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up and opened it and there inside were Jemima's purse, her driving licence, her address book, and her mobile phone. There were other bits and bobs as well, but these didn't matter as much as the fact that Jemima had died in Stoke Newington where she'd no doubt had her handbag with her, and here it was now in Putney, as large as the life she no longer possessed.

There was no question in Bella's mind what she had to do about this sudden discovery.

She was headed for the front door with the handbag in her grasp when the front gate opened behind her and she turned, expecting to see Yolanda's stubborn return. But it was Paolo di Fazio coming through, and when his eyes lit on the handbag that Bella was carrying, she saw from his expression that, like her, he knew exactly what it was.

BY RETURNING TO St. Thomas' Hospital and remaining there for most of the previous night to await word on Yukio Matsumoto's condition, Isabelle had managed to put off the meeting with AC Hillier. Since he'd instructed her to deliver herself to his office upon her return to the Yard, she'd decided merely not to return to the Yard until long after the assistant commissioner had vacated Tower Block for the night. This would give her time to sort through what had happened in order to be able to speak clearly about it.

That plan had worked. It had also allowed her to be first in line to know what was going on with the violinist's condition. This was simple enough: He remained in a coma throughout the night. He was not out of danger, but the coma was artificial, induced to allow the brain time to recover. Had she been given suzerainty in this situation, Yukio Matsumoto would have been brought round and then thoroughly questioned once he'd emerged from the operating theatre. As it was, the most she was able to manage was a police guard in the vicinity of intensive care to make certain the man didn't suddenly regain consciousness on his own, realise the depth of the trouble he was in, and do a runner. It was, she knew, a laughable possibility. He was in no condition to go anywhere. But appropriate procedure had to be followed, and she was going to follow appropriate procedure.

She believed she had done so from the first. Yukio Matsumoto was a suspect; his own brother had identified him from an e-fit in the newspaper. It was not down to her that the man had panicked and had tried to outrun the police. Besides that, as things turned out, he was in possession of what had to be the murder weapon, and when his clothing and his shoes had undergone analysis along with the weapon, there were going to be blood splatters somewhere upon them - no matter how minute and no matter how he'd tried to clean them - and those blood spatters would belong to Jemima Hastings.

The only problem was that this information could not be passed on to the press. It could not come out until a trial. And that was a problem indeed because the moment the word got out that a member of London's foreign citizenry had been hit by a vehicle while running from the coppers - which hadn't taken long - the press had gathered like the wolf pack they were, on the scent of a story that smacked of police incompetence. They were baying to bring down the responsible party, and the job of the Met was to position itself to handle things when the wolves closed in for the kill.

Which, naturally, was one of two reasons that Hillier had wanted to see her: to determine what the Met's position was going to be. The other reason, she knew, was to assess if or how badly she'd cocked things up. Should he decide blame lay with her, she was finished, the opportunity for promotion gone.

The broadsheets that morning had taken a wait-and-see attitude, reporting the bare facts.

The tabloids, on the other hand, were doing their usual. Isabelle had watched BBC1 as she'd made her preparations for the day, and the morning talking heads did their typical bit with both the broadsheets and the tabloids, holding them up for the delectation of their viewers and commenting upon the stories featured. Thus in advance of heading to the Yard, she knew that gallons of newsprint were being devoted to the "Copper Chase

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