^ Roote smiling at him from a bench, his carefully suppressed irritation had broken through and before he had time to think rationally he was deep into loom and snarl. Time to rethink his role. He made himself relax, sat down on the bench, leaned back, winced, and said, 'OK, Mr Roote. Let's start again. Would you mind telling me what you're doing here?' 'Lunch break,' said Roote. He held up a brown paper bag and emptied its contents on to the newspaper. 'Baguette, salad with mayo, low fat. Apple, Granny Smith. Bottle of water, tap.' That figured. He didn't look like a man on a high-energy diet. He was thin just this side of emaciation, a condition exacerbated by his black slacks and T-shirt. His face was white as a piece of honed driftwood and his blond hair was cut so short he might as well have been bald. 'Mr Roote,' said Pascoe carefully, 'you live and work in Sheffield which means that even with a very generous lunch break and a very fast car, this would seem an eccentric choice of luncheon venue. Also this is the third, no I think it's the fourth time I have spotted you in my vicinity over the past week.' The first time had been a glimpse in the street as he drove home from Mid-Yorkshire Police HQ early one evening. Then a couple of nights later as he and Ellie rose to leave a cinema, he'd noticed Roote sitting half a dozen rows further back. And the previous Sunday as he took his daughter, Rosie, for a stroll in Charter Park to feed the swans, he was sure he'd spotted the black-clad figure standing on the edge of the unused bandstand. That's when he'd made a note to ring Sheffield, but he'd been too busy to do it on Monday and by Tuesday it had seemed too trivial to make a fuss over. But now on Wednesday like a black bird of ill omen, here was the man once more, this time too close for mere coincidence. 'Oh gosh, yes, I see. In fact I've noticed you a couple of times too, and when I saw you coming out of the Staff Club just now, I thought, Good job you're not paranoiac, Franny boy, else you might think Chief Inspector Pascoe is stalking you.' This was a reversal to take the breath away. Also a warning to proceed with great care. He said, 'So, coincidence for both of us. Difference is, of course, I live and work here.' The too,' said Roote. 'Don't mind if I start, do you? Only get an hour.' He bit deep into the baguette. His teeth were perfectly, almost artistically, regular and had the kind of brilliant whiteness which you expected to see reflecting the flashbulbs at a Hollywood opening. Prison service dentistry must have come on apace in the past few years. 'You live and work here?' said Pascoe. 'Since when?' Roote chewed and swallowed. 'Couple of weeks,' he said. 'And why?' Roote smiled. The teeth again. He'd been a very beautiful boy. 'Well, I suppose it's really down to you, Mr Pascoe. Yes, you could say you're the reason I came back.' An admission? Even a confession? No, not with Franny Roote, the great controller. Even when you changed the script in midscene, you still felt he was still in charge of direction. 'What's that mean?' asked Pascoe. 'Well, you know, after that little misunderstanding in Sheffield, I lost my job at the hospital. No, please, don't think I'm blaming you, Mr Pascoe. You were only doing your job, and it was my own choice to slit my wrists. But the hospital people seemed to think it showed I was sick, and of course, sick people are the last people you want in a hospital. Unless they're on their backs, of course. So soon as I was discharged, I was ... discharged.' 'I'm sorry,' said Pascoe. 'No, please, like I say, not your responsibility. In any case, I could have fought it, the staff association were ready to take up the cudgels and all my friends were very supportive. Yes, I'm sure a tribunal would have found in my favour. But it felt like time to move on. I didn't get religion inside, Mr Pascoe, not in the formal sense, but I certainly came to see that there is a time for all things under the sun and a man is foolish to ignore the signs. So don't worry yourself.' He's offering me absolution! thought Pascoe. One moment I'm snarling and looming, next I'm on my knees being absolved! He said, 'That still doesn't explain ...'