Wearing Purple ob-3
Page 29
I showed it to Susie. Her hand went to her mouth as she gasped, ‘Oh my God!’
‘That’s what Jan found out,’ I told her. ‘For the last five years, your health care division has been buying, quite legitimately, large quantities of Temazepam and diamorphine. Now we know who’s been doing it.
‘Our guess is that those drugs weren’t here long, only they didn’t go to the hospitals. They went to the streets, for Christ knows how many times their nominal value.’
‘But how could Gary sign those orders?’ she asked.
‘He did vocational training in the RAMC, didn’t he? What’s the betting he could prove to the wholesalers that he’s a qualified pharmacist?’
Susie sat on the edge of Joseph Donn’s desk. She looked crushed.
‘Listen love,’ I said, as gently as I could make myself sound, ‘I have to ask you this. You must have told someone about the work that Jan was doing for you, and where she had reached with it. You said you haven’t seen Gary for months. So who was it?’
She sat there, blank-eyed, and shook her head. ‘No. I didn’t.’
‘Susie, you must have told someone. I know it. Was it your father?’
We looked at her for a while, until finally, she nodded her head: not very vigorously, but she nodded it. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I told my dad, and the silly old bugger must have let it slip to Gary.’
‘Are they close, then?’
Susie nodded again. ‘I wouldn’t say Dad treats him like a son, but yes, they’re close. Gary worships him, that’s for sure.’
As I gazed down at her, I almost heard a click as the last piece of the jigsaw slipped into place.
‘Susie, I think you should give all those records to Mike, the last five years at least. Then I want you to go home, and not to talk to anyone at all, until you hear from us again. Is that okay?’
She pushed herself off the edge of the desk. ‘Anything you say, Oz.’ She pulled the rest of the records from the drawer and handed them to Dylan. ‘But Michael, don’t make it too soon before your next visit. I like my men to bring me good news, not disaster.’
We watched her as she locked the safe, then followed her downstairs, and outside. We watched her as she drove off, into what had become the night.
‘Jesus,’ said Dylan at last. ‘Gary bloody O’Rourke. The boy gets around, doesn’t he. I’ll bet he punts the drugs out through that so-called security firm he worked for. Bastard.’ I let him swear on for a bit longer before I tapped him on the shoulder.
‘Mike,’ I said, quietly and evenly. ‘Remember you and Susie were supposed to be coming to the GWA show in Newcastle, only the Lord Provost had the tickets off you?’
‘Yes: I wanted to go too, but he just commandeered them.’
‘Well that night, I stood beside Gary O’Rourke while he held the door open for his idol, his Uncle Jack. Not a single flicker of recognition passed between them. Not a “Hello, son,” not a “Hello, Uncle Jack”. Not a smile, not a twitch, not as much as a “Thank you”.
‘Yet the same Jack Gantry made a point of telling O’Rourke what Jan was working on. Why d’you think that was?’
Dylan stared back at me. I think that he could have been a bit scared by the sound of my voice. I think I was too.
‘It’s time you and I paid a visit to the Lord Provost, Detective Inspector,’ I said.
‘I don’t think that’s a good idea, Oz,’ Mike protested, weakly. ‘This is Jack Gantry we’re dealing with, after all.’
I laughed. ‘I don’t care if it’s the Devil himself. Come to think of it, maybe it is.’
Chapter 58
I know, I should have given some consideration to Mike Dylan’s position as he directed me through the streets which led to Jack Gantry’s house. After all, I had been concerned earlier about the potential effect of our extra-curricular investigation on his CID career. But that was then.
As I drove through Pollokshields, the only thing in my mind was my wife: Jan carrying our embryonic child, Jan excited by her forensic examination of the Gantry accounts, Jan touching that washing machine, Jan in the time it took the electricity to course through her body, her awareness of what was happening before the current blew all the circuits in her brain and stopped her heart for ever.
I could have exploded, gone over the edge, but I didn’t. Instead, I did as I had before; I built that trusty shell of ice-cold anger around myself, feeding from it as we drew closer to the man who, I was sure, held the answers to all my questions of the weeks gone by. I had no clear idea of what I would do when I came face-to-face with him. All I had was determination that when I had finished, his life would be in as many pieces as mine.
‘This is it,’ said Dylan, hauling me back from my dark thoughts to the present. ‘His house is at the end of this cul-de-sac. ’ I turned right, as he indicated.
It was a short street, nothing much to it at all really, half a dozen houses down either side and one at the end: Jack Gantry’s home. An opening to the driveway gaped at us, but I couldn’t see the house from the roadway, since the view was blocked by mature trees down either side of the carriageway and by a high hedge beyond.
What I could see was the dark shape of a Range Rover, parked under the trees, and inside it, almost filling it, an even darker form. Switching off my lights as we cruised up behind it, I drew the Frontera to a halt. Without a word to each other, Dylan and I climbed out and walked up to the driver’s door. Gently I tapped at the window.
Everett Davis started in his seat, banging his head on the roof. He had to turn on the car’s electrics to lower his window, but when he had he looked at us angrily.
‘What you guys doing here?’ he demanded.
‘Naw,’ I said. ‘We saw you first. What the hell are you doing here?’
‘I’m thinking, man,’ he growled. The sound made me imagine unlucky souls lost in the veldt, hearing a noise like that just before they found themselves added to the local menu. ‘I’m thinking about kicking that man’s door down and strangling the mother with his own chain.’
His eyes glistened as he looked at me. ‘Diane’s in there, man.’ The growl had become a moan.
‘Not again, Ev,’ I protested as I leaned against the car. ‘First Liam, now Gantry.’
‘It’s true this time, Oz,’ he muttered. ‘This morning I didn’t get up till later; we’d decided we weren’t going into the office. When I come downstairs she was just finishing a call. . on her mobile, so I didn’t pick up any extension and hear her.’ He glanced at me. ‘You gimme another reason why she wouldn’t use the house phone.
‘So I set a trap. I told her I’d decided to go to London this afternoon, to look at a venue. I packed an overnight bag and I left. But instead of going to the airport, I just drove back up the street and I waited, parked behind a skip someone had hired and left out there.
‘I waited for hours, man. I was just about to admit to myself that you were right and I was an idiot, when she drove out. I just stayed a few cars behind her and followed her; followed her right here. She drove in there and parked right in the garage. I could just see over the hedge when she walked to the door, and I could see who opened it.’ He paused.
‘I waited ten minutes, then I saw a light go on upstairs.’
He looked at me plaintively. ‘Oz, I know you don’t do matrimonial stuff, but would you come in there with me, just as my friend?’
I think I must have looked like Dracula when I smiled at him in the dark, to judge by his expression. ‘Of course I will, Everett. Mike and I are going in there ourselves anyway. Tag along with us. If you’re lucky you might get to kick the door right enough.’
He nodded and climbed out of his car, closing the door as quietly as he could.
Jack Gantry’s house was impressive enough for a Lord Provost, but not overly large for a multi-millionaire; a red sandstone villa on two floors, with a grey slate roof. The driveway was all monoblock paving rather than gravel, so we were silent as we walked up to the front d
oor.
There was a double garage at the side, with a single wide door, which was open. As we approached, Dylan stepped across and looked inside, then motioned me to join him.
There was a motor-cycle inside, a big powerful Kawasaki job. ‘That’s O’Rourke’s bike,’ said the detective. ‘I recognise the number. Let’s just be a bit careful in there.’
I looked over my shoulder and out of the garage at Everett, and felt myself gleaming inside with anticipation. ‘With him as back-up, pal, it isn’t us who have to be careful.’
We stepped up to the front door; I felt totally in command, but I let Dylan ring the bell for form’s sake. All the ground floor was in darkness, but as Everett had said, one big bay window on the first floor showed light behind its drawn curtains. I told the giant to stand to one side, in the darkness beyond the door, so that he was out of sight.
We waited for a full minute, then Dylan rang the bell again. Finally, the curtains moved and a face peered out. I reckoned it was the first time I had seen Jack Gantry without his gold chain. We gazed up at the window, until it swung open.
‘What the hell is this, Mike?’ the Lord Provost exclaimed as he leaned out. His hair was messed up and he was wearing a heavy tweed dressing gown.
‘We have to talk to you, Jack. Open up.’
‘Indeed I will not, Inspector. Now get the hell off my doorstep. You too, Oz.’
‘I don’t think so, Mr Gantry,’ I called up to him. ‘Either you let us in or my big friend here. .’ Unbidden, but dead on cue, Everett stepped out of the shadows ‘. . will take your house apart, stone by stone, just to get to you. You’re nailed, Lord Provost, you and your murderous bastard of a nephew.’
I smiled at him. ‘You do have an alternative, though. In a place like this you’re bound to have a library and a pearl-handled revolver.’
In an instant, Gantry regained his equanimity, goaded, I guessed by my challenge. He beamed down at me, at his most avuncular. ‘I don’t think so, young man. That’s not my style. Just hold on for a minute or two, and I’ll be down.’
‘You better tell Diane to get her ass down too,’ Everett barked. The Lord Provost had no quick comeback for him. He closed the window.
When he let us in a few minutes later, he was fully dressed, in grey slacks, an open-necked shirt and, of all things, a smoking jacket. As we stepped into the big hallway of the villa, we saw Diane, in a leisure suit, standing halfway up the stairs.
‘Honey,’ said Everett, far more calmly than I had expected, ‘you get in your car and go home. I’ll be back later.’
She shook her head.
‘Honey, I promise you I will not lay one finger on this son of a bitch.’
She stared at him, still scared speechless. ‘He won’t, Diane,’ I told her. ‘I’ll see to that.’ She didn’t understand me. . no one did at the time, probably not even me. . but eventually she grabbed her handbag, which was hanging on a Victorian hat stand at the foot of the stairs, and ran out of the door.
‘How gallant of you, Everett,’ said Gantry as we followed him through into a small panelled room, which appeared to be a study. ‘Is it a duel you’ll be wanting?’
‘You heard what I promised her. If I was going to touch you, your back would be broke by now. I just want to hear what you got to say.’
‘About Diane? Nothing. I like beautiful women, and every so often I find that they respond to me. Not to my money, or my office, you understand; that’s not what I like. They have to respond to me, as a man. Diane does; or did, I suppose I should say now.’
‘Do you want her?’ Everett barked.
Gantry looked at him, almost down his nose. ‘Good God no!’ he said. ‘She was drawn to me, she had a need, I fulfilled it. That’s it.
‘Don’t blame her, Everett. Blame yourself if anyone. You assume that she’s as wrapped up in your appalling business as you are. She isn’t, man. She’d like some of your time for herself, every now and again. She even wears those ridiculous costumes in your shows to provoke you, but she never manages to. . or so she tells me.’ He sneered at the huge wrestler.
‘Your business is a pantomime, Everett, full of role-play, and so is your life. But in life there has to be real action, man, not make-believe. That’s what she’s been missing.’
Gantry seemed to have switched into full campaigning mode. The way he was going I was afraid Everett would wind up thanking him for shagging his wife, so I decided to put a stop to it.
‘Let’s leave Diane out of this, Lord Provost,’ I said. ‘There are lots of things I want to ask you. First off, why did you set your nephew Gary O’Rourke up to sabotage the GWA?’
Everett’s eyes bulged as he stared at me. ‘He what!?’ he roared.
Dylan took him by the arm. ‘Quiet just now, big fella,’ he said, as if he was soothing an elephant.
Jack Gantry ignored them both and stared at me. ‘You have to ask me that?’ he retorted. There was no show; his anger was as quick and genuine as that of Everett. ‘You really have to ask me that? Don’t you understand me at all? Don’t you appreciate what I stand for?
‘Man, I loathe and detest everything his tawdry, paltry organisation stands for. I am the First Citizen of a great European cultural capital, yet I have to put up with these freaks, with their human circus, cheapening its very name, and making it a laughing stock all over Europe.
‘They’re worse than the footballers; at least there’s some spurious cultural heritage there. Mr Davis’s stuff has no substance. It’s a disgrace to my city.’
‘So why did you allow it to happen in the first place?’ I asked.
He scowled at me. ‘It was forced upon me,’ he said. ‘By the national level of my Party. Some fool of a Scottish Office Minister decided that it would be a Good Thing For Glasgow to have a European organisation based here. I had personally negotiated that the Turin Symphony Orchestra would relocate to Glasgow. I had personally arranged the deal through Locate In Scotland. Then Everett appeared with his prancing pantomime Sports Entertainment nonsense.’ His voice rose, then fell back to its normal level.
‘I tried to tell the Secretary of State that it was totally unsuitable, but he’s from an Edinburgh constituency. He laughed in my face and said that it was a money-maker, and that no one ever made a profit from a symphony orchestra, so the GWA deal would go ahead.
‘Those people ignored my wishes, Everett, but I determined that I would not tolerate your presence in the city for one minute longer than was necessary. So I made enquiries, and I worked out how you could be driven out. Like any other businessman, you are reliant entirely on the goodwill of your customers. I reasoned that if I could destroy that, I would destroy the Global Wrestling Alliance.’ He laced the words with contempt.
‘So, as soon as I heard that there was a vacancy in your ranks, I sent my nephew Gary along to apply for it. I never had any doubt that he would get it. I didn’t even have to give him a personal recommendation, although I would have, if it had come to that.
‘Best that I didn’t though. No connection between Gary and me; no case to answer, see.’
‘And Diane,’ muttered Everett, slowly, ‘was she in on it?’
‘Good God no. She might betray you between the sheets, my friend, but she couldn’t stand it if anything happened to you. If she’d known what I was up to, she’d have told you right away.’
‘O’Rourke,’ I asked suddenly. ‘Where is he now? We saw his bike in your garage.’
‘Ahh,’ said Gantry. ‘Yes. Gary.Yes. I might as well tell you. He’s in a freezer in the basement, as a matter of fact.’
Cold as my anger was I still felt a chill run through me.
‘Greedy boy,’ the Lord Provost exclaimed. ‘He turned up last night wanting two hundred thousand for his trouble, so that he could get out of the country for a while. I told him that he’d blown it, so he was getting nothing. He became difficult, aggressive, so I stabbed him in the chest with a Kitchen Devil. Bloody sharp, those things are, you know.
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‘I know I should have called your chaps in there and then, Mike, but I just panicked. I was in shock, couldn’t think straight; so I stuck him in my old freezer while I gathered myself together.’
Something went out of me then. I was taking immense, if perverse, satisfaction out of confronting Gantry, but beyond him there had lain O’Rourke. My game plan had been to have him lead me to O’Rourke, so that I could do for him myself. Now this man — this madman, as we could all now see he was — who had robbed Everett and me of our wives in different ways, had stolen that prospect from me too.
But I regrouped, repaired the crack in my cold armour and pressed on.
‘And Jan,’ I asked him, quietly. ‘What about Jan?’
He looked at me with his first show of regret. Not remorse, that’s different; this was only regret.
‘Aye son,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry about that, but it was necessary. Thanks to my hot-headed daughter, and to her own skill as an accountant, your lass was about to find out about Gary’s wee sideline, and to tell Susie. I had to stop her from doing that, at all costs, I’m afraid.’
‘Gary’s wee sideline,’ I repeated. ‘So you did know about it.’
‘Oh yes. Almost from the start. I was still running the business when he dreamed it up, so I spotted it within the first two months.’
‘So why didn’t you turn him in?’ asked Dylan, incredulity written all over his face. ‘Why did you cover it up?’
Gantry laughed at him, and shook his head. ‘Michael, Michael, Michael, I am a politician, first and last. The job of the politician is to give the people what they want; not to tell them what they want — that’s the real, patronising, Old Labour way — but to give it to them.
‘And what you and those like you must know but are afraid to admit is that the poor, ordinary underprivileged folk in all big inner city areas want Temazepam and the like, and they want heroin. For good or evil those things have become part of their culture and they want them: more than that, they will have them, come what may.