contact with criminals who have connections into the drug scene. What Iâm going to suggest to the CID is that they use the excuse of the âstolenâ car and the possibly pornographic photograph to exploit paragraph five of the Bail Act,â she went on.
I must have looked as blank as I felt, for she deigned to explain. âIf the suspectâs been arrested for one offense and the police have evidence of his implication in another, they can ask for what we call a lie-down. In other words, he remains in police custody for up to three days for the other matters to be investigated. Thatâll give us a bit of leeway, since the meter doesnât start running till the day after the initial hearing. That gives us Saturday, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Heâll appear in court again on Wednesday, by which time you might have made enough headway for me to be able to argue that he should be let out.â
âOh whoopee,â I said. âA schedule so tight Iâll be singing soprano and an eight-year-old too. Go for it, Ruth.â
I left Ruth to her wheeling and dealing with the CID just after half past four and drove into the city center. Chinatown was still lively, the late-night trade losing their shirts in the casinos and drunkenly scoffing Chinese meals after the clubs had closed. Less than a mile away, in the gay village round Chorlton Street bus station, the only sign of life was a few rent boys and hookers, hanging around the early-morning street corners in a triumph of hope over experience. I cruised slowly along Canal Street, the blank windows of Mantoâs reflecting nothing but my Peugeot. I didnât even spot anyone sleeping rough till I turned down Minshull Street towards UMIST.
The street was still. I pulled up in an empty parking meter bay. There were only three other cars in the street, one of them Richardâs Beetle. Iâd have to come back in the morning and collect it before some officious traffic warden had it ticketed and clamped. At least its presence supported Richardâs story, if the police were inclined to check it out. I took my pocket Nikon out of my glove box, checked the date stamp was switched on and took a couple of shots of the Beetle as insurance.
Slowly, I walked round to Sackville Street, checking doorways and litter bins for the trade plates. I didnât hold out much hope. They were too good a prize for any passing criminal, never mind the guys who had stuck them on the coupé in the first place. As Iâd expected, the streets were clear. On the off chance, I walked round into the little square of garden in Sackville Street and searched along the wall and in the bushes, being careful to avoid touching the unpleasant crop of used condoms. No joy. Stumbling with exhaustion, I walked back to my car and drove home. The prospect of having to take care of Davy weighed heavily on me, and I desperately wanted to crack on and make some progress towards clearing Richard. But the sensible part of me knew there was nothing I could do in the middle of the night. And if I didnât get some sleep soon, I wouldnât be fit to do what had to be done come daylight.
I set my alarm for half past eight, switched off the phones and
turned down the volume on the answering machine. Unfortunately, I couldnât do the same thing with my brain. I tossed and turned, my head full of worries that wouldnât lie down and leave me in peace. I prayed Ruthâs stratagem would work. While he was still in police custody, Richard was fairly safe. But as soon as he was charged and remanded to prison, the odds would turn against him. No matter how much the police tried to keep the lid on this business, it wouldnât take long in the leaky sieve of prison before the wrong people learned what he was in for. And if the drugs belonged to one of the Manchester gangs, some warlord somewhere would decide that Richard needed to be punished in ways the law has long