Ryan is loitering before the emergency briefing led by the sergeant, Joanne Zamo.
Leo, Jamie and Ryan are standing along the back wall of the briefing room. โOne for you,โ Jamie says, right before Zamo starts speaking. โOCG is Organized-Crime Group.โ
โThanks,โ Ryan says. โI knew that.โ
โAll right,โ Zamo says. Sheโs in a trouser suit, flat black shoes, holding a coffee in her hand. Her weight is on one leg, and sheโs clearly thinking, staring at the floor but probably at nothing, her brow lowered. โSurveillance are feeding some stuff through to us now. Everybody ready?โ
The briefing room is ablaze with adrenalin in a way it isnโt usually. A copper whose name Ryan doesnโt know is erecting a board, pinning various items on to it. Two others are on the phone, talking more and more loudly.
โOkay,โ Zamo says. โSurveillance have told us that the OCG were targeting an empty house. Then they saw a BMW idling on the driveway next door, keys in the ignition, engine on. So they took it.โ She folds her lips in on themselves, dimples appearing either side of her mouth. โWhat
they didnโt know is it belonged to a new mother who was intending to go on a night-time drive to get her baby daughter to sleep. She secured her in the car seat, then left her there for just a few seconds while she dashed in to get her phone โฆโ
Something turns over in Ryanโs chest. He can see it all. The panic. The terror. The woman seeing the car begin to move. Rushing out after it. The
999 call โฆ
โAnd now itโs five hours post. The car hasnโt been sighted, but we have eyes on the port, where it was heading.โ
Ryan thinks of that baby, with criminals. Or on a ship, in international waters, in the back seat of a car, alone.
โWe have surveillance looking at ANPR for it, but we suspect they will have swapped the plates. Weโve put a stop on all ferries. Now letโs find baby Eve.โ
Leo throws Ryan a look he canโt read.
Itโs his job, now, Ryan assumes, to go and get the names off his corkboard, and theyโre going to dispatch more surveillance officers to watch all of them, to see if they can find the car, and the baby.
Ryan stares at the missing poster pinned to the board. He reaches a finger out to touch it. The paper feels soft and thin.
The baby is beautiful. Ryan has always wanted children. Two, a boy and a girl. He knows thatโs so passรฉ, but itโs always how heโs felt. Two kids and a woman who could make him laugh. Building his own family unit again, from the rubble of his upbringing. If those youโve left behind donโt stack up, create new people, in front of you.
Sheโs four months old. She has the most beautiful eyes, like a soulful little lion. And itโs his job to find her.
โAll right, Ryan,โ Leo says an hour later. โSorry for the delay. Been getting authorizations for more coverts.โ He sips his coffee.
Ryan really wants that drink. Heโs so tired. He worries that heโs beginning to prefer it, the station coffee, that he might start drinking from plastic cups at home.
โWhere will they take the baby?โ Leo asks Ryan. โIn your opinion.โ โThe easiest place. They wonโt care what happens to her. The baby.โ โRight โฆ so โ the port?โ
โThey will fulfil the order, whatever that is. Thatโs their priority. They might ditch the baby somewhere on the way. They wonโt take A roads or motorways because of ANPR. Theyโll go rural. Thatโs what my brother
would do, anyway,โ Ryan says, the words feeling like a betrayal to him. His older brother. He had always protected Ryan, sort of, but now look. โโThe
feds are always watching,โ he always used to say.โ
โYouโre an asset,โ Leo says. โBecause of the brother thing. You know?โ
Ryan shrugs, embarrassed now. โI mean โโ
โThereโs no need for modesty,โ Leo says. He rises from the chair. โMy point being: you know this stuffย andย yet youโre here. You grew up thereโ โ he holds his left hand out, far apart from his side โ โand you arrived here.โ
โThank you,โ Ryan says thickly. โI mean โฆ in some ways, Kelly taught me a lot. I guess the best criminals do.โ