Dark Blood

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Dark Blood Page 37

by MacBride, Stuart


  He spread Danby’s cases out across the desk. The PNC printouts weren’t exactly heavy on detail, more summaries and status reports. A couple of unsolved murders: one drug addict found with a bullet hole in the back of his head; one prostitute kicked to death behind the bins at a nightclub. One Post Office job where the gang had got away with a pathetically small amount of cash after putting a pensioner in intensive care – solved. One blackmail: a bank manager with a thing for Filipino ladyboys – solved. A couple of demanding money with menaces…

  Something started ringing. It took Logan a minute to realize it was his new phone. ‘McRae.’

  ‘LoganDaveGoulding, Just heard back from your CSI boys about the old man who was attacked last night.’ Might have known the psychologist wouldn’t mind using the wanky Americanism.

  ‘What about him?’ Logan kept on reading.

  The last report in Danby’s file was a drug seizure: a shipment of heroin and cocaine, smuggled in through the international ferry terminal in North Shields. Estimated street value of one-point-six million.

  ‘Knox didn’t rape him. He bit him, he tortured him, he beat him, but there’s no sign of penetration.’

  According to the summary three men were due up in court in four weeks’ time, all of them connected to Michael ‘Mental Mikey’ Maitland’s operation.

  God rest his soul.

  ‘So it’s exactly the same as the Sacro handler…Harry Weaver. I thought it might be because Weaver wasn’t old enough, didn’t fit the victim profile, but I’m beginning to wonder if Knox might be impotent.’

  Logan skimmed a list of charges. ‘That’s a good thing, isn’t it?’

  ‘Causing pain is how Knox achieves arousal, it’s what gets him off. If he can’t get an erection, he’s just going to try harder. The next victim’s probably going to end up dead. And it won’t be quick either.’

  Logan stopped reading. Not so good after all.

  ‘Any ideas where he’s heading?’

  There was a pause.

  ‘Well…Aberdeen’s been highly traumatic for him, completely out of his comfort zone. He’ll want familiar ground, somewhere he feels safe.’

  All roads lead to Newcastle. Which was pretty much what they’d been thinking anyway. Logan thanked the psychologist and hung up.

  Logan drummed his fingers on the desk, staring at the blank computer screen.

  God: the idea that Knox could get even worse…

  ‘You should eat more roughage.’

  Logan turned to find Doreen settling in behind her desk.

  ‘What?’

  ‘You’ve got the same expression on your face my six-year-old gets when he’s constipated.’

  ‘Actually, I was thinking about Richard Knox.’

  ‘Join the club. DCI Finnie’s got everyone on either Knox or Danby. It’s an absolute nightmare trying to get anything else done.’ She rearranged her cardigan. ‘Do you know if our little fairy princess got to see her grandad again?’

  Logan shrugged. ‘I’ve been a bit—’

  ‘Oh for goodness sake. I’ll do it.’ Doreen pulled the phone towards her and started dialling. ‘Hello? Yes, I want to speak to someone about a little girl taken into temporary care last night…’

  PC Butler stuck her head around the door. ‘You ready, Sarge?’

  Logan gathered all the files together and stuck them back in the folder. ‘We got a pool car?’

  Butler’s expression soured. ‘Guess.’

  The Fiat groaned from second to third, then whined from third to fourth, and refused to do fifth at all. ‘You know.’ Butler hauled the gearstick back again. ‘I’ve got some friends who could arrange a little electrical fire, if you like? Claim on the insurance?’

  ‘I’ll bear that in mind.’ Not that he’d get much for it – the thing only cost him two hundred pounds. Logan ran his finger across the dashboard, leaving a clean grey line in the dust. ‘Suppose you were a gangster—’

  ‘Cool.’ Butler grinned. ‘Do I get to kneecap that sleazy git DS MacDonald?’

  ‘Just shut up and listen, OK? Suppose you were a gangster and some police officer had just cost you over a mill and a half in drugs. He’s got three of your men banged up waiting for trial, and if they turn Queen’s evidence it’s going to be bad news for your other business interests. What do you do?’

  She didn’t even pause. ‘Kill them. Get a couple of mentalists inside to shank the bastards. Sends out a message – no one squeals.’

  Logan looked at her. ‘What if they’re loyal.’

  ‘Not worth the risk. Got to cut out the cancer before it spreads.’ She slowed down for a corner, the tyres rumbling over a lumpy mixture of slush and ice. ‘Then you go after the pig.’

  Logan turned back to the window. ‘That’s what I was thinking.’

  ‘He awake yet, Babe?’

  ‘Dunno. Think he’s faking it?’

  ‘One way to check.’

  Pain lances through Detective Superintendent Graeme Danby’s nipples. His eyes snap open and he roars. Or tries to. There’s something over his mouth. Something over his head, making everything dim and muffled. He rocks back and forth, fire burning across his chest.

  ‘Gotta love the titty-twister, like.’

  Fucking hell that hurts.

  Then the woman’s voice is back again. ‘Hello, Sweetheart, remember me?’

  Graeme tries to shrink back, but he’s sitting on something:

  can’t move his arms or legs…A chair? And it’s freezing in here.

  He’d been…He’d been wearing the white fluffy dressing gown he’d found in the hotel room wardrobe – the one with the matching slippers in a little plastic bag. But now he feels a biting draught on his bare stomach and thighs.

  Isn’t even wearing any underwear.

  He’s tied to a chair, stark bollock naked, with a bag over his head.

  With her.

  Graeme tries to sit up straight, to bring his chin up. Not to tremble.

  ‘You’ve been a naughty boy, haven’t you, Danby?’ A man’s voice, Newcastle accent.

  And then a fist slams into Graeme’s stomach, wrenching him forwards. Or as far as he can go with his wrists tied to the seat. He tries to breathe through the aching stabs, air whistling in and out through his burning nose. Everything smells of burning copper.

  ‘You see, Babe, we know what you’ve been up to. You and your pet rapist.’

  Oh God, don’t be sick. Be sick and you’ll choke. Choke and die. Naked, tied to a chair with a FUCKING BAG OVER YOUR HEAD!

  Slowly, he hauls himself back up, eyes scrunched tight shut. Swallowing it down.

  ‘Neil? Do the honours will you, Darling, I hate questioning someone when I can’t see their eyes.’

  Fumbling. The whoosh of fabric against his face. Then a cool draft of air.

  Graeme opens his eyes, blinks. Looks down at his pale, naked body – the big dent in his right leg where the bone poked through years ago.

  ‘That’s better, isn’t it?’

  Julie. She hasn’t changed much since last time: still wearing the same cowgirl jeans-and-boots combo. That polished razorblade smile.

  Someone looms into view over his shoulder – Elvis quiff, big nose, tufty eyebrows. ‘Afternoon, Guv. Sitting comfortably?’ Elvis has a tartan pillowcase in his hand. He drops it to the floor.

  Julie pulls up a chair, wrong way round, and straddles it. Smiles down at Graeme’s crotch. ‘Didn’t think it was that cold.’

  He tries on his best Senior Police Officer Glower, but she just laughs.

  ‘Neil?’

  A fist slams into the side of Graeme’s head. Ringing in his ears. The taste of blood. Lights flashing on and off. Then a throbbing ache.

  ‘Now, Babe, you need to think really hard about this, because if you get the answer wrong you lose ten points and we move on to the water round. And trust me, you won’t like the water round. Understand?’

  Graeme stares at her. Then nods.

  ‘G
ood. Neil, you can take the gag off.’

  A harsh ripping noise, eye-watering agony. ‘Fuck…’

  Elvis holds up the duct tape, grinning. ‘Got half his beard off in one go! Can we do his eyebrows next?’

  ‘Bastards…’ Breath hissing through gritted teeth.

  ‘OK, Babe: here’s your starter for ten.’

  He can hear her chair scraping closer.

  ‘Where’s Richard Knox?’

  ‘No, I can barely hear you.’ Logan stuck his finger in his ear as they juddered up the hill past the truncated concrete pyramid of the Shell building, heading south. A massive eighteen-wheeler passed them in the outside lane, sending filthy grey-brown spray all over the car, the windscreen wipers struggling to clear it, leaving two diarrhoea-coloured rainbows across the glass.

  ‘I said, where the bastarding hell are you?’

  ‘Nigg roundabout. Should be with you in ten minutes.’

  If the car didn’t die by then.

  ‘Listen, I found a possible motive for abducting Danby – million-and-a-half in seized—’

  ‘I don’t care. Just got a call from Susan, she’s got these stomach cramps…’

  Oh no.

  Logan swallowed. ‘She all right?’

  ‘Course she’s not, she’s having bloody stomach cramps!’ Silence. ‘What if she loses the baby?’

  More silence.

  ‘I’m sure she’ll be fine. It’ll all be fine.’ That was what you were meant to say, wasn’t it?

  Steel coughed. Sniffed. Cleared her throat. ‘Sod it, I’m taking her to A&E. You’re in charge: give the search another couple hours then wind it down. Make it look like we tried.’

  ‘Do you want…’

  But Steel was gone. He was talking to a dead phone.

  ‘Sod it.’ Logan jabbed the car’s cigarette lighter with his thumb, and when it popped up he pulled a cigarette from the packet and sooked it into life.

  Butler immediately started making pantomime coughing noises.

  ‘Fine…’ Logan ground it out in the overflowing ashtray. ‘Happy?’

  ‘Bad enough I’ve got to drive this rattletrap without catching your second-hand smoke.’

  ‘Just drive, OK?’

  The gritters were out in force – two of them taking up both lanes of the dual carriageway, huge rusty yellow things topped with flashing orange lights, strafing the road with salt and sand. All the cars hanging back to avoid having the paint battered off their bonnets.

  Butler took the second exit at the next roundabout, heading into Cove, weaving through the suburban streets for the south-east corner.

  Jimmy Evans’s house sat on its own at the end of a long, rutted driveway, potholes and ice making Logan’s tatty little Fiat slither and jerk as Butler got them as close to the brightly lit house as possible.

  A series of patrol cars and police vans snaked back from a snow-covered driveway, blocking the lane.

  ‘We’ll have to walk from here.’

  Sunlight speared down from a crystal blue sky, making the fields glitter, the snow crunchy underfoot, the sound of dogs and police chatter ringing in the crisp air.

  The Police Search Advisor met them at the front door, scratching an armpit. With thinning, scraggy blonde hair and a pointy nose, he looked a bit like a meerkat with mange. ‘So.’ He squinted at Logan. ‘It true you’re in charge now?’

  ‘That a problem?’

  ‘Hey, long as you sign off on the overtime, I’m happy.’ He held out a stack of reports and Logan flicked through them.

  ‘You want to summarize this for me?’

  More scratching. ‘No sign of Knox anywhere.’

  There was a shock. ‘IB?’

  The POLSA took his hand out of his armpit for long enough to point at a familiar filthy Transit van. ‘Still doing the guest bedroom. Family’s cleared out, so we’ve got the run of the place.’

  ‘Door-to-doors?’

  He blinked, then did a slow three-hundred-and-sixty-degree turn, staring out at the snow-covered fields. ‘Erm…There’s no one living anywhere near, if you don’t count the sheep, so—’

  ‘Back there, where the lane joins the main road. There’s houses overlooking the entrance – they might’ve seen a car coming or going.’

  The rest of Constable Meerkat’s face turned as pink as his nose and ears. ‘Ah, OK. I’ll get that organized…’

  The Airwave handset clipped to Butler’s shoulder started bleeping and she moved away a couple of paces to answer it, then came back and handed the thing to Logan. ‘Control.’

  ‘McRae.’

  ‘Aye, hud oan, puttin’ you through…’

  Click.

  ‘Sergeant, it’s Dr Frampton, we met at the—’

  ‘Steve Polmont crime scene, yes, I remember.’

  ‘I tried getting in touch with DI Steel, but it seems she’s unavailable?’

  ‘Yeah…’ According to the paperwork, there wasn’t so much as a footprint beyond the back garden.

  ‘We’ve got a result from the soil sample we took yesterday, from the flat where Knox escaped. A footprint just inside the hallway?’

  ‘Uh-huh?’ Logan handed the search reports back to the POLSA. Steel was right – the search was a waste of time, but at least it looked as if they were doing something. Knox was long gone.

  ‘We ran it against the national soil database, and there’s about a dozen places it could have come from in Aberdeenshire, I’ve emailed the results to you.’

  ‘Hold on…’ He pulled out the scrap of paper he was using as a surrogate notebook, and pinned it to the roof of the nearest patrol car with the side of his hand, pen poised. ‘Want to give me the edited highlights?’

  Pause. ‘The sample has a pH of five-point-five and carbon’s sitting around three-point-six percent. Add in silt at eleven percent and that makes it Cairnrobin. You see, the general SSKIB values for soils like these—’

  ‘Place names. Honestly, it’ll be quicker if you just give me place names.’

  ‘Oh. I see.’ She cleared her throat. ‘Yes, well Cairnrobin is a pretty small series – there’s only three hundred and ninty-five hectares in the whole of Scotland – in isolated pockets around Cove, Menie House, and near the mouth of the Ythan at Sleek of Tarty.’

  Logan crabbed them out on the paper, then put his hand over the mouthpiece, leant over to the POLSA. ‘Any signs of a break in?’

  ‘Back door – the lock’s been gouged with a screwdriver.’

  He went back to the call.

  ‘…time. You see, a soil sample is like a fingerprint—’

  ‘Thanks Doctor. That’s great. I’ll be in touch.’ He hung up before she could launch into anything else.

  Logan stood there, tapping the handset against his chin.

  Butler raised an eyebrow. ‘Something?’

  He turned to the POLSA, and slapped his hand on the roof of the patrol car. ‘You got keys for this?’

  Turned out it wasn’t even locked. Logan slipped into the passenger seat and fired up the little grey laptop mounted on the dashboard, using it to log into his Grampian Police email address.

  Half a dozen messages from Beattie – which he ignored – and right after them the one from Dr Frampton. He opened it, then clicked on the .jpg attachment, shifting in his seat as the picture file downloaded.

  It was a high-resolution map that looked as if it was made from stitched together screenshots. The areas where the soil matched the print in the flat highlighted in red. One cluster of red blobs sat north of Balmedie, near Donald Trump’s golf resort; one was about halfway to Peterhead; but the biggest concentration lay along the coast just south of Cove.

  Logan frowned at the screen.

  Most were just fields, but two of the blobs had houses in them.

  Logan zoomed in on the Cove section. ‘See this?’

  Constable Itchy squinted. ‘No, that’s wrong.’ He stuck his finger on the laptop’s screen and drew a little greasy circle inside the red bit. ‘T
hat’s the search area: Steel only wanted a hundred meters. Are we meant to search the rest of it? Only it’s bloody freezing out there, and it’ll be dark soon.’

  Why was there mud from around the victim’s home on the carpet of Knox’s Sacro flat?

  Maybe whoever helped him escape stopped off on the way up to check on potential targets…?

  Logan looked up at the house. ‘I need to speak to the victim, Evans.’

  The POLSA shook his head. ‘Like I said – the family’s cleared out. Son took the old man back to Sunderland, said they didn’t want him being on his own, you know, with Knox on the loose.’

  Couldn’t blame them. ‘Give him a phone: I need to know if Evans saw anything suspicious – cars, people – over the last couple of days.’

  Mind you, they’d have to be pretty open-minded mobsters to find their accountant an old man to torture and rape…

  ‘Sarge?’

  Logan blinked. ‘Right…You two go grab a cup of tea. I’ve got some calls to make.’

  48

  Richard Knox shivers, standing at yet another bedroom window, wrapped only in his granny’s patchwork quilt. The one that smells of old woman and cat.

  The back garden’s pretty, like one of them Christmas cards with robins on it, all plants and snow and ice and that. Fresh flakes floating down like cigarette ash.

  His hand hurts even more now. Can barely move the first three fingers, they’re so swollen.

  He pulls the quilt tighter around his shoulders, then creeps over to the door and puts his ear against it.

  They’re arguing again.

  Arguing about him.

  ‘…out in the middle of nowhere. Let the bastard freeze to death.’

  ‘That wasn’t the plan!’

  ‘I’m just saying we don’t have to—’

  ‘You can’t just…’

  Richard goes back to the window. Gives the sash a one-handed tug, even though he knows it’s locked. What’s he going to do: jump down into the garden, clamber over the back fence and run away into the snow with his cock hanging out and a quilt round his shoulders? Like a pervert playing Batman?

 

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