He goes to the chair and he sits and waits. His hands flow over and over one another in their endless washing motions. He hugs the briefcase tightly to his chest. Like a baby.
He licks his lips.
And he waits.
The phone rings.
“Gonna answer it?” Carnegie asks.
“No,” Abbie says.
“Answer it,” says Carnegie.
She looks up at him. The phone rings. She wants to say
She picks it up and answers it. “Special—” she nearly says
“He’s here,” the desk sergeant says.
“I’ll be right down,” she says.
There’s a loud, definite click as the desk sergeant puts down the phone. He feels Dermot’s eyes on him and looks his way. “They’re coming down for you,” he says, managing, just about, not to grit his teeth.
Dermot just smiles, a mild, milky smile, and the desk sergeant looks away.
Dermot knows they hate him, but he doesn’t care. In fact, he rather likes it.
Because they need him. He knows they need him and they know they need him too.
They have to give him what he wants.
No-one in the reception area is looking at him. The lift door chimes and opens. A woman approaches. Girl, really. Trouser suit. Blonde hair. Pretty, rather. If she was his type… but she isn’t. Pity really.
But then, if she was his type, this wouldn’t be all the sweeter. Because it’s all the sweeter for the power, and what he can make them do.
She comes over to Dermot. She smiles and tries to look civil, but Dermot notices she doesn’t offer to shake hands. There are limits even for the people in Special Projects.
“Sir?”
He nods. He bets it hurt her to call him that.
“Detective Constable Stone. If you’ll just come with me?”
Without waiting for a reply, she turns and walks away. The desk sergeant steals a glance at her small, taut behind, rolling beneath the clinging fabric of her trousers, then recoils, blushing, as Dermot catches his eye and smirks.
The desk sergeant’s face is red. His knuckles, of the fists clenched on the desktop, are white.
Dermot follows the girl into the lift. No-one else looks at him, her, at them. No-one else wants to admit they’re linked or connected in any way, shape or form.
But they are.
“Have you read my file?” he asks her as the lift ascends.
Abbie starts, nearly jumping, gets it under control. She’s stolen a couple of quick glances at him, but that’s all. She was hoping he’d stay quiet, stay silent, till she’d got him to the office. Hoped Carnegie would do all the talking with him. She’d just have to make the tea. Not get involved. Not be complicit. Tell herself she wasn’t responsible.
But he does. He has.
And they have to co-operate with him. Have to go softly-softly. Have to give him what he wants.
He’s looking at her, eyebrows raised, waiting politely for her answer. “Yes,” she says.
He nods. “Then you know all about me,” he says. It’s a statement, not a question, this time. His voice is wavery and weak, with a faint Irish accent. It goes with his pale face and bland features and colourless eyes. With his soft, smooth, hairless hands that have never known honest work.
“Yes,” she says. She doesn’t want to reply but she has to. “Yes, I know all about you.” She tries to keep her voice neutral but can’t, not quite. She wishes she could, especially when she sees the look on his face.