money convincing local middlemen he was genuine, all the time waiting for the big fish to take the bait. The big fish being a villain named Kenny Fallon, who just happened to own fifty per cent of Redmondâs business.
Depending on how you viewed him, Fallon was either a visionary property developer, entrepreneur and investor with a knack of always being in phase with the market, or a lowlife scum who funded his legitimate businesses with a web of illegal activities ranging from protection rackets to scams to drugs. Every city had a Kenny Fallon, a piece of dirt that somehow managed to climb from the gutter and establish itself as the kingpin. The skill they all shared was to stay one step removed from the dodgy activities and hold the shit they dealt with at armâs length. Fallon achieved that through a mixture of shrewd decision-making and creative accounting. So far neither the police nor HMRC had managed to make the necessary connections to trap him.
âWeâll get him,â Kemp said, almost as if heâd read Rileyâs mind. âThe delivery is due soon. A big one, according to my contact. Heâll text me, we swoop, Fallon goes down. Fairytale ending.â
âCan we trust your contact though? When push comes to shove will he come good?â
âHe wants out, doesnât he? He either helps us â¦â Kemp scuffed his foot on the ground, kicking a small stone out through the railings. The stone hit the mud, sending little splatters of liquid out around it. âOr heâs a dead man.â
An hour later and the owner of the building company turned up at Lester Close. Peter Serling drove an immaculate bright red Audi TT with plastic covers on the seats, the material crackling as he eased his bulky frame out of the vehicle to speak to Savage. If the car was an unusual choice of transport for a builder, the manâs attire wasnât; he wore a lumberjack shirt, a dusty fleece, jeans and tan boots. Specks of sawdust clung to scraggy brown hair and white paint flecks on the back of his hands contrasted with a healthy tan. Serling apologised for not arriving sooner, explaining heâd been up on a roof without his phone.
âSusie from the office had to drive round and get me. Right state she were in. Canât say I blame her, if what she told me is true. I nearly fell off the roof when she shouted the news up. Iâm hoping she got the wrong end of the stick and thereâs another explanation.â
Savage said there wasnât and asked about the mix-up. Had his men got the wrong address?
âNo, love.â Serling looked over to the house where two CSIs were carrying a large box of equipment round to the rear. âI was here last week speaking to Mr Evershed. Went into the back garden and he explained exactly what he wanted doing. Heâd been let down by another builder, apparently, and needed some groundwork done quick in preparation for a conservatory. The company were coming to erect it later this week and heâd told them the patio would be cleared and the area readied in time.â
âMr Evershed denies that,â Savage said. âHe says he never asked you to do any work. In fact he denies even knowing you.â
âWell, he would, wouldnât he? Considering what my lads have found.â
âAnd youâre positive there couldnât have been some mistake?â
âYes.â Serling closed his eyes and kept them shut. âThereâs a patio round the back. Stretches the width of the plot. Kitchen doorâs pale green with a glass panel, in need of a paint. I noticed some rising damp to the right of the kitchen window, probably caused by the downpipe from the guttering not discharging into the drain properly. I asked Mr Evershed if he wanted me to fix it. He said ânoâ, he was quite capable of doing that himself. He said he would have lifted the patio slabs, but at his age he needed to start to take it