadn’t been speaking much to my son, Dan, though he continued to look after my Bitcoin portfolio and do research for me; nor had I been in contact with my some-time partner, Belinda McFee. I was becoming that rare beast, the Reclusive Detective, seen only in the glare of a camera flash or in a back-alley talking to someone you’d normally cross the street to avoid.

Frank Wallace had been watching me think and must have thought I was considering taking him on as a client. He said, ‘What do you need to know? How do we do this?’

‘I’m sorry, Mr Wallace, but I wasn’t flapping my lips for the sake of it. I’m too busy to take the case. And besides, why do you want me to watch you?’

He smiled slowly. ‘See, I knew you’d be interested.’

‘Call it a mild curiosity.’

He’d taken hold of his walking cane and now rapped it once against the edge of my desk, as if he were firing a starter’s gun.

‘I used to work as a project manager at the Toyota factory in Derby. Well, outside Derby, actually. You’ve probably been past it on your travels.’

‘I’ve seen the road signs.’

‘Exactly. Big place. Anyway, that’s all besides the point. Except insofar as to say that towards the end of my working life there I had a … well, I suppose you’d call it an affair.’ He looked at me, grinning, as though it was rather devilish for someone of an advanced age to have such an adventure. ‘You must understand that my wife died years ago, but the woman I was seeing was well and truly married. The affair carried on for a couple of years and then I retired and for one reason or another we never saw each other again.’

‘So what’s the problem?’

‘Someone’s watching me. Even following me.’

‘Are you certain? You’re sure you’re not just imagining it?’

He looked cross. ‘Don’t patronise me, Mr Dyke. I’m not going senile and I’m not making this up. I’ve seen the man in the street, in his car, down at the café. He’s been there for a couple of weeks.’

‘Who do you think he is?’

‘Don’t you see? Wendy’s husband must have found out and is observing me.’

‘For what reason?’

‘How should I know? Perhaps he wants to bump me off.’

He put inverted commas around this phrase with his voice and his eyes danced with the perversity of the idea.

I said, ‘This is all a bit far-fetched, if you don’t mind me saying. How do you know this man is really watching you and not just going about his own business? You’ve become aware of him once or twice and now you’re seeing him everywhere.’

He leaned back in the chair and glanced out of my window on to the streets of Crewe. The morning was gaining some heat and the pavements were beginning to whiten in the glare of the early sun.

He said, ‘You know when the back of your neck bristles? And you turn around because you think someone’s just said your name, or has come into a room when you thought you were alone? It’s that feeling. Sometimes I see him and sometimes I don’t but I know he’s there even when I can’t see him.’

He said all this in a melancholy tone, but he suddenly brightened and reached inside his green jacket, pulling out a thick wallet. He opened it and extracted a fistful of notes. He rested his elbow on my desk and held the notes in the air like a prize. Thankfully he didn’t wave them or I might have snatched them from his hand.

‘There’s three thousand, five hundred pounds here. We’ll call it a down payment. Seven days at five hundred pounds a day, which I guess is about your going rate. When can you start?’

I stared at him with exasperation. I wasn’t as busy as I’d led him to believe, but I couldn’t see this working. He was acting like a paranoid pensioner looking for a spot of adventure to brighten his drab days.

In the end, I said, ‘I don’t need all that as a retainer.’

‘Nonsense. And there’s more where that came from.’ He placed the cash on the desktop then took out a business card from the wallet and laid it next to the money. ‘These are my numbers and my address. Do we have to sign a contract of some kind and identify milestones and goals and so forth?’

He really was a project manager.

Wearily, I said, ‘I’ll get one in the post to you.’

‘If you have it in pdf format you can email it and I’ll sign it electronically, if that would suffice.’

‘Fine.’

I was actually thinking it might not get that far.

He said, ‘Let’s be clear: there are two things that I want to come out of this. First, I want to be sure I’m being followed. Secondly, I want to know by whom. Do we understand each other?’

I assured him I knew what he wanted, but even as I was telling him this I wondered when I’d actually agreed to take the job. Then I asked myself how hard it could be … watch his place for a while, follow him to his local café or bank, persuade him he’s been imagining the whole thing. Perhaps it would be good for me to work for a private individual again, rather than the local government types who’d made up the majority of my clients for the last couple of months.

I didn’t realise the irony of that thought for several weeks.

Wallace began to gather himself together, putting away his wallet and picking up his cane. He said, ‘When will you start?’

‘It’s probably better if you don’t know. And I have a question for you.’

‘Oh, good.’

‘If you believe you’re being followed by this man, how do you know he didn’t follow you here?’

His reply should have made me think twice about taking on the case right there.

He said, ‘Because I made sure he didn’t.’

CHAPTER TWO

IT WAS A WHILE since I’d been to Buxton. I’d forgotten how bleak the drive through the wilds of the Peak District could be, especially as night was falling. You climbed narrow winding roads up the sides of difficult wooded hills, engine straining, for half the distance, then descended with brakes on full bore for the other half.

Finally I entered the town and my GPS directed me towards a long, straight avenue bordered by cherry trees just coming into blossom. It was the day after Wallace’s visit to my office, and I’d decided to come over and have a look around. If he was right and there was somebody watching him I was sure I’d be able to spot the surveillance. It was something I’d done a lot of myself.

Now I was here I was even more certain. For one thing, there was nowhere to hide. Wallace lived on a street that was simply two rows of semi-detached houses fronted by small gardens, with a cherry tree planted on the edge of the wide pavement every thirty yards or so. There were cars parked on the street in front of every house—no garages were built for residents in the days when few people had cars—but there were no other buildings behind which a bad guy could hide.

Although I’d started out in daylight it was dark now. I drove to the end of the street, noting Wallace’s house as I passed, then turned around at the T-junction and drove back.

I parked fifty yards this side of Wallace’s house and waited.

After five minutes I was bored, so I climbed out of my new Mondeo and leaned with my back against it. The air was cooling but still pleasant, and warm enough to carry sounds from further away.

I looked in both directions up the street—nothing to see except the slight blue glare of television sets in front rooms. No youths hanging about, smoking. Or ingesting even worse kinds of chemical. No motorcycle gangs tearing up the tarmac. No street-corner lovelies with come-hither eyes and pale faces.

It was all very suburban and middle-class, exactly where I would have imagined someone like Frank Wallace to live.

I took my phone out of my pocket and pretended to be looking at it and texting as I walked past Wallace’s house. It was double-fronted with stone-framed bay windows in a twenties style. There was a short flight of stone steps from his gate to his front door, a chunky affair with a brass lion’s head for a knocker. His curtains were drawn closed downstairs but through an upstairs window I could see a dim light as if from a stairwell. I passed by, still engrossed in my phone’s screen.

At the end of the street I turned and looked back, then crossed to the other side and began walking towards my car once more. This time I checked the parked vehicles, looking for drivers or passengers who seemed to be doing nothing but could have been observing Wallace’s house. There was nobody.

Which made it all the more surprising when I felt the unmistakable point of a sharp knife sticking into the small of my back, accompanied by a hand on my left shoulder. He was good: I hadn’t heard a thing.

‘Don’t turn and don’t move,’ a man’s voice said, muffled as if by a scarf or balaclava. I could tell he was tall from the direction of the voice and strong by the grip he had on my shoulder.

Despite what people might think, in my line of work you don’t often come across people willing to stick knives into your back. It calls for a certain amount of psychopathology to do it in the middle of a suburban street, too, so I thought it best to follow orders and do nothing.

The voice said, ‘What are you doing here? Why are you looking at that house?’

‘Isn’t it for sale? I thought I might make an offer.’

The knife dug a little further into the fleshy part below my ribs.

‘Answer the question.’

‘I don’t think I will. You’re not going to knife me in the middle of the street and get away with it. You know it and I know it.’

‘Clever man. Count this as a warning. Stay away from the house or it might be bad for your health.’

‘Who writes your lines—Tony Soprano?’

The hand on my shoulder had gone, and a moment later the point of the knife released its insistent pressure on my spine. I heard a car approach and as I turned saw a tall man wearing a black tee-shirt and a knitted balaclava climbing into the back seat of a long car, perhaps an Audi. It pulled away and the yellow light from the street lamps was too dim to reveal its license plate.

I rolled my shoulders, looked back at Frank Wallace’s house, then returned to my car. I could have knocked on his door and told him what had happened, but I didn’t want to frighten him.

I was frightened enough for myself.

SO INSTEAD I drove around the corner, parked on a quiet street, and thought about what had just taken place. It seemed that Wallace wasn’t as paranoid as I’d believed. Someone was watching his house and didn’t like the fact that I was watching it too. But that person wasn’t acting alone: someone had driven the car my bad guy had climbed into. It had been dark and the driver was on the far side, with his head turned away, looking for traffic coming from behind before he pulled out.

So I had no means of identifying who had stuck a knife in my back and nothing to go on except that he’d been tall, strong and had a generic middle-class accent, probably from somewhere south.

I pulled out my phone and called Frank Wallace’s home number. He answered on the fourth ring.

‘Who is this?’

‘Sam Dyke. Are you okay?’

‘Yes, why shouldn’t I be? Oh, have you seen something?’

‘I’m just checking in. Can we meet tomorrow?’

‘Of course. Do you know Buxton?’

‘A little.’

He gave me directions to a pub I knew was around the corner from his house because I was staring at it.

I said, ‘You know that story you told me about an angry husband?’

He was wary. ‘Yes … ‘

‘It’s not true, is it?’

‘Why do you say that?’

‘Call it a hunch.’

He surprised me by laughing.

‘The great detective follows a hunch. Never mind clues or evidence, gut feeling is what counts. Is that what I’m paying you for? Intuition?’

I said nothing. I was suddenly angry.

He went on, ‘Meet me tomorrow lunchtime and I’ll explain everything. I guarantee you’ll be interested.’

He hung up a second before I did.

IT WAS AFTER eleven o’clock by the time I got home—too late for a drink, too early to go to bed.

I phoned Dan, knowing he’d be awake and about to start his online stint trading Bitcoins. He answered at the first ring.

‘Dad, hurry it up. Craig is coming round.’

Craig was his new boyfriend. I hadn’t met him yet, though I’d seen his fancy Porsche pulling away from Dan’s house a couple of weeks ago.

I gave Dan Frank Wallace’s details and asked him to find out what he could from his usual nefarious sources. He was a wiz at discovering stuff not only through Google but with his own ability to gain entrance to databases closed to the general public. So far I’d managed to put the illegality of these searches to the back of my mind, but lately I’d begun to realise that I was suborning him to break the law. I’d have to do something about that.

He said, ‘A project manager at Toyota? Not your usual high-profile client, then.’

‘There’s more to him than meets the eye.’

‘What should I be looking for?’

‘Anything unusual.’

‘Oh, give me a break. How do I know what’s unusual for a project manager at Toyota?’

‘Use your imagination.’

‘Okay.’

I paused. ‘How’s it going with Craig?’

‘I think he’s going to split up with me. That’s why he’s coming round so late.’

‘You don’t sound too upset. I thought it was going well.’

‘So did I. But hey, things change.’

‘When did you get so casual?’

‘When my mum was murdered and my dad had his house and car burned to a cinder.’

I took a beat. I’d never really thought about the impact of what I did on his developing personality. He hadn’t known his mother because she’d given him up for fostering, without telling me, but I supposed the fact she’d been murdered was likely to have some say in the way he viewed the world.

I said, ‘Take care. Plenty more fish in the sea.’

‘You’re a great comfort.’

We hung up and I suddenly felt as miserable as a three-legged greyhound.

Then I thought back to my phone call with Frank Wallace. For a man who’d said his life was in danger, he sounded awful jaunty.

CHAPTER THREE

I WAS SITTING in the lounge of the Duke of Hereford ten minutes before I’d agreed to meet Frank Wallace when my phone bleeped to say I’d had a text message.

It was ostensibly from an Unknown Caller, but it was signed by Wallace. It said there’d been a change of venue and I was to come out of the pub, turn left and walk two hundred and fifty yards, where I’d find a café-bar ‘with a sporting theme’.

I sighed, finished my drink, and followed his instructions.

As far as I could tell, The Players’ Bar had in fact no connection to sportsmen—or to travelling theatre troupes, for that matter. There were no photographs of visiting football teams, no wooden, heart-shaped trophies propped behind the bar and no timetables of upcoming fixtures. Perhaps the owners were liable under the Trades Description Act for false advertising, but I doubt they were too worried. The place had a high ceiling and black-and-white floor tiles and the tables were square and modern. There were no cosy alcoves for secret trysts or client meetings. A party of young mothers with babies and their associated strollers took up a third of the space at the back, some of the kids wailing while the others watched in goggling bemusement.

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