Itโs Ryanโs fifth day at work, Friday, and five minutes ago everything changed. He arrived at the station and this man, thisย Leo, told him he wasnโt working on response today. He walked Ryan into the large meeting room at the back of the station, more of a boardroom, and Ryan had watched curiously as he locked the door behind them.
Leo is maybe in his late forties, slim but jowly, his hairline receding. He speaks with a jaded kind of brevity, as though heโs never not talking to idiots. Similar to Bradford, but not at Ryanโs expense. Not yet, anyway.
Unlike Bradford, whose reputation Ryan now knows to be that of an embittered junior, Leoโs generally regarded as a crazy genius. Much worse, in many ways, but much more interesting, too.
They have just been joined by Jamie, who is maybe thirty. These men are not only in plain clothes but in actual scruffs: Jamie is in jogging bottoms, a stained T-shirt and a black baseball cap. Leo looks like he is about to go and coach a football team.
Ryan is feeling fairly uneasy at this point, sitting opposite these men, a giant table between them. โSorry โ what is this โฆ?โ he starts to ask.
โWeโll get on to that,โ Leo says. He has a cockney accent, a signet ring on the little finger of his left hand which clinks against the wooden table.
โWhere did you say youโre from, Ryan?โ
โManchester โฆโ Ryan says, wondering if heโs about to get sacked. โCan I just ask โโ
Next to him, Jamie takes his baseball cap off and rubs at his hair. He puts the cap on the table, very deliberately, it seems to Ryan, over the recording equipment. Ryanโs eyes track to it. โNine nine nine response is pretty boring, isnโt it?โ Leo asks.
โFor sure.โ
โLook. How do you fancy doing something more interesting? We can call it research.โ
โResearch?โ
โWe need information about an organized-crime gang operating around Liverpool.โ