Read Behind Closed Doors Online
Authors: Michael Donovan
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers, #Crime Fiction, #Crime, #noir, #northern, #london, #eddie flynn, #private eye, #Mystery
âWe've got some unhappy people downstairs,' Shaughnessy said. He came in at eight fifteen and stood in my doorway.
I'd migrated from the couch to my office via the washroom and was sorting out a plan for the day which now included organising a set of wheels. The stink of burnt rubber seeping through the back window gave the place a truly special aroma. I saw Shaughnessy's nose twitch.
I should have warned him. We shared the rear parking area with Rook and Lye and the fire had damaged Gerry Lye's spot. Worse, we now had a blackened skeleton and the smell of burnt rubber to greet the lawyers when they parked their Mercs. I'd never figured a firm of ambulance-chasers for sensitivity but I guess their perception of company image didn't involve parking in Beirut.
âHave you taken up smoking while you drive or is the Frogeye just due for a wash and polish?' Shaughnessy asked.
âIt got all the wash it needed last night,' I said, âbut I won't bother with the polish.'
âLye wants to know when we're going to clear it,' Shaughnessy said. âIt's only the second time he's ever talked to me.'
I gave him a grin. âA glimmer of good from every misfortune. We're finally getting chatty with our neighbours.'
âDon't be so sure. Gerry wants a response today. I think they're in conference now figuring a strategy to sue us off the street.'
âWhat are they going to sue us for?' I said. âIs the parking area part of their company image? If that's what they claim then I'm going to charge for keeping the wreck there.'
âI guess Bob and Gerry are thinking more of the financial side.'
Shaughnessy had a point. Gerry's Merc, parked on a meter while we kept him off his slot, would run at fifteen quid a day. Add expenses and my guess was that they'd bill us at a couple of hundred a week.
âLet them sue,' I said. âWe'll counter with a claim for access rights. How many times a week do we have to run for cover when Bob Rook blocks the stairs?'
âThat's not the same,' Shaughnessy said.
âNot the same?'
âThey're solicitors,' he explained. âWe're private investigators. They do what they want.'
âNot everything,' I said. âWe're still here.'
âThe crazy relative in the attic,' Shaughnessy leered. âThat's the bit we've got over them. They don't know what you're likely to do next. Keeps them on their toes.'
He stayed put in the door.
âSo, was your car struck by lightning? Or is someone trying to tell you something?'
âOff the record, the fire brigade say it was torched.'
âSomeone is giving you a message.'
âA rag in the petrol filler. I guess that's a kind of message.'
âLet's hear it for the modern car,' Shaughnessy said. âLocking petrol caps.'
âIf the cap was locked they'd just have broken a window and started the fire inside.'
âThere's that,' Shaughnessy agreed. âYou saved on glass.'
I looked at him. âThe windows all blew.'
Shaughnessy grimaced. âNot even a crumb of comfort. You make too many enemies, Eddie.'
âThat's business,' I said. âOnly I've got a pretty good idea who's business we're talking about.'
âMcAllister.'
âHim or someone near and dear.'
âHe must think you didn't hear him the other day.'
âThat's what I'm sensing,' I said.
I went through to make coffee. I fed the filter machine and threw the switch. The light stayed off but that didn't mean it wasn't working. Sometimes you got lucky.
Shaughnessy unlocked his office, sorted some stuff then came back out and dropped himself onto the sofa. The coffee machine let out a couple of coughs and spat hot water into the filter. The aroma of Buckaroo filled the place. We looked at each other. The day was picking up already.
âAre we moving like we planned?' Shaughnessy asked.
I told him that we were. âI just want to hear what the Hanlons have to say,' I said, âthen we'll hit the Slaters.'
âWhat we have is still circumstantial,' Shaughnessy pointed out. âThe Slaters may still say the girl's not missing.'
âSure,' I said. âBut this time we spook Larry with his misdemeanours. That should loosen his tongue.'
âSo what do we have for certain?'
âWhat we have for certain,' I said, âare too many connections.'
The coffee was drizzling steadily into the pot. I pulled out the mugs and opened a tin of Marvel.
âThree families,' I said, âthree husbands connected to Alpha Security, to Brighton and to a classy hooker. Alpha Security operating on behalf of a known criminal, Paul McAllister. The hooker Tina Brown, a crony of his, currently lying low. Two of the three families known to have freed up capital in a hurry â a half-million plus each time. One of those families currently missing a daughter. The connections look solid.'
âThe puzzle,' said Shaughnessy, âis what the connections mean. It looks like we've got two things going on. A blackmail scam with the dirty photos. And a kidnap racket.'
âI don't see how they fit either,' I agreed, âbut they're part of the same thing.'
âHow about the Hanlons for simple blackmail?' Shaughnessy asked. âThe Slaters too, but for some reason the stakes were upped and they took the girl.'
I shook my head. âThe Hanlons' estate cottage raised too much cash for a simple sex-blackmail. I'd put blackmail down for twenty grand, not half a million. I want to find out what the house sale was for.
âYou think the Hanlons will tell you?'
I poured coffee. âI'm not holding my breath,' I told him. âSomething's kept them quiet for a long time. But if I can just get a sense that something did happen to one of their kids then it will show we're on the right track.'
I handed Shaughnessy his coffee. Treacle-thick. Black. His first and last of the day. I spooned Marvel and three sugars into mine.
âThat's my plan,' I said. âHow does it sound?'
Shaughnessy smiled his lop-sided smile.
âIt sounds like the only one we've got.'
My motor insurance didn't run to courtesy cars so it was either rent cheap or walk. I looked up the local rent-a-wreck in Yellow Pages. They agreed to have something within my tenner-a-day budget by nine thirty.
I found ValuDrive in a portacabin behind a body shop off Camden High Street. I reached them by squeezing between a couple of cars that were going to be a challenge to even the most skilled of the body shop's mechanics. The portacabin's office was the size of a broom closet, floored in cracked linoleum and smelling of Calor gas and mould. At nine thirty in the morning the place was dank. A woman wrapped in an anorak fit for Annapurna stood behind a counter littered with grease-stained contracts. She asked for my licence and credit card. I waited whilst she transcribed the details onto a contract form with a biro that kept smearing. She filled out a million details in triplicate then mashed my card twice through her machine. Once for the rental. Once for the deposit. Wrote the charges and asked me to sign. The rental was cheap but the deposit stung. If I wrecked their vehicle my card was going to finance a new City office for ValuDrive.
I signed a contract that had text too small to read but would have significance if something went wrong. The woman gave me my copy with a scribbled telephone number for the breakdown service. The number was also unreadable. She lifted the flap and came out. The whole time I'd been there she'd said nothing other than the essential. Rent-a-wreck, with service to match.
Outside, she took me to check a damage sheet against a lime green Citroen ZX that turned out to be one of the cars I'd pushed past on the way in. The checks went over my head while I made an adjustment to my understanding of the term
rent-a-wreck
. The wreck might actually be wrecked. Valu's offerings were everything you could wish for in this respect. The Citroen looked like the runner-up in a nursery school drawing competition. It had an engine barely bigger than the Frogeye's to haul a car twice the weight, and the bodywork had enough things bent or hanging off to make the damage report sheet an insane doodle. The rear suspension was so far down it looked like the car was parked on a slope. All this for seven ninety-nine a day. Maybe I got air miles. I was suddenly regretting not getting the woman to write the breakdown number more clearly.
I signed the damage report on the basis that it covered the car so comprehensively that if I had a smash they'd never be able to prove it. Then the woman handed me the keys and walked away. The Citroen started on the seventh attempt. Either the petrol gauge wasn't working or they'd run it so low that even the vapour wasn't registering. A more talkative clerk might have told me to push the thing to the nearest filling station. Zero style, zero fuel. The private investigator on the road.
I coasted on fumes to a BP station, keeping my foot light to conserve petrol and minimise the racket of the blowing exhaust. I pumped fifty-six litres of unleaded but the needle stayed on empty. The car was telling me something. I fired up again and headed south across the river and out towards Chevening.
The Hanlons' driveway was still barred by the electric gates but today when I pressed the bell the metalwork swung silently open. Easy!
A hundred yards brought me to an oval forecourt fronting a three-storey Queen Anne. Converted stables to one side provided garage space for a fleet of vehicles but two cars were parked side by side up against the entrance steps. One was a silver Bentley Continental Coupe and the other a Merc sports. The guy in the expensive suit waiting at the top of the steps was David Hanlon.
He watched as I swung the Citroen round to park by his Bentley, said nothing as I climbed the steps. When I held out my hand he held his own up to stop me. Kiss-off number fifty. I'd batted my half century.
Hanlon was a fit fifty-something. Lean, with streaked silver hair and a bespoke wool suit. The no-nonsense stance of a company MD.
He watched me with cold eyes and asked for ID.
I gave him Eagle Eye's card and held up my driver's licence for good measure. He scrutinised them. Held on to the card.
âYou've got five minutes, Mr Flynn,' he told me.
He tilted his head and we went in. I heard dogs barking in the back. Hanlon directed me into a lounge overlooking the forecourt. There was no sign of his wife but my senses told me that she was close by. It looked like both of them had taken the morning off to see me. Hanlon didn't ask me to sit.
âIf I get the gist of your note,' he said, âthen I conclude that you are interfering in our private affairs. Would you care to tell me what this is about?'
I scanned the walls, impressed. The room had more expensive artwork than the Tate.
âWe're investigating a professional criminal,' I told him, âand we've picked up a connection with your family. I mentioned the guy's name in my note.' That was the note I'd dropped into their post box yesterday. Either it was third time lucky or the note had produced the desired effect. Hanlon might be playing uppity but he and his wife had both stayed home to see me.
Hanlon shook his head.
âI'm afraid the name means nothing to either of us,' he said. âYour note said that you had information related to the safety of my family. Is this some kind of game, Mr Flynn.?'
I quit my tour round his artwork and looked at Hanlon again. âIt's no game, Mr Hanlon,' I said. âWe're looking into a serious criminal operation. And we do have a very clear link to you.'
Hanlon shook his head again. âYou're mistaken,' he said. âI've already told you that I don't know this person McAllister. Why don't you stop running in circles, Mr Flynn. Just tell me what you actually have.'
Hanlon's bluster seemed forced but it was possible that he really didn't know McAllister's name. The McCabes hadn't. If the name meant nothing then it must have been the mention of the Brighton Royal Trafalgar in my note that had given Hanlon the incentive to stay home. I switched to this track and asked him about his stay at the hotel.
âI run a company,' Hanlon said. âI stay in hotels all over the country.'
I lifted my eyebrows. âAnd that includes eight-hundred-a-night hospitality?' I asked. âI must be in the wrong job.'
Hanlon looked out of the window at the Citroen.
âYou are,' he said.
Good point. If the shit-heap was sold it wouldn't buy a set of wiper blades for Hanlon's Bentley. But I wasn't swallowing his line about eight-hundred-quid suites being normal business in the IT trade. When you see that kind of extravagance proffered for free you know that business is not normal.
âThose must have been very generous business associates,' I suggested.
âNone of your business, Mr Flynn.'
I looked at him. âMr Hanlon, it's become my business. Maybe you didn't know it but your Brighton holiday was financed by a professional criminal. These people do things for a reason. Especially five-star hospitality.'
âI've already told you â I don't know this man McAllister.'
âSo bear with me. What business took you to Brighton?'
âNothing I'd talk to you about,' Hanlon said. âUnderstand this, Mr Flynn, I've stayed home to find out what your note was about, not to be interrogated.' He looked at his watch. âYour five minutes is almost up.'
âJust a couple more questions,' I said. âFrom what you say you wouldn't be concerned if the Brighton thing came under the scrutiny of the authorities? You'd stick to your line about normal business?'
âWhatever I did, it would have nothing to do with you.'
I changed track. âI understand that you sold the gatehouse last year. How much did you lose on the deal? Would I be right saying half a million? What I've been asking myself is why a wealthy guy has to rush into a loss-making deal when he can probably raise the same kind of money economically if he waits a few weeks. Unless he's looking to raise cash in a very short time with minimum visibility. What else did you sell? Is your garage emptier than it was?'