glancing at them and then across at Daniel.
âCome on,â he said with a touch of impatience. âIf it is the right house, the last thing we want is for you to be recognized. You look pretty boyish already with your hair cut short like that, we might as well go the whole hog.â
She frowned. âThe whole . . . ?â
âHog. Complete the look. Finish the job.â
Dipping into the bag once more, he produced a navy-blue boiler suit and a bag containing a number of embroidered patches. Getting out of the car, he stepped into the overalls, zipped them up and then slid back behind the wheel.
Katya had put the hoodie on, its size swamping her slim figure, and was sifting through the patches.
âWhat are all these?â
âThese,â Daniel said, lifting them from her grasp, âare my passports to all sorts of places.â
He could see that she still didnât understand and picked out one of the patches, fixing it with its Velcro pad to the breast pocket of the overalls. Then, putting on a cockney accent, he said cheerfully, âGood afternoon, love. Come to look at your boiler. Doing a spot check on carbon-monoxide emissions. Wonât take a minute and wonât cost you anything. You donât get much for free these days, do you?â
Changing the patch for another and his accent for a Scouse one, he said, âAfternoon, sir. Telephone engineer. Had reports of an intermittent fault on the line. Have you had any trouble? No? Well, Iâll just take a quick look while Iâm here, shall I?
âThatâs a good one because you can lift a few numbers from the caller display if they donât watch too closely,â he added. âSee whoâs been ringing them.â
Katya was frowning again. âYouâve done this before.â
âOnce or twice.â
âI donât understand. Who are you?â
âIâm probably your only hope of getting your sister back, if you really wonât tell the police,â Daniel said, sidestepping the question. âWhy wonât you? What are you so afraid of?â
Katya stared at her hands, and after looking at her troubled profile for a long moment, Daniel sighed.
âAll right. Put the cap and shades on and letâs get going. And when we get there, you stay in the car, dâyou hear me? Whatever happens. This is just a fact-finding exercise, so donât get any ideas about launching a one-woman rescue mission, whatever or who ever you might see, OK?â
Katya nodded, her eyes still downcast, but Daniel wasnât satisfied. She had a habit of avoiding his gaze when she was lying.
âKatya, look at me and promise.â
Her head came up. âAll right! I promise,â she said, her manner so much that of a sulky teenager that he was reminded she was only fifteen.
Daniel made another sortie into the holdall and came up with a grey beanie and a small plastic case from which he took two golden-coloured rings. Moments later, with the aid of the rear-view mirror, he wore one ring in his ear and the other apparently through the left side of his upper lip.
Katyaâs eyes were growing rounder by the minute. âIs that . . . ?â
âThe earring is real; the otherâs fake, and bloody uncomfortable, too, but facial piercings are great. People canât take their eyes off them â itâs all they tend to remember.â
He pushed his hair back off his face and pulled the beanie on low over his eyes, assuming a âwhateverâ attitude. Putting a stick of chewing gum in his mouth, he turned to Kat.
âWhat are you staring at?â he demanded, and she shook her head in disbelief.
âI wouldnât know you!â
âWell, thatâs the general idea,â he said with a broad wink. âRight, weâre ready to go.â
Swinging the old Mercedes between the gates of Moorside House, Daniel felt a quickening of awareness that was
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