Within a few minutes of meeting DI Peter – ‘call me Pete’ – Fraser, Thorne was convinced that the agent assigned by Silcox and Mullenger as his guide and liaison for the Spanish leg of the inquiry was probably not one of SOCA’s finest. ‘Welcome to the madhouse,’ Fraser said as they walked towards the airport car park. He grinned and lowered his head, peered at Thorne over wraparound sunglasses. ‘From what I’ve heard, you should slot in quite nicely.’ He was not much taller than Thorne, but looked a good deal fitter. His hair had the kind of blond streaks that Louise called ‘bird-shit highlights’, while the three-quarter-length shorts, beaded necklace and salmon-pink shirt made him look more like a small-time drug dealer than a big-time secret squirrel. Perhaps that was the idea, Thorne thought. He pictured his own, more conservative collection of shorts and polo shirts, bought a few days earlier with his warm-weather allowance of M&S vouchers.