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'What the h.e.l.l is wrong with you people?' Logan lurched to his feet. 'I'm a policeman! This is a murder suspect! Ow...' The inside of his mouth ached: he'd taken a chunk out of his cheek. He spat a glob of blood out onto the ground at his feet as Insch's Range Rover screeched to a halt by the abandoned hut, where they used to rent out the pitch-and-put golf clubs in the open season. The inspector jumped out and plipped on the locks leaving Garvie handcuffed in the back lumbering across the course with surprising speed.
'Did you get him?'
Logan nodded. 'Over there.' He winced and explored the inside of his mouth with a finger. One of his teeth was loose.
Insch hauled the kid to his feet. The eight-year-old murderer wailed and moaned and blubbered, snot and tears streaming down his face. Logan pulled his finger out and stared. 'f.u.c.k.'
It wasn't Sean Morrison.
20.
The Chief Constable's office was full of unhappy faces DI Insch and DI Steel sitting opposite one another in the visitors' chairs while 'G.o.d' himself sat behind the desk, drumming his fingers lightly on the formal complaint lodged by the wee boy's family. Count Nosferatu AKA Inspector Napier, the ginger-haired, parrot-faced, miserable-b.a.s.t.a.r.d head of Professional Standards lurked by the window, scowling at Logan as he went through the events leading up to the current fiasco. They'd kept him waiting outside for nearly an hour while they decided what they were going to do about him. Big Gary was here too, in his official capacity as Federation rep, which meant it was serious. They were probably going to fire him.
Logan could feel Napier's hooded eyes boring into his back like a set of steak knives. The inspector had gone out of his way to make life difficult ever since the 'Mastrick Monster' case; s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g Logan over had become something of a pet project for him. He'd be loving this. Logan got to the part where the family started threatening lawsuits then finished. Now the only sound in the room was the radiator, pinging away to itself beneath the window, and then the CC said, 'You really, genuinely believed he was Sean Morrison?'
'Yes, sir.' Maybe he'd be lucky and get off with a suspension?
'And you used force because you thought the child was violent?' The CC steepled his fingers. 'An eight-year-old boy?'
'Sir, last time we ran into him he stabbed a policewoman in the throat. And he'd just killed-'
'And you let him get away.' Napier his voice like a sliver of ice. 'If it weren't for your ... "condition" Constable Nairn wouldn't have had to rescue you, would she, Sergeant?' Logan didn't answer that. The inspector sneered. 'Surely even you should have been able to subdue an eight-year-old child!'
The CC held up a hand and Napier went quiet again. 'You understand that we're going to get hauled over the coals on this one, don't you, Sergeant? Not only have Grampian Police failed to catch an eight-year-old murderer, we're also going round a.s.saulting children and their families at random.'
'They attacked me! I was just-'
The Chief Constable kept on talking. 'Do you have any idea how incompetent that makes us look, Sergeant?'
Logan had thought it was a rhetorical question, but the CC stared at him until he answered. 'I thought it was Sean Morrison.'
A sigh. 'And that's the only reason we're not suspending you. But for G.o.d's sake next time you get the notion to arrest a small child, try and pick the right one!'
If anyone asked, he'd say he was concentrating on the three million break-ins DI Steel had lumbered him with, but if he was being honest, Logan was hiding in the cramped little room he'd commandeered to watch Jason Fettes' p.o.r.n collection, having a bit of a sulk. The Force Medical Officer had given him a couple of cold packs for his bashed head, but they didn't seem to be doing much good. He still ached.
b.l.o.o.d.y parents: what the h.e.l.l did they think they were doing, dressing their b.l.o.o.d.y kid up like Sean Morrison? It wasn't as if the kid's description wasn't plastered all over the papers and television news...
He sat and stared at the laptops Rickards had purloined from the evidence store. Then started swearing. If anyone found out they'd been using the d.a.m.n things to watch dirty DVDs he'd be right back up in front of Napier again and the pointy-faced b.a.s.t.a.r.d would get another shot at making life difficult. Logan was rummaging about under the desk, trying to untangle the wires and plugs, when the door battered open and a huge shadow loomed into the room. Insch.
'What the h.e.l.l are you doing down ... never mind. Get your coat the PF likes Garvie as a suspect. He and the victim knew each other, they're both into bondage, they've had s.e.x together or whatever it is these freaks do and Garvie's impotent.' Logan stuck his head out from beneath the desk, just in time to see a cola cube disappear into the inspector's mouth. The huge man sooked thoughtfully. 'That says s.e.xually frustrated to me. Garvie gets himself one of those jumbo-sized strap-on things, ties Fettes up, and gets carried away. Suddenly there's blood everywhere and a last-minute rush to the hospital.'
'So we need to get a search warrant and-'
Insch held up two sheets of paper. 'Signed and sealed. We're just waiting for the IB to get their backsides in gear.' He smiled, the buzzing strip-light flickering off his bald head. 'What did I tell you: Steel couldn't crack it in four weeks and I've done it in less than a day.'
Garvie's flat was nothing special from the outside two bedrooms on the second floor of a four-storey building in Danestone, a sprawl of boxy homes on the north bank of the River Don. Winding cul-de-sacs, yellow brick, and pantiles. Huge metal pylons marched through the middle of the place, like Martian tripods frozen on their way to war. Garvie's building sat in the shadow of one, a faint electrical buzzing just audible through the open kitchen window. The flat was done up in cla.s.sic geek chic: the lounge housed a complete collection of Star Trek, DS9, Voyager, Next Generation, Enterprise, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Stargate, Farscape, The Simpsons and a stack of j.a.panese Anime; PlayStation, Xbox and TiVo hooked into each other and a collection of fancy speakers; one wall dominated by a huge screen, the projector bolted to the roof above the door; and a single black leather couch. The spare bedroom was done out as a study with a collection of computers and stacks of books and comics. The latter all sealed away in individual plastic sheaths, as if Garvie was afraid they'd catch something.
The bondage gear was in the master bedroom, taking up one side of the built-in wardrobe, the custom-made dark red rubber suit hanging next to a variety of leather harnesses, straps, paddles and flogging whips. 'Houston, we have lift off...' said one of the IB technicians, emerging from the bottom of the wardrobe with a large black phallus. It was at least a foot and a half long, standing out in sharp contrast to its finder's white paper over suit. It went in a large evidence bag. Next out was a familiar pink mushroom shape.
Insch got as far as, 'What the-' before Logan jumped in with 'b.u.t.t plug.' The inspector stared at him.
'I ... er... DI Steel told me about them when we found one in Fettes's bedroom.' Feeling a blush rising up his cheeks, suddenly uncomfortably hot in his SOC outfit.
Garvie's p.o.r.n collection was alphabetically ordered in a small bookcase next to the bed a handful of his own films, and a collection of American and Dutch hardcore gay p.o.r.n. Hidden away at the back of the sock drawer was a collection of unlabelled video tapes and two ancient seventeen-millimetre film canisters. One marked THE BUTLER'S REVENGE, the other FESTIVE FROLICS in faded brown script.
'You know,' said Logan as they were bagged up, 'somehow I don't see Garvie being the old-fashioned projector type...' And he was right they searched the whole place from top to bottom but there was no sign of any device that would play anything that old. 'He's got something dodgy in there.' Logan asked the IB guys to take the canisters out and open them, expecting a nice juicy haul of drugs. Disappointed when they turned out to contain exactly what it said on the tin old rolls of brittle, black and white film.
'Never mind,' said Insch, as they were sealed back up again and returned to their bags, 'I'm sure you'll get something right soon. Law of averages.' Then he clomped off to stand on the doorstep and eat Chewits, leaving Logan to keep an eye on the IB team as they started sampling the bedclothes and carpet for blood and s.e.m.e.n stains.
An hour later and they were back in the car, watching the last of the evidence bags being loaded into the back of the IB's filthy-white Transit van. 'This makes no sense,' said Insch, as Logan started the car, 'there should be blood everywhere. Even if Garvie's got kinky rubber sheets, there'd be a trail between the bedroom and the front door...' He stared off into the middle distance for a bit. 'Check all the hotels and B&Bs see if anywhere rents rooms by the hour to the bondage crowd. Flash Fettes and Garvie's photos about: I want to know if anyone put them up that night. And get a door-to-door done here too. Was Fettes a regular visitor?' The inspector went rummaging in the glove compartment again, coming up empty. 'Sod it. Well, come on, Sergeant, back to HQ, we haven't got all b.l.o.o.d.y day.'
21.
The flat was warm when he got home, the TV competing with the kitchen stereo for who could make the walls shake more. Jackie was through in the bedroom, pulling a pair of old black jeans on over a thick pair of tights. She didn't hear him the first time, so he had to shout it again: 'YOU GOING DEAF IN YOUR OLD AGE?'
'What?' she looked puzzled for a moment, then zipped up her jeans. 'It's that moron downstairs, he's been on a Whitney Houston binge since I got home.' She stopped, and ran a hand across Logan's battered cheek. 'That's some wallop you got... Big Gary said they didn't fire you.'
'Napier wasn't happy about it.'
'Napier's never b.l.o.o.d.y happy.' Jackie pulled on her thick, padded, black jacket, then dug a woolly hat out of the top drawer. It was black too.
'Going somewhere?'
She nodded, stuffing her curly hair into the hat. 'Rennie's been shooting his mouth off about this Mikado thing all day. I bet him twenty quid he'd be dreadful, so I'm going to the rehearsal to heckle.' Jackie paused, hunting through her coat pockets till she found a pair of black padded gloves.
'You look like a cat burglar.'
'Thanks a heap.' She pulled on her gloves, then frowned at him, head on one side. 'You want to come?'
'No: I've seen them. Your twenty quid's safe.'
'Thought so. Don't wait up, OK? I'm going to the pub afterwards, and you know what Rennie's like when he gets a drink inside him.' And then she was gone.
Monday morning was cold and clear, the sky tainted pale blue with pre-dawn light as Logan walked Jackie up the hill to the Castlegate, making for FHQ and a seven o'clock start. Her nose and ears were bright red by the time they reached King Street, breath streaming out behind them, frost sparkling on the pavements. She stifled another yawn breaking the scowl that had been creasing her face since the alarm went off at six.
'So what time did you get in then?' he asked, trying not to think about the story in that morning's P&J. The one t.i.tled, POLICEMAN ATTACKED MY CHILD!
Jackie buried her hands deeper into her coat pockets. 'No idea. Late. And you were right they were b.l.o.o.d.y awful. Easiest twenty quid I ever made.' She didn't even crack a smile.
'You want to talk about it?' Logan asked.
'What, the rehearsal?' Shrug. 'b.l.o.o.d.y disastrous-'
'You've had a face on all morning.'
'Don't be stupid.' They stopped, waiting for a break in the traffic so they could hurry across the road and down the little alleyway at the side of the Tollbooth and the side entrance to FHQ. 'It's Macintyre, OK? We let the raping b.a.s.t.a.r.d get away with it and now he's attacking women in Dundee.'
'Might not be him.'
'Are you kidding? Of course it's him, dirty little f.u.c.k.' She stepped out onto the road as the lights changed. 'And where is he? In prison? No, he's sodding about in his expensive house and expensive cars with that pregnant b.i.t.c.h fiancee of his. How the h.e.l.l can she give him an alibi? She's got to know he's guilty!'
They kissed goodbye in the shadow of the morgue, then Jackie stomped off, still cursing Rob Macintyre under her breath, while Logan made his way up to the Jason Fettes incident room.
DI Insch's morning briefing had a triumphant feel to it, even if it did start nearly an hour late. The inspector perched on a desk at the front of the room, telling everyone about Frank Garvie: the ex-p.o.r.n star was due to appear in court at half eleven, where the Procurator Fiscal would ask for him to be held for trial without bail. But it wasn't likely to happen. 'Officially, this isn't a murder investigation,' said Insch, his voice booming in the small room, 'but we're going to treat it like one. It might look like an accident, like a s.e.x game gone wrong, but Garvie's got guilty written all over him. He strapped Jason Fettes down and rammed something so far inside him he ruptured the intestinal wall. Fettes broke his own teeth biting down from the pain. He died in agony. We need to know where Garvie took his victim.'
The trouble with asking bed and breakfast establishments if they rented out rooms by the hour for illicit s.e.xual liaisons was that they all said 'No.' Accommodation in the city was at a premium anyway most places made quite enough exploiting the oil and service companies, without having to cater for that kind of thing as well. So Logan was given the task of trolling round the carpet warehouses, looking to see if any of the hundreds of Aberdeen B&Bs had replaced carpets recently, trying to get rid of suspicious bloodstains.
It was a complete waste of time: if the owners had woken up to find one of their rooms drenched in blood they would have called the police. Stood to reason. But DI Insch was adamant, and Logan didn't see any point in arguing it would just get him shouted at.
He grabbed Rickards and signed for a leprous Vauxhall, making the constable drive. The morning sky was crystal blue, one side of the street bathed in sunshine, the other shivering in frigid shadow. Rickards took them up Schoolhill, stopping at the lights to let a troop of schoolchildren swarm across the road, dressed up in their Robert Gordon uniforms: the boys in charcoal-grey trousers, the girls in kilted, tartan skirts, dark blazers marking the cut-off line for untucked shirts and squint ties. Nearly all of them had mobile phones clamped to their ears.
The lights changed to green, a couple of stragglers meandering past without a care in the world. Finally Rickards pulled away, drifting past the crowds of identically dressed kids milling about outside the Robert Gordon's gates determined not to go through until the very last minute. Enjoying their freedom. Logan turned to watch them. 'Stop the car.'
'What?'
'Pull up over there.' Pointing at the grey slab of Aberdeen Art Gallery.
Rickards did as he was told.
They marched through the crowds, making for a small knot of children by the statue of the school's eighteenth-century founder. There were five of them, laughing and pushing a small ginger-haired girl around. Logan grabbed the ringleader by the scruff of the neck a boy, seven or eight years old, in expensive sungla.s.ses. The laughter stopped dead. 'Still not learned your lesson?'
'Getoffme! Getthef.u.c.koffme!' Flailing his arms around.
Logan pushed him towards Rickards, before he could do any damage. The constable got a good double handful of jacket, stopping the kid from doing a runner. No longer the centre of attention, the little girl slipped away.
'Peter, isn't it?' asked Logan as the kid struggled. 'You carrying a knife, like your mate Sean?'
The child's face was every bit as ugly and petulant as it had been in the interview room on Friday one of Sean's little posse. 'My dad says I don't have to tell you f.u.c.kers nothing!'
'Good, you can keep your mouth shut while we search you.'
The struggling got more violent and Rickards tightened his grip as the boy screamed, 'POLICE BRUTALITY!' at the top of his lungs. 'You can't search me! I've not done nothing!'
'I have reason to believe you may be carrying a concealed weapon. That means I have the power to search you. We can-'
'He touched my a.r.s.e!' Wriggling, looking back at PC Rickards. 'He's a pervert! CHILD ABUSE!'
'Shut up and empty your pockets.'
'Think you're so f.u.c.king hard, don't you? Sean kicked your a.r.s.e! Soon as this f.u.c.king paedo lets go I'm gonna kick it too!'
'Your mum and dad must be so proud. Hold him.' Logan started with the jacket: an iPod, a portable game station, a bag of crisps, and a mobile phone. 'What have we here?' Logan flicked it open and clicked it on, the screen lighting up with a picture of a naked woman. The keypad wasn't locked. 'You got a receipt for this, Peter? Not stolen is it?'
'f.u.c.k you!'
Logan called up the built-in phone book and scrolled through it till he found what he was looking for: SEAN MOBILE. The phone his parents had sworn blind he didn't have. He punched 'call' and held the thing to his ear, listening as it rang, and rang, and rang, and- 'Pete?'
'No. You remember me, Sean?'
The kid in Rickards' hands squirmed and writhed, shouting, 'It's the pigs! Sean, it's the f.u.c.king police!'
Silence from the other end. Not the sound of a dead line, but of someone very scared, trying to breathe softly.
'Sean, the policewoman's going to be OK. You can come home.'
'Don't f.u.c.king listen to him, Sean! Don't-' Rickards clamped a hand over the kid's mouth.
More silent breathing.
'Your mum and dad are worried about you, Sean.'
'I...'
Logan waited for him to say something else, but that was all he got. 'Come on, Sean, tell me where you are and we'll come get you. It'll be OK.' He left a long pause. Still nothing. Time to try something else. 'You've kept it inside for a long time, haven't you, Sean? What happened six months ago?' A sharp intake of breath on the other end. 'Don't you want to talk to someone about it?'
And the line went dead.
Logan closed the phone and told Rickards to un-gag Sean's mate. 'Where is he?'
A furious scowl. 'I'm telling my dad! I'm telling the teachers! You're f.u.c.ked! They'll fire you and-'
'He's gone, hasn't he: London? Edinburgh?'
Something cunning pa.s.sed across the kid's features, then he said, 'Yeah. Yeah, he's gone. London. You'll never find him.'
The first peal of bells from St Nicholas Kirk rang through the cold morning air, sounding nine am and the kids began to drift away to cla.s.s. Logan took a note of Sean's number and tossed the phone back to the sour-faced child, telling Rickards to let him go. The eight-year-old scrambled for the mobile, catching it just before it hit the pavement.
Back in the car, Logan settled into the pa.s.senger seat and told Rickards to do a quick one-eighty at the roundabout, keeping his eye on Sean's friends. Expecting one of them to make a break for it, bunk off and go see the eight-year-old murderer. But one by one they shuffled in through the gates and were gone.
'd.a.m.n.' Logan frowned, watching the school go slowly by. Insch or Steel? Insch or Steel...' Right,' he said, not really liking either alternative, 'back to the station.'
Constable Rickards looked appalled. 'But the inspector-'