‘I buy my cars from Decko. You get to know the staff too, you know.’
He blew out a stream of smoke hurriedly, tapping the cigarette against the edge of the ashtray. ‘Look,’ he said. ‘I don’t really see what else I can do here.’
‘Did you know Peter Webb?’ I asked.
‘By reputation,’ he said. ‘We might have met once or twice, nothing else.’
‘What about Jamie Kerr?’
‘That’s the guy they found on the tree, isn’t that right? Terrible business,’ Hannon said, stubbing out his cigarette, half smoked.
‘So, you knew none of these people, or what happened to them?’
‘No,’ he said. ‘Wish I could help you, Ben, but. .’ He shrugged in a way which I found strikingly disingenuous.
‘I don’t believe you, Paddy; I’m sorry,’ I said, taking out my own cigarettes. ‘I find it hard to believe that, in the final moments before his death, possibly fearing for his life, Danny McLaughlin phoned a wrong number which just happened to be yours. I find it even more unbelievable that you would phone it back in the middle of the night.’
‘That’s as may be, Inspector,’ Brown said, ‘but in the absence of anything other than supposition and coincidence, you have no reason to hold my client. Either charge him with something, or let him go.’
‘I’ll speak to my Super and see what he says,’ I said, standing up.
‘While you’re at it, Ben,’ Hannon added, ‘see if we ever got to the bottom of those drugs and guns. You know, the ones that were found twice.’
Paddy Hannon was released without charge twenty minutes later. He shook my hand and told me he understood I was just doing my job. Dempsey seemed even more disgusted than I was with the result; he was to return to Dublin on Monday without a single arrest or prosecution, despite the number of crimes that had been committed over the past weeks.
We went for a drink after Hannon had gone. Then, I headed home. I sat with Debs, Penny and Shane, and attempted to forget all that had happened. But the film we watched could not engage me. And I spent more time wandering in and out of the kitchen for a smoke at the back door than I did sitting with my family.
Finally, fed up with my moping, Debbie came out.
‘What’s up?’ she asked, not even tutting at me for smoking inside the doorway.
‘Nothing,’ I said. Then I added, before she turned to go, ‘I’m really pissed off with this whole bloody case.’
‘I’d noticed,’ she said.
‘Nothing’s been resolved. I know Paddy Hannon is behind these killings and I can’t prove a thing.’
‘That’s how it goes sometimes, Ben,’ Debbie said, coming over and rubbing the back of my neck with her hand. ‘Sometimes things don’t end out the way you’d like.’
‘You didn’t see him, Debs. He was so fucking smarmy about the whole thing.’
She nodded and did not speak. We stood like that, her hand gently massaging my neck, until Shane shouted, ‘Mama.’
‘Things work themselves out, Ben,’ Debbie said. ‘You’ll see.’
Chapter Twenty-six
Sunday, 20 June
The accuracy of Debbie’s words was proven rather quicker than either of us expected. The following morning, after Mass, Costello called to our house. I was sitting on the back step, reading the paper. He attempted to lower his bulk on to the step beside me, but, failing, leant against the door frame and pretended to survey the garden.
‘Beautiful spot you have,’ he said. ‘The garden looks well.’
‘That’s Debbie’s doing,’ I said.
He nodded in understanding. ‘Emily was the same. Green fingers.’
He allowed the silence to settle between us.
‘Harry Patterson came to see me this morning.’
‘Aye?’
He nodded. ‘Seems Hugh Colhoun confessed to him.’
‘What?’ I exclaimed, knocking over my coffee cup.
‘Everything,’ he repeated. ‘Planting the guns, the sympathy card, the attack on the house.’ He paused, then added solemnly, ‘And the car thing. The rag.’
‘Hugh Colhoun,’ I repeated, incredulously. ‘Are you sure?’
He nodded gravely. ‘Apparently he felt bad about what happened to Caroline. Hadn’t meant it to go so far. I think he thought Harry would understand.’
‘Why did Patterson tell you?’
‘To save his own bacon, of course. Harry still thinks he’s got a chance for promotion. And he’s not going to take the fall for someone else.’
‘A real team player,’ I said.
‘There may not be an “I” in team,’ Costello said. ‘But there is “a me”.’ He laughed curtly. ‘I thought I’d let you know.’
‘So what happens now?’ I asked.
‘Harry’s back on the beat. Hugh was lifted this morning. He’ll face charges, if you or Caroline want to press them. Either way he’s in a shit load of trouble.’
‘Have you spoken to Caroline? What did she say?’ I asked.
Another pause. ‘She’s weighing up her options.’
I spent the day with my family. Several times, I tried phoning Caroline, to see how she was feeling about Hugh Colhoun’s confession, but either she wasn’t home, or she wasn’t answering her phone.
That evening, I had agreed to go out for a farewell drink with the NBCI team. Dempsey bought dinner for us all, then we headed into Strabane for a few drinks at a local club. Deegan and Meaney spent the night eyeing up the local talent, while Dempsey and myself sat in a cubicle, considering the cases and their outcome. Dempsey seemed even more dejected than I did about the whole affair.
‘So, we’ll never know who killed Webb, or Kerr, or Decko,’ he said. ‘Apart from McLaughlin.’
‘It was Paddy Hannon behind it,’ I said. ‘I’ll bet money on it’
‘You just can’t prove it.’ He sipped his drink and looked at me slyly. ‘Unless a piece of evidence should happen to appear in his car or something,’ he added, conspiratorially, then laughed.
My head spun as he spoke, and I felt an old, familiar fluttering in my stomach. I actually gripped the edge of the table for support.
‘Between us — it was you, wasn’t it? Playing the NBCI boys, just in town.’ He laughed, shaking his head in mock disbelief.
My thoughts struggled to come into focus. I imagined myself again at Decko’s house, approaching his car, placing Kerr’s leaflet, watching it later on the videotape. .
‘Jesus, the tape!’ I exclaimed.
Dempsey actually started in his seat, spluttering in his beer.
‘What?’
‘The videotape. Decko had a hidden security camera at the front of his house. We watched the bloody video ourselves when we lifted him.’
Dempsey’s expression froze. ‘Shit. How fucking stupid are we? Is it still in the station?’
‘That tape will be. No doubt it was replaced with a fresh one though. Which will still be in the recorder, in Decko’s house.’
He jumped to his feet and barged on to the dance floor, grabbing Deegan and Meaney. By the time they’d got their coats, I was waiting at the front door in the car, engine running.
Decko’s house was in darkness when we arrived. The front gates were closed, blue and white crime tape wrapped around the bars. The building itself was imposing — squat and black against the darkening sky. The windows were closed; no noise of a party in full swing now, as there had been the first time I’d come here. No sign of life at all. Decko had left his fortune to no one, for he had no one to leave it to.
We pulled up at the front of the house. I took the torch from the boot and shone it up across the facade, trying to spot the camera, but none was immediately visible. I went over to the spot where Decko’s car had been parked the night I had planted the evidence. As best I could I stood where I had stood that night and then, recalling the angle of the shot on the videotape, I shone the torch up to where I thought the camera might be placed. I moved the torch beam inch by
inch along the wall, every tiny movement of my hand amplified. Then, just to the left of one of the side windows, something glinted.
‘There,’ Deegan called, pointing to the spot.
I handed him the torch. ‘Hold that steady,’ I said.
Dempsey was already at the door, picking the lock. I looked at him quizzically. ‘Ask no questions, I’ll tell you no lies,’ he said, winking. Seconds later there was a click as the lock opened, and we were inside. The SOCO team wouldn’t have been able to set the burglar alarm when they’d locked up the house after their search.
We sprinted up the stairs, trying to judge which window the camera was at. Finally, in a disused bedroom sitting at the back of the house, we found it.
The room had four windows; two to the side of the house and two to the back. The beam of the torch Deegan was holding down below hit the ceiling above the first side window. It didn’t take long to spot the tiny white box sitting on the outside windowsill. Nor did it take long to follow the trail of the wire, running from it to a cabinet sitting in the corner beside a mahogany dresser.
The cabinet was locked but proved little challenge for Dempsey. Sure enough, inside we found a two tiny monitors and a video recorder. The video had stopped recording, the monitors showed no picture, though a red light on each showed they were on standby.
‘Another wire,’ Dempsey said, pointing over my shoulder, his breath warm on the back of my neck.
This one led to one of the back windows, where we found another tiny security camera, tucked in at the corner of the window frame.
The tape in the video recorder was fully rewound, suggesting it had run out. We played with the monitor until the screens came to life, then pushed in the tape and pressed play. A split screen image appeared on the monitor. By pressing a few more buttons, we discovered that we could watch either a recording of the back of the house, the front of the house, or both.
The date and time on the tape showed us that it had started recording at 8.37 p.m. on 12 June. We forwarded it, hoping that it hadn’t run out before Decko’s killing. Figures flickered on and offscreen as the tape moved. We stopped every so often to try to identify any of them. In one we could see Decko, standing near his pool, on the phone. Through the night and early part of 13 June, there was little to see.
Finally, at around 6.30 p.m., Hannon’s car pulled into the driveway. Danny McLaughlin was unmistakable: despite the graininess of the shot his bald head and sheer size were obvious. Paddy Hannon, on the other hand, was not quite so clearly identifiable, though we had little doubt that it was him. They approached the front of the house, then disappeared from view.
Several moments later, Decko suddenly appeared in the back garden, lying on his back, as though someone had thrown him. Next screen, Danny McLaughlin was over him, his hands clamped on Decko’s back. Then they were at the pool. As the images flicked by, one after another, we sat in silence, stunned and disgusted as we watched frame after frame shot of Decko’s torture. McLaughlin held his head under the water in some shots and out of the water in others. Then Decko lay alone at the pool’s edge, McLaughlin standing out of the picture. The next image revealed O’Kane’s body in the pool, around which a darkening circle was spreading.
Several images later we watched the two figures make their way down the side of the house to the car. McLaughlin opened the car door for Paddy Hannon, who was peeling off a pair of gloves. Then the car backed out and the frame was empty.
As the screen continued to flicker on to the end of the tape, we sat back and looked at each other.
‘Is it enough?’ I asked.
Dempsey smiled grimly. ‘I think it might be,’ he said.
Epilogue
Wednesday, 23 June
Over the subsequent days, Paddy Hannon moved from protesting his innocence, to blaming others, to finally agreeing to make a detailed confession in return for a reduced sentence. His version of events was as follows.
Jamie Kerr’s return to Lifford had caused none of them any concern. Even when he confronted Peter Webb, no one had really worried. Webb was an old hand, reliable as they came. Then a Brit came looking for Webb after the guns were found on his land. His wife put two and two together and finally realized that her husband had, in fact, been an informer in the earlier days of the Troubles. She and her younger brother had confronted him. A scuffle had ensued and in a rage Danny throttled Webb. Panicking, they contacted Decko O’Kane, who helped stage Webb’s suicide.
Jamie Kerr had witnessed Decko’s arrival at the house and his departure with Webb’s corpse. When the body was discovered, he had easily pieced together the truth. He had indeed blackmailed Sinead Webb, but not for money. He had threatened to tell the police, unless she organized a meeting with Decko and the other member of the Castlederg gang. It was at that meeting that Kerr was killed, nailed to a tree. The joke was that Kerr had wanted to forgive them, Hannon said. But, he’d pointed out, he hadn’t wanted to crucify the man; Decko and Danny had done that.
Then, of course, Decko was arrested and released suspiciously quickly. Things were closing in on them. Decko had been sleeping with Webb’s wife; things were getting messy. If Decko was linked with Webb and Kerr and arrested, there was no guarantee he wouldn’t name Hannon in an effort to plea-bargain. And so they had dispatched him, just as we had seen. Hannon had been able to blackmail McLaughlin into doing his dirty work, even killing his sister’s lover, as Decko had told him that McLaughlin was borrowing cars for the night and bringing them back with blood stains on the seat. It hadn’t taken a genius to compare the dates with the attacks on the two girls and make the connection.
The rest we knew. Hannon played down his involvement in all aspects of the cases. He’d wanted nothing to do with it, even from the start, he’d said.
Still, that didn’t stop an eagle-eyed accountant employed by the NBCI from finding a paper trail leading right back to the funds gained from the Castlederg robbery in Hannon’s accounts. The Assets Recovery Agency plan to seize all Hannon’s belongings and the building site in Raphoe where Karen Doherty lost her life will, for the foreseeable future, remain unfinished.
Sinead Webb was arrested following Hannon’s statement and will face a number of serious crime charges, including her involvement in the murder of her husband, and aiding and abetting her brother in his attacks on Karen Doherty and Rebecca Purdy.
Hugh Colhoun still does not know his fate. Williams has decided not to press charges, as have I. He has been discharged from the Gardai. He offered no reason for his actions, though he claimed he had never meant for anyone to be hurt. I spoke to him once, briefly, during his interview. He apologized profusely and promised he’d do whatever he could to make it right. I had nothing to say to him.
On the Monday morning, the promotions list was finally pinned up on the noticeboard in the station. I was not surprised to find that my name was not among the twenty-five successful applicants. Patterson’s name, however, was fifth on the list.
An hour or two later Miriam Powell arrived in the station, to speak to Costello. On her way out, she came over to my desk.
‘Good morning, Miriam,’ I said.
‘Just thought you should be the first to know,’ she said, kissing the air beside me. ‘Harry Patterson has been offered the Superintendent’s position here. I put in a good word on his behalf that he should remain in the area. He’ll be starting at the end of the month. I’ve just confirmed it with your boss.’
She waited for a reaction from me, but got none.
‘I’m very happy for him,’ I said. And I meant it. If Jamie Kerr could forgive those who shot him and left him to rot in jail, and could do so in the face of ridicule and threat, it seemed churlish for me to bear a grudge against Harry Patterson.
‘I am sorry,’ Miriam said, trying to seem genuine. ‘He really impressed the board with the way he handled the Colhoun fiasco.’
‘Fiasco,’ I repeated. ‘That’s a nice way to put it.’
‘He will o
bviously put the needs of the station above his own private agenda. Like with that guns find. You really shouldn’t have told the panel it was sound, Ben. We already knew there was something fishy about it by that stage.’
‘We all make mistakes, Miriam,’ I said, tiring of the conversation and whatever emotional response Miriam Powell was attempting to elicit. ‘Thank you for letting me know. Pass on my good wishes to Harry.’
That afternoon, Caroline called at our house. It was the first time I had seen her in a number of days. Her parents had come up to take her to stay with them for a while. Peter was strapped into the seat beside her father, the back of the car packed with their belongings.
‘Going on holiday?’ I asked, nodding towards the luggage.
‘A little longer than that, I think,’ she said. Her wounds had begun to heal now, though she still wore a neck brace and the cast on her arm.
‘What about the work?’
‘I’ve handed in my notice,’ she said. ‘Costello said he’d keep the job open, but then, I guess it’s not his call any more.’
I nodded vaguely.
‘What about you?’ she asked. ‘Any thought of leaving?’
I shook my head.
‘Staying to fight the good fight,’ she said, aiming for levity. We both laughed, unconvincingly.
‘When will you be back?’ I asked, swallowing back a lump rising in my throat.
She smiled sadly. ‘I don’t know.’
‘But you will be back, right?’
This time she said nothing. The space between us lay pregnant with unspoken words.
‘What about the house?’ I asked, turning to practical matters in an attempt to keep the conversation going. ‘Do you need me to keep an eye out?’
‘I’ve arranged with a local estate agent to let it out for a year; see how we get on.’
‘A year?’ I said.
‘For now.’
We stood looking at one another, both desperate to find something safe to say.
Gallows Lane idm-2 Page 23