Chapter 20

‘So why did she have your name written on her?’ Chief Inspector Young sat back in his seat and surveyed Logan over the expanse of his desk. The Professional Standards office was empty, except for the two of them: three desks; framed diplomas and handshake photos on the walls; a case of legal textbooks and policing manuals; and the clinging reek of spearmint.

Young had rolled up his sleeves, exposing a pair of huge hairy arms. But then he was big all over, like a rugby player or a professional boxer. Or a mob enforcer. Pale scar tissue made ripples across his knuckles. Definitely not the sort of man you’d want to fuck with.

Logan puffed out his cheeks. ‘Best guess? Someone thought she wouldn’t remember who to ask for otherwise. But the idiots didn’t even write it upside down so she could read it. Mind you, given how off her face she was…’

The Chief Inspector drummed his fingertips on the desktop, the tendons and muscles dancing beneath the fur of his forearms. ‘And tell me, Sergeant, why did she think you’d hand the drugs over to her?’

‘Because she’s an idiot too?’ Logan shrugged. ‘She’s convinced the people her boyfriend bought the stuff from are going to hurt him if he doesn’t come up with the money. What else is she going to do?’

‘Hmm…’ Young stopped making thumpitta-thumpitta noises on the desktop. ‘And have you put anything in place?’

‘Well, Shuggie’s wanted on drugs charges from the Thursday morning raid, and it’s pretty obvious he’s still in contact with Trisha. So I’ve advised DI McPherson to put her under surveil-lance.’ Another shrug. ‘It’s his case.’

‘I suppose … there’s always hope.’ Young started drumming again. ‘We’ve not seen you up here for a while, Logan. I think Superintendent Napier’s missing you.’

‘Really, sir?’ He glanced over his shoulder at the Arch Bastard’s desk. All neat and tidy, everything carefully arranged in straight lines.

The Chief Inspector looked off into the middle distance. ‘Tell me … how’s Acting Detective Inspector MacDonald getting on?’

Silence.

Logan shifted in his seat. ‘In what way, sir?’

‘Is he settling in all right? Getting on with his colleagues? Can be very stressful, suddenly moving up from DS to DI like that.’ Young wouldn’t make eye contact.

‘I’m sure he’s coping fine.’

‘Good. Good.’ A pause. ‘What with the McGregor case and everything…?’

‘Fine. Couldn’t be better. Doing a great job.’

Another pause.

‘Well, then I’ll let you get back to your sex offenders.’

Dodgy Pete’s wasn’t exactly what you’d call a watering hole for the bright young things. More a hospice: palliative care for alcoholics on their way to a booze-soaked oblivion. But it was a two-minute walk from the Munro House Hotel, and that was good enough for Steel.

The scuffed linoleum made sticky noises, trying to hold onto the soles of Logan’s shoes as he followed her over to the bar. It was busy in here for a change: a dozen people scattered in pairs about the low room, staring up at a widescreen TV mounted on the wall. The Aberdeen versus VfB Stuttgart live from Germany: two-nil to the home team.

The barman was huddled at the far end of the long hard-wood bar, holding a muttered conversation with a thin girl in cargo pants and a camouflage hoodie. There was something laid out on the surface between them, but Logan didn’t have time to see what it was before she snatched it up and stuffed it into the black rucksack at her feet.

Steel thumped her hand down on the bar and clambered onto a stool — the red vinyl held together with grey duct tape. ‘Hoy, Pete, stop perving up that young sex-pot and make with the drinkies.’

The huge man sniffed. Then turned and lumbered over, a red Aberdeen University sweatshirt stretched to ripping point over his belly. Pete ran a hand through his Santa-on-an-off-day beard, and squinted at the three of them. ‘Usual?’

Steel nodded. ‘And a couple brace of Grouse too.’

‘You paying for these?’

The inspector stuck out her bottom lip. ‘Pete, I’m shocked. Are you suggesting Grampian’s finest come in here looking for freebies?’

‘Bloody right I am.’ He grabbed a couple of pint glasses from under the counter, stuck one under the Stella tap, the other under the Deuchar’s IPA. Then sniffed in Rennie’s direction. ‘What about the sunburnt wee loon?’

The constable stuck out his chest. ‘I’ll have a pint of-’

‘He’ll have a Diet Coke.’ Steel pulled out her fake cigarette. ‘Driving, remember?’

‘But Guv-’

‘Give him a packet of prawn cocktail too.’

Dodgy Pete stuck the pint of IPA onto a curling cardboard coaster, then picked up a couple of short glasses and clunked a double shot in each from the Grouse whisky optic, making a great show of waiting till the little plastic container filled all the way up each time. ‘Anything else?’

The girl in the camouflage hoodie grabbed her rucksack and slipped quietly out of the pub.

Steel turned and stared after her. ‘You’re no’ up to anything dodgy, are you Pete?’

‘My daughter. Not that it’s any of your business.’ He rapped a knuckle on the sticky bar. ‘Now are you paying for these or not?’

‘Lighten up, eh, Pete? No’ my fault the Shop Cops did you for serving short measures, is it?’

They took their drinks through to the snug — pretty much a walk-in cupboard with two bench seats and a table wedged into it. Steel crumpled down, sighed, then took a huge gulp out of her pint. ‘Can’t hang about tonight, boys, I’m on a promise.’

Logan pulled the reports out of his pocket and stuck them on the table. ‘Ninety-six RSOs interviewed today… So far we’ve got three with possible access to veterinary surgeries. No hospitals — turns out the NHS frowns on registered sex offenders creeping about the wards.’

Steel had a scratch. ‘Who’s doing the vets?’

The whisky tasted like a peat fire, burning its way across Logan’s tongue, making his gums tingle. Dodgy Pete must’ve stopped watering the booze down too. ‘DI Evans. No one’s reported any thiopental sodium missing.’

Rennie crammed in a mouthful of crisps. ‘What if they bought it off the internet?’

Steel stared at him. ‘Drink your Diet Coke. Things are sodding complicated enough as it is.’ Then back to Logan. ‘You sure about the hospitals?’

‘McPherson says-’

‘God’s sake, he’s no’ doing that as well is he? Talk about abandon-bloody-ship. I’ll have a word with Finnie, see if we can’t get someone else to…’ She creased her face up. ‘Marmiteflavoured arseholes. He’s no’ speaking to me any more.’

Logan frowned. ‘Yeah, about that — why were we winding Maguire up? He’s not on the register, I checked.’

‘Because…’ She turned and looked at Rennie. Then dug out a handful of change. ‘Here, go get yourself some more crisps.’

‘But I don’t-’

‘Then go play on the bandit, something.’ Pause. ‘Bugger off for five minutes.’

Rennie picked a couple of pound coins from the pile, then scooped up his crisps and drink. ‘Be like that, then.’

She waited till he’d left the little room. ‘We gave Mr Baldy a hard time because Acting DI MacDonald was in charge of that bit of the investigation. And I don’t trust him. OK?’ She held up a hand. ‘It’s no’ that he’s dodgy, it’s just that he’s completely fucking hopelessly out of his depth. And I know Finnie thinks the same, or he’d no’ have been there holding his hand at the church.’

‘I see…’

‘Laz, I know you lot in the Wee Hoose are thick as thieves, but there’s a wee girl’s life at stake. I’m no sodding about with this one.’

Fair point. ‘So what about McPherson?’

Steel pulled a face, then took a swig of whisky. ‘You leave Disaster to me, we’ll-’

The rest was drowned out by cheering coming through from the main bar. ‘GO ON MY SON!’, ‘RUN YOU WEE BUGGER!’, ‘GO ON, GO ON!’

The volume on the telly was cranked up — the roar of the crowd booming out of the speakers. ‘And it’s Hansson to Paton. Up the outside … and he crosses to Gibson… Gibson shoots and-’

Sudden silence.

‘AWWW! FUCK’S SAKE! NO’ NOW!’, ‘PETE! FIX THE FUCKING TELLY!’, ‘DID HE SCORE?’

Logan’s phone rang — he dragged it out and checked the caller display: Colin Miller.

‘Colin?’

The TV blared into life again: ‘Interrupt your programming to bring you a news bulletin…’

DI Steel’s phone was ringing too. ‘Can a girl no’ have a wee drinkie in peace?’

‘…believe that?’ Colin’s voice was almost inaudible over all the racket.

Logan stuck his finger in his other ear. ‘Hello? Colin?’

‘I said, they’ve sent another package, aye: to the BBC! Mate of mine works there, he’s just called.’

Crap. ‘What is it? What did they send?’

‘I mean, why didn’t they send it here? They always send stuff here fi rst.’

‘Colin: what — did — they — send?’

Steel was on her feet. ‘Shite…’ She stuck her phone against her chest. ‘They’ve sent more toes to the BBC.’

Rennie crashed back into the snug. ‘You got to come see what’s on the telly!’

‘Have I no’ done everythin’ they’ve asked for? How’s that fair?’ Everyone in Dodgy Pete’s stared up at the big TV, where a straight-backed reporter was doing a bit to camera. ‘…just five minutes ago.’ There was a perfectly framed shot of two tiny toes in high-definition. Pale pink digits with swollen ends, the edges of the cut dark and discoloured. Unlike the big toe sitting on ice in the mortuary, these had definitely been cut from a living person.

Colin: ‘Laz? Laz, you still there?’

‘Shut up a minute.’

‘The toes were delivered to BBC Scotland offi ces in Aberdeen, along with a DVD and instructions to play it on air. The following footage contains graphic scenes and may distress some viewers…’

Steel had her phone to her ear again. ‘Aye, we’re watching it.’ The screen went black, then faded up on a graffiti-covered room, bare floorboards, sunlight streaming in through the chinks in a pair of boarded up windows. The whole image swung around, the autofocus taking a moment to catch up. A pair of tiny feet, stained orange-brown around the sides. Chipped pink nail varnish.

The two little toes were missing, the stumps where they should have been puffy and red, the skin stitched together over the holes with black thread. The knots looked like spiders, bursting out of the angry flesh.

‘Holy fuck…’ Someone in the bar dropped their pint. A crash of splintered glass.

The camera swung upwards. There was no mistaking the wee girl lying on her back, on what looked like a swathe of white plastic sheeting. Blonde curls, that long straight nose, the apple cheeks. Eyes half shut, a sheen of drool streaking down from the corner of her open mouth. An IV line was taped to the inside of her left wrist.

She groaned and twitched.

A purple-gloved hand moved into shot, holding a copy of the Edinburgh Evening Post. ‘TOE NOT JENNY’S BUT POLICE STILL DENY HOAX’. The camera zoomed in on the date. It was today’s edition.

The picture faded to black, then the familiar artificial voice burst out into the silent bar.

‘This is not a hoax. You have four days left. If you raise enough money, they will live. If you do not, they will die. Do not let Jenny and Alison down.’

A pause, then the newsreader appeared back on the screen. ‘Harrowing footage there. We go live now to Grampian Police Headquarters and our correspondent Sarah Williamson. Sarah, what can you tell us?’

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