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Beneath the Abbey Wall

Page 1

by A. D. Scott




  PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF

  A. D. SCOTT

  “Another stunner. . . . Lots of action, lots of atmosphere, and above all, lots of fun.”

  —Booklist (starred) on A Double Death on the Black Isle

  “Readers . . . should enjoy Scott’s careful attention to creating characters who convincingly belong to a past era’s attitudes and values.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “A Double Death on the Black Isle is like a visit with an old friend in front of a fireplace on a cold wintry night. It’s a place you won’t want to leave.”

  —Suspense Magazine

  “A Small Death in the Great Glen is a novel to savor.”

  —Malla Nunn, author of

  A Beautiful Place to Die

  “Once you start reading, you’ll find it hard to put down.”

  —Peter Robinson on A Small Death in the Great Glen

  Thank you for purchasing this Atria Paperback eBook.

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  CONTENTS

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About A.D. Scott

  To Glenn McVeigh

  PROLOGUE

  Ten past nine on a mid-September night, everything in the town was tight shut, including the sky. It must have known it was the Sabbath.

  The stone staircase leading from Church Street to the suspension bridge was not the man’s usual way home. But after a long cold shift in the railway marshaling yards he was weary, and cycling the long way round, across the Black Bridge in the rain, would chill a man to the bone.

  Since he was a child, taking the stairs down to the river made him uneasy. It could be the graveyard above, the tombstones rising above eye level. It could be the wall, the ancient remains of the Abbey of the Black Friars. It could be the rumor of a ghost—the ghost of the Black Lady, but more likely the ghost of a Black Friar in cloak and cassock.

  He always told his wife he didn’t believe the old stories—old wives’ tales, he called them, but this night, in the dark, in the drizzle, and the lamp above the back porch of another church halfway down the steps was broken—it was even more eerie than usual.

  He hugged one side of the long flight, keeping close to the iron banister that ran down the middle, his bicycle hefted on his left shoulder.

  He saw the bundle on the porch step without thinking much. Later, when asked, he recalled an impression of abandoned coal sacks—the hundredweight size, he said. But for the hand, lying upturned, reaching out in a gesture of supplication, still warm, unlike that of the angel in the graveyard opposite, he would have hurried on.

  The wife waits up till half past nine, he told the police sergeant; one minute late and he would have to warm his supper himself.

  He knew it was a body; he’d seen enough of them in the war. He dropped his bike, felt for a pulse, found none, then sprinted up the street to the police station. And no, he told them afterwards; he hadn’t lifted the sacking, somehow he couldn’t, and no, he hadn’t seen anything or anyone. Nothing at all.

  He had felt an absence from the bundle of sacks and a presence from the graveyard over the wall, but that was not the kind of thing a man could tell anyone.

  He saw a flicker, a movement, something, dancing between tombstones, hiding behind the largest, one so old it was leaning at an angle like a drunk.

  It was that, more than the discovery of the woman’s body, that made him hare up the street so fast he had to stop outside the police station to clutch his side, a painful stitch stopping him from taking another step.

  When he had his breath back, and when he reported what he saw, he didn’t mention the ghost. But he never forgot how terrified he had been.

  The theft of his bicycle from where he dropped it on the steps beside the body nagged at him for months. The hand, reaching out, haunted him for the rest of his life. And ever after, even though he didn’t believe in ghosts, he cycled the long way home.

  CHAPTER 1

  After twenty-five years as a journalist, McAllister was used to late nights, so when the doorbell rang at twenty past eleven he was awake, reading, and on his third single-malt whisky of the evening. As he put down his book and rose to answer the door, he felt uneasy. Who would be awake in this Scottish Highland town this late on the Sabbath?

  Police Constable Ann McPherson stood on the doorstep. “Mr. McAllister. We’ve found a woman. She’s dead. One of my colleagues thinks she works—worked—at the Gazette . . . ”

  WPC McPherson saw a flash of dread cross McAllister’s face. “It’s not Joanne.”

  Ann McPherson knew McAllister and liked the editor of the Highland Gazette; liked his wit, his intellect, and secretly admired his tall dark brooding elegance. She had also guessed at his fascination with Joanne Ross, a reporter on the Gazette, a woman fifteen years younger than his forty-five, a woman whose smile and changeable-as-the-ocean-blue-green eyes and ever curious mind had entered his dreaming—awake and asleep.

  “Come in.” Not waiting for an answer, he went straight to his sitting room to pour another dram.

  “Who is she?” he asked after he gulped the whisky down.

  “That’s why I’m here. We need your help to identify her.”

  He noted she did not say what had happened and knew this was not good. “I’ll get my coat.”

  Until now, September had been glorious. A late burst of warmth and color and crystal nights, the glens and mountains orange and red and ochre, the islands in the river that cut the town in half, were decked out in an outburst of beauty that made the heart glad. But this Sunday, winter gave advance notice with a grey dreich-damp cold shroud, covering the town and mountains, spiced up by a steady nor’easterly straight off the North Sea that sent even the seagulls inland. It seemed a fitting day to end in death.

  McAllister was grateful that on the short journey across the river, WPC McPherson said nothing.

  The car park for the mortuary was at the back of the building and dark except for a single faint light above a door marked “Entrance.” The exit was not marked, but McAllister was aware of the tall robust brick chimney and wondered if it was the exit, or perhaps entrance, to the underworld.

  “McAllister.”

  “Detective Inspector.”

  They said no more. Detective Inspector Dunne led the way down a corridor and held open the thick green doors to the high-ceilinged room, where a mortuary attendant was waiting beside a trolley. A rubber sheet—green, color-coordinated to match the door and tiles—covered the figure awaiting McAllister’s verdict. He mentally blessed the deities, in which he had little faith, for the three shots of malt he’d had earlier. Or was it four?

  He took a breath through his mouth, then nodded.

  The light was harsh, making shadows. It highlighted the look of surprise that McAllister fancied he saw on the brow of her clearly dea
d face. He never understood that epitaph on tombstones, “Only sleeping.”

  “Enough,” was all he managed to say, before turning and walking out into the corridor.

  “I have to ask you formally . . . ” DI Dunne came up behind him.

  “Can I smoke?” McAllister asked.

  “In here.” WPC McPherson indicated a waiting room.

  The police officers waited until McAllister filled his lungs, exhaled, before putting the formal question.

  “Mr. McAllister, do you recognize the deceased?” the inspector asked in a formal policeman’s voice.

  “I do. It is, was, Mrs. Smart, business manager at the Highland Gazette. I don’t remember her first name.”

  As he said this he felt a rush of guilt. This was the woman he had worked beside for a year and a half. This was the woman who made sure the Gazette functioned, the woman who was as essential to the newspaper as the printing press.

  “I’m sorry, it’s the shock.”

  He knew it wasn’t, and he knew he would be ashamed of this lapse of memory for the remainder of his life. He turned away. He wanted to remember her differently—alive, clearheaded, calm, an anchor in the newsroom, an older woman, once pretty, who had grown into a handsome understated elegance. He wanted his vision of her, hair in a chignon, never a stray strand, no makeup and the only touch of vanity a perfume that Joanne had assured him was called Joy, to remain intact, not sullied by the sight of her in death. And he needed to breathe, to affirm he was alive.

  “I need air,” he said. He didn’t add that the mortuary was thick with the presence of death, and he could only breathe through his mouth, and he needed a cigarette, and he needed a whisky, and he wanted to talk to someone but he was too old to talk to his mother, and he was once again regretting his aloofness, his self-isolation, facets of his character he never saw as a fault, until lately.

  Mrs. Smart is dead.

  DI Dunne walked with McAllister along the corridors, out into the fresh air, saying nothing. The detective was a good man. And sensitive. He knew when to say nothing.

  McAllister refused the offer of a lift home. He wished DI Dunne a good night, knowing it would never be that. WPC McPherson had left. Probably off to break the news to the husband. That seems the lot of a woman police officer.

  McAllister took the Infirmary footbridge across the river, the quickest way home. Halfway across he thought, Her husband—all I know is that he is a retired military man. Again he tasted the bitter tang of guilt. I know so little about that splendid woman, and now it is too late.

  A church bell was striking one o’clock as he opened his front door. He went to the kitchen, put on the kettle. Remembering his mother’s recipe for shock, he added sugar to his tea. Taking his mug to the sitting room, he added a slug of whisky—his recipe for shock. He threw a log on the embers of the fire, settled down to search for the name. Still the answer eluded him.

  She was a private woman. I’ve worked with her since I came to the north from Glasgow, I liked her, I respected her, but I could never say I knew her. She was always Mrs. Smart to everyone—even to Don, but I should know her first name.

  A calm efficient woman, he had inherited her and his deputy, Don McLeod, when he was brought in as the editor of the Highland Gazette. It took only one day for him to recognize that he did not need to tell them their jobs, and that they could run the place without him.

  McAllister was there for a different reason—to bring the newspaper out of the nineteenth century and into the nineteen fifties. It had taken more than a year, but 1957 was the rebirth of a newspaper unchanged for more than a century.

  Why in Heaven’s name would anyone want to murder her? It must be a mistake.

  He had always thought her name appropriate—Mrs. Smart—the model of an efficient office manager; quiet, well-mannered, capable, able to grasp his new ideas for the Gazette and implement them without fuss. She was fine-looking in an elderly, middle-class way. She seldom offered an opinion until asked, did not gossip, and kept her private life private.

  Wasn’t her husband a war hero from somewhere in the Far East? Don will know. They’ve worked together since before the war. Should I tell him? Is one o’clock in the morning too late? Who would want to murder her? Why was she in town at nine thirty on a Sunday night? How are we going to get the paper out without her?

  And in the maelstrom of thoughts he kept returning to the question that bothered him most—what was her first name?

  * * *

  McAllister had had little sleep, but he wanted to be early; he felt it his responsibility to break the news to the others on the Gazette. He walked down St. Steven’s Brae, brain not quite in the land of the living, the homing instinct guiding him to the office. The incoming tide of Academy pupils on their way to school in their blue blazers, chattering like a flock of starlings, in groups or dragging bicycles, in solitary despair because they were not part of a popular group, in panic over homework not done, dragging their Monday-morning feet up the steepness, parted around and oblivious to the gaunt man.

  He continued down Eastgate in the suitably Monday-morning dreich. To a passerby who knew him slightly and who was ignored when he lifted his hat to McAllister, the man seemed to be searching for something or someone. Which he was; he was searching for an answer.

  He reached the ornate eighteenth-century town house that loomed over the end of the High Street and paused to light a cigarette. He would need all the nicotine his body could absorb to get through this morning.

  Climbing the spiral stone staircase to his office, he heard the clatter of what sounded like a bucket. Through the half-open door of his office he saw a cleaner mopping the floor. He knew the Gazette employed a cleaner, he had seen the payments in the budget, but he had never been in early enough to meet her.

  “I’ll no’ be a minute,” she said without looking up.

  “Fine.” He walked the five steps across the landing to the reporters’ room, where the floor was still wet. He took a tall chair at the end of the long High Table, as Don McLeod, his deputy, referred to it. He lit another cigarette and waited.

  As he stared out of the solitary window at the dark grey cloud cover, he started to mentally compose the obituary. A nice woman, with an impressive bosom; can’t put that in an obituary. He half smiled, his first since seeing the chrysalis of her body, covered by the sheet, her hair still tight in that immaculate French roll she had worn as long as he had known her.

  A good woman—no, that doesn’t do her justice.

  “Goodness, you gave me a fright.” Joanne Ross stood in the doorway. “Never expected to see you in so early.”

  McAllister busied himself stubbing out a cigarette in the metal ashtray with “Souvenir from Ayr” stamped around the edge.

  She stared at him for a moment, seeing the darkness around and in his deep, almost navy blue, eyes. “What’s wrong?”

  “Let’s wait for the others.”

  She knew that was all she would hear until Don McLeod, deputy editor; Rob McLean, her fellow reporter; and Mrs. Smart, the business manager, turned up. She took off her Fair Isle beret; finger combed her heavy chestnut hair, hung up her scarf and coat, stuffing her gloves into the pockets. It might be mid-September, but cycling across the river, the North Sea wind could penetrate right to the bone.

  “Tea?” she asked.

  “No thanks.”

  Joanne and McAllister were awkward alone with each other. The sound of Rob running up the stairs was welcome. Following him came the wheeze of Don’s breathing, clearly audible from a half-flight of stairs above.

  Sitting at the reporter’s table that filled up most of the narrow room, facing the Underwood typewriter that she thought of as ancient and unforgiving and imbued with the spirit of John Knox, Joanne grinned at Rob as he came in.

  Rob grinned back, shook the wind out of his overlong straw hair, threw his motorbike jacket at the hatrack, which wobbled but stayed upright, and holding his hands in the air, declared, “G
oal!”

  Don McLeod had to climb into the tall chair beside McAllister. They always made an incongruous pair—he short and barrel shaped, the editor long and pole shaped. He sat for a moment to get his breath back—the climb up the stairs on Monday always seemed steeper than on other days. His glance at the railway station clock registered the editor’s early attendance, he winked at Hector Bain, Gazette photographer and serial nuisance who had crept in, taking the chair next to Joanne, knowing she at least would not shout at him, he muttered Good morning, lass, to Joanne, ignored Rob—it being too early for a twenty-two-year-old’s version of wit—and began the search of his numerous pockets for his little red pencil, the one that kept the Gazette reporters up to the mark. He found it and put it behind his right ear. Now he was ready to start the week.

  McAllister stubbed out yet another cigarette. “I have some news . . . ” he started.

  “Well, we are a newspaper,” Rob pointed out.

  Joanne threw a scrunched-up ball of paper at him. He ducked. She missed. They grinned at each other like small children misbehaving behind the teacher’s back. Don McLeod looked at them as though he were their teacher not editor. He started to waggle his finger at them, then realized what was wrong.

  “Where’s Mrs. Smart?” he asked, knowing that for the ritual Monday-morning news meeting she was always in before the others.

  McAllister saw he had lost control of his hands. He put them under the table, holding on to the underledge.

  “Mrs. Smart won’t be coming in. She’s . . . ” He couldn’t continue.

  It was Don who understood first.

  “Has she had an accident?”

  Before McAllister could reply, the sound of voices echoed up the stairwell.

  “You can’t go up without an appointment.” Gazette secretary Betsy Buchanan’s voice, although shrill, was completely ineffective—the two sets of footsteps were already halfway up the stairs.

  Detective Inspector Dunne hesitated in the doorway. The uniformed policeman behind him was visible only as a navy blue blur. But the detective, in a smart wool jacket, white shirt, regimental tie, raincoat open, hat respectfully removed, with the face of an off-duty funeral director, made everyone instantly nervous.

 

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