Logan McRae Crime Series Books 7 and 8

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Logan McRae Crime Series Books 7 and 8 Page 61

by Stuart MacBride


  ‘Big time: drew an eight-foot magic circle on the lino in the kitchen. Bloody thing was like a conga-line for maggots.’ He shifted in his seat, pulled his chin back, frowning. ‘Why are you looking at me like that?’

  Logan pointed at the door. ‘Go: I want copies of the crime-scene photos on my desk in five minutes. And make sure there’s some good ones of the magic circle.’

  ‘Urgh …’ Rennie hauled himself out of the chair and slouched from the room, leaving the office door lying wide open behind him.

  Logan grabbed his phone and put in a call to ex-DI Insch, stuffing an extra set of photos into the blue folder with the post-mortem shots while it rang.

  The big man’s voice boomed out of the earpiece. ‘About time you called back! I told you to have a word with Robbie Whyte, not arrest him!’

  Call him back? Logan pulled the mobile from his ear and poked at the screen. Four voicemails and three text messages. All from Insch’s number. Ah …

  ‘Been in meetings all morning, so I—’

  ‘What part of “keep it low key” did you have difficulty understanding?’

  ‘He gave Nichole Fyfe a gift-wrapped severed dog’s head and assaulted two people. I didn’t have any choice.’

  ‘CHOICE? If you’d got your finger out and spoken to him when I asked you to, it wouldn’t have happened and I wouldn’t have my lead actress bawling her eyes out in her trailer unable to do any BLOODY WORK!’

  Wonderful. A bollocking from Insch. Just like the good old days.

  ‘You said to get in touch if I needed anything.’

  ‘You think you deserve a favour?’

  ‘I – didn’t – have – any – choice. I’m trying to solve three murders here, OK? I’m sorry if that’s inconveniencing you in any way.’

  Silence from the other end of the phone. Then, finally, ‘What do you want?’

  ‘How about the name and number of your witchcraft consultant?’

  ‘Wow.’ The man in the leather jacket rubbed a hand across his downturned mouth and neatly trimmed beard. ‘And you’re sure I’m supposed to be in here?’ He’d hauled his long blond hair back into a ponytail. That and the beard, the chiselled features, and broad shoulders made Alex Hay look more like a Viking than Aberdeen City Council’s chief historian.

  Logan tucked the folder under his arm and pointed to the path of raised metal trays beneath his feet, the little metal legs keeping them a couple of inches above the patio slabs outside the back door. ‘Forensics have got everything they’re going to get; just stick to the walkway and you’ll be fine.’

  Alex pulled on a smile that didn’t seem all that happy with his face. ‘Does it always smell like this?’

  Logan patted him on the back – it was like patting a brick wall. Had to be solid muscle underneath the leather. ‘Don’t worry, it’ll be worse inside.’

  ‘Worse. Right. Good …’

  Logan turned the key in the lock and pushed the door open. The smell of meat, long past its sell-by date oozed out from the kitchen, sunk its claws into the base of his stomach and twisted. He blinked, turned his face away, breathing through his mouth. The air tasted as bad as it smelled. ‘OK, maybe masks would be a good idea.’

  He put one on, then passed the other over. Waiting until the historian had his in place before stepping off the walkway onto the one-foot-square patch of linoleum just inside the door marked with black-and-yellow tape as safe. Then from there straight back onto the first tray of the path set up in the kitchen.

  It was a reasonably modern space, but completely empty. No pots, no pans, no toaster, no kettle and no furniture, just the little drifts of fly carcases piled up by the skirting boards. The walls were a disturbing shade of rippling grey.

  A ragged pentagram, about six-foot across, sat in the middle of the blue-and-cream linoleum. It was lumpen, spotted, as if it’d been made by melting black candle wax onto the floor, layered over with a series of concentric circles punctuated by incomprehensible words and squiggles. Like a demonic sheriff’s badge. The smears and pools of dried blood just added to the image.

  Five holes pierced the linoleum, a couple of inches in from the pentagram’s points.

  Alex paused on the threshold, rubbing his fingertips down the front of his jacket, as if that would keep them clean. He stared down at the gap in the walkway. ‘I thought we weren’t supposed to—’

  ‘They can’t lay the trays where the door goes, can they?’

  ‘Ah, OK, yes, got you …’ He cleared his throat, then stepped inside. Clunked the door shut behind him.

  The noise must have startled the flies, because the walls went from grey to magnolia as they buzzed into the rank air, bobbing and swirling like angry smoke. Alex froze. ‘I …’

  ‘Ignore them.’ The walkway detoured around the pentagram and headed further off into the house. Logan stopped at the top of the five-pointed star. ‘Well, you’re the witchcraft expert: is that what I think it is?’

  ‘Ah, OK …’ A cough. ‘Do you have any gloves?’

  Logan handed him a pair, and the historian struggled them on over trembling fingers.

  He hunkered down on the walkway, head moving from side to side. ‘It’s a magic circle.’

  Pause. ‘I’m going to need slightly more than that.’

  ‘Ah, yes, of course …’ He puffed out a breath. ‘Right, this is basically a corruption of the circles described in The Key of Solomon. Going by strict Qabalistic belief, the pentagram shouldn’t be there, it’s wrong. It shouldn’t cross the outer circles either.’

  He pointed at the centre of the pentagram, where four words sat inside the innermost band. ‘Septen, merid, orien, occid – north, south, east and west. They orient the circle. The next layer: those things that look like musical notes? They’re the letter Tau, last character in the Hebrew alphabet, they stand for the perfection of God’s creation.’ He shifted over a couple of paces. ‘Next band out is, Eloah, Tetragrammaton, Eheieh and Elion – Tetragrammaton represents the true name of God, the rest are emanations. And all around the outside is: Miserere mei Deus secundum magnam. Basically, “Have mercy upon me, oh God, according to your loving kindness.”’

  Logan opened DI Leith’s folder and pulled out the crime-scene photographs. Selected one that showed the whole room, then held it out. ‘Victim was staked out in the middle.’

  Alex held a hand against the base of his throat, as if he was trying to swallow something stuck there. ‘OK, that’s just wrong.’ He made a gulping sound. Then a groan. Then lurched to his feet and stumbled for the door, making the walkway clang. Thump, out into the back garden, ripping his facemask off.

  The door swung shut again, silencing the sound of violent retching.

  25

  Samantha made chewing noises down the phone at him, as if she was eating something. ‘Well, you can’t just do nothing and hope it’ll go away, can you?’

  Logan wandered up the street in the hazy sunshine, plastic bag from the wee shop swinging at his side. ‘Well, what am I supposed to do? I can’t accept a cheque for—’

  ‘You’re not accepting it, are you? All you’re doing is nominating a charity.’

  ‘But that makes me—’

  ‘No it doesn’t. Thirty grand could make a massive difference to some charities, so grow a pair and pick one.’

  He stopped, leaned against a garden wall, and peered down the street at the handful of journalists and TV crews loitering outside the Abernethy house, doing bits to camera with the ‘FOR SALE’ sign and line of ‘POLICE’ tape in the background. They looked about as bored as it was possible to be and still remain awake. ‘It’s not right.’

  ‘You’re getting as bad as Rennie.’ More chewing. ‘Fancy Chinese for tea tonight?’

  ‘Can’t, I’ve got that NPIA review thing. And what am I supposed to do about being executor for Wee Hamish’s will?’

  ‘That I can’t help you with. Don’t stay out too late.’ And she
was gone. Some rotten sods just enjoyed other people’s misfortune.

  Right. Back to work. He tucked the plastic bag under his jacket, the cold leaching into his ribs as he marched up the road. No making eye contact, face the front, act like any other normal person out for a walk. He passed the BBC outside broadcast van, a Renault with two journalists reading newspapers and smoking cigarettes. Not one of them looked up. So far, so good. Then he took a sharp left, ducking under the line of barrier tape and onto the Abernethys’ driveway.

  The uniform standing guard nodded at him. ‘Guv.’

  By the time the assembled members of the press realized he wasn’t just a passer-by he was through the gate at the side of the property.

  A voice behind him: ‘Have you identified the remains yet?’

  Then another: ‘Do you have any suspects?’

  And another: ‘Is it true the victim was dismembered?’

  He clunked the gate shut.

  Alex Hay was where he’d left him, sitting on a wooden bench in the back garden with his head between his knees.

  ‘Feeling any better?’

  The historian shrugged. ‘Sorry, I didn’t think it would … The smell was a bit …’

  ‘Yeah, I know.’ Logan produced the carrier bag, dug out a tin of Diet Coke and handed it over. ‘Got you a Cornetto. Might settle your stomach.’

  Alex cracked the tin and took a sip of Coke, swishing it between his teeth as if it was mouthwash. ‘The whole thing’s wrong.’

  ‘Violent death always is.’ Logan perched on the edge of the bench and stretched his legs out. Helped himself to a bottle of water and a choc ice. ‘They wash the body when they’re getting it ready for post mortem. Want to see?’

  ‘He was staked out inside the pentagram, right? That’s the wrong way round. A magic circle like that’s for protection, you create one and then you stand in it when you’re dealing with Satanic forces. Summoning the devil, or demons, or spirits, or raising the dead, or questioning witches. They can’t cross the circle and their powers can’t either.’ He put the can down and peeled the wrapper off the Cornetto, licking the ice cream from the underside of the cardboard top. ‘It’s like a condom that stops evil screwing you.’

  Logan took out the pre-post-mortem photos again and placed them on the bench between them. ‘Didn’t do our victim much good, did it?’

  ‘That’s why it’s wrong. In Witchfire, Hunter created this kind of hodgepodge of different belief systems, stealing things from all over the place. I suppose that’s the joy of writing an alternative history, go back far enough and you can change things to suit yourself: who’s going to complain?’

  ‘That magic circle: it’s in the book, isn’t it?’ A lot of the story was a blur, but there were definitely a few magic circles in it.

  ‘The Fingermen call it the Ring Knot, it’s meant to keep them safe during interrogations.’ He glanced down at the photographs. ‘How could anyone do that to another human being?’

  Logan licked a dribble of melted choc ice from his wrist. ‘You’d be surprised.’

  ‘You see all those little wounds? It’s called “pricking”, they do it to find the Devil’s mark. Theory was that when you enter into the Devil’s service, he gives you this mark that shows you’re his. It’s meant to be impervious to pain, so they’d jab you all over with pins and knives, looking for some spot where it didn’t hurt. If they found it, that meant you were a witch. And they always found it, even if it wasn’t there.’ He took a deep breath and checked the photos again. ‘In the fifteenth century, the Malleus Maleficarum was the witch-finders’ bible. It details shaving off all the witches’ body hair before interrogation begins, because they could be hiding something underneath – a charm, or power, or something else they can use against the inquisitor.’

  ‘But he should’ve been outside the circle.’

  ‘The circle’s for protection: if you were the Fingerman, why would you want to protect the witch?’ He stared into the depths of his Coke can. ‘Did he … was it the loss of blood? You know … that killed him.’

  ‘Won’t find out till they’ve done the post mortem.’ Logan pulled out the other set of photographs – the ones from Saturday evening – and placed them on top of the first lot. The unknown necklacing victim stared up at them with cooked eyes. ‘The trial by fire. Identical to the book.’

  Alex just sat there with his mouth hanging open.

  A wasp swooped down onto the Cornetto in his hand, buzzing like a happy serial killer.

  ‘Half strangled, then burned alive.’

  ‘In Scotland they veerit you first … Wrap a rope around your neck and twist it while you’re tied to the stake, waiting for them the light the fire and … Ayabastard!’ He dropped the ice-cream cone and flapped his hand around, dancing up from the bench.

  Logan took another bite of choc ice. ‘Why didn’t they necklace the body in there?’

  ‘Bloody thing stung me …’ He sucked on the back of his hand.

  ‘I mean, they necklaced the other victim, why not this one?’

  ‘Bloody wasps …’

  Logan’s phone rang in his pocket. He pulled it out: unknown number. ‘Hello?’

  ‘Hello? DI McRae? It’s April. I mean, Dr Graham. The forensic anthropologist?’

  ‘It’s OK, I know who you are.’

  ‘Good. Yes, well, I thought you’d want to know: I’ve almost finished the facial reconstruction. Do you want me to start on the skeletonized remains from the caravan roof next?’

  ‘Give me … ’ Logan checked his watch, ‘half an hour.’

  ‘If you can get them to OK the budget for it, a facial reconstruction could—’

  ‘Have you heard anything from your friend the isotope man?’

  A pause. ‘I only sent the samples off last night, he—’

  ‘Chase him up, tell him it’s a priority.’

  The historian settled onto the bench, flexing his hand and scowling at the swollen nodule between his knuckles. ‘Ow …’

  ‘I’ll be in soon as I’ve sorted something out.’ Logan hung up and stuck the phone back in his pocket. Stood. ‘I’d better get going.’

  Alex looked up at him. ‘You think it’s someone involved in the film?’

  ‘Something like that.’

  A sigh. ‘Horrible to think it might be someone I work with.’

  ‘We’re pursuing several lines of enquiry.’ He checked his watch again. ‘Look, I hate to hurry you, I really have to get—’

  ‘Yes, of course.’ The historian levered himself to his feet, sucked at the lump on his hand again, then followed Logan down the crazy-paving path towards the house. ‘Do you believe in witches?’

  ‘Of course I don’t.’

  ‘In the book, neither does Rowan. A witch-finder that doesn’t believe in witches. She doesn’t believe in talismans like that either.’

  Logan stopped. Turned.

  The historian was pointing at the guttering beside the kitchen door.

  ‘Talismans?’ Two steps back and there it was: a knot of three small bones, tied with a black ribbon. Just like the ones at the caravan.

  ‘In Witchfire, there’s a Vodun bokor who uses them to protect himself from his enemies.’ A shrug. ‘I said the belief system was a bit of a hodgepodge.’

  ‘You told me you were finished with the scene!’ Logan shifted the mobile from one ear to the other, foot flat to the floor. The Fiat’s engine whined and complained, the speedometer jiggling its way up to seventy as it hammered down the Tyrebagger hill.

  The SEB head tech’s voice was thin, as if he was forcing it through gritted teeth. ‘We were finished. There’s nothing—’

  ‘Then why did I just find three human finger bones hanging outside the back door?’

  ‘That’s not—’

  ‘Get your people back out there and do it properly!’

  ‘Don’t you—’

  ‘You left human remains at a cri
me scene, John, how, exactly, is that doing your job? Now get … John?’ Pause. ‘John?’ Typical, he’d hung up. Bloody prima donna.

  Logan overtook an eighteen-wheeler and tried Chalmers instead.

  ‘Guv?’

  ‘I want you to get over to Agnes Garfield’s house and find us a DNA sample. If the parents give you any trouble, tell them it’s standard procedure when someone goes missing.’

  ‘Don’t worry, Guv: I get the feeling they’ll be a lot more cooperative now they know she’s OK.’

  ‘Why would they …?’ The cash-machine withdrawal – she was caught on camera. Sodding hell. ‘Her parents don’t know. We didn’t tell them she’d been spotted taking money out of Anthony Chung’s account.’ Bloody idiot.

  A pause. Then Chalmers was back with a smile in her voice. ‘Even better: means I get to break the good news. Be no problem getting a sample after that. We— Oh, hold on …’ There was a scrunching noise, as if she’d put a hand over the mouthpiece. Then she was back. ‘Constable Guthrie says there’s a Dr Goulding here to see you?’

  ‘Put Goulding in an interview room with Robbie Whyte. I want a full psych evaluation.’

  ‘Emergency detention?’

  ‘And tell Goulding to find out if Whyte’s capable of murder.’ Logan stuck on the brakes, pulling into the slip lane to turn right across the dual carriageway.

  ‘You think he might be the one who …’ There was a pause. ‘Who did he kill?’

  Good question.

  Logan gunned the engine, nipping across the carriageway in the gap between a bread van and a minibus. ‘And soon as you’ve got some of Agnes’s DNA, make sure they test it against the necklacing victim and the body we found last night. And the bones from my roof too.’

  Chalmers whistled. ‘You think she killed all three of them?’

  ‘Bloody hope so, otherwise we’ve got a whole bunch of nutters out there murdering people.’ Nutters … Better safe than sorry. ‘Get them to test Robbie Whyte’s DNA against them as well.’

  There was a pause, then the intercom buzzed and the gate swung open. Logan edged the car off the road and onto the long gravel driveway. Little chunks of granite pinged and clunked in the rusting wheel-arches.

 

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