‘Yes, sir.’
‘Good.’ They stood and stared at the man as he backed away up the stairs. He disappeared from sight as the loop started again. ‘Come on then,’ said Logan, ‘if I listen to that any longer, I’m going to end up thumping someone.’
The constable asked to be excused for a minute, hurrying out into the rainy night and the lazy blue sweep of the patrol car’s lights. She came back, shaking the water off her police waterproofs, grinning, holding up what looked like a little gun. ‘Got it off the internet,’ she explained as they climbed the stairs into the deafening noise. ‘Been dying for a chance to try it out.’
‘Hold on,’ said Logan as they got to the first-floor landing, digging out his mobile phone and calling Control, telling them he was concerned for the safety of the householder and that they were going to force entry. There was no sign of the angry mob on the second-floor landing – Mr Middle-Aged had probably warned them the police were more interested in persecuting them for vandalism than doing something about Frank Garvie’s serenade of eternal damnation. ‘KICK IT IN.’
‘NO NEED.’ The PC swaggered up to the door and slid the pointy end of her ‘gun’ into the keyhole, twisting it slightly and pulling the trigger. If anything happened it was inaudible beneath the racket. ‘HA-HA! LOOK AT THAT!’
The door swung open and the noise got even worse. Logan slapped his hands over his ears and picked his way into the flat. The welcome mat stank of piss so he stuck to the wall, not wanting to tread in anything as he picked his way down to the end of the short hallway. The home cinema system in the lounge was pumping out an incredible amount of sound, making the floorboards thrum beneath his feet as the loop built to yet another crescendo. Logan stepped into the living room just as everything went quiet.
Frank Garvie was hanging from the stainless steel hook in the ceiling. Twitching.
The loop started up again.
30
It took the IB ‘team’ twenty minutes to turn up: a lone woman in white SOC coveralls, clutching her sample case and trying not to yawn. ‘Is this it?’ asked Logan as she looked around the now-silent flat.
She shrugged. ‘Iain’s retirement bash. I’m the only one on call.’ She stopped at the living room door and had a good long stare at the body. It was dressed from head to toe in dark red rubber, the material stretched nearly to bursting point, polished and glittering, a zipped mask obscuring the face. Thin black wires trailed from the crotch and backside to a small case sitting on the floor. The body didn’t dangle from the ceiling, but hung slack, legs bent, toes resting on the floor. White silk rope, pulled taut by the body’s weight, reached from the hook in Garvie’s ceiling to the slipknot at the back of his neck – the cord buried so deeply in the shiny rubber around the throat it was nearly invisible.
‘Death been declared?’ she asked scanning the carpet for footprints.
‘Got the ambulance men to do it.’ But Logan had checked first. Garvie wasn’t just dead, he was cold – he’d been dead for hours. The deafening racket had come from a DVD – Buffy the Vampire Slayer, season four. He must have had the disk on ‘play all’ and when the episodes were over, and Garvie was gone, it jumped back to the main menu, and the never-ending loop of music.
The IB tech nodded. ‘OK, well, you go wait outside and I’ll let you know when it’s OK to come back in. I’ll need—’
‘Shoes and suit. I know.’
‘Good, now bugger off, I’ve got about three people’s jobs to do.’
Logan was sitting in the back of Alpha Thirteen, three hours later, eating a sandwich from the twenty-four-hour supermarket up the road, when the pathologist finally appeared. ‘Look out,’ said the PC as Isobel’s familiar silver Mercedes parked behind their patrol car, ‘the Wicked Witch of the West’s here.’
Colin Miller emerged from the Mercedes’s driver seat, and hurried round to the passenger side, helping Isobel out into the faint drizzle. Fussing over her till she slapped his hands away and glowered at him. Then apologized.
She stood for a moment, breathing heavily, one hand pressed into the small of her back, the other cupping her bulging stomach. Then waddled towards the flats.
Logan stuffed the rest of his sandwich back in the carrier bag and climbed out to join her, hesitated halfway down the path, then turned back to the Mercedes and opened the passenger door. ‘You look rough.’
Miller tried to give Logan the finger, but the effect was ruined by the prosthetics in his gloves, making it look as if he was trying for a deformed shadow puppet instead. He gave up. ‘This the same Garvie you arrested for the Fettes kid’s death?’
‘You know I can’t tell you any—’
‘Thought we was supposed to be friends again. What? I’m good enough to go diggin’ up dirt on your polis buddies, but you’ll no’ tell me about your suicides?’
‘Touché. Frank Garvie: used to work in adult films with Jason Fettes.’
The reporter stared past Logan’s shoulder at the block of flats. ‘Did he now. . .’
‘You can’t print anything about this, OK? We’re—’
‘DS McRae?’ It was the PC from Alpha Thirteen, waving an Airwave handset at him. ‘Control.’
Logan turned back to Miller, ‘Look, no printing stuff without my OK!’
‘Aye, aye. Nothin’ wrong with havin’ a poke about though, is there?’
‘DS McRae?’ the PC again.
‘Yes, fine, I heard you the first time! And you,’ he looked at the reporter, thinking about giving him a lecture on social responsibility and the victim’s right to privacy. . . ‘Try not to get me fired.’
Control was a chief inspector with a clipped Aberdonian accent, wanting an update on the Garvie suicide and how long Alpha Thirteen was going to be tied up for: after all, there was a whole city out there to patrol, even if it was quarter to three on a dreich Friday morning. Logan passed on what they knew and hurried into the flats after Isobel, catching up with her before she’d got as far as the first landing. She was leaning against the wall halfway up the stairs, breathing heavily.
‘Are you OK?’
Isobel grimaced, running a hand back and forth across the top of her bump. ‘I’ve got heartburn, swollen ankles, a foot in my bladder, the little sod does gymnastics at two in the morning, I’m boiling the whole time, and I’m the size of a bouncy castle. And I’m really not looking forward to tomorrow.’
‘Why don’t you just go home, it’s only a suicide after all, we can always—’
‘You actually think I’m going to miss the last crime scene I’ll see for six months? No chance.’
Up at the top of the stairs he helped her clamber into the biggest white paper oversuit they had, the zip barely making it over her bump. ‘Erm, Isobel. . .’ He handed her a pair of latex gloves. ‘When we were together. . .’ This was stupid.
‘What?’
‘Nothing.’
She scowled at him. ‘What?’
He took a deep breath, looked her in the eye, and said: ‘When we were together, did you ever see anyone else?’ Watching closely for a reaction, not expecting the one that he got. Her bottom lip trembled, her eyes filled with tears and she started to cry. ‘Look, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean anything. It wasn’t—’ She hit him, a stinging slap on the chest. ‘Ow!’
‘How could you ask me that?’ Advancing on him as he backed away. ‘How the hell can you –’ she hit him again, ‘ask –’ and again, ‘me –’ and once more for luck, ‘that?’
‘I’m sorry!’ His back bumped into the wall. ‘I. . .’ He came within a hair’s breadth of telling her about Jackie and Rennie, but the words wouldn’t come. Logan closed his eyes and hung his head. ‘I’m sorry.’
She must have heard something in his voice, because she laid a gentle hand on his arm and told him not to worry, some day he and PC Watson would have a baby of their own. He would have laughed, but got the feeling it would come out strangled and frightening, so he open
ed the door to Garvie’s flat instead.
The IB tech was standing halfway down the hall, fiddling about with a laptop, cables snaking back into the lounge. She saw them stepping over the threshold and waved them back. ‘Give us a minute, I’m doing the last three-sixty. . .’ a pause, then an electronic bleep. ‘OK, you can go in. I’ve done fibre, prints, body fluids, video and photos. No sign of forced entry, all the windows are locked, curtains drawn. Got some good prints off the gimp suit. . .’ She yawned, not bothering to cover her mouth, showing off a vast array of good, old-fashioned Scottish fillings. ‘Phhhhh. . . What time is it?’ Logan told her and she swore, rubbed a hand over her face then started packing the spherical picture kit away, sticking the goldfish-bowl-on-a-tripod back in its case, muttering about having to be up this late when everyone else was out on the pish.
Isobel circled the body, peering at it, gently poking the musculature through the fingerprint-powdered suit. She stopped, sniffed, then prodded the rubber where it bulged over the silk rope. Frowning.
‘Something wrong?’ Logan asked.
‘Perhaps. . .’ she peeled back the hood, exposing Garvie’s neck, her latex gloves squeaking on the dark rubber, then sank her fingers into the exposed, waxy skin. ‘Cold. . . I’d expect the body to be stiffer than this.’
‘Well, he was twitching when we got here—’
She looked appalled. ‘Then why the hell didn’t you cut him down?’
‘Already dead. I checked.’
‘Don’t be ridiculous. Dead bodies don’t twitch.’
Logan pointed at the small transformer lying on the Persian rug. Two thin wires stretched from there to the little flap in the crotch of the suit, a third disappearing into a similar hole in the backside. ‘You want to see?’
Isobel nodded so Logan picked up the plug and stuck it back in the wall socket where he’d found it. Immediately the body began to twitch. ‘It’s an electrostim set,’ he said, as Frank Garvie’s corpse danced for them, ‘it’s supposed to heighten orgasm.’
‘Turn it off.’
FHQ was almost deserted, just the wub-wub-wub of a floor polisher somewhere down the corridor breaking the silence as Logan made himself a cup of coffee at the small kettle in the corner of the CID offices. The milk in the fridge looked like an unexploded bomb, the plastic carton swollen and well past its sell-by date. He had it black.
It had taken him two hours to get all the paperwork done for their visit to the house and the discovery of Garvie’s body. He slumped back in his seat and stared at the computer screen, scrolling through the transcripted door-to-door interviews they’d done while the one-woman IB team worked the flat. He wasn’t really reading them, just killing time. Putting off going home and the inevitable confrontation with Jackie. The accusations, the lies, the shouting. . . The betrayal. And the worst part, the very, very worst part, was that beneath all the anger and resentment and desire to ram his fist down Rennie’s fucking throat – he still loved her.
But that didn’t mean it wasn’t over.
So he went back to the witness statements, reading their lies instead. No, they hadn’t done anything to the man in flat four. Graffiti, Officer, me? Piss through someone’s letter box? Never!
A familiar shape lumbered into the CID office, carrying a huge steaming mug: Big Gary. He stopped when he saw Logan. ‘Er. . .’
‘Don’t bother,’ Logan told him, ‘there’s no milk left to steal.’
‘Bugger.’ Big Gary peered into his mug. ‘Anyway, I wasn’t going to steal it. . .’
‘You’re a dreadful liar.’
Gary shrugged. ‘That’s why I never made the move into CID: too honest. What you still doing here?’
‘Making sure everything’s done before Insch comes in.’
‘Aye, well. . . Don’t forget to tell him he’s got till noon if he wants to put in for the Ice Queen’s leaving present.’ A sad look slid onto Gary’s fat features. ‘Been a hard sell: at this rate we’ll be giving her something nicked from the lost and found and a homemade card.’
Logan blushed and dug out his wallet. ‘Put me in for a. . .’ Five? Ten? They did sleep together for six months and at least she’d never cheated on him. He pulled a dog-eared twenty out and handed it over.
Gary took the note with an impressed whistle, then held it up to the light. ‘God, it’s a real one too! Come down to the front desk when you get a minute, you can sign the card.’ He turned and lumbered off, calling back when he got to the door, ‘And take some bloody time off, you’re screwing up the overtime bill.’
‘Hoy, Rip Van Winkle.’ The smell of coffee, smoky bacon, and stale cigarettes. ‘We’re no’ paying you to sleep on the job.’ Logan peeled open an eye to see DI Steel looming over him.
Groaning, he swung his legs off the blue, plastic-coated mattress and onto the cold brown floor, searching blearily for his shoes.
‘Jesus,’ said Steel, ‘you look rough.’
‘What time is it?’ Yawning and stretching. The lining of his brain seemed hotter and rougher than normal, as if someone had pebble-dashed the inside of his skull with warm gravel while he’d been asleep.
‘Here,’ she handed over her mug of milky coffee, ‘I’m no’ needing this as much as you.’
Logan hesitated for a second . . . then accepted it, taking a deep gulp before putting it down on the floor so he could struggle into his suit jacket. It took two goes to get his watch in focus enough to read the hands. Eight seventeen. He’d managed a whole two hours’ sleep.
Steel sat down on the cell mattress next to him and finished off her bacon buttie while Logan got his shoes on. ‘Least they let you keep your laces.’ She sooked the tomato sauce from her fingers. ‘Let me guess: trouble in paradise?’
‘Has Insch been in?’
‘Nope. Detective Inspector Fat-and-Grumpy is stuck on the road in from Oldmeldrum. Some idiot tried overtaking a tractor and got smeared all over the front of a dirty-big truck. So he’ll be in a right crappy mood when he finally gets here. Same as usual, eh?’ She smiled, looked him up and down, then patted him gently on the shoulder. ‘Go home.’
‘Can’t,’ he said, levering himself to his feet, ‘got to hand over the Frank Garvie case, and the post mortem’s at ten.’ And Jackie was supposed to be on a day off today, so he didn’t want to go back to the flat.
‘Aye. . . Well, have a shower then. You smell like day-old curry.’
His hair was still wet when Insch arrived, already three shades redder in the face than normal. The inspector bellowed, ‘McRae, my office!’ and stomped past, PCs scurrying to get out of his way.
Insch’s office was filled with ominous muttering as he skimmed the pile of paperwork Logan had left on his desk the night before. The fat man pulled the last sheet from the case file: Garvie’s suicide note, wrapped in a clear plastic evidence bag. ‘“I’m sorry” – is that it?’
Logan stifled a yawn. ‘There’s a poem on the back.’
‘I’ll bet there is.’ Insch flipped the evidence bag over and read it, his lips moving as he went. ‘Actually,’ he said at the end, ‘that’s quite good.’ He went back to the front. ‘“I’m sorry”. . . Well, it would’ve been better if he hadn’t left off the whole “for killing Jason Fettes” part, but I suppose it’ll have to do.’ Insch slipped the note back into the folder. ‘What about that encryption key?’
Logan held up a small evidence bag, the bottom littered with shattered bits of plastic and slivers of twisted metal. ‘We found it in his kitchen.’
The inspector snatched it out of his hands, frowning at the contents. ‘Can we—’
‘IB says it’s been repeatedly smashed with a hammer. Anything on there is gone.’
‘Hmph.’ Insch dumped it on his desk and stared thoughtfully at his big Mikado poster. ‘Did we get anything back from Computer Forensics on that email address for Fettes?’
‘Not yet.’
‘Oh for crying out loud! You had Fettes�
�s hotmail address days ago!’
‘I’ve been chasing them up,’ he lied. ‘I was planning on trying again after I’d seen you.’
‘Well tell them to get their finger out. Just because Garvie’s dead doesn’t mean we’re not going to finish this investigation properly. I do not want them slipping it to the bottom of the pile. Understand?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Post mortem?’
‘Ten.’
Insch glanced at his watch. ‘Then what are you hanging around here for? Get those lazy IT morons onto it! And tell Rennie I want to see him.’
Logan nodded, feeling something catch fire in his head. Just because he was avoiding Jackie didn’t mean he wouldn’t ‘have words’ with DC Simon Fucking Rennie.
31
‘DC Rennie – what’s up?’
‘Where are you?’
‘Eh? Downstairs. Getting the teas in again. Do you—’ Logan hung up on him and marched down to the second floor.
The constable was slouched against the wall, yawning his head off as a kettle rumbled to the boil. He looked up as Logan approached and pulled on a smile. ‘Never guess what,’ he said in a theatrical whisper, ‘Beattie’s missus was up for one of those High Street Honeys things! Look. . .’ He rummaged around in his pockets, coming out with a small, shiny, dog-eared booklet from one of the more risqué lad’s mags, holding it up so Logan could see the picture. ‘I mean, we always suspected she was a bit—’
‘A word, Constable.’ Logan marched straight past.
‘Eh? Oh, OK . . . sure.’ Rennie stuffed Beattie’s wife back in his pocket and scurried after him, down the corridor and into the tiny room Logan had appropriated for the break-in investigation. It was slowly turning back into a cupboard, piled high with files and junk. ‘What can I—’
‘I know.’ He kicked the door shut. Ever since he’d found out about them – Jackie and DC Halfwit here – he’d been wondering how he’d feel when it finally came to this. And the answer was surprisingly fucking angry.
Rennie backed up, banging into the little desk, sending a pile of forms skittering to the carpet tiles. ‘Hey, I don’t know what—’
Logan McRae Crime Series Books 1-3: Cold Granite, Dying Light, Broken Skin (Logan McRae) Page 99