All the Lonely People
turned up yet?”
    â€œCorrect.”
    â€œSignificant, don’t you think?”
    â€œYou know me, Harry, I’m not paid to think.” The good-humoured expression was as effective a mask as any.
    â€œAny idea where the man is?”
    â€œYour guess is as good as mine. All I know is that we’d like to talk with him when he does show up. Result is, two of us have been sent to keep an eye on this place. My mate’s in the car down the road. But you’ve no business here, you’re well aware of that.”
    Harry said grimly, “I’d dearly love to speak to Coghlan myself.”
    â€œForget it. This is a murder inquiry, Harry, not some piddling burglary. You’re personally involved. Do yourself a favour and keep out of it.”
    Harry fished for more information, but landed nothing. Moulden might not have been told much about the case by his superior officers and in any event was too good a policeman to let anything slip.
    On his way back to the city centre, Harry asked himself what the journey had achieved. Coghlan’s continuing absence was hard to understand. Had he done a flit? The first signs were that Skinner was right in implying that Liz’s death had not been a straightforward case of a mugging or rape that had gone murderously wrong. More than ever, Harry wanted to find out for himself exactly what had happened to her. But how could he do that?
    Tonight of all nights he couldn’t go to the Dock Brief. Too many people who knew him frequented the place and he wasn’t in the mood for repeated condolences. Instead he chose the Lear, a free house in Lime Street which took its name not from the Shakespearean king but from the Victorian rhymester who under Lord Derby’s patronage had written many of his poems over at Knowsley Hall. Pictures of luminous-nosed Dongs and toeless Pobbles decorated the walls, strange companions for the seamen and tarts who packed the bar.
    Harry sat at a table by himself for hours, drinking slowly and turning the day’s dreadful news over and over in his mind. Quite apart from the traumatic news of Liz’s death itself, the way in which Jim, and especially Maggie, had reacted to the crime was somehow unsettling. And where was Coghlan? Was the nagging thought that the man might have murdered Liz prompted by logic, loathing or merely his own reluctance to accept that she might have met her end at the hands of a teenager doped out of his senses by smack?
    In the corner of the snug, a couple of prostitutes were conducting a drunken dispute about a customer beneath a framed print which depicted the Owl and the Pussycat in their beautiful pea-green boat. And as the evening wore on and alcohol, fatigue and consciousness of what he had lost fuzzed his mind, the murder of Liz began to seem more ludicrous by far than a simple piece of nonsense verse.

Chapter Nine
    At eight the next morning, the alarm’s buzz woke him. The coldness of the day made him shiver; his restlessness during the night had thrown the duvet onto the floor. Already the memory of staggering home from the Lear was as hazy as a scene observed through a smeared windowpane. He had an idea that he’d taken the phone off the hook and ignored a tapping at the door accompanied by a voice that sounded like Brenda Rixton’s asking if he was all right.
    Nothing could be seen when he pulled the bedroom curtains apart. Fog had rolled over the Mersey, covering the water with its grey quilt. No hint of human life anywhere outside; he might have been marooned on an urban island.
    He was drinking black coffee when the doorbell rang. Brenda again? No: when he put his eye to the spyhole, the sad face of Chief Inspector Skinner gazed back at him. It was a gut-wrenching repeat of the start to the previous day and for a moment he thought that he must still be dreaming. When he opened the door, he saw Macbeth was there as well.
    â€œSorry to disturb you again, Mr.

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