Dark Blood

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Dark Blood Page 41

by Stuart MacBride


  Butler strapped the detective superintendent into place. ‘Hospital?’

  ‘Building site.’

  ‘Damn.’

  They left the road flares burning, and Butler did another slithering three-point-turn to get the Land Rover facing the right way. Then Logan told her to kill the blue flashing lights as they drove deeper into the development.

  ‘You sure about this, Sarge?’

  ‘Nope.’ Logan pulled out his phone. No signal. He reached over and plucked the Airwave handset from Butler’s shoulder.

  Control still didn’t have an ETA for the firearms team. The whole Bridge of Don was gridlocked after a bendy-bus slid sideways across all four carriageways between the bridge and Balgownie Road, trying to avoid a three-car pile-up. They were having to divert via Grantham in snow-laden rush-hour.

  The message from DCI Finnie was to sit tight and not do anything stupid.

  Logan hit the disconnect button.

  PC Butler looked at him. ‘We’re going to do something stupid, aren’t we?’

  ‘Yup.’

  52

  The development loomed out of the blizzard – skeleton houses, the hunched shapes of machinery. First stop the site office.

  The lights were on, but when Logan sent Butler out to try the door it was locked. No one inside.

  A little after five and the sun was long gone, now everything beyond the reach of the headlights was enveloped in darkness.

  The Police Land Rover bumped over something in the snow, the front end rearing up, then the back. Behind them, Danby groaned again. At least he was still alive. Probably more than they could say for Richard Knox.

  Butler let the four-by-four rumble to a halt. ‘Think we’ve run out of road.’

  Logan peered into the whirling white and inky black. Last time he was here with PC Martin and her cadaver dog, Wardrobe, the further away from the site office they got, the more complete the houses were. Assuming they hadn’t just staked Knox out to freeze to death in the great outdoors, he’d be in something that at least had a roof on it.

  The Land Rover was fitted with a roof-mounted spotlight. Logan grabbed the handle and flicked the switch. A crack sounded above his head and the harsh white beam leapt out through the snow.

  He fiddled with the handle, swinging the spotlight about, trying to get a feel for it, then did a slow sweep left to right. Didn’t matter how strong the light was, it could only penetrate so far before the whirling flakes consumed everything.

  He pointed towards the nearest property with a roof. ‘That way.’

  The Land Rover bumped and rolled its way slowly through the drift-covered landscape. The first house was dark. So was the second one, blue-and-white ‘POLICE’ tape snapping and writhing outside it. The third was dark too. But a pale glow oozed out from the downstairs window of house number four.

  ‘There.’

  Logan snapped off the spotlight. Butler killed the engine and the headlights. Darkness. Now the only sound was the howling wind and the creak of springs as the Land Rover rocked with each blast.

  ‘Right.’

  They both stayed where they were, in the dark, watching the house through the windscreen.

  Butler cleared her throat. ‘We got any sort of plan?’

  No.

  Logan licked his lips. Melting snow plastered his hair to his head, trickling down the back of his neck and into his collar. ‘I’ll take the front, you go round the back.’ He pulled his damp sleeve back, exposing his watch. ‘What time have you got?’

  She checked. ‘Quarter past.’

  ‘Right, we go in at twenty past. Quietly, understand?’

  Butler nodded and they synchronized watches. ‘You sure about this, Sarge?’

  ‘Nope. You?’

  The constable pulled out her extendible baton, undid her seatbelt. Took three deep breaths. Opened the door, and jumped out into the night.

  Logan gave her a couple of minutes to get into place, then climbed into the darkness, sinking up to his knees in a drift of soft grey.

  He waded his way forward, clambering upwards until the snow only came as far as his ankles, leaching the heat from his damp socks, making his trouser legs stick to his skin. His whole head burning with the cold.

  The front door was painted some dark colour, indistinguishable in the gloom, but the little portico offered a little shelter from the whipping snow.

  Logan checked his watch. Twenty past in: three, two, one…He grabbed the handle.

  Thank God it wasn’t locked.

  He threw the door open and stumbled into the house.

  A tiny hallway, door leading off to one side – probably a toilet – stairs leading upstairs, set of glass doors to the right. That was where the light was coming from.

  He looked through into a small lounge.

  They were obviously still finishing off the property. A stack of skirting boards lay beneath the front window; two or three boxes of bathroom tiles; a table-mounted circular saw; rolls of silver-backed Rockwool; a nail gun; drums of thick, grey electrical cable; some stuff for fitting carpets; a toolbox; a plastic bag of screws, the shiny thorns of metal glinting in the glow of a big battery torch that lay on the floor.

  Richard Knox was curled up next to it, naked on a rectangle of plastic sheeting, hands behind his back, silver duct tape thick around his ankles, another strip across his mouth.

  Where the hell was PC Butler?

  Logan checked his watch again. Twenty-one minutes past. Butler should’ve been here by now.

  Logan reached for the glass-panelled door and froze. There was someone in the room with Knox. A man, dressed in a thick padded jacket – goatee beard, glasses, comb-over. The project manager: Brett.

  Brett crouched down beside Knox with his back to the door, and Logan caught a flash of needle-nosed pliers.

  And then Knox writhed, screaming behind the gag as Brett twisted and pulled and shoved.

  Damn it…Now he didn’t have any choice.

  Logan eased the door open and crept inside, matching his footfalls to Knox’s muffled yells, eyes darting around the room in case Brett wasn’t working alone.

  The project manager sat back on his haunches, staring down at Knox. ‘I’m going to keep doing this until you tell me where the money is. You may have the rest of them fooled, but I know you’ve still got something hidden away, haven’t you?’ He opened the pliers and something metal fell to the floor. ‘Shall we take another one out? I think—’

  Logan battered him over the head with the torch.

  The project manager slumped sideways, the pliers bouncing out of his hands.

  Not the most heroic rescue in the world, but it worked.

  He rolled Brett over onto his front and cuffed his hands behind his back.

  The plastic sheeting Knox lay on was spattered with droplets of scarlet. About a dozen little dark spines stuck out of his upper arm and shoulder, surrounded by angry red welts, oozing blood. About the same number again were just empty, bloody holes. Just like Steve Polmont.

  Logan shifted around until his back was to the wall, then crouched down and patted Knox on the cheek.

  The little man’s eyes snapped open. He flinched back, screaming behind his gag.

  Logan slapped him, and hissed, ‘Shut up, you idiot! Not going to hurt you.’ He stole another look around the room. ‘Are there any more of them?’

  Knox drew a shuddering breath in through his nose and nodded.

  Bugger. Where the bloody hell was Butler?

  Logan reached down for the edge of the duct tape gag and froze. Might be a better idea to leave it where it was. Get Knox out of here as quietly as possible, before the rest of Malcolm McLennan’s thugs got back.

  ‘Can you walk?’

  No response.

  ‘I said, “Can you walk?”’

  The thin, naked man just blinked at him.

  One way to find out.

  Logan sne
aked over to the toolbox, looking for anything with a decent blade to cut through the duct tape. There was a battered Stanley knife in one of the trays with SP scratched into the handle. Perfect.

  The mechanism was stiff, but he managed to slide the rusty triangular blade out, then squatted over Knox’s ankles and started sawing.

  ‘Wouldn’t bother if I was you.’ A Glaswegian accent, right behind him.

  Logan froze.

  Where was Police Constable Fucking Butler when you actually needed her?

  17:18, SIX MINUTES AGO

  PC Vicki Butler edged her way around the corner of the detached house. She’d abandoned the standard fluorescent-yellow high-vis waistcoat back in the car. Can’t sneak up on anyone when you glow in the dark, can you?

  She flexed her hands around the handle of the extended truncheon. Feeling the weight.

  Dear Lord it was cold.

  She crept along the back wall – ducking under the kitchen window – making for the French doors.

  Vicki peeled the cuff of her glove back and checked the time. Thirty seconds to go. Twenty-nine. Twenty-eight.

  Her feet were going numb, even through two pairs of socks.

  Seventeen. Sixteen. Fifteen.

  She tightened her grip on the truncheon.

  Twelve. Eleven. Ten.

  Vicki inched closer to the French doors.

  Six. Five. Four. Three.

  She placed a black-gloved hand on the door handle.

  Zero.

  And then she heard it. A low growl, coming from right behind her.

  Oh…crap.

  She turned, slowly.

  There was a dark shape slinking through the snow towards her. Big, muscular – snow sticking to its black fur.

  Jesus, that was a big dog.

  Vicki backed off, nice and slow. ‘Good doggy?’

  The growl became a snarl.

  Fuck…

  Andy Connelly, AKA: Mr Big-and-Bald, wiped his hands on a wodge of blue paper towels. From above Logan could hear the sound of a cistern filling up again. Completely missed the flush.

  Connelly dropped the towels on the floor as Logan stood.

  ‘Andrew Connelly, I am arresting you on suspicion of the murder of Steven Polmont—’

  ‘He doesn’t have the money any more.’

  Logan pulled out his pepper-spray. ‘Face down, on the ground, do it!’

  ‘That’s what you’re after, right? Mental Mikey’s little eighteen million pound nest egg?’

  ‘Eighteen million?’

  Shrug. ‘So they say. But the little shite’s frittered it all away, hasn’t he?’

  ‘On the floor.’

  ‘Transferred into the offshore bank accounts of Mikey’s successors.’ Connelly frowned. ‘Shame, could’ve done with a couple million, you know? Set me up somewhere warm and sunny till the heat dies down on that Polmont prick.’

  Connelly nudged the unconscious project manager with his foot. ‘Course this crawly wee fuck wanted to give it all to the boss, didn’t he? Wanted to make up for all the dodgy goods and drugs you bastards seized.’

  ‘I’m not telling you again: on the floor, now!’

  ‘See, if Knox doesn’t have the money any more, he’s fuck-all use to nobody. You want him, you can have him.’

  Lying on the floor behind him, Knox mumbled, kicking the floor.

  ‘Yeah, I want him.’

  Shrug. Connelly turned and walked through the lounge door. ‘He’s yours.’

  Logan frowned. That was a lot easier than he’d been expecting. He glanced back at Knox, lying trussed up on the floor, opened his mouth to say something, and then Connelly hit him – a side-on rugby tackle that sent them both crashing against the wall. Hard enough to crack the plasterboard.

  They went down in a tangle of limbs, Logan gasping for breath as his scarred stomach screamed at him, swinging fists, elbows, knees, anything to get the bastard off.

  Only Connelly was bigger, heavier, and a hell of a lot stronger.

  Less than thirty seconds and he had Logan pinned to the chipboard, face down, with his knee in the middle of Logan’s back. The big man grabbed a handful of Logan’s hair, hauled his head up off the floor, then slammed it down again.

  Logan threw an elbow back, but all he got from Connelly was a grunt.

  His forehead battered into the chipboard again.

  Bright lights chasing darkness. Jackhammers in his brain. Thumping.

  And then a hand grabbed his flailing wrist and pinned it to the floor.

  ‘Never, ever, take your eyes off the prize.’ Connelly reached out with his other hand, and Logan watched him drag the nail gun over.

  ‘Fucking get off me!’

  The nail gun’s nozzle was cold against the back of Logan’s hand.

  ‘See, it’s got a pressure safety trigger, have to press down to fire.’

  THUNK.

  Logan screamed, even though the pain hadn’t kicked in yet. It…He stared at his hand. The nail was sticking through his sleeve, pinning it to the chipboard.

  THUNK. Another nail on the other side.

  Kneeling on top of him, Connelly laughed. ‘What? You thought I was going to put a nail through your fuckin’ hand? What kind of animal do you think I am? Sides, get blood on the floor, have to hack up that whole chunk of chipboard and replace it…’

  ‘GET THE FUCK OFF ME!’

  ‘Ah well, it’s only chipboard.’

  THUNK.

  Silence.

  There was a half inch of dark grey metal sticking up out of the back of Logan’s hand. Fire raced up his arm. ‘FUCK! AAAGH! FUCKING…FUCK!’

  ‘Fancy another one? Piercin’s all the rage these days, but.’

  THUNK.

  ‘FUCK!’

  ‘See: did that one at an angle so your hand’s stuck. Chippies call it dovetailin’ the nails. Is that no’ interestin’?’

  Warm red trickled out between Logan’s palm and the chipboard.

  The weight shifted on his back.

  ‘We going to do your right hand next? Or shall we just stick a couple through your forehead?’

  Logan whipped his head to the side, eyes raking the floor for something to…The rusty Stanley knife. He threw his right hand out, groping for the handle.

  Connelly leaned down and grinned in his face. ‘No fuckin’ way, big man. Nice try though—’

  Something dirty-pink slammed into Connelly’s bald head. He lurched forwards and the feet hit him again, both together, heel-first, cracking his nose. Then again, bouncing his head off the flooring.

  It was Knox, writhing on the blood-streaked plastic sheeting, driving his feet down on Connelly’s head again, both legs still duct-taped together at the ankles. Face screwed up, hissing behind the gag.

  One more time and that was it – he collapsed back against the plastic sheeting, sobbing. But Andrew Connelly wasn’t moving any more.

  The kitchen door nearly exploded off its hinges, the handle making a deep gouge in the plasterboard wall.

  PC Butler lurched in, left trouser leg torn and tattered, blood oozing down her shin, little flecks of red all over her face, waving her extendible baton. ‘POLICE! Nobody fucking move!’

  She stood there, wobbling for a moment, frowning at the scene. ‘What did I miss?’

  53

  Logan dry swallowed another couple of ibuprofen, chased them down with an amoxicillin, gagged, then washed everything away with a mouthful of lukewarm tea.

  His hand throbbed, all wrapped up in white bandages and feeling like it was twice the size. Could barely move his fingers. Lucky both nails missed the tendons, or he’d have been buggered – that was the technical term the surgeon had used.

  Two days later and it still hurt like hell.

  PC Guthrie slouched through into the Wee Hoose, waved a brief hello, then settled onto Biohazard Bob’s desk. ‘You got a minute?’

  Logan checked
the clock, it was surrounded by Post-it notes with arrows and ‘BEER O’CLOCK?’ scribbled on them.

  ‘You can have three. Got Goulding coming in, we’re off to see Knox at half past.’

  ‘Finnie tells me you’re the man for the graveyard flasher case?’

  Logan closed his eyes, slumped in his seat, head dangling over the backrest, arms hanging by his sides. ‘What now?’

  ‘He got his knob out again this morning – showed it to a nice young lady who used to kickbox for Scotland. She beat the living crap out of him.’

  ‘He downstairs?’

  Guthrie nodded. ‘His black eye’s even better than yours.’

  ‘Stick him in an interview room and leave him to sweat for a while. You can do a bit of looming if you like?’

  ‘Yes, Guv.’

  Soon as the door clunked shut, Doreen swivelled her chair around. ‘You know, you should really go home with that hand. You don’t need to be here.’

  ‘Course he does.’ DS Mark MacDonald grinned. ‘Our lad here can’t leave in case they decide to give Beardy Beattie’s job to you, me, or Bob. It’s OK, Laz, we’d be kind to you, wouldn’t we?’

  ‘I’m just saying it’s not right to be in work with a serious injury like that…’

  Logan gathered up his files in his good hand and excused himself. Pausing on the way down the corridor to sneak a look into Beattie’s office. They’d already taken the name plate down, and now it was just the idiot himself, hunched over a file box, tidying away his personal effects so the next occupant could move in.

  It was a miracle they hadn’t just fired his useless beardy backside.

  Logan even managed to whistle a happy tune on his way down to reception.

  The meeting with Knox was pretty straightforward. The ratfaced Geordie was in a private room at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, with a plainclothes officer from the Offender Management Unit stationed outside – just in case.

  Logan settled back against the wall, letting Dr Goulding take the single seat.

  Knox’s belongings were piled on the wide windowsill, the battered leather suitcase on the bottom, his granny’s quilt folded on top of that. The man himself lay in the bed, beneath the institution-grey covers, family bible clutched to his chest.

 

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