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  Call to Arms

  A Detective Kay Hunter crime thriller

  Rachel Amphlett

  One

  Ten years ago

  * * *

  East of Maidstone, Kent

  * * *

  Jamie Ingram stalked across the darkened farmyard, shoved the crash helmet onto his head, and swung his leg over the motorbike.

  He sat for a moment, his heart racing, anger coursing through his veins.

  He realised he was grinding his teeth, and he forced his jaw to relax. He leaned forward, flexed his fingers over the handlebars, then started the engine and kicked the bike into gear.

  It had been raining since four o’clock that afternoon, a steady downpour that soaked the landscape and had continued into the night. A weak full moon attempted to break through the clouds that tumbled overhead, then submitted to the next deluge.

  The Kentish countryside held a starkness to it, tree branches reaching up to the pitch black sky while the promise of an early morning frost clung to the air around him.

  A chink of light appeared at one of the upper windows to the farmhouse, before the silhouette of a man emerged.

  Jamie remained still, glaring through the visor, his breathing ragged.

  As a boy, he had loved waking up to the sound of rain as it beat upon the roof of the house. The crops were dependent on the ebb and flow of the seasons, and despite the risk of flooding, he found the noise soothing.

  Tonight though, it seemed to heighten his frayed nerves instead.

  Eventually, the figure retreated and the curtain at the window dropped back into place.

  Jamie blinked to regain his night vision.

  He turned the bike’s wheels in the mud that now coated his boots and pointed it towards the cattle grid separating the property from the lane.

  The farm hadn’t been home to animals for nearly two decades, but the cattle grid served as a makeshift security measure – the rumble of tyres across its steel bars could be heard from within the farmhouse, giving its occupants ample time to see who was arriving.

  He checked for oncoming traffic before accelerating into the road from habit rather than necessity. He didn’t expect to see anyone – it was the dead of night, after all, and the only people who used the road were the residents of the farmhouse and tenants from a couple of cottages further along.

  The high banks and hedgerows either side of the lane sheltered him from the worst of the wind that tried to batter the motorcycle, but did little to protect him from the fresh onslaught of rain that now streaked across the fields.

  On any other night, he’d have resisted the urge to be out riding.

  The phone call had put paid to that.

  He growled under his breath, and leaned the bike into the first bend.

  A cold chill crawled over his shoulders as fear began to overcome his anger.

  It wasn’t meant to be like this.

  Everything was out of control.

  The phone conversation had begun with accusations, and deteriorated from there.

  He had paced while he spoke, gesticulating with one hand as he tried to placate the person on the other end of the call.

  It was too dangerous. They had to stop.

  It couldn’t continue – not anymore.

  The caller was insistent; there was too much at stake, too many promises made.

  He slowed the motorbike as he approached a T-junction, checked his mirrors, and took a moment to roll his shoulders and crick his neck.

  Tension clutched at his limbs, and he briefly closed his eyes. A wave of nausea seized him, cramping his stomach.

  He reached up and flipped the visor open, gulping in the fresh air, fighting the dizziness that clawed at the periphery of his vision.

  Rain pecked at his face, and he savoured the cold water that helped to soothe his burning cheeks.

  He had berated the caller for making the promises in the first place. That hadn’t been the arrangement.

  They had always known they were on borrowed time, and he wasn’t prepared to take the risk.

  Not now. He’d already lost so much.

  He took a deep breath, and tried to refocus, clenching his gloved hands to try and wring the tension from them. He reached up and replaced the visor, the Perspex muting the soft undertones of damp earth and ozone, cocooning him from reality.

  There was only one person he could speak to who would know what to do.

  He wrapped his fingers around the handlebars once more.

  He swivelled his head to check for oncoming traffic, and wasn’t surprised when the lane stayed deserted.

  Only a fool would be out on a night like this.

  Surface water glistened in the light from the headlamp, and he took advantage of the fact that he was the only one on the road and swerved between the deep puddles, using the width of the lane to manoeuvre.

  His heart raced as if he’d been running, and he wondered if he had made the right choice. There was no turning back now – when he had made the decision, it had been an automatic knee-jerk reaction. He had been pushed too far, too fast.

  What he had first viewed as a bit of a laugh and then a challenge had instead turned into something he had no control over. There were too many others involved now.

  The road dipped and curved as the terrain levelled out. A familiar sign glowed in the headlight beam to his left, and he began to slow the machine using the gears rather than risk applying the brakes too hard.

  The main road was deserted, and as he approached the junction a flash of movement between the trees beyond his position caught his eye. A moment later, a Eurostar train flashed by, its pantograph sending bright bolts of electricity through the air as it powered its way towards the coast and onwards to Paris.

  A dull sensation clawed at Jamie’s chest.

  He would give anything to be out of the country again right now.

  Resigned, he turned onto the A20 and steered the bike in the direction of Maidstone.

  As the gradient began to rise, he lined up to take the corner; it was easy – he’d been riding the route since he had left school and got his licence. His body and the machine moved as one, leaning into the curve as he accelerated to control the turn.

  His brain registered the dark shape that loomed in front of him a fraction too late.

  Desperate, he pushed the left-hand handlebar away from him in an attempt to swerve, his gut twisting as he realised his mistake.

  He cried out, his voice muffled within the confines of the helmet as the shape collided with him.

  The handlebars were torn from his grip, and then he was airborne, limp as a rag doll and unable to comprehend what had gone wrong.

  The night sky spiralled above him and in the distance, he heard the sickening scrape of metal as his motorbike skidded along the road to a halt.

  He screamed as his knees found the asphalt first, the crack of bones inevitable when his body tumbled to the ground.

  A moment later, the back of his helmet smacked against the unforgiving hard surface, and darkness claimed him.

  Two

  Now

  * * *

  DI Kay Hunter elbowed her way through the door to the incident room of Maidstone police station and bit back a sigh of relief as PC Debbie West reached out for the pile of folders she’d been trying to balance under her arm.

  ‘You shouldn’t be carrying these, they weigh a ton,’ she scolded. ‘You’re supposed to be on light duties for at least another eight weeks.’

  ‘Thanks, Debs.’ She followed the uniformed officer as she weaved between desks and headed towards the office in the corner of the incident room. ‘I thought I’d be okay with those, to be honest. Actually, could you put them on my usual desk?’

  Debbie
glanced over her shoulder and smiled as she altered course. ‘Still not going to use your office?’

  Kay grimaced. ‘Seems disrespectful, to be honest. I keep thinking Sharp’s going to walk through the door any minute and kick me out.’

  Debbie dropped the folders onto the desk and waited until Kay sat down. ‘Any news?’

  ‘No, but you know as well as I do that Professional Standards investigations are always hush-hush. I guess we won’t know the outcome until he does.’

  ‘I still say it’s unfair.’

  ‘Yeah, me too, Debs.’

  Kay waited until the uniformed officer had wandered back to her own desk, then contemplated the pile of documents strewn in front of her and resisted the urge to groan.

  Her injuries at the hands of one of the most diabolical people smugglers the country had ever witnessed had taken longer than anticipated to heal, despite hours of physiotherapy and enforced rest.

  The nightmares returned on a regular basis, but she and her other half, Adam, had elected to keep that news to themselves. She was determined that Jozef Demiri wouldn’t rule her life after his death – not after what he’d put her and other women through when he was alive.

  She’d finally returned to work the previous week, having convinced the occupational health therapist that she was likely to commit a serious crime herself if she had to spend another month cooped up at home.

  A compromise had been struck, and she was now relegated to what the police service referred to as “light duties”, but which meant she was deskbound for the foreseeable future.

  In addition, DCI Angus Larch had stated outright upon her return to work that he expected her to follow orders, and reminded her that her promotion to DI was a probationary one.

  Her role to date had resulted in nothing more than a paper-pushing exercise, and she was becoming restless, as well as having a sneaking suspicion that the next few weeks would test her diplomacy skills and patience to the limit.

  As it was, she’d spent most of the morning in a training session at headquarters over on Sutton Road, only to be whisked into a management briefing after lunch, and was relieved to return to the incident room at Maidstone police station.

  She glanced up as a large mug of tea and a hefty chunk of carrot cake was shoved in front of her, and smiled.

  ‘Thanks, Carys.’

  ‘How’re you feeling?’

  ‘Okay. D’you want to round everyone up and we’ll do the afternoon briefing?’

  ‘Sure.’

  Kay took a sip of tea and watched as the young detective constable made her way through the incident room, laughing and joking with her colleagues as she passed on the message.

  She moved with a determined grace that reflected her ambition to work her way up through the ranks, and as she pushed a strand of black hair behind her ear, Kay relaxed.

  The woman’s confidence had taken a hit over the winter months after a detective sergeant she’d held in high regard had been found to be involved in a corrupt scheme against DI Devon Sharp and his team, and who was now languishing in an open prison for his role.

  It seemed that Carys was starting to put the experience behind her.

  The events of the past year had exposed the nefarious activities of a senior officer, DCI Simon Harrison, whose actions had directly impacted Kay and almost resulted in her death.

  The personnel at the county police station would take time to recover from the treachery, she was sure, but the fact that Carys seemed to be healing gave her strength.

  Kay shivered and buttoned her jacket, trying to ignore the screech of an electric drill from the corridor beyond.

  The police station’s temperamental heating system had finally shuddered to a halt three days before she’d returned to work, and a ramshackle team of electricians was still trying to pinpoint the location of the fault in the reverse-cycle air conditioning and fix it before the inhabitants of the building froze to death.

  In his usual brusque manner, DC Ian Barnes had corralled the team into buying a set of electric heaters to ward off the cold, but they had little effect in the large space of the incident room.

  She hated to think what the electricity bill would look like at the end of the month.

  As Kay signalled to the team to join her at the front of the room for the morning briefing, Barnes dragged his chair over to where she stood and sat down with a loud sigh.

  ‘You’d think they’d have sorted it out by now,’ he said. ‘What’s it been? Five – no, six days? At this rate, we’re going to need earplugs, or risk being left deaf by the time they’ve managed to fix it.’

  ‘I can’t hear them over an old detective moaning about it,’ said Gavin Piper as he perched on the edge of a desk.

  Kay laughed as Barnes scrunched up a sheet of paper and aimed it at the younger DC’s head. ‘All right, enough. Let’s get started, shall we?’

  ‘Sarge – sorry, Inspector,’ said Gavin.

  She waved her hand at him. ‘You know the rules – it’s “Kay” around here, unless we’re outside.’

  He grinned, and Kay noted his summer tan had finally had the decency to fade. ‘Still can’t get used to it.’

  ‘What’s the short name for “Inspector”, anyway?’ said Barnes, scratching his chin. ‘“Insp?” “Spector?”’

  ‘Stop it,’ said Kay, and wagged her finger at him. She ignored the quirk that began at the side of his mouth, and turned her attention back to Gavin. ‘Right – what’s happening with that break-in over at Aylesford? Got pretty nasty, didn’t it?’

  ‘Yes – a retired couple were up late watching television when the glass in the kitchen door was broken and an intruder got in. Threatened to burn their pet dog over the gas hob if they didn’t hand over all their valuables. I’m currently waiting on footage from cameras set up at the end of their driveway by a security company over near Sevenoaks,’ said the young DC, and raked his fingers through his spiky blond hair. ‘The homeowner had some sort of top of the range system installed three months ago and doesn’t have access to the files himself. The contact name I was given was supposed to get it to me by Friday, but apparently someone was off sick. If I don’t see anything by five o’clock today, I’ll give them another call.’

  ‘Do that,’ said Kay, ‘and if you need me to weigh in, just ask.’

  ‘Will do, thanks.’

  ‘Is the dog okay?’ said Debbie.

  ‘Yes, fine. Seemed it was simply used as a threat, nothing else.’

  Kay smiled. She had been tempted to ask the same question, and was glad she wasn’t the only one wondering about the dog’s fate.

  ‘Carys – what’s the latest on the spate of break-ins at the industrial estate in Parkwood?’

  ‘We’ve got a teenager by the name of Calvin Westford in custody downstairs. First time offender, and scared out of his wits – sounds like he joined in as a dare, and didn’t realise his mates were serious about breaking and entering the premises. He’s currently with PC Norris providing a list of his accomplices.’

  A murmur of congratulations filled the room.

  ‘Nice work, well done.’ Kay tossed the whiteboard eraser to Carys, who caught it with ease and made her way to the front of the room before wiping the case from the board.

  She returned the eraser to Kay, a smile on her face. ‘Thanks, guv.’

  Kay watched her return to her chair, Gavin providing a high five to his colleague as she sauntered past, and then turned to the folders she’d brought to the front of the room.

  ‘Okay, tasks for tomorrow – Barnes, this one’s for you. Suspected arson attack over at that little Indian takeaway on the Tonbridge Road last night. The fire brigade asked us to provide support, so can you follow up with them in the morning?’

  ‘Will do.’

  He rose from his seat to take the folder from her, and then began to flick through the pages.

  Half an hour later, Kay had set tasks for each of her team and dismissed them for the afternoon. />
  She returned to her desk and ignored the ache in her forearm, flexing her fingers to ease a muscle spasm as she wiggled her mouse to wake up her computer.

  As the team began to filter out of the room at the end of the afternoon’s shift, Kay flopped back into her seat with a sigh and surveyed the reports in the tray.

  ‘If this is what being a detective inspector is like, they can keep it,’ she muttered. She looked up as Gavin approached her desk. ‘Everything okay?’

  ‘Yes,’ he said, and shifted his weight from foot to foot. He glanced over his shoulder. ‘I just wondered if you’d spoken to DI Sharp recently, and whether there was any news?’

  She shook her head. ‘Nothing to report yet.’

  She didn’t mention that she hadn’t spoken to their DI for over six weeks, and a wave of guilt washed over her when she realised she’d been so busy concentrating on getting through her health assessments to get back to work that she hadn’t given a thought to Sharp’s own predicament.

  Gavin cleared his throat. ‘Okay. Well – I’ll see you tomorrow, Kay.’

  She forced a smile. ‘Will do.’

  She rested her chin in her hand as she watched him wind his way between the desks and out through the door of the incident room, his voice carrying over those of Carys and Barnes as the three of them hurried along the corridor towards the exit.

  She tossed the folder she was holding into the tray, and then grabbed her bag from under her desk and checked her watch.

  Maybe it was time to catch up with Detective Inspector Devon Sharp, after all.

  Three

  ‘A beard?’

  ‘You don’t like it?’

  ‘Well, it’s… different.’

  Kay managed to stop gaping and made her way over the threshold of DI Devon Sharp’s house before he closed the door and waved her towards the kitchen.

  Rebecca, Sharp’s wife, worked at a local childcare centre and given the sound of rock music from the back of the house, was still at work. The way the childcare centre worked, the management staff took turns either working an early morning or a late afternoon to be present when children were dropped off or collected, in case parents wanted to speak to someone.