Riven

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Riven Page 27

by A J McCreanor


  ‘But . . .’

  ‘Sshh.’

  ‘I’ve got the bat.’

  ‘Right. Where is it now?’

  ‘Allotment.’

  ‘I’ll get it rehomed.’

  ‘But George said somebody came intae Gilmore’s hoose and told him not to worry, that if he hadn’t done it then he was there to do . . . was it Mr Doyle? Was he there tae kill Mr Gilmore only George got there first?’

  Sonny paused. ‘It’s best you forget what you heard, forget what you’re thinking now.’

  ‘Only George wouldnae say who wis there, who put Mr Gilmore on the hook . . . wis it Mr Doyle?’

  ‘It’s over. You know nothing, son. Nothing.’

  Rab nodded. ‘That’s what I told the polis.’

  ‘Good.’

  ‘How come me and Alec cannae go tae London with George?’

  Sonny peered at him. ‘Did Gilmore touch either of you two?’

  ‘Naw. But I hate where I’m living and Alec dis tae.’

  Sonny sighed. ‘It’s no jist as easy as that, son. See it costs a lot and I mean a fuck load of money tae get the kind of therapy wee George is gonnae get. Wi it being residential and that, it means he lives in and gets fed and stuff.’

  ‘Aye, okay. I see whit ye mean.’

  Sonny knew that Rab didn’t understand why one wean had got out of it but the rest of them were left. Gilmore might have been discovered abusing George but Rab and Alec were being neglected too. ‘Christ,’ Sonny shook himself, ‘I’m turning soft. Away round the front, I’ll get ye a wee vodka tae heat ye up, then you fuck off tae the chippy or for a pizza with Alec. Understand?’

  Rab nodded and followed Sonny back into the bar.

  Chapter 62

  It was after midnight and the rain had momentarily stopped battering the city. It was only a light drizzle by the time the Smuggler’s Rest closed. The twins had left earlier after Sonny had tipped them off about a lock-in at another pub. The Hangman’s was equally as salubrious as the Smuggler’s and Sonny had assured Shona and Heather that they would be welcome at the lock-in.

  Sonny rinsed the few remaining glasses and left them upturned on the draining board for the morning. He moved quietly around the bar humming tunelessly to himself. He had his usual routine and he liked this time of the night, when it was quiet, when everyone had gone home or elsewhere. He poured himself a double vodka and sipped it as he wiped down the tables. He left the table in the corner to the last as one customer lay slumped on the chair, his body sagging, his head resting on the scarred table, mouth open, a stream of saliva dripping its way onto the table. Finally, when he had tidied everywhere else, Sonny went over to the table.

  ‘You’re out for the count, Mason.’ Sonny wiped around Maurice Mason’s head before leaning over and checking his breathing. It was regular and shallow. It was as if he had fallen asleep. Or maybe he was just a happy drunk who’d nestled down after one too many. Or perhaps he had simply fallen unconscious naturally. Instead of being dosed with Rohypnol. Either way Mason was snoring contentedly. Sonny went to the bar, searched underneath and pulled out a pair of rubber gloves. He walked back to the table, hauled Mason into a sitting position and patted down his coat. He opened Mason’s wallet, removed most of the contents, left the loose change and smiled, ‘This is for wee Rab in exchange for the bling.’

  The video was in the right-hand pocket. Sonny slid the packet out, checked to see that the video was in place before letting Mason’s face crash back onto the table, breaking his nose in the process. Then Sonny tut-tutted, ‘Careless, Mason. You need tae be more careful or you’ll hurt yourself.’ He took out the St Christopher medal and chain and fastened it around Mason’s neck. ‘I wis going tae flog this, Mason, but it’s your lucky day, you get tae wear it.’

  Sonny strolled to the counter, reached underneath and took out a large black holdall, unzipped it and unfolded a thick tarpaulin and spread it on the floor, found the ropes he’d stored earlier and placed them all together.

  Then he got to work.

  Outside at the back of the pub, a battered blue van was reversing quietly into the deserted car park.

  Chapter 63

  ‘Think of it as a wee road trip for Mason.’ Stella winked at Lizzie as Sonny loaded Mason into the back of the van.

  ‘You jist after doing your stint at the panto?’ Sonny asked, noting the silver dress, the high heels and heavy make-up. He didn’t mention the wig and dark glasses she was holding.

  ‘Aye Sonny, it went like a dream.’

  ‘You and Doyle not out celebrating?’

  She shook her head. ‘He thinks I’m out with my pals; besides, him and Weirdo are having a wee meeting. Business.’

  ‘You sure you want tae dae this Stella? I could’ve done it for you, no problem.’ Sonny sounded solicitous.

  Stella smiled at him. ‘Definitely, Sonny. We need to say a wee cheerio to him ourselves, don’t we Lizzie? You and me, we both need closure.’

  Lizzie nodded. ‘But I went tae see Doyle . . . will the polis no think that—’

  Stella cut her off. ‘The polis don’t know that you went to see Andy. No one knows.’ She turned to Sonny. ‘Who saw Mason in here earlier?’

  ‘Only the twins and they left before I put him out. Anyway, they’d never talk to the polis.’

  ‘No chance,’ Stella agreed, helping to heft the body into the van.

  Sonny stooped to test the rope tied around the body. ‘He’ll be out for a good few hours.’

  ‘He go under okay?’ Stella asked.

  ‘Aye. Easy enough, although his nose is busted so his breathing’s already fucked. And I put the wee bit of tinsel round his neck for luck.’

  Stella looked at him. ‘Tinsel?’

  ‘You don’t know about it doll, but it’ll come in handy.’

  Stella smiled. ‘Feeding time for the fishes.’

  Lizzie whimpered.

  Stella looked at her, pointed a warning finger. ‘Once it’s done, it’s done, Lizzie. End of. Move on. Lizzie Coughlin, you’re not your father’s daughter. I’m disappointed.’

  Lizzie hiccupped softly but nodded her head. ‘No, I thought I could dae it . . . but . . .’

  ‘But what, Lizzie?’ Stella’s voice was harsh.

  ‘Nothing, Stella. Whatever you say.’

  Sonny and Stella exchanged a look. Sonny kept his voice low. ‘She gonnae be okay? Cause, you know if not . . .’

  Stella stared hard at Lizzie. ‘Well?’

  Lizzie nodded. ‘I’m okay.’

  Sonny continued, ‘We can’t take any chances; it wouldn’t be . . . safe to leave any loose ends hanging around.’ He let the meaning hang in the air.

  Lizzie shivered and pulled her jacket closer around her. ‘I’m fine. Honest. You can trust me.’

  Sonny said nothing. He slammed the van door and stood back, nodded to Stella. Ignored Lizzie.

  The two women climbed into the van, reached for their seat belts and secured them in place. Only Lizzie’s hands were shaking. She glanced at Stella. ‘Maggie, I mean Mags . . . sorry I mean . . .’

  ‘It’s Stella. Lizzie, what the fuck is the matter with you?’

  ‘Sorry, I’m just nervous,’ Lizzie muttered. She tried to steady her voice. ‘I thought Margaret was a lovely name.’

  ‘It’s no special enough, is it? I always knew I was going to be a star, that I’d go stellar. So I got in there first and changed my name. Stella means star and I’m going to be one – that reason enough for you?’

  Lizzie nodded, gripped onto her seat belt and stayed silent.

  Stella nodded to Sonny and pulled out of the car park, carefully nudged the van onto the road and they set off. The roads were fairly quiet, other than a few cars, late-night buses and taxis. The rain had stopped and a full moon shone pale and cold over them as they drove out of the city. Stella stayed close to the roads running beside the River Clyde, knew that the river was swollen, its banks in places fragile and ready to burst. She kne
w that the Glasgow Humane Society would be patrolling the Clyde, rescuing those they could find or recovering cold bodies with dignity and compassion.

  Stella drove carefully, avoiding as many CCTVs as she knew of. No matter, she wore a wig and glasses and her manicured hands were carefully ensconced in gloves. She gripped the wheel and chewed hard on gum for a few minutes before reaching over and turning on the radio.

  ‘And now we have Michelle Makepeace on line one to introduce her favourite song. Ever.’

  ‘So, like this is the best song ever. I love it . . .’

  ‘Thanks Michelle and here it is, Robbie Williams with “Let Me entertain You”.’

  Stella smiled, turned up the volume, tucked the gum into the side of her mouth and sang along.

  Lizzie waited until the karaoke had finished and cleared her throat. ‘You not worried Stella, that the polis will know it’s us? Trace the van tae us?’

  Stella sighed. ‘Van was stolen to order – they’re gonnae find it burned out in the morning. Abandoned on a wee bit of wasteland over by the Watervale scheme. No worries, hen.’

  ‘And James Harris requested this one for his wife Alexandra, who’s due to give birth to their first baby in a few days. Good luck with that! Now here is,’ the presenter paused, ‘here is the song James requested: let’s hope it’s not a message to Alexandra! Here’s “Suspicious Minds” by the late, great, Elvis Presley.’

  Eventually Stella turned off the road, drove down a deserted dirt track and into a narrow lane. Kept driving.

  Beside her Lizzie was quiet and pale; she stared out of the window as they left the roads where the streetlights glowed orange and drove into the dark of the country. She didn’t ask where they were going.

  Stella drove for half an hour before she turned off the lane and drove through a sodden field. The van lurched as it crossed the uneven ground. Stella rolled down the windows, heard the roar of the Clyde, knew that they were close to the river bank. Stella put the van in reverse. They both sat in silence listening to the sound of the water, the spray hiss into the cold dark air. The smell of the river.

  Stella had picked out the tarpaulin herself, industrial-strength, which was helpful as they had to drag Mason’s body across the last part of the field. She changed into wellington boots. At the water’s edge, Stella took out her new knife and cut the rope Sonny had secured around the tarpaulin. She watched Mason’s body slide onto the sodden ground.

  ‘See, he might get washed up, Lizzie, and we don’t want it to look bad. We need it to look just like he’s fallen in after having one too many drinks.’

  ‘But the—’ Lizzie began.

  Stella cut her off. ‘The roofies will be long gone from his system unless he washes up in the morning. And what are the chances of that?’

  The drop was long, the splash muffled by the hiss of the river. Stella threw the knife in after him.

  Lizzie cried softly.

  ‘Shh hen, there’s no one to hear.’ Stella paused for a second, shone the torch down where they had dropped the body. There was no trace of it. Mason’s body had slipped neatly underwater. Stella grinned.

  Lizzie began snivelling again. ‘It’s gonnae be awful for him, waking up and being under the water and stuff. Cold and dark. Horrible.’

  ‘Shite, his heart would’ve stopped when he hit the freezing water. A wee heart attack before he even went under. Never even woke up. We did him a favour. He wouldn’t have felt a thing.’ She patted Lizzie’s arm. ‘He’ll be sleeping like a baby now.’

  Lizzie blinked. ‘You sure that they always have a heart attack, right away, so they feel nothing?’

  ‘Always,’ Stella lied.

  ‘Best that way.’ Lizzie stared at the water, comforted. ‘Well, if he had to go . . . probably best that way.’

  ‘Mon.’ Stella grabbed the tarpaulin and strode back to the van.

  Lizzie trotted along beside her. ‘That it?’

  ‘Aye, that’s it. The cunt’s gone.’

  ‘What now?’

  ‘Nothing, you know nothing. Let it be. You forget all about that wanker. Okay? Polis come looking for him, tell them he’s scarpered. You’ve no idea where he went. Besides, there’s no reason the polis should be looking for him.’

  Lizzie shivered as she climbed back into the van. ‘I’ve not done anything like that before.’

  ‘Aye, so you said earlier. It’s not like I plan on making a habit of it.’

  ‘I’ve never though. Even though ma da . . . well, you know.’

  ‘Then you need to man up, Lizzie. Get over yourself. Mason was a fucking waste of space.’ Stella put the van into gear. ‘You know that, don’t you?’

  ‘Aye but still, it’s murder and . . .’

  ‘Shite, it’s a service to society. The cunt’s gone AWOL. That’s all the polis will know. That’s all anybody needs to know.’

  Lizzie stared out of the window and watched the sky. Dark clouds rolled across the moon. Her eyes filled up; she brushed the tears away.

  ‘And Doyle never gets to know about our wee trip, okay?’ Stella said.

  Lizzie nodded.

  On the way back to the city Stella sang along with every song on the radio, her hand thumping the steering wheel loudest to Cheryl Cole’s ‘Fight for this Love’. Stella sang like her life had just got better; she felt for the video in her jacket pocket, imagined Mason at the bottom of the Clyde and grinned as she sped through the sleeping city. She dropped Lizzie close to a taxi rank before abandoning the van, keys still in the ignition. It would be picked up and burned out. The polis would just find another burned-out vehicle, nothing to get excited about. Sonny had it all arranged. Stella left the gloves, wig and glasses on the seat. Threw the wellington boots in the back and slammed the door behind her.

  Once home she poured herself a drink, took it through to the TV lounge and slipped a Mad Men DVD into the player. By the time Doyle had returned she was on her third episode of the drama and her fourth vodka.

  He poured himself a double.

  Stella smiled. ‘A good business meeting with Weirdo, babe?’

  ‘Aye, but I heard that there was an unexpected death the night.’

  Stella gripped her glass tight, swallowed hard, ‘That right, babe? I never heard anything. Who died?’

  ‘No one important, guy called MacIntyre jumped off a bridge.’

  Stella sipped her vodka. Breathed deeply.

  ‘You okay?’ Doyle looked at her. ‘Good night?’

  Stella smiled, raised her glass. ‘Fabulous.’

  DREAMER

  George Grey turns in his sleep, fingers worrying at unfamiliar sheets. Unfamiliar smells. He sighs, eyelids flickering, lashes damp with tears. Remembering. It had been his sixth birthday when MacIntyre had first taken him to Gilmore’s house and left him there. That’s when it had all started. George whimpers in his sleep. Eventually he awakens. There is a low light on in the room, the kind of night light a child may have in their bedroom.

  There is a knock on the door. A voice asks him, ‘Are you okay, George?’

  ‘I’m okay.’ George feels calmer and soon he closes his eyes again and falls asleep. Now he dreams of the future. He is standing in a field. He can hear birds singing; he feels the grass beneath him. The sun is shining and the tears dry on his face. George smiles.

  Outside the wind rages through skeletal trees and rain lashes at the brass sign. The Keenan Institute.

  Chapter 64

  Saturday, 14 December

  Doyle sipped his coffee and didn’t bother to rearrange his face into any kind of civil. That kind of shite could wait. He heard footsteps walk towards his office, then pause. The knock on the door was slight, tentative, respectful. Aye, well it had better be fucking respectful.

  Smithy inched his way into the room. Tried to say, ‘Okay, Mr Doyle?’ but his voice had deserted him. Stood, hands clasped together, shaking. Blubber glistening, pools of sweat cooling.

  Looked like his bowels might let him down.
/>
  Doyle shook his head sadly. ‘You like robins, Smithy?’

  Smithy shifted uncomfortably. Said nothing. Eyes darting.

  ‘What about sparrows?’

  Smithy stared at the thick carpet, clenched his buttocks. Concentrated.

  ‘You deaf, Smithy?’

  ‘Is it like a trick question, Mr Doyle? If you want me to like them, aye, fair enough. But if no, well that’s fine as well. Jist, you know, jist tell me.’ He licked his lips. ‘Whit’s the right answer?’

  ‘You tell me, Smithy.’

  Smithy bit his lip. Hard. Drew blood. Sucked it back into his mouth quickly.

  ‘I find wee birds handy, you know?’

  ‘How’s that then Mr Doyle, you one of them . . . things . . . no sure of the name . . .?’ Smithy tried hard, like he was fighting for his life, ‘A tweeter . . . a twitcher?’

  Doyle smiled. ‘An ornithologist, is that what you mean Smithy?’

  ‘Aye Mr Doyle, that’s whit I mean.’ He sounded unsure.

  ‘Well, see a wee bird told me that you’ve been, now, what’s the right word here?’

  Silence.

  ‘Fraternising, yeah that’ll do. See the wee bird whispered in my ear that you and that bollocks Stevie Tenant have been seen having a wee get-together.’

  Smithy turned white, started to shake. ‘I jist bumped into him in a pub, couple of times, Mr Doyle, honest.’

  ‘Is that right?’

  ‘Honest Mr Doyle. I jist nodded tae him. Couldnae ignore him could I?’

  Doyle sat back in his chair, rested his hands on his boat of a desk. Watched Smithy try for a smile, his face a tangle of spasm. Waited some more. Saw the attempt to smile die on his face. Watched the face grow pale. Kept his voice low, reasonable. ‘See there’s something I don’t like. Any ideas?’

  Smithy didn’t trust an answer, shook his head.

  ‘I don’t like it when folk are lying to me.’

  Silence.

  ‘But worse than that, way fucking worse is something I hate.’ Doyle paused. ‘Care to hazard a guess Smithy?’

 

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