by Alex Gray
‘What, then?’
‘How about Second Chance?’ Maggie suggested.
Lorimer snorted. ‘Sounds like a racehorse.’ Then he paused, ‘Why not call him Chancer? That’s what he is after all, a right wee chancer.’
Maggie looked up. Was there something of disapproval in her husband’s tone? Or had it simply been a particularly hard day? Whatever, he needed something pleasant to ease the worry lines etched across his brow, she thought in a rush of affection.
‘Okay, Chancer, off you go.’ Maggie stood up and let the cat slip off her knees. ‘Fancy some dinner or are you too tired?’ She came up close to Lorimer, arms entwining his waist, and felt his breath warm on her face.
‘Not that tired,’ he murmured, pulling her tightly against his body.
‘Sex-mad fool!’ she murmured into his shoulder teasingly, but shivered as her husband’s strong fingers traced the shape of her hips. Maggie closed her eyes as she felt his hardness against her, all thoughts of dinner vanishing as another sort of hunger commanded her senses.
CHAPTER 6
Jimmy Greer licked the salt from his lips. Crushing the crisp bag, he aimed it at an already overflowing waste bin but the bag unfolded itself mid-flight and landed well short of its target. No goal, he thought. Well, maybe he’d hit the mark with this latest story. Footballers’ wives had that double allure of belonging to a man’s world and still remaining glamour pusses, his editor had reminded him. They’d already sourced a picture of Janis Faulkner smiling into someone’s lens from her poolside sun lounger. It was true what they said, a picture was worth a thousand words and this one told a lovely little story of self-gratification. It almost begged the reader to indulge in a bit of Schadenfreude. Greer smiled to himself. He’d see what other tasty bits he could rake up while he was at it. The Gazette’s senior reporter turned back to his laptop. A few more words to knock out then he was out of here.
Even with all the windows open, the newspaper office was stiflingly hot and underarm damp patches had spread like twin Rorschach ink blots across his blue shirt. Greer glanced at his watch. Time for a quick one in the press bar, he told himself, flicking the cursor to ‘save’. Just a wee half before Kelvin FC held their press conference. Greer chuckled to himself, wondering what spin their new manager would have for them and what stories his rival journalists would have for tomorrow’s editions. Well, his sources had brought him something better and he’d have an exclusive.
The boardroom at Kelvin FC was a testament to the club’s long history. Founded in the late nineteenth century, its walls had echoed with the hopes and celebrations of Kelvin’s directors over three different centuries. Old photographs hung on the wood panelling, their teams lingering on for posterity. Names could still be matched with the faces staring forwards to whatever lens had captured their images, some of them remaining forever young, their aspirations cut off by one of the wars that had ravaged the twentieth century. Ron Clark glanced around the empty room. It was his favourite place inside the club, somewhere he could come and feel at home among all these sporting heroes. His last job had been with another First Division team but it had lacked the history of a club like Kelvin. Clark liked it here. Besides, he and Pat Kennedy understood one another.
Chairs had been arranged in ranks facing the largest table behind which he’d placed the Kelvin Chair. This was a fine-carved affair, high backed with the club’s crest emblazoned upon it, a chair normally reserved for Kennedy during more formal occasions. But today it seemed fitting that he should take it himself. Sitting there might give him the confidence he did not presently feel. Or was it because he was unconsciously taking Pat’s place? And would he be trying to emulate the chairman’s tactics?
The Kelvin manager shivered. He’d not felt as nervous as this before, even with a cup-winning match in prospect. But then, he told himself as he rubbed some warmth into his arms through his shirt sleeves, he’d never been involved in a murder investigation. Sometimes players were difficult to handle; temperaments could flare up on and off the pitch and more than once in his career he’d had to step in to settle some belligerent character who’d threatened them with the press. A few pub fights and (once) the father of a teenage girl had caused him some sleepless nights. On the whole the boys here were great. They turned up on time for training sessions, worked hard at their fitness regimes and mainly stayed out of trouble.
But nothing like this had ever happened at Kelvin FC. There was absolutely no precedent for the murder of one of their star players. And, Clark thought sadly, a star who’d never even had the chance to put on a Kelvin strip. He recalled Pat Kennedy’s bitter words. We’ve paid Sunderland top whack for him and now all that money’s gone, the chairman had complained. Clark had remained silent, shocked that Pat could begin to think about hard cash in the face of the footballer’s demise. What was money when a life had been so horribly cut off? But, he reflected, Pat seemed pretty obsessed by money these days. Ron’s own nephew, Davie, who had come up through Kelvin’s ranks and was now one of their regular defenders, had told him about the ill-feeling in the dressing room because of Kennedy’s insistence that they wouldn’t be paid extra for home wins next season.
Clark looked up, his train of thought interrupted as the first of the journalists was shown into the board-room by Marie McPhail, Kelvin’s administrative officer. Rising to his feet, the manager nodded to the reporter from the Gazette. ‘Take a seat, will you. The others shouldn’t be long.’
In truth the conference lasted a scant half-hour but for Ron Clark it seemed that it would never end. Questions about Nicko’s background came up, the reasons they’d had for paying all that money for him, whether he had any ideas about the man’s death to offer. The manager had shrugged his shoulders, bewildered that they’d think he could have any opinion whatsoever on the matter and wishing, not for the first time, that this particular press conference had not come within his remit as club manager. And as for getting in a mention of Jason White? That had been a non-starter.
Eventually he’d shaken all their hands and seen them out at the entrance to the club. It had felt as if he were accepting condolences after a funeral.
‘Have the police been to see you?’ Ron Clark turned to see a thin, cadaverous figure standing a little apart from the other journalists. It was a man he had not recognised; familiar as he was with the sports writers, this one eluded him.
Clark’s puzzled expression must have shown for the man thrust out a hand and gripped his own in a brief, damp clasp.
‘Jimmy Greer. The Gazette,’ he announced.
‘The police? No they haven’t,’ Clark replied.
‘They will.’ The reporter flicked one long finger against the side of his nose. ‘Trust me, they will,’ he repeated, then with a grin that showed a set of unhealthy stained teeth the reporter turned on his heel and headed for the car park.
Ron Clark stood watching him for a few moments then he shivered, despite the sun beating down out of a cloudless blue sky. There was something about the man Greer that made him more than a little uneasy.
He saw the floodlights looming over the motorway long before the actual stadium hove into view. Then some clever technology tilted the image and he was looking down at a manicured pitch, green beyond the dreams of any loving groundsman. Memories flooded back; the first time his dad had taken him to a league match. It had been Kelvin against Partick Thistle, he recalled, though what the score had been on that Saturday derby of long ago he simply couldn’t remember. Flashes of the occasion were all that remained: Dad hoisting him over the black, metal turnstile, the Bovril he’d spilt down his new jeans and the roars of the crowd that crushed him on all sides as they’d climbed up the stone staircase to sit side by side on worn wooden bucket-seats. His dad had been a keen Kelvin supporter and some of that must have rubbed off.
Lorimer had played rugby at school, but he had always followed the progress of Scottish football. It was part of the male psyche, he thought, to know what fixtures w
ere on and to remember the names of players, though these days that was becoming harder with all the foreign names mixed in with fewer and fewer Scots. Some of them, like Henrik Larsson, had stayed long enough to become feted almost as one of their own, but others were barely with a Scottish club for one season before they were off again.
Kelvin FC was one of those clubs that had retained a following among Glaswegians that was both loyal and parochial. Never rising to the greatness of the Old Firm, the club had nevertheless acquitted itself well in all its long history. And that, of course, was the main reason for such ardent loyalty. From its inception, Glaswegians had supported the club with a fierce devotion that was still reflected on today’s websites. Lorimer was reading their latest offering right now.
It took only seconds to realise that this link to the website had not been updated over the weekend. Lorimer grimaced. Well, what had he expected? That the Kelvin Keelies would have posted up information about Nicko Faulkner’s death? It was still holiday time, after all. Yet he’d expected something. After all, the transfer market had been hot for weeks and the new signings of Jason White and Nicko Faulkner had made headlines in more than just the sports section of the Gazette. White was one of the bad boys of the game, his name all too frequently in the tabloids for the wrong reasons. His flair on the park seemed to make up for his wayward bouts of antisocial behaviour though, at least as far as his past managers were concerned. Rumour had it that he’d been denied an English cap due to some of these incidents. How would he fare under the management of Ron Clark? The Kelvin manager was well respected in the game, one of those rare birds of passage, an articulate fellow who didn’t talk in clichés all the time. Lorimer chuckled to himself; Clark had been the despair of Jonathan Watson, the TV comic who had taken off so many of the prominent figures in Scottish football.
Lorimer’s mouse clicked on the last of the website’s pages. At first sight it was simply a chat room for fans to have their say about the team’s progress. The last batch of correspondence was dated 3 July.
Don’t know why they have to put up the season ticket again. How many bums are they going to lose off seats if they keep this up? It’s not as if we’re even in the SPL this season — Chris
Well everyone says that Kennedy’s going to have to put more money into the club or it’ll be in trouble. Remember what happened to Airdrie? They had to crawl back up from Division Two after they’d gone broke — Danny
Aye, and Falkirk. They nearly went bust too, didn’t they? Should’ve been in the Premier League as well, if it hadn’t been for the condition of Brockville — Chris Ancient history, pal. Though I suppose Kelvin’s not exactly state of the art, is it? — Danny
‘D’you want a cup of tea?’ Maggie’s voice broke into Lorimer’s thoughts.
‘Give me a minute. I’ll be right out,’ he called over his shoulder. He scrolled down to the last words on the page:
Well they must have plenty of money if they’re throwing all that dosh at Nicko Faulkner. What d’you think? — Chris
But the chat came to an abrupt end, the invisible Danny failing to respond and leaving that question dangling in the ether. What did he think? What was the consensus of opinion among the fans? Had Nicko been unpopular with any of them? Lorimer gave himself a shake. That was a dangerous train of thought. Looking for some weirdo who’d had a grudge was just daft. Mitchison was almost certainly correct in his assessment of Janis Faulkner: it was so obvious that she must have killed her husband, but still Lorimer sat at the computer wondering that perennial question: why?
‘It’ll get cold,’ Maggie murmured, her warm cheek against his. ‘Come on outside while it’s still light.’ Lorimer put his hand on her waist, ready to encircle it, but she was off with a laugh and he could only follow her out into the garden where two sun loungers lay waiting. From the depths of one of them an orange face looked up.
‘You again,’ he grinned. ‘Right wee chancer you are, pal.’
The sky was still light, the treetops dark against a pinkish haze that signalled yet another sunny day tomorrow. Maggie scooped up the cat and flipped it back on to her lap in one easy movement as she lay back on the lounger. A tray with two mugs sat on top of an upturned plastic litter bin, Maggie’s improvised picnic table until such time as she could be bothered to buy a proper one. Lorimer couldn’t recall when the summers had been as hot as this one. Sitting out in their garden at the end of a working day had previously been more of a novelty; now it was a welcome routine. He closed his eyes against the brightness of the western sky and let his hand fall limply by his side. Somewhere in the shrubbery a blackbird’s liquid notes came through the twilight. He opened his eyes, glancing at the cat, but it was curled contentedly on Maggie’s knee, oblivious to any bird. That was good, he thought. Maybe it wouldn’t be a nuisance after all. The idea of the animal stalking one of their garden birds and sinking its claws into a bundle of feathers made him wince, he could almost feel the sharpness of the points as they bit into the struggling bird.
Lorimer’s imagination took another leap, this time into a kitchen where human flesh had been pierced by sharp metal and where a man had bled to death. Had he been stalked? Had that been a calculated act of cruelty?
The blackbird whistled again but this time Lorimer took no pleasure in hearing the bird and knew he would not recapture the peace he’d found on Mull until he’d come to find the truth behind Nicko Faulkner’s killing.
CHAPTER 7
‘We are the Keelies!’ The rhythmic stamping of feet followed the refrain, echoing round the ground, then a huge cheer went up as their team ran out from the tunnel. Black-and-white scarves held high were waved in time to the chants, roars of approval met the loudspeaker’s announcement of each team member. It was the first game of the season, the sun shone out of a clear blue sky, the score sheet was still pristine and anything could happen. Kelvin Park almost had about it a carnival atmosphere; music blared from the tannoy as a huge panda bear lumbered up and down in front of the stands, its immense paws held out to the front row of wee boys, clamouring to touch their mascot. Their spirits at least had not been dampened too deeply by the sombre aspect of a player’s death. ‘And you can hear the crowd as we look out over Kelvin Park. There’s a sense of expectation in the air, don’t you think?’
‘I would agree with that. Kelvin FC playing at home to Queen of the South today surely have a real chance to go through this first round of the Bell’s Cup.’
‘You don’t think the Dumfries side will progress past this game into the next round of the cup, then?’
‘Well, Jim, I would say that Kelvin’s reputation makes the home fans pretty confident of victory. Just listen to them!’
‘Ah, but football’s a strange game,’ Jim Nicholson, the host of Radio Scotland’s Sport Saturday, replied. ‘Look at all the surprises from last season. And with Nicko Faulkner’s death and Jason White not in the line-up, who knows what might happen?’
‘Any idea why White’s not playing today?’ his co-presenter asked.
‘No. A bit odd that he’s not even on the bench, don’t you think?’
Then the commentators broke off as a minute’s silence began.
The ripple of talk died away leaving only the crackling static from the tannoy system and a whine like an air-raid siren as a motorbike started up. Its engine roared into life, then the noise faded into the distance until all that could be heard was a plaintive seagull crying above the stadium.
A minute is a long time to be silent, reflecting on one man’s death. The mass of people stood, some with bowed heads, others staring at the two teams lined up on the pitch. In the quiet seconds ticking their way towards the start of the game, there was a sense of unease mingled with a desire to forget the recent tragedy and continue with the more important business of football. One man watched the clock, counting off the seconds. Then he put a whistle to his mouth and raised one arm skywards. Once again the noise erupted from the terracing, some handclapping endorsin
g the football club’s respectful action.
From his vantage point in the directors’ box, Patrick Kennedy watched his team with something amounting to pride. They had all stood for the minute’s silence, but now, like schoolboys released at the sound of a bell, his players were suddenly running into their positions, eager to begin this game. The pitch was in perfect condition. Wee Bert had spent days with the sprinkler, coaxing some energy back into the dried turf. The freshly painted goals gleamed white in the sunshine, no hint of a breeze disturbing the brand-new nets. Gordon Carmichael, their regular first-team goalkeeper, stood between the posts, eyes scanning the ball, but it was well up the park, no threat to Kelvin’s six-foot-six goalie. He was a big, douce lad, was Gudgie Carmichael, thought Kennedy. Nobody meeting him off the park would dream that he was totally fearless when coming out to challenge an opponent.
Glancing around him, Kennedy could see the expressions on the punters’ faces. Many of the men around him were recipients of the corporate hospitality that Kelvin offered at home games, and after a good lunch and a few drinks, they were happy to be Kelvin fans, if only for that afternoon. Last season’s relegation was behind them now and all the talk was on getting back into the Scottish Premier League. Further along from the directors’ box, people were getting down to the serious business of the new season, all eyes on the ball as it was booted across the park into the path of the oncoming Kelvin players.
A howl went up as Leo Giannitrapani missed an attempt at goal. Kennedy shook his head. Their Sicilian striker had disappointed them the previous season and if he didn’t begin to fill the score sheet, the fans would expect him to be out this time next year. Still, it had been a chance for Kelvin to draw first blood and the crowd were applauding Giannitrapani’s effort.
Kennedy’s eyes followed the ball up and down the park, his teeth clenching in irritation as chance after chance went awry, Queen of the South’s defenders nipping at his strikers’ heels. Now if Jason White had actually been here … He sighed. All that money spent and what had the team to show for it? The new mid-fielder had been one of their great hopes. The player was still in custody after a night of riotous behaviour, despite all of Ron Clark’s pleading. Relations between the local police headquarters and the football club were generally good but asking for favours like releasing the player for today’s game had been a non-starter. White would suffer for this.