Snapshot
Page 14
‘Looks like the killings at Harthill have made the natives restless and the pantomime on George Square obviously hasn’t helped. Jo-Jo Johnstone’s wee brother Jason was found with both his legs broken and Jo-Jo is spitting blood about it. Two of Tookie Cochrane’s boys were hit by a car and are in the Royal. One of them is in a coma. There’s also a guy supposedly gone missing named Harvey Houston who works at Ally Riddle’s scrapyard. Riddle’s saying he knows nothing but Shirley’s pulling him in tomorrow for a chat.’
‘Christ. Sounds like it’s getting crazy.’
‘Those are just the ones we know about. Fuck knows what else is happening. My guess is that there’s much more that the bastards have swept under the carpet.’
‘A lot going on this afternoon. Have to wonder why I didn’t get a call to photograph any of it.’
‘Oh fuck off. You will get to do your dirty little thing with whatever that twat does next but this is fall-out from it and you’ll just have to get used to someone else pushing the buttons. Cool your jets.’
Addison’s eyes were flashing the way they did when he was pissed off and Winter admitted to himself that he had a point. Much as he wanted to capture every bit of grisly shit that went on in the city, he knew he couldn’t. There was just too much of it.
‘So what happened when you got back to Harthill?’ he asked the DI.
‘The lovely Ms Fitzpatrick said that Strathie and Sturrock had had the shit kicked out of them professionally. Nothing obvious at first sight but abrasions and contusions to the neck, knees and chest. A few blows but well chosen. Lesions to the wrists, duct tape marks on their faces. They’d been bound up good and tight.
‘The bullets are at the lab and we’ll have a match in the morning. They will be from the same gun though. No doubt about it. Be the same with the rounds they found at George Square. The Temple had everyone jumping through hoops. He called for every bit of CCTV he could, on the motorway and in the services. The Harthill cameras picked up the pair running and falling so we were able to work out the direction of the shots and have crawled over every inch in a straight line but got nothing. They’re going to try again tomorrow.’
‘What about the motorway cameras?’
‘Bits and pieces. They’ve got the white van at different times along the road and at a couple of places in town. No shot of it going into Livingstone Tower though.’
‘So have they got any kind of pictures of the driver?’
‘I can’t really say.’
‘What do you mean? You don’t know?’
‘No, I mean I can’t say. Won’t say, if you prefer it that way.’
‘You are fucking kidding me. I’m on the team.’
‘Nope,’ Addison corrected him. ‘You are with the team. Big difference. If you don’t like it you can go back to photographing broken windaes.’
‘Fucksake, Addy. I don’t like it but I don’t suppose I’ve got much choice.’
‘You don’t. I’ll tell you some stuff, some stuff I won’t. Time you went and got those pies.’
‘Wanker.’
‘That’s Detective Inspector Wanker to you. Get me a burger as well, I’m starving.’
Winter told him what he could do with his burger but they both knew he’d buy it even though he was pissed off at him. Winter wanted every bit of info he could get and Addison was his best chance of it. Shit, he thought, if he was going to be this much hard work then Rachel was going to be a fucking nightmare. She was so wrapped up in the secrecy about them being together that she was paranoid about the need-to-know shit. As far as she was concerned, he didn’t need to know. Addison was just enjoying pulling his chain.
Winter made it back before the second half started, his hands filled with two pies, a burger and a couple of Cokes. Addison enthusiastically helped lighten his load.
‘So were you winding me up when you said you couldn’t tell me about having pictures of the van driver?’ Winter asked him.
‘Maybe.’
‘So are you going to tell me?’
‘Nope.’
‘Okay, so what’s his game then?’
‘Eh?’
‘You said you knew what the fucker’s game was.’
‘Oh aye, that.’
‘Aye, you know?’
‘Aye . ’
‘Aye, you’re going to tell me?’
‘Naw. That also falls into the category of stuff I’m not going to tell you. Not yet anyhow. I’m sure I know what his game is but I still don’t know what it means. But I will. I fucking will.’
Winter looked at him for an age but knew he was getting nothing more. As if to make sure of it, the teams ran back out and another deafening chorus of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ swept them up into the noisiest of silences.
Celtic scored twice more in the second half and the stadium emptied happy and bouncing. Addison and Winter made their way down the stairs and out onto the concourse.
‘Pint?’ Winter asked.
Addison looked at his watch with an exaggerated stare.
‘Just a couple. It’s getting late.’
‘What?’
Winter looked at his own watch and saw that it was quarter to ten.
‘What’s up? You turn into a pumpkin at eleven?’ he guessed.
‘No, but I’ll be pumping something by twenty past,’ he grinned. ‘She finishes shift at the hospital at eleven and will be naked by the time I get there.’
‘Spare me the details.’
‘You couldn’t handle the truth, wee man.’
‘I’m not sure you can handle her with the amount of drink you’ll have put down your neck tonight. She might be disappointed.’
‘Nae chance. The Addison Express runs well on firewater. The overnight train with no sleeper. I’m going to hit every station.’
‘Mind when I said, spare me the details?’
‘At least I haven’t turned gay. Not that I’m prejudiced, Winter, each to their own. Whatever floats your boat and all that.’
He bristled but knew Rachel wouldn’t thank him for blurting out a retort that used her as ammunition.
‘Oh just fuck off, will you,’ he settled for. ‘Some of us don’t feel the need to broadcast our conquests.’
Addison roared with laughter.
‘Conquests? How is life in Elizabethan England? Are you ready to plight your troth or hoist your petard?’
‘I’ll hoist your fucking petard in a minute.’
‘Temper, temper, wee man. Too easy.’
‘Aye? Tell me, how many of these easy rides is it going to take before you find some measure of self-esteem?’
Addison’s eyes flashed with anger and Winter knew that his jibe had stung. He glared at Winter for a second before the grin emerged again.
‘How many? Let’s see . . . so far this month there has been Alison, Helen, Denise, Ali and . . . what was the blonde’s name . . . oh aye, Moira. How could I forget? All Babes. Thank goodness for Bacardi. Another few should do it for September.’
Addison was beaming all over his face but it quickly disappeared when his mobile rang. He answered with a series of nods and shakes of his head and monosyllabic answers.
‘Fucksake,’ Addison growled as he finished the call. ‘There’s no fucking end to it.’
‘Another shooting?’
Winter realized he’d said it almost as much in hope as anything else and that Addison had heard it in his voice.
‘Don’t get excited, wee man. No, that was from Monteith. Some muppet has firebombed Terry Gilmartin’s place. His five-year-old son was right in the firing line and he’s in intensive care. They don’t think he’s going to make it.’
‘Jesus.’
‘Probably not. More likely to be the Quinns. Colin’s pulled overtime and is on the case so we can all sleep easy in our beds tonight. Well, you can sleep. I’ve got other things in mind.’
‘You’re a nightmare, Addison.’
‘Thanks.’
Addison threw three pints
down his neck in the forty minutes that they were in the Oak, the place buzzing around them with post-match post-mortems. Winter could see that he was on edge, full of jokes and bravado but he was under strain. His drinking levels had stepped up big time and something was weighing heavily on his mind.
They squeezed their way out of the pub and tumbled back onto the street where the two taxis they had ordered were waiting for them. Addison was heading for the nurse’s bed and Winter said that he was going home. Except that he wasn’t going home, of course, he was going to Rachel’s flat on Highburgh Road.
As both cars were ready to move off, Winter wound down the window in the back of his cab and beckoned for Addison to do the same.
‘You reckon you know what this guy is up to, right?’
‘I’ve got a fair idea, yeah.’
Winter looked him straight in the eye.
‘Is it good or bad?’
‘That’s the million-dollar question, wee man. A million dollars. It could be both.’
Addison wound his window up again and turned to direct the driver towards the waiting nurse without another word.
CHAPTER 19
Jan McConachie stared at her mobile phone and tried to summon up the courage to answer it. She dreaded doing so but knew that delaying it would only make him angrier and she could imagine how incensed he was already. He was a scumbag but he did love his son and she, more than most, knew just how desperate that could make a person.
She answered.
She’d expected that he might be ranting and raving, the way he often was, but instead his voice was low and measured and that scared the shit out of her. He was anxiously trying to keep his emotions in check but she could hear the fear and the rage bubbling under the surface.
‘You better have some news for me,’ he breathed.
‘I heard about your son,’ she replied. ‘I’m so sorry.’
‘Shut it. I don’t want to hear you even mention him. I want information.’
‘We don’t know for certain but what we are hearing suggests that it is Quinn’s people that were behind it.’
‘I fucking knew it,’ he seethed. ‘That bastard Riddle organized this.’
‘We don’t know that for sure,’ she insisted.
‘Well, find out,’ he roared. ‘Do your fucking job and find out. It’s what you’re paid for. Both by the polis and by me. My wee boy is fighting for his life and I’ll have revenge for this.’
He lowered his voice again.
‘My son means the world to me. You know what that’s like, don’t you?’
Jan’s heart pounded and she could hear the blood rushing in her ears.
‘I’ll find out everything I can. You don’t need to threaten her. You know she’s done nothing wrong. She doesn’t deserve this. She’s only eight. Please.’
‘Deserve? Don’t give me that pish. My boy doesn’t deserve what’s happened to him and don’t think for one second that I won’t use whatever I can to sort this. I don’t give a fuck about your daughter but you do. So find out what I need to know and I’ll keep putting bread on your table. If you don’t then someone else will be picking her up from school soon.’
CHAPTER 20
Highburgh Road was always a wee bit too west-end trendy for Winter’s liking. Sure, the rooms had all the Victorian wood panels, stained-glass windows, cornicing and character that you’d want if you were into that kind of thing. But he never really saw the point in boasting that your flat had a butler’s pantry when you couldn’t get parked within a mile of the place. There were a ton of pubs and restaurants on its doorstep but it wasn’t a whole lot of use for him seeing as they weren’t allowed to go to them together. It was like being a liver-damaged eunuch serving champagne in a bordello.
Rachel liked it, though. She’d always wanted a pad in the west end and the truth was it was much more her style than his. When she spent all day, or sometimes all night, chasing the bad guys she wanted to get home and lock herself away behind three inches of security door, pour herself a glass of Sauvignon Blanc and chill under twelve-foot high ceilings while eating Kettle Chips. He was happy to lay his hat there, so to speak, four or five times a week.
He rang the intercom and waited. He virtually lived there but he didn’t have a key. It was her flat. Her flat, her remote control, her bed, her rules. If he had a key then the next thing he’d be expecting a say in what they watched on the television and that just wouldn’t do. It took her a while to pick up the phone upstairs and, as usual, she didn’t say anything, just left him listening to the crackly line.
‘It’s me,’ he said wearily.
The buzz meant she’d pressed the entry release so he leaned against the door, went up to the second floor and through the open door into the flat where he found Rachel sitting back on the bed with a selection of newspapers spread out before her. She didn’t look up when he went into the room, just tossed a paper to the side of the bed and picked another one up. She was wearing a pair of pyjama bottoms, a vest top, a seriously pissed-off expression and was almost shaking with anger.
‘Wankers.’
‘Today’s papers or tomorrow’s?’ Winter asked.
‘Tomorrow’s chip papers,’ she scowled. ‘I don’t know what I was thinking but I went out to Queen Street station to get the morning editions.’
‘What? You’ve always said—’
‘Aye, okay. I know that, alright? Just gimme peace. I’m annoyed enough as it is. They are making this sniper out to be some kind of fucking superman. I can’t believe it. And in the middle of all this ridiculous glorifying of a killer, “Melanie” or whatever her name really is, gets ignored. I’m sick of this.’
‘I was wondering . . .’ he started.
She looked at him doubtfully, sensing something she wouldn’t like.
‘Go on.’
‘If you had the choice, would you rather catch the guy who’s been shooting gangsters or the one who killed your prostitute?’
‘Jesus. What kind of question is that?’
‘One I’m interested in the answer to.’
She pondered, wondering whether to give him an honest reply, even if she wasn’t sure of it herself. Against her better judgement, she did.
‘For the sake of my career, I’d rather catch the sniper. If that didn’t come into it, then for the sake of the greater good I’d rather catch Melanie’s killer.’
‘Is that not some sort of moral fuck-up? To want to catch the killer of one person rather than the killer of five?’
Narey threw a copy of the Sun across the room, kicked the other papers off the bed and glared at him.
‘So are you here to screw me or what?’ she demanded. ‘Because if you’re not then I’m not really in the mood for talking. And if you are then hurry up, I’m on early in the morning.’
‘Who said romance was dead?’
‘Is that a no?’
‘Fucksake. You are a pain in the arse. It’s a yes but think yourself lucky.’
‘Oh aye, I’m so flattered.’
With that she pulled her vest top over her head and tilted her head to one side questioningly. It was discussion over. It was hard for a man to argue with perfect tits and she knew it.
He pulled his clothes off with an attempt at a grudging look on his face but another part of his anatomy gave the lie to it. Maybe he was cursed by the fact that she never looked better than when she was angry and those nut-brown eyes blazed. He grabbed the waistband of her pyjama bottoms and hauled them off her, throwing them to the side of the room. In turn, she grabbed at him and massaged him to the desired state, pulling him down and onto her. It was fast, furious and completely lacking in any social niceties. They wrestled, grabbed, slapped, swore, stabbed and thrusted. Speed, for once, seemed to be rated way higher than subtlety or technique. He pinned one of her arms with one hand and kept a tight hold of her hair with the other. It was enough for her to be pushed and pulled over the edge, coming a good bit before he did, barely bothering about wai
ting for him to join her.
She was asleep two minutes later, out like a light. Winter liked the idea that he had worn her out but he knew it was someone else that had done it. He had maybe sorted out her body but her mind had been fucked by the sniper and the prostitute killer. He also knew a lot of it was down to the Cutter murders and how badly she had come out of that. It was all happening again and she felt like she was chasing a runaway train.
He knew full well what was winding her up and, although it wasn’t his doing for a change, he was always going to be the one in the firing line. Which was ironic.
He got out of bed and sat on the floor with his back to the wall, leafing through the newspapers that she’d kicked away. A quick look was enough to confirm the source of her anger.
The Sun had started it the day before when they began sneaking words into their reports of the killings. Vigilante. Clean up. Crackdown. They liked the last one a lot and the pun helped. Then the phrase that was the real killer – anti-hero.
The Evening Times had carried on the good work that afternoon. From the minute that he blew up the cocaine and gave Glasgow city centre a high it would never forget, he went from being a murderer to a maverick.
Now the morning’s Daily Mail had done it in a heading. Crackdown continues. It implied something good, something that should have happened a long time ago. The Daily Record’s editorial followed suit. It was a carefully crafted piece but it could neatly be summed up as saying, ‘We could never condone murder but . . .’ It was open season on drug dealers and that was fine by them.
The prize went to the Daily Express though. It was them who came up with the name that was to stick, Dark Angel. He supposed that it suggested someone good doing something bad.
Winter had heard a couple of radio phone-ins before he went to the Celtic game and they were the same. Callers didn’t hold back and at first the stations cut them off when they came out with lines like, ‘Serves them right’, ‘Not before time’, and ‘Good riddance’. The presenters pretended to be outraged and were all apologetic about how they couldn’t support such opinions. At first. That didn’t last long though and when the calls became more regular and more insistent then they couldn’t and wouldn’t stem the tide. The Dark Angel was doing what the cops couldn’t, doing what they were paid to do but were too scared or too incompetent to do. Presenters shooed them along when callers suggested the cops hadn’t done anything because they were in the dealer’s back pockets but they didn’t stop them from saying it.