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The Rule Book

Page 30

by Kitchin , Rob


  ‘McEvoy.’

  ‘Colm, it’s Tony Bishop. I won’t keep you.’ His voice was calm, measured. ‘We’ve considered your offer. We’ll see you back at work tomorrow morning. I’ll meet you at eight o’clock.’

  ‘I’m not suspended?’ he asked, disbelief in his voice.

  ‘No, but they’ll be some changes. We’ll talk tomorrow. Try and get a good night’s sleep. You’ve had a long few days. No doubt tomorrow will be as well.’

  ‘Right. Right, okay,’ he mumbled, unsure what to say. ‘And Deegan?’

  ‘Don’t worry about Deegan. I’ll see you tomorrow morning.’ The call was ended.

  McEvoy stared at the phone for a while, his mind a blank bubble, then slotted it back into the pocket and climbed into the shower, turning the water back on, washing the suds away.

  Chapter Seven

  Sunday, April 20th

  McEvoy tightened his tie and brushed down his uniform. He didn’t feel comfortable wearing it, but one of his oversized numbers would just provide Bishop with extra ammunition. He felt like a naughty child hovering outside the headmaster’s office. He tried to gather himself, his inner voice ordering him to be strong, to fight his corner, to not back down or accept a deal simply to maintain the peace; to make sure he retained some dignity going forward. He took a deep breath and knocked on the door.

  ‘Come in.’

  He pushed it open. Tony Bishop was sat behind his desk, Detective Superintendent Paul Roche opposite him. They both rose when he entered, Roche pulling a tight smile, looking uncomfortable. He was a couple of inches shorter than McEvoy, but broader in the shoulders, with white-grey hair, a short-haired greying beard, a pair of thin framed glasses over blue eyes, and a wide mouth. He was the senior Superintendent on the NBCI murder team, the steady hand who would soon reach retirement age. McEvoy liked him as a person and respected him as a policeman.

  The desk was covered with the morning’s newspapers. The banner on the one at the top read, ‘KEYSTONE KOPS’, a picture of the homeless man on the ground, the uniformed guard knelt at his side looking up, his face communicating that the man was dead. An inset picture showed McEvoy hitting Deegan.

  McEvoy looked from Bishop to Roche, back to Bishop, and down to the newspapers, his heart sinking. Bishop was outflanking him. He wasn’t suspended, but he was off the case. This was the handover. And Roche’s presence would inhibit any discussion of yesterday’s argument – their manoeuvring and his threats.

  ‘Colm.’ Bishop pointed to the free chair and waited for McEvoy to sit. ‘After yesterday’s fiasco we spent the evening conducting a review. It’s the Commissioner’s and Minister’s opinion that we bring in a fresh perspective – somebody who can stand back and see the whole picture, who isn’t too close to the action; someone who can plot a new path forward. They want Superintendent Roche to take over the investigation with immediate effect.’

  Bishop had gazumped him. It wasn’t Bishop and the AC who was moving him aside, it was the Commissioner and the Minister for Justice. He had no direct fight with them. He slumped back in the chair. This was all going horribly wrong.

  ‘You are to stay part of the investigative team until Paul is fully up to speed. To the outside world it will be presented that we are adding another senior officer, spreading the load, rather than it looking like you’re being kicked off the case. I know you’re not going to be happy with that, but this is from the top. We need to be seen to be doing something after yesterday’s disaster. That something is a change of management.’

  McEvoy stayed silent, staring down at the papers.

  ‘Colm?’ Bishop prompted.

  ‘And what about once Paul is up to speed?’

  ‘You’ll be eased out of the picture and out of the media’s eye. It’ll be best for you, for us, and for Paul. You’re not exactly a media darling and it’s hurting your reputation.’

  McEvoy smiled to himself. What was good for them was good for him. They were trying to make shafting him look like a favour.

  ‘And then what?’ He wiped at his nose with the back of his hand.

  ‘And then you go back into the regular rotation.’

  ‘And at the first opportunity I’ll be sent out to some backwater that needs a superintendent?’

  ‘I don’t make those kind of decisions, Colm,’ Bishop said, his face flushing red, signalling his annoyance. ‘I’ve no idea what the plans for you are. My view is that you’re lucky to have a job after yesterday, lucky that you’re not being yanked from the case right now after the damage you’ve done.’

  McEvoy shook his head and rubbed his face. Within six months he’d be stationed in Leitrim or West Offaly, operating out of a part-time station with a leaky roof, policing local GAA games and tracking down fly-tippers.

  ‘So?’ Bishop prompted again.

  ‘So what?’ McEvoy said facetiously. ‘It’s not like I’ve got a choice, is it?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Well, I guess I’ll leave you to brief Paul then,’ McEvoy said standing.

  ‘Sit down, Colm, we’re not finished yet. There are some other ground rules.’

  McEvoy dropped back into his seat.

  ‘First, this is now Superintendent Roche’s case. You do whatever he asks you to do. You do not make or act on any decisions without running them past him first. Second, I want to be kept informed at all times as to the progress of the case. Any major decisions will need to be okayed by me through Paul. Third, under no circumstances are either of you to talk to the media. None. All of that is now being handled by me and me only. You’ll probably be pleased to know that neither of you will be required to attend press conferences either. It’ll allow you to concentrate 100 percent on catching this bastard.’

  McEvoy stayed staring at the papers. At least the responsibility was being lifted off his shoulders and he wouldn’t need to talk to Bishop or the media. And he’d just have to see what happened in a few days’ time. A holiday wouldn’t be a bad idea. Except that deep down he wanted to catch The Raven; wanted to be there when they finally cornered him; wanted to make him pay in some small way for the misery and suffering he’d caused.

  Roche shifted in his seat, remaining silent.

  ‘Right, well, you better get started.’ Bishop said, dismissing them.

  McEvoy and Roche were standing just inside Roche’s office.

  ‘Look, Colm, I want you to know that I had no part in that. As far as I’m concerned this is still your investigation.’

  ‘I think we both know that there’s no way this is my investigation anymore,’ McEvoy said, dejected. ‘I’m a sinking ship, you’d be best to steer well clear.’

  ‘Look, feck them, okay? We both know you’ve been shafted by Bishop protecting his scrawny arse. I’m going keep you involved in this as long as I can. One, it’s your case, and two, you’ve got the best knowledge of how all of this sits together. You’ve seen all the victims and murder scenes, spoken to all the key witnesses; all I’m going to be able to do is go on the case notes and discussions with your investigating officers. While I get myself up to speed, I want you to carry on as you would have done.’

  ‘I’m not sure that’s a good idea, Paul. Bishop’s going to be looking over your shoulder like a hawk making sure I’m behaving myself.’ He blew his nose.

  ‘Okay, well, we’ll play it Bishop’s way. You tell me what you’re going to do and I’ll okay it. That’ll keep him quiet. However we do it, we can’t stall everything for two or three days while I try to familiarise myself with things. We need to try and keep the investigation moving. What leads have you got?’

  ‘Nothing much,’ McEvoy said flatly, unable to muster any enthusiasm. ‘We know as much about him now as we did a week ago. I was going to go and re-interview one of Laura Schmidt’s friends, a drug addict called Karen. I think she knows more than she’s letting on. Kathy Jacobs, the profiler, and myself both think Laura’s the key to all of this. She was the first victim and Kathy thinks she might have let him
kill her; a kind of bizarre form of euthanasia. Whatever happened, it just doesn’t fit. There was no sign of any struggle, she lay there and he forced a sword out the back of her head.’

  Roche winced at the thought. ‘Well, once we’ve had this team meeting, you go and interview her and see where that gets you.’

  ‘You don’t want to be present?’

  ‘Look, I don’t need to hold your hand and you know what you’re doing in any case. I’m going to spend the day talking through each case with the DIs and their teams; see if a fresh pair of eyes can spot any new lines of enquiry. Come on, let’s go and get this team meeting over with.’

  McEvoy nodded and opened the door.

  Roche slapped him on the back as he exited. ‘Don’t worry, Colm, we’ll catch this bastard. It might take us a while, but we’ll get him. He’s left too many possible lines of enquiry. And when we do, you won’t be able to get rid of Bishop with a shitty stick. He’ll be your best friend again.’

  ‘Some friend,’ McEvoy muttered.

  Karen was sitting at the table, staring absently at its surface, smoking a cigarette despite the signs forbidding it. McEvoy and Jacobs sat down opposite her.

  ‘We need to talk, Karen.’ McEvoy said neutrally. He didn’t tell her to extinguish the cigarette, savouring the secondary smoke.

  She looked up slowly. ‘Was it you who had me locked up all night?’

  ‘It was for your own safety.’

  ‘Yeah, right. More like so I couldn’t do a runner. Who’s yer wan? Social worker?’ She took another drag on the cigarette.

  ‘No, she’s a criminal profiler. A psychologist. Dr Kathy Jacobs. She’s trying to help us catch The Raven, the man who killed Laura.’

  ‘I’ve already fuckin’ told you, I barely knew Laura. We just met up once or twice. And I don’t know this Raven fucker either.’

  ‘When I asked you whether Laura had a boyfriend yesterday you hesitated. Did she have a boyfriend, Karen?’

  ‘Is that why you’re holding me, over a hesitation?’

  ‘Did she have a boyfriend, Karen?’

  ‘Jesus! How the fuck am I meant to know? She hardly spoke. Look, this is fuckin’ ridiculous, can I go now?’

  ‘No. I want you to tell me about Laura.’

  ‘I’ve told you about Laura. She was just some fucked up kid like the rest of us. I want to go.’

  ‘Are you afraid of him?’ Jacobs asked. ‘Is that why you won’t talk about him? You’re afraid that if you say who he is, he’ll come after you?’

  ‘Not another one,’ Karen said, looking down at the table again. ‘I don’t know who you’re talking about. I’ve no idea who this Raven fucker is!’

  ‘Okay, so you don’t know him. Did you ever see Laura with any men? Perhaps just sitting and talking? Maybe somewhere round the city?’

  Karen stayed silent.

  ‘She’s dead, Karen,’ McEvoy said. ‘Somebody killed her. He’s going to carry on killing unless we stop him. Did you see her with a man at all?’

  She stayed silent for a moment. ‘What’s it worth?’

  ‘Worth?’ McEvoy snapped.

  Jacobs put a hand on his arm.

  Karen tried to appear indifferent.

  ‘Did you see her with a man, Karen?’ Jacobs repeated.

  McEvoy fished 20 euros from his pocket and placed it on the table.

  Karen reached across and took it, rolling it into a thin straw.

  ‘I saw her near to the Mater once talking to someone. She hardly ever talked to anyone. And she once brought him back to …’ She stopped, aware of what she was saying.

  ‘She brought him back to your squat?’ McEvoy pressed.

  Karen stayed silent, her thumb plucking at the note.

  ‘Karen?’

  ‘Yeah,’ she eventually muttered.

  ‘And did you know him?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘But you’d recognise him again?’

  ‘I doubt it. He was just some man.’

  ‘How old was he?’

  ‘I don’t know, 30, 40.’

  ‘And what was he wearing?’

  ‘I don’t remember, okay? He was just some bloke.’

  ‘Why didn’t you tell me this before?’

  She shrugged. ‘What difference would it make? I don’t remember him.’

  ‘For God’s sake,’ McEvoy mumbled. It was something and nothing. Laura the loner had spent some time with a man; possibly The Raven, possibly not. But that was it. There were over 600,000 men in the Greater Dublin Region. ‘You must remember something about him, Karen,’ he pressed.

  She continued to stare at the table top, plucking at the note. ‘Can I go now?’

  ‘Well, it’s a start,’ Jacobs said, walking back up the stairs.

  ‘It’s a long shot,’ McEvoy replied without enthusiasm, sniffing. ‘She’s not going to recognise him; she barely recognises her own face.’

  ‘It’s something to work with though,’ Jacobs pressed. ‘We need to try and reconstruct Laura’s life. We know next to nothing about her. It might be that the man’s not The Raven, but we need to find him to confirm that.’

  ‘Come on, Kathy,’ he replied, massaging his face, exhausted and moribund. ‘We’ve had appeals out all week for information on Laura and we’ve got bugger all back. She wandered the streets like a ghost. Nobody knows anything about her.’

  ‘Look, I know you’re tired and pissed off, no doubt with good reason, but you’re still on the case and we need to try and catch him before he kills again. I still think she’s the key.’

  McEvoy nodded, conceding the point. ‘Right, okay, let’s go and see Paul Roche,’ he said flatly. ‘Maybe we could organise a few people to go round the north inner city and show people her picture; see if it jogs anyone’s memory.’

  ‘That almost sounded like the Colm McEvoy I met on the beach in Donabate,’ she teased.

  ‘Yeah, well, as you say, we need to try and find out something about her.’ He pushed open the door onto the corridor and let her pass through.

  The patch of blue off to the west indicated that the light drizzle might stop shortly. McEvoy huddled under a small, black umbrella, hoping for a lucky break. He’d been standing near to the Eccles Street entrance to the Mater Hospital for the last 20 minutes. So far two dozen people had recognised Laura from the papers, but not from the streets, and about half of those also recognised him. He approached a young couple hurrying towards the entrance under a golf umbrella.

  ‘Excuse me, An Garda Síochána, I’m wondering whether you might recognise this young woman?’ He thrust out the card, blocking their path.

  The woman took it, staring down at the four photos, all at least two years out of date. The man looked him over.

  ‘You’re the guy in charge of this Raven case,’ the man stated. ‘You really fucked up yesterday, didn’t you? How many’s he’s killed now? Seven?’

  ‘Do you recognise the woman in the pictures, Sir?’ McEvoy prompted, pointing to the sheet.

  ‘What?’ The man looked down at the card.

  ‘How about you, Madam?’

  ‘I’ve seen her in the papers and on TV.’

  ‘How about on the street? Maybe walking round here?’

  ‘We don’t live round here, we’re just visiting.’

  ‘So you haven’t seen her then? Perhaps somewhere else in the city?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘How about you, Sir?’

  ‘Nah. She the one who had a sword shoved through her head? Must have been a right fuckin’ mess.’

  ‘Peter!’ the woman said, disapproving.

  ‘I’ll let you get on then. Thanks for your time.’ McEvoy took the card back. He shouldn’t be doing this. That is what uniforms are for. But then what else was he going to do? Roche was in charge now. He was a spare part. He blew his nose thinking that an anti-congestive mightn’t be a bad investment.

  A man stepped out of a taxi and approached the hospital entrance while his friend paid t
he driver. McEvoy stepped across to greet him.

  ‘Excuse me, Sir, An Garda Síochána. Could you tell me whether you recognise this young woman?’

  The man took the card and looked at it. ‘Missing is she?’ he said with a London accent.

  ‘She was murdered earlier this week. She was living rough in the city and we’re trying to find out something about her life. Have you seen her?’

  ‘I’m not sure. I might have done,’ the man hazarded.

  ‘Where do you think you saw her?’

  ‘I don’t know, I can’t remember.’ The man’s friend hovered off to one side, his hands jammed into his pockets.

  ‘Was she with anybody?’

  ‘Is this what this is about, Superintendent?’ the man asked, tipping the sheet towards his friend. ‘You think she might have known her killer?’

  The friend whipped a small camera from his pocket and started to take photos.

  ‘What? What the …’ McEvoy snatched the card back and lurched towards the photographer, who backed away.

  ‘Gary Bridges from The Sun,’ said the man who’d been holding the card. ‘Do you have any comment on your dismissal as lead investigator on The Raven murders? Do you accept that you’ve made major mistakes in the investigation?’

  McEvoy turned away and started to hurry along Eccles Street, his anger rising, the journalist and photographer in tow. He should have recognised the toe-rag from the press conference at the Burlington.

  ‘Do you have any idea as to who The Raven is? Do you care?’ Bridges heckled. ‘What have you got to say to the victims’ families?’

  McEvoy stopped and turned, the journalist almost colliding with him.

  ‘If you don’t back off,’ McEvoy snapped, ‘and leave me alone, I’m going to arrest you for obstructing a police investigation.’

  ‘We both know that’s not going to stick,’ Bridges countered. ‘I’m just doing my job.’

  ‘And so am I, now back off.’ He set off again away from the hospital.

  The journalist and photographer hit a high five and watched him go, broad grins on their faces.

 

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