Fold. Fold. Fold.
The paper was getting loose along the seams where it'd been folded again and again. A perfect square flapped away from one corner and Roadkill scowled at it.
'Mr Philips? Can you tell me what happened?'
Carefully the battered man pulled the square of paper free and placed it in front of him. It was perfectly lined up with the edges of the desk.
And then he started folding again.
Insch sighed.
'OK. How about the sergeant here writes down what happened and you can sign it? Would that make things easier?'
'I need my medicine.'
'Sorry?'
'Medicine. It's time for my medicine.'
Insch looked at Logan. He shrugged. 'They probably gave him some painkillers at the hospital.'
Roadkill stopped folding his paper and placed both hands on the desk. 'Not painkillers. Medicine. I need to take my medicine. Or they won't let me go to work tomorrow. They wrote me a letter. I have to take my medicine or I can't go to work.'
'It'll only take a few minutes, Mr Philips. Perhaps-'
'No statement. No minutes. Medicine.'
'But-'
'If you're not going to arrest me, or charge me, I'm free to go. You can't force me to make a complaint.'
It was the most lucid thing Logan had ever heard him say.
Roadkill shivered, hugging himself with his arms. 'Please. I just want to go home and take my medicine.'
Logan looked at the tattered, bruised figure and put down his pen. Roadkill was right: they couldn't force him to make a complaint against the people who blackened his eye, split his lip, loosened three of his teeth, cracked one of his ribs and kicked him repeatedly in the goolies. They were his goolies after all. If he didn't want the people kicking them to be punished, it was his call. But Grampian Police weren't about to just turn him loose on the street either. The stupid people would still be out there. And by now the Press would be too. 'Local Mob Captures Kiddie Fiend!' No, 'mob' sounded too negative. These violent, stupid people were heroes, after all. 'Parents Capture Council Paedophile!' Yes, that was much more like it.
'Are you sure about this, Mr Philips?' asked Insch.
Roadkill just nodded.
'OK. Well in that case we'll get your possessions returned and DS McRae here will give you a lift home.'
Logan swore very quietly. The social worker beamed, glad not to have been lumbered with the task. Smiling from ear to ear, he shook Logan's hand and made good his escape.
While Bernard Duncan Philips was signing for the contents of his pockets, Insch tried to make it up to Logan by offering him a fruit pastille. It would be going on half-seven, eight before he got back into town. He'd have to tell Jackie he was going to be late. With any luck she'd wait for him, but after this afternoon's performance that was far from certain.
'So he's definitely not our boy, then?' said Logan, accepting the sweet grudgingly.
'Nope. Just some poor mad smelly bugger.'
They stood and watched the battered and bruised figure as he painfully bent down and rethreaded his shoelaces.
'Anyway,' said Insch, 'got to go. It's curtain up in an hour and a half.' He patted Logan on the shoulder and turned on his heel, whistling the overture.
'Break a leg,' Logan told the inspector's retreating back.
'Thank you, Sergeant.' Insch gave a cheerful wave, without turning round.
'No seriously,' said Logan. 'I hope you fall and break your bloody leg. Or your neck.' But he waited until the door had closed and Insch was well out of earshot.
When Roadkill was finally reunited with his personal possessions Logan forced a smile onto his face and escorted him to the car park at the back of the building. A flustered-looking PC grabbed them just as Logan was signing for yet another car. 'Desk sergeant says you've got another two messages from a Mr Lumley.'
Logan groaned. The Lumley's Family Liaison Officer should have been handling these calls. He had enough on his plate as it was. He felt guilty almost immediately. The poor sod had lost his son. The least he could do was return the man's phone calls. He rubbed at the headache growing behind his eyes.
'Tell him I'll see to it when I get back, OK?'
*
They went out the back way. The front of Force Headquarters was all lit up, television camera spotlights making everything stand out in sharp relief. There were dozens of them. Roadkill's face was going to be all over the country before the end of the day. And it didn't matter if he was innocent or not, by breakfast time tomorrow half the nation would know his name.
'You know, it might be a good idea if you took a couple of weeks off work. Let the idiots forget about it?'
Roadkill had his hands wrapped round the safety belt, tugging it gently every six seconds, making sure it was still working. 'Need to work. Man has no purpose without work. It defines us. Without definition we do not exist.'
Logan raised an eyebrow. 'OK…' The man wasn't just schizophrenic: he was crazy.
'You say "OK" too much.'
Logan opened his mouth, thought better of it and closed it again. There was no point arguing with a crazy person. If he wanted to do that he could go home and talk to his mother. So instead he drove them through the fading rain. By the time they'd reached Roadkill's small farm on the outskirts of Cults it had stopped entirely.
He took the car as far up the drive as there was road. The council clear-up crew had been hard at work all day. Two large metal waste containers loomed in the car's headlights. They were each the size of a minibus, their yellow paintwork chipped and scratched, sitting in the weeds next to steading number one. Huge padlocks kept the container doors shut, as if anyone was going to break in to get at the rotting animal corpses inside.
Logan heard a small sob from beside him and realized the padlocks were probably a good idea.
'My beautiful, beautiful dead things…' There were tears running down Roadkill's bruised cheek into his beard.
'You didn't help them?' Logan asked, pointing at the containers.
Roadkill shook his head, his long hair swinging back and forth like a funereal curtain. His voice was tortured and low.
'How could I help the Visigoths sack Rome?'
He got out of the car and walked over the trampled weeds and grass to the steading. The door was lying open, letting Logan's headlights fall on the bare concrete floor. The piles of dead animals were gone. One steading down, two more to go.
Logan left him sobbing gently outside the empty farm building.
19
The evening didn't go exactly as Logan had planned. WPC Jackie Watson was still at the pub when he finally got there, but she was also still smarting from his reprimand. Or maybe there was a lingering smell of Roadkill about him, even though he'd had the car windows open all the way back? 'Oh, how the stench of you clings Whatever it was, she spent most of her time speaking to the Bastard Simon Rennie and a WPC Logan didn't recognize. No one was rude to him, but they didn't exactly fall over themselves to make him feel welcome. This was supposed to be a celebration! He'd found Richard Erskine. Alive!
Logan called it a night after only two pints and sulked his way home, via the nearest chip shop.
He didn't see the dark grey Mercedes lurking under the streetlight outside his flat. Didn't see the heavy-set man get out of the driver's seat and pull on a pair of black leather gloves. Didn't see him crack his knuckles as Logan balanced the cooling fish supper in one hand while the other hunted for his keys.
'You didn't call.'
Logan almost dropped his chips.
He spun around to see Colin Miller standing with his arms crossed, leaning back against a very expensive-looking automobile, his words wreathed in fog. 'You were supposed to call me by half-four. You didn't.'
Logan groaned. He'd meant to speak to DI Insch, but somehow never got around to it. 'Yeah, well,' he said at last. 'I spoke to the DI…He didn't feel it was appropriate.' It was a barefaced lie, but Miller wouldn't kn
ow that. At least it would sound as if he'd tried.
'No appropriate?'
'He thinks I've had quite enough publicity for one week.' Might as well be hung for a lying bastard as a lamb. 'You know how it is…' He shrugged.
'No appropriate?' Miller scowled. 'I'll show him no' a-fuckin'-propriate.' He pulled out a palmtop and scribbled something onto it. The next morning started with about a dozen road traffic accidents. None of them fatal, but all blamed on the inch of snow that had fallen overnight. By half-eight the skies were gunmetal-grey and low enough to touch. Tiny flakes of white drifted down on the Granite City, melting as soon as they hit the pavements and roads. But the air smelled of snow. It had that metallic tang which meant that a heavy fall wasn't far away.
The morning's Press and Journal had hit Logan's doormat like a tombstone. Only this time the funeral wasn't his. Just his fault. Right there on the front page was a big picture of Detective Inspector Insch done up in his pantomime villain outfit. It was one of the show's publicity shots and Insch had on his best evil snarl. 'D.I. PLAYS THE FOOL WHILE OUR CHILDREN DIE' ran the headline.
'Oh God.'
Under the photo it said: 'IS PANTO REALLY MORE IMPORTANT THAN CATCHING THE PAEDOPHILE KILLER STALKING OUR STREETS?'
Colin Miller strikes again.
Standing at the sink, he read how the inspector had been 'prancing around on stage like an idiot, while local police hero Logan McRae was out searching for little Richard Erskine'. And the rest of the article went downhill from there. Miller had done a first-rate hatchet job on DI Insch. He'd made a well-respected senior police officer look like a callous bastard. There was even a quote from the Chief Superintendent saying that this was 'a very serious matter that would be thoroughly investigated'.
'Oh God.'
'COUNCIL WORKER ATTACKED BY CONCERNED PARENTS' barely made it onto page two.
*
Insch was in a foul mood at the morning briefing and everyone did their damnedest to make sure they didn't do or say anything to set him off. Today was not a good day to screw up.
As soon as the briefing was over Logan scurried away to his little incident room, doing his best not to look guilty. He only had one WPC today: the one womanning the phones. Every other available officer was going to spend today looking for little Peter Lumley. Someone had stuck a rocket up Insch's backside and he was determined to share the experience. So it would be just Logan, the WPC, and the list of possible names.
The team he'd had working their way through Social Services' 'at risk' register had turned up exactly nothing. All the little girls were right where they should have been. Some of them had 'walked into the door' and one had 'fallen down the stairs after burning herself on the iron', but they were all still alive. A couple of the parents were now facing charges.
But that wasn't the only thing Logan had to worry about now. Helping DI Steel on the Geordie Stephenson inquiry seemed to consist of DI Steel smoking lots of cigarettes while Logan did all the work.
There was a new map of Aberdeen pinned to the wall, this one covered with little blue-and-green pins marking every bookmaker in town. The blue ones were 'safe' – not the kind of place that took your kneecaps if you failed to pay up. The green ones were kneecap territory. The Turf 'n Track was marked in red. So was the harbour where they dragged the body out of the water. And next to it was a post mortem head-and-shoulders photo of Geordie Stephenson.
He wasn't much to look at. Not now he was dead anyway. The bouffant hairstyle was all flattened to his head and the porn-star moustache stood out, heavy and black, against the waxy skin. It was odd, but seeing the dead man's photograph Logan got the feeling he'd seen him somewhere before.
According to the information Lothian and Borders Police had sent up, Geordie Stephenson had been quite a character in his youth. Assault mostly. A bit of collecting for small loan sharks. Breaking and entering. It wasn't until he started working for Malk the Knife that he stopped getting caught. Malk was very particular about his employees staying out of prison.
'How'd you get on then?' It was DI Steel, hands rammed deep in the pockets of her grey trouser suit. Yesterday's ash-coated blouse was gone, replaced by something shimmery in gold. The bags under her eyes were a deep, saggy purple.
'Not too great,' Logan plonked himself down on the desk and offered the inspector a chair. She sank into it with a sigh and a small fart. Logan pretended not to hear.
'Go on then.'
'OK.' Logan pointed at the map. 'We went through all the bookies marked in green. The only one that looks likely is this one-' he poked the red pin, 'Turf 'n Track-'
'Simon and Colin McLeod. Lovely pair of lads.'
'Not as lovely as their clientele. We got to meet one of their regulars: Dougie MacDuff.'
'Shite! You're fucking kidding me!' She pulled out a battered pack of cigarettes. They looked as if she'd sat on them. 'Dirty Doug, Dougie the Dog…' she excavated a slightly flattened fag from the pack. 'What else did they use to call him?'
'Desperate Doug?'
'Right. Desperate Doug. After he choked that guy with a rolled-up copy of the Dandy. You'd've still been in nappies.' She shook her head. 'Fuck me. Those were the days. I thought he was dead.'
'Got out of Barlinnie three months ago. Four years for crippling a builder's merchant with a ratchet screwdriver.'
'At his age? Good old Desperate Doug.' She popped the cigarette in her mouth, and was at the point of lighting it when the WPC on the phones gave a meaningful cough and pointed at the 'No Smoking' sign. Steel shrugged and stuffed the offending fag in her top pocket. 'So how's he looking these days?'
'Like a wrinkly old man.'
'Aye? Shame. He was fucking tasty in his day. Quite the lady-killer. But we couldn't prove it.' She drifted off into silence, her eyes focused on the past. Eventually she sighed and came back to the here and now. 'So you think the McLeod brothers are our likely lads?'
Logan nodded. He'd read their files again. Hacking off someone's kneecaps with a machete was right up their street. The McLeods had always been hands-on when it came to debt control. 'Problem's going to be proving it. There's no way in hell either of them's going to admit killing Geordie and dumping him in the harbour. We need a witness, or some forensic evidence.'
Steel dragged herself out of the chair and gave an expansive yawn. 'Up all night shagging, you know,' she said with a conspiratorial wink. 'Get on to Forensics: have them run every bloody test they've got. And it wouldn't hurt to take another look at the body. It's still in the morgue.'
Logan stiffened. That meant having to speak to Isobel again.
DI Steel must have seen him flinch, because she laid a nicotine-stained hand on his shoulder. 'I know it's not going to be easy. Not now she's got herself a bit of rough. But to fuck with her! You've got a job to do.'
Logan opened and closed his mouth. He didn't know she was seeing someone else. Not already. Not when he was still on his own.
The inspector stuffed her hands back in her trouser pockets, clasping the squashed packet of cigarettes. 'Got to go. Fucking bursting for a fag. Oh, and if you see DI Insch: tell him I liked his picture in the papers this morning.' Another wink. 'Very sexy.' Detective Inspector Insch didn't look very sexy when Logan saw him next. He was riding the elevator down from the top floor. And that meant a meeting with the Chief Constable. Insch's nice new suit was stained darker grey under the arms and down the back.
'Sir,' said Logan. Trying not to make eye contact.
'They want me to give up the pantomime.' His voice was low and flat.
Guilt stampeded up Logan's back until it sat on top of his head, like a big sign saying: 'I DID IT! IT WAS ME!!!'
'The Chief Constable thinks it's not conducive to the image Grampian Police wants to portray. Says they can't afford to have that kind of negative publicity associated with a major murder enquiry…Either the panto goes, or I do.' He looked as if someone had pulled the stopper out, leaving him to slowly deflate. This was not the DI Insc
h Logan knew. And it was all his fault. 'How long have I been doing Christmas panto for? Twelve, thirteen years? Never been a bloody problem before…'
'Maybe they'll forget all about it?' tried Logan. 'You know, when it all blows over. This time next year no one will remember a thing.'
Insch nodded, but he didn't sound convinced. 'Perhaps.' He mashed his features round in a circle with his podgy hands. 'God, I'm going to have to tell Annie I can't go on tonight.'
'I'm sorry, sir.'
Insch tried a brave smile. 'Don't be, Logan. It's not your fault. It's that bastard Colin Miller.' The forced smile turned into a scowl. 'Next time you see him you tell him I'm going to rip his bloody head off and crap down his neck.' The morgue was quiet, just the hum of the air conditioning breaking the silence. All the dead bodies had been tidied away, the dissecting tables lying empty and sparkling beneath the overhead lights. Not only were there no dead people in here, there were no living ones either.
Gingerly, Logan made his way across to the wall of refrigerated drawers. One by one he read the name cards on the drawer doors, looking for George Stephenson. He stopped when he reached the one marked 'UNKNOWN FEMALE CAUCASIAN CHILD: APPROX 4 YEARS OLD', one hand on the cool metal drawer handle. The poor wee sod was lying in there, cold and dead without even a name.
'Sorry.' It was all he could think of to say.
He worked his way along the row. There was no sign of a George Stephenson, but there was an 'UNKNOWN MALE CAUCASIAN: APPROX 35 YEARS'. DI Steel hadn't told the morgue they'd IDed the body yet. Something else for Logan to do. He unlatched the drawer and pulled it open.
Lying on the flat steel surface of the drawer was a large, dead man, in a white plastic body-bag. Gritting his teeth, Logan pulled on the zip.
The head and shoulders that appeared from the bag were the same as the photo pinned up on Logan's incident room wall. Only the real thing had a wrinklier look to it, as if someone had peeled the face down from the top of the head so they could open the skull with a bone-saw and extract the brain. The skin was waxy and pallid, deep purple bruises marking where the blood had pooled and congealed after death. There was another bruise on the left temple. In the photograph Logan always thought it was just a shadow.
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