their career where appearance counted for little compared to reputation.
The newcomer flipped open a leather wallet to reveal her warrant card.
‘“Priya” to my friends, “Detective Superintendent Nehwal” to you. I appreciate you’ve been on all night, PC Clayburn, but I’d like a quick word if poss … without the attitude.’
‘Certainly, ma’am. If …’ Lucy was briefly tongue-tied. She didn’t know DSU Priya Nehwal personally, but she certainly knew about her. Everyone knew about her. ‘If … if I can just finish getting dressed …?’
Nehwal glanced at her watch, as if this itself was an imposition. ‘I’ll wait outside.’
Priya Nehwal was a thirty-year veteran and ace thief-taker, a status for which she’d been decorated many times. She was now one of the most senior investigators in Greater Manchester’s Serious Crimes Division, having solved many more high-level offences – like murder, rape, robbery and arson – than anyone else currently serving. She was something of a poster-child for the women entering the job, especially Asian women.
Lucy hurried to finish getting dressed, and left the building through its side personnel-door, rucksack on her back, crimson motorcycle helmet tucked under one arm. The aptly named Robber’s Row wasn’t just a police station but the N Division’s administrative HQ, and as such a massive multi-floored redbrick monstrosity of a building, which occupied an enormous plot of land running alongside Tarwood Lane, the main thoroughfare into Crowley from Salford. It shared a forecourt with the local fire station, though when Lucy walked out there, nobody was waiting for her. She checked in the personnel car park at the rear of the nick, and even around the garages and in the vehicle pound, but again it was no dice. She finally found Nehwal some ten minutes later, in the small park on the other side of Tarwood Lane, where she’d unwrapped a plastic bag and was breaking up a squishy cheese-barm, fragments of which she scattered for the ducks clustered at the pond’s edge.
She didn’t bother looking round when Lucy approached.
‘Ma’am?’ Lucy finally said, feeling strangely self-conscious.
At a slim five foot eight, physically fit, with long black hair and handsome, feline looks as yet unlined by her years of police service, Lucy was aware that she cut quite a dash, especially when kitted out in the leathers she wore to ride her gleaming red Ducati Monster M900. But the presence of a living legend like Priya Nehwal, however much a ragamuffin she was in appearance, made Lucy feel gawky and awkward. It didn’t help, of course, that Nehwal had blazed a trail for female detectives though many decades of impressive work, and that Lucy had completely ruined her own CID chances in the very first week.
‘Heard you had a good lock-up last night?’ Nehwal said.
Lucy shrugged. ‘Common sense bobbying, ma’am.’
‘And now you’re the woman of the moment.’
‘I wouldn’t go that far, ma’am.’
Nehwal brushed crumbs from her hands and scrunched the plastic wrapper into her coat pocket. ‘Neither would I … but when you’re back on Division you’ve got to talk the talk.’
She pulled on a pair of fingerless woollen gloves. It was October 15 th , and though it had been a mild month so far, this particular morning was fresh to the point of chilliness.
‘Is this something important, ma’am?’ Lucy asked. ‘Only I’ve just finished a double-length shift …’
‘Ready for bed, are you?’
‘Well … the armchair. No point going to bed when I’m not actually on nights, but a couple of hours can’t hurt.’
‘Yes, well … sorry to rain on your parade, PC Clayburn, but sleep may not come so easily after this. Even so, it’ll be your call.’ Nehwal produced a morning paper, unrolled it and offered it to her. ‘What do you think?’
Lucy gazed at the front page, which in a massive banner-headline, read:
JILL THE RIPPER!
Underneath