The Cold Cold Ground sdt-1

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The Cold Cold Ground sdt-1 Page 27

by Adrian McKinty


  “Just a couple of steps and we’re in Woodburn Forest,” I said.

  “But remember Lucy wasn’t found anywhere near here. It was all the way over that hill, wasn’t it?” Laura asked.

  “Obviously he can’t hang her right next to his house.”

  “How does he carry her?”

  “Over his shoulder. Fireman’s lift. You could carry someone for a mile like that.”

  She was sceptical.

  “Let me show you.”

  “Ok.”

  Favouring my good wrist, I lifted her up onto my right shoulder and slapped her bum.

  “Hey!” she yelped.

  I walked for about fifty feet and stopped.

  “See? You’re out of breath and-”

  I put her down.

  “Jesus! Look! There!” I said, pointing through the trees. About thirty yards from the road in a broad valley between two enormous chestnut trees there was a burnt-out Ford Granada.

  I ran to it.

  The glass had melted and buckled, the interior was a mess of black debris and blackened foam but there was no rust or erosion. This had been done recently. Within the last month. I opened a door and looked inside.

  It had been doused with gasoline and burned but then someone had killed the fire with a foam extinguisher. The number plates had been stripped off and when I lifted the bonnet I saw that the serial numbers on the chassis had been blow-torched away by arc-welding gear.

  “Mother of God!”

  “What is it, Sean?”

  “It’s Tommy’s car. Has to be.”

  “He drove a Ford Granada?” she asked, but I wasn’t even listening.

  “For some reason Tommy comes over and Freddie kills him. The girl’s a witness so he has to hang her. He cuts Tommy Little’s hand off and shoves a musical score in his rectum. He drives to the home of the only other poofter he knows. He shoots him. He cuts off his hand. He leaves Tommy’s hand there.”

  “Are you sure this is Tommy Little’s car?”

  “It’s Tommy’s car. Freddie can’t be caught driving it and he can’t have the IRA finding it at his house, so he gets it off the road and burns it out.”

  “I don’t get it. He killed Tommy Little and drove him to Carrick?”

  “He kills him. He puts Tommy in the boot of his car. He drives carefully through the police and army roadblocks. He gets far away to the Barn Field in Carrickfergus, he dumps Tommy’s body where he hopes it will be quickly found along with Andrew Young’s hand. He hurries back here. He drives Tommy’s car off into the woods and torches it. But he doesn’t leave the car burning all night in case it attracts attention. He waits until Tommy’s body is found and then he calls the police and finds out my name and writes a bunch of gibberish on a postcard and sends it off to me. He calls the Confidential Telephone and starts in with the threats and false clues. He calls the Sunday World. He leads every one of us on a merry dance through the labyrinth. His bosses in the IRA know that Tommy is coming to see him but he tells them Tommy never made it over. The IRA are suspicious, sceptical, but when they find out that Tommy is mixed up with a sordid homosexual serial killer the whole thing is brushed under the rug. The misdirection works.”

  “But why, Sean? Why kill Lucy? Why kill Tommy?”

  “I don’t know. But I’ll find out. I’ll arrest him and charge him with terrorist offences and question him and crack him. Come on! Let’s go back to his house and call Carrick RUC. I don’t care if I do get bloody suspended, I’m taking him down.”

  “I still don’t see-” she began but was interrupted by a loud crack and bark flying from the chestnut tree behind her.

  “What was tha-”

  “Hit the deck!” I yelled at her. “And stay down!”

  She dived into the thick layer of leaves on the forest floor. I took out my service revolver and turned to look behind me.

  No one.

  Another crack and this time the bullet missed my head by inches.

  Where had it come from?

  Somewhere up ahead in the direction of the house.

  I ditched my raincoat, slithered through the undergrowth, got back into a crouch and ran through the trees in a big semicircle to my right.

  I kept Laura and the car in view and looked for him.

  He had anticipated my move and was waiting for me near a lightning-struck oak. I saw him out of the corner of my eye a split second before he fired. I dived to the ground and heard the crack of the 9mm three more times, I rolled behind the nearest tree, a slender Scots pine and then kept on rolling down a little embankment.

  Back on my belly again, moving sideways, silently, deliberately, holding my breath.

  “Where are you?” he yelled and I could see his profile ten yards to my right. He was still wearing his office suit, holding the gun in two hands and looking into the space where I had been.

  This time I had successfully outflanked him.

  I got to my feet.

  One step in front of another, carefully, toe then heel in my Converse gutties. Gently down onto the leaves, onto the twigs, gently right up behind the fucker.

  I placed the barrel of the.38 on his neck.

  “Drop the gun and slowly put your hands on your head.”

  He did as he was told.

  I took a step backwards. “Laura! It’s all right now! I’ve got him.”

  “Are you sure?” she called back.

  “See if you can find my raincoat, it’s got my handcuffs in it.”

  Scavanni turned and looked at me. He was grinning. I felt like pistol-whipping that smile off his fucking face.

  Laura gave me the raincoat. Her face was flushed. Her chest heaving. For an insane second I wanted to blow his brains out and lay her down and fuck her into next week.

  “Hold your hands out!” I said to Scavanni. “Laura, reach into the pocket, take out my handcuffs and cuff him.”

  She seemed reluctant.

  “Don’t worry, if he so much as twitches, I’ll put one in his left ear.”

  “It’s not that. How do these things work?” she asked.

  “Put his hands in and close them tight,” I explained.

  “Oh, I see.”

  She cuffed him.

  “What now, Sergeant Duffy?” Scavanni said.

  “Now, Mr Scavanni, we go back to the house, I call Detective Chief Inspector Todd and he shows up with a bunch of men anxious to have a wee chat with you. You get lifted, I get a fucking medal and maybe a promotion and you get life in prison. Probably in solitary cos I think they’ll be out to make an example of you, won’t they?”

  Scavanni did not seem ruffled or concerned in any way.

  “There’s a phone in my living room,” he said.

  “All right, let’s go.”

  We went back inside the garden walls. His car was in the driveway and the front door was open. The phone call to his office had obviously spooked him and he had driven home to see what, if anything, was up. Better for me.

  “Why did you kill her?” Laura asked him.

  “My dear, I don’t believe we’ve been introduced,” Scavanni said.

  “Dr Laura Cathcart. Pathologist.”

  “Charmed. Freddie Scavanni, Sinn Fein Press Officer,” Freddie said.

  “Why did you kill her?” she asked again.

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about. I didn’t kill anyone. I’ve never killed anyone in my life.”

  “Who were you shooting at in the woods?”

  “I thought it was that dreadful fox again. He causes havoc in my bird feeder. I suppose I should have gotten the shotgun.”

  “Fox my arse. You saw us near the car. You knew the game was up. There’s no point running your bullshit any more, Freddie.”

  We reached the living room and I put Freddie in the beanbag chair. Laura sat in the sofa and I sat in the chair next to the phone.

  “Before you call Carrick RUC, would you indulge me in my one phone call?” Freddie asked.

  �
�No fucking way.”

  “I think you’ll find that it explains everything.”

  “Yeah, it goes right to an IRA hit squad who’ll speed down here and try and save you before the coppers come.”

  “Oh no,” Freddie said. “Nothing like that. It’s a London number. 01 793 9000. When you get through and they ask who’s calling, tell them it’s Stakeknife. And when they ask for the reference number, tell them 1146.”

  “Pardon?”

  “01 793 9000. When you get through and they ask who’s calling, you tell them Stakeknife. And when they ask for the reference number, tell them 1146.”

  “What are you playing at, Scavanni?”

  “Dial the number. You’ll see. If you don’t, your entire career will go down the shitter.”

  “Don’t threaten me, my lad!”

  “That’s not a threat, believe me. Call the number. And if at any stage you are not completely happy, immediately hang up and call Carrick RUC. What have you got to lose?”

  “Well, I’m slightly curious,” Laura said, still flushed and excited by it all.

  “All right, I’ll indulge you. Consider this your phone call. And if I don’t like it I’m hanging up.”

  “It’s a deal.”

  I dialled 01 793 9000.

  “Hello? Who’s calling, please?” a young female, English voice said.

  “Stakeknife.”

  “What is your four-digit reference number, Stakeknife?”

  “1146.”

  “Thank you, Stakeknife, I’m putting you through to Mr Allen.”

  There was a pause and then a man came on. An older Englishman.

  “What is it, Stakeknife?”

  “Who is this?”

  “Who’s this? How did you get this number?” Allen demanded.

  “My name is Detective Sergeant Duffy of Carrickfergus RUC,” I said.

  “Where’s Stakeknife?”

  “He’s nice and safe. He’s under arrest.”

  “Where? At the police station?” Allen barked.

  “Who the fuck are you?” I asked.

  “Let me speak to Stakeknife. How do we know he’s still alive? Who are you?”

  “I’ve told you, I’m a policeman and-”

  “What’s your warrant card number?”

  “Let me speak to him,” Freddie said.

  “I think I can cut through this dismal swamp of mistrust.” “Is that Stakeknife?” Allen asked.

  I looked at Scavanni. “I’m getting fed up with this. I’m going to hang up.”

  Freddie shook his head. “No, no, let me speak to them for a second or two.”

  I glanced at Laura. She shrugged.

  “All right. You got two seconds. Anything I don’t like and you’re toast.”

  I carried the phone over and held it in such a way that we could both listen.

  “Oh hello, Mr Allen, this is Stakeknife. I’m afraid I’ve been arrested by a member of the Carrickfergus police. He wants to bring me to his local station. We’re still at my house.”

  “Has he told anyone else?”

  “He’s brought a lady friend with him. A pathologist.”

  “Shit.”

  “Mr Allen, he’s very sceptical. I’m concerned that he’s not going to take your word for it. You’ll have to get the Minister.”

  “Tell him to hold on,” Allen said. “And give him the phone back.”

  “He wants you to hold on,” Freddie said.

  “I heard him.”

  “Can you hold the line please, Sergeant Duffy?” Allen asked.

  “Yes.”

  I sat back down on the sofa. I found that I was trembling.

  A minute went by. A minute and a half.

  A voice on the phone said: “Hello.”

  “Yes?” I replied.

  “Hello, Sergeant Duffy, do you recognize my voice?”

  It was William Whitelaw, the Home Secretary, Margaret Thatcher’s Deputy Prime Minister.

  “Yes, sir, I recognize your voice.”

  “Sergeant Duffy, would you mind awfully waiting at your present location for a few minutes? We’re sending out a couple of chaps who will explain things to you much better than I can.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Thank you, Sergeant Duffy. There’s a good chap.”

  I hung up the phone. I looked at Laura.

  “What is it?” she asked.

  “He’s MI5. He’s an MI5 undercover agent in the IRA. He’s a fucking spook.”

  Half an hour later, two men pulled up in a silver Jaguar.

  I sent Laura upstairs and kept Freddie handcuffed and the gun pointed at his head until I saw their IDs.

  They were both in their forties. Ex-military. Old-school agent handlers. After they uncuffed Freddie, I had a stab of panic.

  The easiest way out of this would be to immediately kill me.

  Kill me.

  Kill Laura.

  Make us go away.

  But they didn’t kill us. They put us in the back of the Jag and drove us to Thiepval Army Barracks in Lisburn. HQ of the British Army in Northern Ireland. They took us to a fenced-off, high-security area and then to an even tighter security installation within that.

  They took us to separate rooms and debriefed us.

  I told them about the evidence I had against Scavanni.

  They told me that it sounded pretty flimsy to them. They told me that Stakeknife was a valuable asset. A very valuable asset. He was now the head of the IRA’s internal security branch, the Force Research Unit, and thus a very important person indeed.

  “He might be the key figure in ending the hunger strikes. He might be the key figure to ending the Troubles.”

  I listened. I understood. I was made to sign a document that I was not allowed to read. I was made to sign The Official Secrets Act. A new team came in and it was all explained to me again.

  I signed more documents. A third team came in. It went on until ten o’clock at night. Finally they were satisfied. I would not talk. I would not prosecute Freddie. I would return to my bicycle theft case and never speak of this again.

  They asked me if I understood the big picture. I told them I understood the big picture. A middle-aged woman in a grey skirt and white blouse appeared.

  “In that case,” she said as if resuming a conversation, “we can let you go, Sergeant Duffy.”

  I stood up and looked into her brown eyes. “There’s a condition,” I said.

  Her mouth opened and closed like a Lough Neagh roach wondering if you’re going to throw him back or not. “You’re not in a position to-”

  “You tell Freddie that the killing has to stop. He’s done enough to leave his trail. The killing has to stop!”

  “I’ll tell him.”

  They dropped Laura and me in the harbour car park in Carrickfergus next to my BMW which was already there.

  She was shivering. “Cold?” I asked.

  She shook her head. “Did they make you sign all those forms?” she asked.

  I nodded. “What will happen to us if we talk?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “What will we do now?” she asked.

  “I don’t know.”

  “Let’s get a drink,” she suggested.

  We made it to the Dobbins for last orders. I got two triple whiskeys and two double gin and tonics. We sat by the fire. The rain came on outside. “What’s going to happen to Scavanni?” she asked.

  “Nothing.”

  She gulped her gin and tonic.

  “Drink up, folks!” Derek boomed.

  “I’ll walk you home,” I said.

  She shook her head. “Let’s go to your house. I want to be with you tonight.”

  I didn’t feel sober enough to drive the car so I left it in the car park.

  “So that’s that, he’ll never be punished for any of that?” she wondered.

  “It’s best not to think about it any more,” I said and my voice sounded like it was coming from the bottom of a wel
l.

  We walked up Taylor’s Avenue, Barn Road, Coronation Road. We went inside #113. I lit the paraffin heater. We went upstairs and hugged under the blankets and closed our eyes and maybe even slept until the men in balaclavas came down the path and sledgehammered the front door and stormed violently into the house.

  21: CORONATION ROAD

  I reached under the pillow but the revolver was still downstairs in my raincoat pocket. I put my hand over Laura’s mouth before she could scream.

  “Get under the bed. Don’t make a sound. You’ll be safe.”

  I heard the men thumping up the stairs.

  I had three or perhaps four seconds.

  If I hesitated I/we were dead.

  I grabbed a fire iron from the malfunctioning fireplace and ran naked onto the landing. I reached the top of the stairs at the same moment as the first gunman. His balaclava was impeding his field of vision but that didn’t really matter as he was a microsecond too slow onto the final step.

  I smashed the fire iron into his head, screaming as I did so.

  Metal into bone.

  He crumpled instantly and fell backwards down the stairs into gunman #2.

  Gunman #2, however, put his hand out and stopped his mate from knocking him down. He shot at me twice with a big.45 that banged horribly in the enclosed space of the staircase. The two.45 rounds missed me by inches.

  I ducked my head back round the staircase wall and desperately tried to think of a plan. They’d kill me if I went out either of the front bedroom windows and there might be a man waiting out the back too.

  Another.45 round smashed into the yucca plant at the top of the staircase. Gunman #2 had recovered and was walking slowly up the stairs.

  “C’mon, Gusty!” a voice said, a voice I recognized as Shane Davidson. So it was Billy White and his crew come to kill me before I told the world what I knew about them.

  Behind me Laura came to the bedroom door.

  “What can I do?” she asked.

  I ran to the end of the landing and picked up the five-foot-tall paraffin heater by one of the handles at the top.

  “Take the other handle!” I said.

  The heater was never supposed to be moved when fuelled up and it was never supposed to be moved when burning.

 

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