by Ken McClure
‘The drugs were in glass vials, weren’t they?’
Denise nodded.
‘Did Michael know this man as a pusher in the city?’
Denise shook her head. ‘He said he’d never seen him before in his life.’
‘Didn’t he think that odd?’
Denise shrugged. ‘Dunno. Never thought about it. These days there are probably more pushers than postmen.’
‘Where was this building site?’
‘Dunno.’
‘You never asked Mike?’
Denise shrugged and said sourly, ‘South side somewhere, didn’t exactly matter. we weren’t thinking of buying one.’
‘You said Michael took a handful. How many was that exactly?’
Another shrug. ‘Dunno. Twenty maybe, hard to say.’
‘Did he sell any?’
‘Never had the chance. Fell ill after the first one he took, didn’t he.’
‘But he gave some away.’
‘To who?’ snapped Denise.
‘Tommy Hannan.’
Denise’s aggression evaporated. ‘Oh yeah, Tommy came round the night Mike came home with the gear. He gave him five, I think.’
The number matched Dewar’s thinking. There had been four in the box in the chimney. Hannan had mainlined the other one and killed himself.
‘So where are they now, Denise?’
Denise looked at him suspiciously. ‘Have you “reconsidered” my case?’ she asked.
‘I’ve reconsidered,’ said Dewar. ‘I’ll give you an injection.’
‘They’re in the flat.’
‘Where in the flat?’
Denise paused as if giving away this secret was still something that was difficult to do despite the circumstances. ‘Under the sink.’
‘In the cupboard under the sink?’
‘Not just in the cupboard. There’s a board at the back that hides the pipes. Mike fixed it so it lifts out. There’s a space behind it. You’ll find what you’re looking for there.’
‘They’re still there?’
‘Unless any of you bastards have had them away.’
‘Thanks Denise.’
‘Don’t thank me, you shit. Just give me the vaccine.’
‘Roll up your sleeve.’
Denise did as she was told. Dewar brought out his little bottle of sterile saline and charged a syringe. He swabbed the skin on her upper arm and injected a little sterile saline, something that would do her neither good nor harm. ‘There you go,’ he said. ‘All done.’
‘Good. Now fuck off and leave me alone.’
‘Another satisfied customer,’ murmured Dewar as he left the room. He called George Finlay on an internal phone in the hallway. He didn’t want to get out of protective gear just yet.
‘He was called away,’ said the nurse who answered. ‘Some problem up in the wards. He said to ask you when you came out if we were to treat Denise any differently?’
‘Yes,’ Dewar replied. ‘Be very positive. Tell her she’s looking better each time you go in. Tell her you think she’s got away with it. She’s not going down with the disease after all.’
Understood. Are you coming out now?’
‘I’d like to see Sharon Hannan first.’
‘She’s in number 7.’
Sharon Hannan was obviously in a bad way but she recognised Dewar when he entered. The rash on her face was now well developed and she was shivering despite suffering an obvious fever showing in the sweat on her skin. ‘Did you go?’ she croaked.
‘I did. Puss is fine. She sends her love.’
Despite the fact that Denise’s eyes were almost hidden in small slits due to the swelling of the tissue around them, Dewar saw relief appear in them.
‘Thanks. Thanks a lot,’ she said.
‘She’s quite a cat.’
‘She’s all I’ve got.’
TWENTY-TWO
Dewar called Karen’s mobile number on the way back. ‘Where are you just now?’ he asked.
‘I’ve just come back up to town.’
Dewar glanced at his watch. It was coming up to five o’clock. ‘What d’you say we meet for coffee? Then I’ll run you over to Public Health in time for your meeting.’
‘What about the cafe in the Royal Mile?’
‘Fifteen minutes.’
They met up in a small coffee shop in the Royal Mile which they’d frequented on previous visits to Edinburgh, usually on Sunday mornings after walking in the old town and before returning to London after spending the week-end with Karen’s mother.
There was only one other couple sitting there when Dewar arrived five minutes late. Karen was sitting in the opposite corner nursing a cappuccino. She got up and he hugged her. ‘Good to see you but I still wish you hadn’t come. More coffee?’
‘No, I’m fine and no lectures please.’
Dewar smiled. There was no point in arguing.
‘The city seems remarkably calm,’ said Karen, when Dewar returned from ordering black coffee at the counter.
‘The Scots aren’t big on panic,’ said Dewar with a smile.
‘I know we’re not but I did expect people to be a little less laid-back over something like smallpox.’
‘So far, we’ve been lucky,’ said Dewar.’ The problem’s remained confined to the Muirhouse estate.
‘You mean things might be different if it broke out in Morningside or Comely Bank?’
‘Call me cynical.’
Karen smiled. ‘You look tired,’ she said.
‘I’m okay.’
‘You said you’d made progress?’
Dewar nodded. ‘I more or less stumbled over the reason for the outbreak. I found the virus cultures that started the whole thing off.’ He told Karen the story of the cat rescue. ‘Trouble is, I only found the vials Kelly gave to Hannan. The others are still hidden in Kelly’s flat. ’
‘So you were right about a laboratory source. Well done. What’s the institute saying about the egg on its face?’
‘The virus didn’t come from the institute,’ said Dewar.
‘You’re kidding!’ exclaimed Karen.
‘I know, it’s almost unbelievable but it didn’t.’
‘So where … ‘
‘The vials contain freeze-dried virus from forty or fifty years ago.’
‘Freeze dried?’
‘One of the best ways of storing viruses long-term.’
‘I know. I went to medical school too,’ said Karen. ‘I was just trying to think who would want to do that.’
‘Steven Malloy suggested the Ministry of Defence. I’ve asked Sci-Med to check out any interest the MOD might have had in smallpox in these parts in the past.’
‘As if they’d admit it,’ said Karen.
‘Macmillan carries a lot of weight in Whitehall. If anyone can get it out of them, he can.’
‘But at the moment, you’ve no idea where these vials came from?’
‘In a local sense, yes. Kelly was working as a digger driver on a new housing development when some man approached him and asked him to do a bit of private digging on the side. According to Kelly’s girlfriend, he unearthed a store of these vials for this character. Kelly, being Kelly, assumed they contained drugs. He went back later and helped himself. You can fill in the rest.’
‘My God. He injected? …’
‘Both he and his pal, Tommy Hannan.’
‘God, what a nightmare! So where was this place? And the man? Who was he?’
‘I’m trying to find that out.’
Karen looked at the clock on the wall. ‘I’m sorry. It’s time I was making a move.’
Dewar paid the bill and drove Karen over to Public Health headquarters. The pavement outside was crowded with volunteers — about thirty in all, who’d come in from all over the country and were converging for their introductory briefing from Mary Martin. Karen saw some people she knew and, kissing Dewar on the cheek, she went off to join them. Dewar was about to drive off when he saw Mary Martin in the
rear view mirror pull up behind him in her Volkswagen Passat. He got out to exchange a few words.
‘Did Malcolm get in touch?’ she asked, locking her car door — a task made difficult by the fact she was carrying a briefcase and a number of files tucked under one arm. She seemed harassed, an impression heightened by her hair blowing over her face in the wind.
‘He did but unfortunately he didn’t come across what I hoped he might. I’m going to have to go to Kelly’s flat myself.’
‘You can’t,’ said Mary flatly. ‘It’s in the no-go area.’
Dewar stood there, stock still, as she brushed past him, greeting the volunteers and apologising for being late. Karen, who, like the others, had turned to witness Mary Martin’s arrival, noticed the look on Dewar’s face and came back over to him as the crowd filed inside. ‘Something wrong?’ she asked.
‘I’ve just been told the yobs have control of the virus.’
‘You’re serious?’
‘I didn’t realise Kelly’s flat was in the no-go area. I’d been assuming it had been left safe and secure after the Public Health people had dealt with it. Now it’s under threat from any yob who cares to break into it. With a bit of luck, they won’t realise what’s in there but this changes everything.’
‘What are you going to do?’
Dewar looked at her distantly. ‘I’ll have to find some way of getting in there to recover the vials.’
For once, heavy town traffic was welcome as Dewar drove back to the Scottish Office. He needed time to think. He hadn’t even considered that Kelly’s flat might be in the area controlled by the yobs. He tried convincing himself that there was no reason for them to break into it but, on the other hand, Kelly was a known addict; he associated with known addicts. Someone might just have reasoned that he might have had drugs hidden away there and, as he wouldn’t be needing them any more, … It was too risky to leave to chance. He’d have to recover the vials as soon as possible. But how?
Instead of driving straight back to the Scottish Office he took a detour to Fettes police headquarters and sought out Grant. ‘I’ve got a problem,’ he said.
‘Join the club,’ replied Grant.
‘I’ve got to get in to the no-go area in Muirhouse. I’ve got to get into Michael Kelly’s flat.’
‘Then you want the Brigade of Gurkhas,’ said Grant sourly.
‘I’m serious.’
‘I can see that,’ said Grant. ‘Are you sure this is absolutely necessary? I mean a matter of life and death. Absolutely no alternative?’
Dewar shook his head. ‘Believe me, there must be a million things on this earth I’d rather do,’ he said. ‘Kelly left some glass vials in the flat. They contain pure, concentrated smallpox virus.’
Grant’s eyes widened. ‘How the f …’
‘Don’t ask. But you can see why I’ve got to get them back.’
‘Bloody hell,’ murmured Grant. ‘Have you told old Cammy Tulloch about this?’
Dewar shook his head. ‘No, I wanted to hear what you had to say first. ’
Grant sighed and swung his feet up on the desk. He thought for a moment before saying, ‘Tulloch would go by the book; he knows no other way. In the circumstances that would probably mean a full scale assault on the block using armed officers. He’d figure that something as big as this would warrant it. We could be talking big time casualties here. World war three maybe. The trash maybe don’t have guns but by God they’ll make up for it with bricks, bottles and Molotov cocktails. They’ll burn the flats down rather than surrender them.’
‘Paradoxically that would be an acceptable outcome,’ said Dewar. ‘At least fire would destroy the virus.’
‘Maybe one problem solved,’ said Grant. ‘But as I see it, the trouble would spill out into other areas and there’s a real chance we’d have widespread anarchy by morning. No law and order at all.’
‘We’ve got to keep what order we have,’ said Dewar. ‘It’s vital that the vaccine programme goes ahead or we can kiss good-bye to the city.’
‘Then you’re talking an under-cover operation with just a few people,’ said Grant.
‘I suppose I am,’ agreed Dewar. ‘In fact, I’m thinking just two. What d’you say?’
Grant looked at Dewar without expression. He said, ‘You’re asking me to engage in a covert operation without my superior officer’s knowledge, knowing that he’d be totally opposed to it?’
‘You know the flats; you know the people; you know the good guys from the bad guys and most importantly, you know how they think,’ said Dewar.
‘That still doesn’t get me in there in the first place.’
‘I’ve been thinking about that on the way over. I heard earlier the yobs were letting in ambulance crews. There was also a report about a doctor and a nurse being allowed in to visit a sick child.’
Grant smiled cynically. ‘Sounds like them,’ he said. ‘They all like to think they’re Robin Hood at heart.’
‘Be that as it may, I thought we might borrow an ambulance and answer an emergency call.’
‘Might work,’ agreed Grant.
‘Well?’
Grant sighed and shook his head as if to show it was against his better judgement ‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘It’s been a while since I worked the area but some people might just remember me. That could be bad news.’
‘I take your point, said Dewar. ‘But maybe with a cap on and a change of uniform …’
‘I must be crazy but okay, I’ll do it,’ said Grant. ‘I’ll organise an ambulance and some uniforms.
‘We’ll have to choose our time,’ said Dewar. ‘That means waiting until we see how the night’s going.’
‘If the yobs come out to play again tonight it might not be possible at all,’ said Grant. ‘They may use fire barriers again to stop any invasion of what they see as their territory.’
‘If you monitor things here, I’ll do the same. It won’t take us long to meet up if the moment seems right.’
Dewar drove on down to the Scottish Office. There was a message waiting for him from Sci-Med in London. The Ministry of Defence hadn’t stone-walled this time. They had stated categorically that smallpox had never been used in any experimental programme instigated by them and had at no time been seriously mooted as a potential biological weapon either during the second world war or afterwards in the cold war period. They cited the existence of a highly effective vaccine as sufficient reason to rule out its use as a potential agent.
‘Well, well,’ muttered Dewar. ‘Where does that leave us?’ He looked for the other message he was expecting but found nothing. There was still no reply to his enquiry about the location of Michael Kelly’s last job.
Dewar found Hector Wright down in the operations room updating his epidemic map with the day’s figures coming in from the hospital.
‘How’s it looking?’
‘See for yourself,’ replied Wright.
Dewar took a closer look at the map of the Muirhouse estate with each red-flagged pin indicating an confirmed smallpox case. He asked what the blue markers were.
‘Schools and church halls to be used as vaccination centres. Many of Mary Martin’s team have spent the day preparing them. All we need now is the vaccine.’
‘And the black ones?’
‘Temporary morgues, should we need them. At the moment the crematorium is coping.’
‘Gut feelings?’ asked Dewar.
‘The vaccine has to come tonight, not just for practical reasons but for psychological ones too. If we don’t have some good news soon all that fear and uncertainty out there is going to change to anger and resentment.’
‘I understand the police have been telling the people the vaccine will be available from tomorrow,’ said Dewar.
‘I think Tulloch was trying to stave off another night like last night. It’s a big gamble. If the vaccine doesn’t come and all hell breaks loose tomorrow, I suspect the superintendent’s going to be spending a lot more time with his fa
mily.’
‘I hope he’s successful for personal reasons apart from anything else, said Dewar.
Wright looked at him quizzically.
‘I’ve got to go in there tonight.’
‘What the hell for?’
Dewar told him.
‘Bloody hell, that’s all we need,’ exclaimed Wright. ‘The loonies in charge of the asylum.’
‘Maybe you can show me on the map exactly where Aberdour Court is?’
Wright turned back to the map and traced a curving pattern in the air with his pen. He homed in on one spot and then looked at Dewar over his glasses. ‘Right in the middle of the no-go area. You must be mad. Surely the police, if they knew what was at stake would …’
‘I’ve already been down that road,’ interrupted Dewar. ‘I’ve been talking to Grant at police headquarters. The likely backlash from a mob-handed police raid might make things infinitely worse in the long run than they are at the moment. The vaccination programme would be hopelessly disrupted and the epidemic would almost certainly spill over into the rest of the city.
Wright shook his head but he saw the sense in what Dewar was saying. ‘Need company?’ he asked.
Dewar smiled. ‘That was a kind thought, and a brave one,’ he said but Grant and I have worked out a plan we think will work providing the streets aren’t blocked off.’ He told Wright about using an ambulance.
Wright looked dubious. ‘As I understand it, the yobs have been letting ambulances through in the daytime. No one’s tried it at night yet.’
The same thought had occurred to Dewar. He shrugged and said, ‘If we don’t try it we’ll never know.’
A meeting of the crisis management team was scheduled for seven but it was nearer half past before enough people had arrived. Tulloch sent his apologies but the night had already started as far as he was concerned. He was needed elsewhere. Mary Martin was late through welcoming the new volunteers and assigning them tasks for tomorrow.
‘Do you have enough people?’ asked Wright.
‘I think so. The response has been good. I’m going to continue using my own people for new patients and contacts because they have local knowledge. The new people will be used mainly to man the vaccination centres. They are all qualified so little or no training will be required. They can get straight into it.’