She needed to check in at home to ensure that with all the traffic disruptions Chloe and Sean had been picked up safely by the taxi. Then she realised that her phone was in her bag, and her bag was buried somewhere under the rubble at the courthouse.
Her face ached and her head thumped. Every limb in her body felt like it had been hit with a concrete block. Which wasn’t far from the truth. She decided a quick shower in the locker room would suffice.
She headed down the stairs to the basement, stripped off her filthy clothes and stood under the cold water. She realised she should have checked first to make sure she had a clean set of clothes in her locker. As the water drummed up goose bumps on her skin, she hoped with all her heart that Boyd was going to be okay. She needed him.
* * *
Tony escaped to the pub as soon as he could. The guards and emergency personnel had done everything possible in the circumstances. They now had to wait for lifting equipment to come from Dublin to raise the crushed remains of the crane. The fire service were using cutting equipment, but it was too dangerous as the ground underfoot kept giving way.
He’d just got inside when the clouds burst open. The site was going to be some mess now. He half expected Conor to be sitting nursing a pint, but there was no sign of him. The place seemed to be full of journalists and reporters. He quickly took off his jacket with Gill Construction emblazoned on the back. Better to be just another rubbernecker, he thought. He didn’t want to have to answer any awkward questions.
Elbowing his way to the counter, he heard snippets of conversation, though nothing to concern himself with. He ordered his drink and waited. For the first time in ten years, he felt as if a weight had lifted from his shoulders. Now he just had to hope that Conor Dowling was one of the bodies beneath the rubble.
* * *
The T-shirt was too long and the jeans too tight, but Lottie had no choice but to squeeze into them. Deciding that her jacket was a lost cause, she found a lightweight garda one. Before she went home, she’d call to Conor Dowling’s house, because that was where she’d been heading when she’d taken the detour to the building site, and because, after making enquiries, no one on the site had been able to contact him.
Nabbing a car from the pool in the yard, she sped around via the bypass, pulling up at Dowling’s house fifteen minutes after she’d stepped out of the freezing-cold shower. She was so numb she couldn’t feel any pain, and she wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or not.
The house looked slightly more decrepit than its neighbours. She had never been house-proud herself, but she had to still an urge to find a cloth and clean the dirt off the windows.
She hammered with her fist on the cracked timber and cringed with the pain reverberating through the bones in her hand. The grass was long and trampled in places. Plenty of weeds, too, and a buckled bicycle wheel leaning against the inside of the wall. About to walk away, she heard a shuffling behind the door just before it was opened.
‘Mrs Dowling?’
‘What’s with all the banging? Have you no patience? I’m not supposed to be up. What do you want?’
‘I’m Detective Inspector Parker. I’d like a word with Conor, please.’
The woman’s face appeared to shrink in on itself. Looking down on the balding head, Lottie thought Mrs Vera Dowling was about to take a bite out of her arm, so she shoved her hands into her flimsy jacket pockets.
‘Conor? What do you want with him? Aren’t you the one who locked him up?’ Now the face had definitely taken on an evil quality. ‘Bitch of a guard, you are. My boy did nothing wrong. But you believed those two young hussies over him.’
‘Can I come in, please?’ Lottie glanced back over her shoulder to where curtains were twitching across the road. ‘You don’t want the neighbours knowing your business, do you?’
Mrs Dowling twisted round on her walking sticks and beckoned. ‘Come in so.’
Lottie had to wait for her to slowly shuffle along the narrow hall before she could enter and close the door behind her. She followed her into what she could only describe as the woman’s living quarters.
From what she could see, it seemed Vera Dowling ate, slept and carried out her bathroom functions in the one room. A television stood in a corner with the sound blasting out a game show. The air was foul with the odour of unwashed flesh and clothes. She felt like opening a window to allow freshness in. There was nowhere to sit, so she stood, careful not to lean up against the wall, where condensation dripped down faded wallpaper and a wooden crucifix hung with black rosary beads fixed around Jesus’ drooped head. A yellowed stock image of a house in a forest hung in a cracked wooden frame over an unlit fireplace.
At last Mrs Dowling was seated on a fetid pile of cushions. Dust motes rose in unison as if eager to escape being flattened by her bottom. Lottie felt like she had walked into a sepia-hazed nightmare.
‘So why do you want to talk to Conor?’
‘Can you lower the television sound, please?’ Lottie couldn’t hear a word the woman was saying.
After trying each of the four remote controls lined up on the arm of the chair, the woman eventually got the sound turned down. Lottie noticed how crooked and swollen the older woman’s fingers were.
‘Mrs Dowling, have you heard that there was an accident at the courthouse today?’
‘Accident? Is Conor okay? I hope he isn’t injured. I need him to look after me.’
‘I don’t know if he is or not,’ Lottie said truthfully. ‘I’m trying to locate him. Was he at work today?’
‘Of course he was at work. He goes every day. He’s a good lad, not that you believe that. He’ll be home soon.’
‘My office has been unable to contact him.’
Mrs Dowling blessed herself. ‘Holy Mary, Mother of God, he better be all right. I spent ten years waiting for the day he’d be free to look after me, and now this happens.’
‘Don’t worry unduly. I’m sure he’ll turn up.’ Lottie wasn’t at all certain of that, but she didn’t want Mrs Dowling getting hysterical. Now that she was here, she itched to get home and check on her family, then return to the hospital to make sure Boyd hadn’t discharged himself.
‘Would you like me to make you a cup of tea?’ Why on earth had she said that?
‘Oh, that’d be great. The kitchen is that way.’ Mrs Dowling pointed with her walking stick. ‘I’m eaten alive with rheumatoid arthritis. Painful in the legs and hands. I depend on Conor for everything.’
‘How did you manage when he was … inside?’
‘His friend Tony was good to me. He works with him on the site. A loyal friend, Tony is.’
‘I’ll make that tea then.’
In the scullery-like kitchen, Lottie filled the kettle and switched it on. ‘Do you take milk?’
‘Course I do. Otherwise it’d be like dishwater.’
Lottie found a carton in the fridge. ‘Sugar?’
‘There’s a bowl in the cupboard. Two spoonfuls. Tea bags are in the caddy.’
‘Does Conor stay in every night?’ Lottie searched through the grimy cupboard.
‘He does.’
She made the tea and brought a mug in to Mrs Dowling. ‘Hope that’s okay.’
‘A bit weak,’ the woman sniffed.
‘And he goes shopping for you?’
‘You hardly think I’m able to go around pushing a trolley, do you?’
‘Tuesday night, was he in all evening? All night?’
Her legs were weak from the trauma of the accident, and the look Vera Dowling threw her made her feel like sinking to the floor.
‘Are you accusing him of something? Like you did the last time?’ Tea spilled from the mug and down the side of the chair, but the old woman didn’t seem to notice. ‘He was here. Every night. So you can piss off with whatever you think you’re going to pin on him.’
‘I wasn’t—’
‘Conor never did those things you accused him of. He never beat that old man to a pulp and he never stole
his money.’
‘He didn’t deny it.’
‘He didn’t do it.’
‘He offered no alibi.’
‘How could he? I was working back then. Nights in the hospital. I used to be a nurse’s aide. He was home. Alone.’
‘Was he, though? He never said he was.’ It had niggled Lottie at the time that Conor had offered no explanation for his whereabouts the night of the assault on Bill Thompson. In the end, with lack of forensic evidence and no denial from the accused, it was the two eyewitnesses who had swung the case.
Mrs Dowling set her mouth in a thin straight line and eyed her. ‘He didn’t do it. He had no access to a gun. Did you ever find the weapon? Did you ever find the money? Look around you, Inspector. Do you see any sign of wealth here?’
Lottie shook her head and shrugged. It didn’t mean anything. He could have the money buried, awaiting an appropriate time to dig it up. They never did find out how much had been stolen, but bar staff estimated it could have been ten thousand euros. Bill Thompson hadn’t brought home the takings every night. Usually only on a Sunday. And it had been a busy weekend. Conor Dowling had regularly frequented the pub. He knew Thompson’s routine. Louise Gill and Amy Whyte had sworn they’d seen him rushing from the direction of Thompson’s house that night. He never denied it. Never said a word. But Lottie was confident the right man had been jailed.
‘Here, take this piss away. Trying to poison me, are you?’
Taking the mug, Lottie went back to the scullery. She looked out at the back garden as she swilled the tea down the sink. The outside area was neater than the front, but the overhanging trees could do with being cut back, not that she knew anything about gardening. The wooden shed appeared out of place, like it had been dropped from the sky. One side was slightly lower than the other, as if it had sunk into the ground. A large padlock hung on the bolt. Why? What was in there that needed protection from theft? Not an expensive lawnmower, she thought, seeing as the grass was so long. Hiding something? More than likely.
An ache drummed behind her eyes as she decided on the best approach to get Mrs Dowling to allow her access to the shed. She could just open the back door and go out to have a look, couldn’t she?
‘What are you doing in there?’ The voice sounded closer and Lottie jumped when she turned round. Vera was standing in the doorway, leaning on her two walking sticks.
‘You’re snooping, you sneaky bitch.’
She straightened her shoulders, ignoring the pain shooting down her spine. ‘I was wondering what you keep in your shed?’
‘Conor’s stuff is in there. And it’s none of your business.’
‘What stuff?’
‘You’d like to know, wouldn’t you? If you want to look, get a search warrant. Now before I kick you out, tell me why you’re asking all these questions.’ Mrs Dowling leaned against the door jamb and pointed a walking stick at Lottie’s chest. But she wasn’t letting herself be intimidated by a fetid crone.
‘Four young women were murdered this week. I need to validate Conor’s alibi.’
‘Get out, scum pig.’ Mrs Dowling raised the other stick and Lottie ducked as it swung through the air. ‘Get the hell out of my house with your insane accusations.’
‘I didn’t accuse him of anything. I just need to know—’
‘Go, and don’t come back. You can rot in hell and take your accusations with you.’
Mrs Dowling’s eyes blazed and Lottie felt her cheeks burn from the angry heat. She’d made a mess of this. Her head throbbed and her bones felt like jelly. She was leaving, but not without a last attempt.
‘I want to know where Conor is now, where he was two nights ago, where he was Saturday night, and I want to know what’s in that shed.’
‘You’re a nosy bitch. Piss off and don’t come back unless you have a search warrant.’
Leaving the front door open so the older woman would have to walk along her hall to close it, Lottie moved slowly to the car. She looked across the road and saw a shape behind the curtains. Tomorrow she’d have the neighbours canvassed to see whether Conor had been at home when he said he’d been, though past experience told her she’d get nothing from them. But the little shit with his crazy mother wasn’t going to best her. That’s if he wasn’t already buried beneath the courthouse rubble.
Forty-Seven
Lottie was desperate to get home, but first she needed a phone. There would be a spare one at the station. Her mind was in such disarray that she hadn’t thought of it before. She drove around by the ring road and snaked along with the traffic at the railway bridge. She wondered how Penny Brogan’s family were faring. She really needed to call to them; it was going on tomorrow’s to-do list.
Parking haphazardly, she jumped out of the unmarked Mondeo and ran through the spills of rain. Inside the station she headed to the storeroom and checked out a Samsung. She had no contact numbers but at least she had a phone. Before heading off again, she made her way to the office. It was still empty, Boyd’s desk the neatest of the lot. Hopefully he’d be sitting there before too long. She gulped down her emotion and went into her own office to try and figure out how the phone worked.
She should make a report on her visit to Dowling’s home. She was interested in finding out what Conor Dowling had in his garden shed. But how would she get a warrant? A gut feeling wasn’t enough. She’d have to sleep on it.
There was a stack of pages on her desk with a Post-it on top signed by Sam McKeown. The new guy. She hadn’t yet had a chance to get to know him. Once this was over, she’d have more time for introductions and familiarity, she thought with a grimace that made her stitches hurt.
As she flicked through the photocopies, she recognised pages from Louise Gill’s notebooks.
‘McKeown!’ she yelled. But there was no one there. She began to read, her eyes still stinging.
‘What?’
She jumped. ‘Don’t creep up on me like that.’
‘You shouted for me. I’m sure you were heard across the road in the cathedral.’
Sam McKeown stood in front of her desk, sleeves rolled up to the elbows. No tie. Beads of perspiration glistened on his shaved head under the fluorescent light.
‘Where’ve you been?’ she said.
‘Stuck in a cupboard-like office going through CCTV. It’s a sauna in there.’
‘I know. And in here. The superintendent is always going on about budgets, and here we are wasting gallons of heating oil.’
‘Why don’t you complain?’
‘Because if we get it turned down now, when the really bad weather comes it will be a running battle to get it switched on again.’
‘Can I make an observation?’
‘Sit down first. I’m dizzy looking up at you.’
He sat. ‘That’s part of my observation.’
‘What are you talking about?’ She wanted to discuss the notes, but she had to hear him out otherwise she might alienate him when she needed him enthusiastic for the investigation.
He coughed, cleared his throat. ‘It’s just that you don’t look great. You’ve been through a traumatic experience. Do you think you should be working?’
The cheek of him. He was hardly a day in the place and here he was voicing crap opinions.
‘Detective McKeown, I’m your boss. Never, ever question my ability to do my job.’
‘I wasn’t—’
‘You were.’
‘I’m sorry. But have you looked in a mirror? You’re bruised, cut and bleeding. I’m genuinely concerned. Nothing more.’
‘Bleeding?’
‘Yes. You seem to have burst one of the stitches on your cheek.’
‘Oh feck. Sorry. I didn’t mean to snap. You’re right, it’s been an awful experience, but both Boyd and myself are fine. Or will be. My main concern is the four dead girls. When I find out who killed them, then I’ll take a break. Not before. Okay?’
‘Okay.’ He shuffled in the chair and placed his hands flat on his knee
s.
‘Tell me what I’m looking at here.’ She pointed to the pages, with lines of Louise’s handwriting marked in pink highlighter.
‘It was the only one I could find.’
‘What?’
‘The pink highlighter. No yellow anywhere. Believe me, I looked.’
Lottie hoped she hadn’t inherited another OCD detective. One Boyd was enough, thank you very much. ‘I mean the text!’
‘Oh, right. Sorry.’
‘Please don’t say sorry again.’
‘Okay. This notebook seems to be a diary of prison visits that Louise Gill made over the last year. May I?’ He took the pages from Lottie and scanned them, then handed one back to her. ‘This one here. Three months ago. Mountjoy Prison. See the name of the prisoner she visited?’
‘I might have bloodshot eyes, but I can still read.’ Lottie squinted at the neat spidery handwriting. ‘Louise visited Dowling in prison a month before his release?’
McKeown nodded. ‘Her notes read like a confession. In a nutshell, she told him that she was sorry. That she’d been sure he was the man she saw that night, but that maybe she’d made a mistake. That she was finding it hard to live with herself.’
Lottie swallowed hard.
‘Are you okay?’ Sam asked.
‘Fine, thanks.’
‘Do you need a drink of water? I can fetch a bottle for you. Or a coffee?’
‘You’re trying too hard. You don’t have to impress me. Back to Louise and Dowling.’
‘It seems to have been an angry meeting. He said he wouldn’t forgive her. She told him that she intended to do something to uncover the truth.’
‘The truth?’ Lottie said. ‘What was she going to do?’ She hastily flipped through the remaining pages.
‘She doesn’t say. I’m still waiting for the transcripts from her computer. There might be something on those.’
‘You need to find out if she met with Dowling after his release.’
‘How will we do that?’
‘You will do it. Talk to her mother. Her friends. Anyone you can find who knew her. Her course tutor. Use that detective’s brain you have.’
Final Betrayal Page 23