12.06 A.M.

Doyle brought the Datsun to a halt and jumped out, heading towards the side entrance of Euston. Towards the two burly uniformed men who blocked the way.

'I've got to get inside,' Doyle said, reaching inside his jacket.

'No chance,' said the taller of the two constables. Doyle produced a small leather wallet and flipped it open.

'Counter Terrorist Unit,' he said sharply, pushing past the policeman, sprinting up the short ramp towards the side door.

There was only one word to describe what he saw inside the station itself.

Pandemonium.

'Jesus Christ,' Doyle murmured under his breath, walking slowly past the left luggage area.

There were still a couple of hundred people on the concourse, all hurrying towards the exits. Mingled with them were uniformed staff from the station itself, workers from the shops and cafes. A seething mass of humanity all attempting to get out of the building as quickly as possible.

Doyle saw men and women running from the platforms to join the throng.

The announcement to evacuate the station was still booming from the loudspeakers.

Doyle saw policemen moving about amidst the confusion. The bright yellow helmet of a fireman bobbed into view. Then another.

He heard dogs barking.

Sniffer dogs, he assumed.

The announcement from the Tannoy blurted on, voices were raised, there were shouts, the sound of thousands of feet on the concourse. The dogs.

Bedlam.

More people were pouring up from the subway, scrambling awkwardly up escalators which hadn't been switched off and were still programmed to move downwards.

It looked like some bizarre fairground ride, but the faces on it showed anything but joy.

Doyle walked briskly across the concourse, glancing around.

Hoping Neville's left the bomb in plain sight?

A uniformed BR man ran past him.

Where the fuck is it?

There were so many places to hide a device.

Doyle heard footsteps close behind him and turned to see two uniformed men running in his direction.

He flipped open his wallet and showed his ID to the policemen, who nodded briskly and moved off in another direction.

As Doyle passed the counter of the Casey Jones stall he saw a cup of hot liquid standing on the counter, abandoned. Still steaming.

Lying close by the counter was a discarded rucksack.

Suitcases had been left on the concourse.

He even noticed a small plastic football, possibly dropped by a child. It was rolling across the concourse slowly, undisturbed by the many feet scuttling past it.

Doyle stood still, the noise echoing in his ears. The shouts, the Tannoy announcement, the dogs.

He looked down at his watch.

Twenty-five minutes to detonation.

'Shit,' he murmured under his breath.

'Doyle!'

The sound of his own name made him turn and he saw Calloway heading towards him, accompanied by two men dressed in black uniforms.

Bomb squad, Doyle thought.

'It's Neville,' the DI said. 'One of our mobile units has him in sight now. We've got a description of what he's wearing, we've even got the bike's reg number.'

'Bike?' Doyle said, looking puzzled.

'He's riding a motorbike. He shot a policeman here, two cars chased him, they're still on his tail now.'

'Where is he?' Doyle demanded.

'Christ knows but they've got him in sight,' Calloway said.

'You'd better make sure you take him alive or we'll never find those fucking bombs.'

'The station's nearly clear,' Calloway said, looking at the crowds still pouring through Euston's exits.

'Great,' Doyle murmured. 'That gives us less than half an hour before everything goes sky-high.' He looked at the men of the bomb squad. 'You'll never find it in time.'

'Let us worry about that,' the older of the two men said.

'If you don't we'll all be worrying about it,' Doyle snapped. Then he turned to Calloway again. 'The man Neville shot, is he dead?'

The DI shook his head. 'No,' he muttered. 'Not yet. The doctors don't hold out much hope though.'

Again Doyle looked at his watch.

Time was running out fast.

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