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Authors: Michael J. Malone

Tags: #Crime, #Thriller, #Fiction, #Scottish, #glasgow

Beyond the Rage (22 page)

BOOK: Beyond the Rage
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‘What the...’

His sight was blurred. He could make out the wide shoulders of a grey figure above him and brought up his arm in a defensive move. Something flashed. Connected. He heard a loud snap. Screamed. The pain in his arm was incredible. His vision flared and sharpened to the view of his arm dangling at a strange angle before another blow to his temple and the light caved to a pinprick. And died.

41

Mason Budge was thinking that if he had a Facebook page he
’d
be making an entry around now that would read, ‘
Mason Budge
wonders if life could get any better!’ He might even add another couple of exclamation marks to that.

All of his plans for the boss were coming along nicely. He had Kenny O’Neill on the rack and he
’d
even managed to give his girlfriend a real good time. Now if he could manage to get the lovely Kenny into the same prone position he wouldn’t rule out giving him exactly the same treatment.

Fist and cock could be an even more potent mix when used on a man. And let’s face it, the sexual rush – and jeez, was it a rush – came from the power, not the body he was fucking.

Yes. The bold Kenny wouldn’t be quite so fucking confident if that were to happen to him. He should speak to the boss and see if he could make that part of the plan.

He picked his phone from his breast pocket and dialled a number.

‘Yes?’ was the terse, frightened answer. There was still a note of defiance though and Budge loved a little bit of defiance. Made him horny as all hell.

‘Alexis, babycakes,’ he said. ‘Walk to the window and look down onto the street.’ He waited a moment and then spotted her pale face leaning out from behind a curtain. He could see her spot him and then look up the street at a car parked at the entrance to the flat. Nice, thought Budge. That was an interesting glance. Told him exactly where he should be looking. He took a step closer to the car and made out the form of two young men in the front seats. He nodded to himself, this could get interesting. A nice little diversion could be in order. The guys looked barely out of their teens; he could take them out as easily and with as much emotion as he might trim a nail. And where’s the fun in that?

‘You can’t be here, Budge. Kenny will be back any second.’ Her voice was sharp, distant. To see her mouth move and the words come from the small machine in his hand gave him a buzz.

‘Say something else, Alexis.’

‘What are you on, you madman? Go away. Kenny can’t see you.’ She ducked behind the curtain as if the sight of him was too much.

‘Correct,’ he said. ‘Kenny can’t see me.’

‘Right.’ Alexis paused as if trying to gauge his meaning. ‘So why the hell are you standing across from his building?’

‘Aww, you know. I was passing. Thought I should say hi to my favourite girl.’

Her breath was ragged. Her fear reached him through the phone, warming his heart. ‘Please, Budge. I’ve done everything you asked. I’m doing everything you ask.’

‘So what’s fresh, what’s new?’

‘Kenny’s not in. He’s gone out to the gym. But he will be back shortly. So piss off and leave me alone.’

‘Such a potty mouth on such a beautiful young lady. I should come up there and wash your mouth out with my cock.’

‘I have a knife, you bastard. And I will use it.’

Mason loved the way her accent sounded on the word bastard. ‘Alexis, don’t be so harsh. We really could be such good friends.’

‘Apart from trying to torture me, what the hell do you want?’

‘To remind you that you are not to let O’Neill out of your sight.’ He paused to let that one drive home. ‘He’s not exactly in view at the moment, is he?’

‘I’m sorry... he... he’s not the kind of man to sit around playing nurse.’

‘Well, you need to be a little more convincing then, don’t you? Perhaps I should come up there and reapply some bruising?’

A whimper then she collected herself. ‘I told you I have a knife. And I will use it.’

‘Sure you will, babes.’ He laughed. Revelling in the moment. ‘Anywho, do you have anything interesting to report?’

‘He’s been a bit preoccupied with his sick aunt at the moment to be doing much.’

‘What about his father?’

Alexis said nothing. Crossed her arms. Silence sang in his ear.

Budge added a quiet note of promised violence to his tone. ‘What about his father?’

42

‘So, let’s go over this again, Mr O’Neill. You were walking to your car?’

‘Oh fuck off, McBain, and don’t look so fucking pleased with yourself.’

‘Well, it’s not everyday that Kenny O’Neill gets mugged. And watch your mouth.’ Ray turned and smiled at a nurse who had just pulled aside the curtain that offered a modicum of privacy to the Accident and Emergency cubicle they were resident in.

She was tall and, judging by the look on Ray McBain’s face, had a waist to hip ratio that was very pleasing. Her hair was thick auburn and she had large brown eyes that were looking at McBain as if to say,
You really should leave now.

‘It’s okay, nurse. He’s kind of a friend.’

‘Didn’t you get lucky?’ she said to Kenny while striding over to the bed. Her shoes squeaked on the floor.

Ray laughed his big warm boom and said, ‘When I die, I’m coming back as a doctor.’

‘McBain, shut it. I’m in pain here, in case you haven’t noticed. Do your hunting for babes in your own time.’

‘I’m flattered,’ said the nurse, batting her eyelids in an exaggerated manner. She was on the near side of forty and clearly looked after herself. ‘It’s been a long time since someone called me a babe.’

‘What’s wrong with my friend…’ – McBain paused – ‘…babe?’

The nurse dismissed him with a snort, but her eyes were shining with a suppressed smile.

She turned to Kenny. ‘Mr O’Neill, you have concussion so we need to keep you here for a wee while for observation. You have also broken your radius and ulna.’ She turned to Ray. ‘For the medically challenged, that’s your forearm.’ Back to Kenny. ‘The good news is that it was a clean snap. No surgical intervention required. A few weeks in a plaster cast and you’ll be right as rain.’ Smile. She turned to include Ray in the conversation. ‘Just don’t be letting any daft friends graffiti the plaster.’

‘Awww, miss,’ said Ray. ‘I’ve been practising drawing big willies for just this occasion.’

‘Can’t imagine that would be from real life,’ she said.

‘Ouch.’ Ray grinned.

‘For crying out loud, guys,’ said Kenny. ‘Man in pain here. Can we flirt on our own time, please?’

‘Don’t be such a whiner, O’Neill,’ laughed Ray.

‘Someone will be along shortly to apply a cast to your arm. And by “shortly” I mean anytime within the next twenty-four hours,’ the nurse said and looked at Ray. ‘I finish at ten.’ With that, she left the cubicle as briskly as she
’d
entered.

‘So,’ said Ray, trying to hide a smug expression, ‘what do you remember?’

‘I remember coming out of the gym.’ Kenny paused. ‘Do you think she was joking when she said twenty-four hours? And by the way, if you don’t wait here until ten, I’m calling Pitt Street to tell everybody that you’re gay.’

‘So’s your face,’ Ray said. ‘Twenty-four hours?’ He looked around himself at the pale blue empty walls and the cream floor-length curtains. He shuddered.

‘Yeah, lucky me,’ said Kenny, reading his movement. ‘I came out the gym. I remember walking towards the car. I heard something. My spidey senses were a wee bit slow; I knew something was up but I didn’t react fast enough.’ Kenny was disgusted with himself. ‘I spun and ducked but it wasn’t enough. The bastard caught me on the side of the head. I tried to protect myself…’ He looked down at his arm. He mentally replayed his actions. ‘My arm was... and then he caught me on the head again. After that, I have no idea.’

‘Your wallet is still in your pocket,’ said Ray. ‘I checked. It has some money and a few credit and bank cards. And your phone is still in your jacket, so if someone was trying to mug you, they must have been disturbed before they could complete the theft.’

‘How much money?’

‘Sixty quid. In tens.’

Kenny nodded. That was just as he remembered. ‘Are there any closed circuit cameras around there?’ asked Kenny.

‘Nope.’

‘How did you get to hear about it?’ By ‘you’ he meant the police.

‘A passing good Samaritan. He didn’t hang around to see if there was any reward.’

‘You hear the phone call?’

Ray shook a no. ‘Apparently it was a male voice. Said there was a man lying unconscious in the car park and we should get an ambulance down there asap.’

‘Nothing remarkable about the caller?’ Kenny asked.

‘Jeez,’ said Ray. ‘Who’s the polis here?’ Pause. ‘Afraid not. Typical west of Scotland accent. Male.’

Kenny slumped back onto his pillow, his face scrunched in pain.

‘Want me to get the nurse back for you?’ asked Ray.

‘For you, or for me?’

‘Don’t be crass,’ said Ray. ‘I wouldn’t let my libido get in the way of your health.’ He creased his face in sympathy. ‘You do look like you could take some pain relief, mate.’

Kenny breathed deeply, forced himself to relax and rode the next wave of pain. Whatever they had given him when he first arrived was wearing off and he needed more, but he wanted to keep his thoughts free and run through events leading up to his attack. A fresh set of drugs and he would remember nothing.

He went through the whole course of events again. Leaving the gym door. Walking towards the car. Kicking the can. The sound of someone approaching.

There were three strikes with a blunt weapon. Two to the head. One to the arm.

He thought some more about the gym. The place was well known locally. Well known as a place where some of the toughest bouncers in Glasgow trained. Either it was someone who didn’t know the area and he was in the wrong place at the wrong time, or it was...

Kenny sat up sharply. ‘I think I was targeted.’

‘What makes you say that?’ Ray had too much respect for Kenny’s experience and hunches to dismiss them.

‘The gym. Only a crazy person would attack someone who just left that gym. It’s well respected as a place where some top fighters train. And nobody is going to mess with Matty the Hut.’

‘Aye,’ Ray nodded his head, ‘unless Matty the Hut – sounds like a charmer, by the way – was in on it?’

Kenny snorted. ‘Hasn’t got a bad bone in his body, that man. Besides, he’s a mate and I’ve donated loads of cash to his charity work. So he’s hardly going to bash the golden goose.’

McBain winced. ‘There goes a mangled metaphor. What about a passing opportunist?’

‘No.’ Kenny was firm on that. ‘If you’re an opportunist mugger then you pick someone small and vulnerable; someone who looks like prey.’

‘Again. Good point.’ You
’d
have to be drug-addled to think Kenny looked anything remotely like a victim.

‘Also there was something about the way he attacked me. Once to the head and I was stunned. Unable to defend myself. My arm was out at the side when his weapon hit it. It wasn’t a defensive injury... it was calculated.’ He paused while the implications of this worked through his mind. ‘The fucker was deliberately trying to break my arm.’

43

It was the small hours of the morning before Kenny was allowed to leave the hospital. First he called Alexis to let her know he was safe. The next thing was to call Calum and Mark. As he dialled the number he realised that Ray had in fact disappeared close to the ten o’clock mark. Right after the nurse administered some pain relief. Lucky bastard.

Mark answered and he asked him to stay on site and for Calum to come and pick him up in the car.

‘Oh man,’ said Mark, ‘it’s my car; can I no come and pick you up?’

‘I have a sore head, Mark,’ said Kenny. ‘I need someone who hoards words like a miser stores coin.’

‘Eh?’ asked Mark.

‘You talk too much,’ replied Kenny. Now was not the time to be sparing anyone’s feelings. ‘Sore head. I need silence.’

When Calum arrived, Kenny opened the car door and sat in the passenger seat with a relieved sigh, delighted to be leaving the hospital.

‘Where to, boss?’ asked Calum and Kenny could have hugged him. No questions, no chat, just a simple request for information.

‘I need to eat something full of fat and calories,’ Kenny thought out loud. ‘A supermarket’s probably the easiest place to get a cooked breakfast, without thinking too much. Find me a supermarket.’

‘Okay, boss.’ Calum put the car in gear and drove off. Within fifteen minutes they were in a supermarket cafeteria. Calum was drinking a black coffee, five sugars. Kenny shook his head at that one, while he cut into a plate high with sausages, bacon, black pudding and a pair of fried eggs. Which was not easy with one good hand. He washed it down with a coffee of his own, sat back in his chair and exhaled.

‘Right. I feel like a human being once again.’

Calum simply sipped at his mug.

‘You can speak now and again, Calum.’

The younger man shrugged. ‘Confucius said that gratuitous speech was the province of the foolish.’

Kenny laughed. ‘That’s what I get for taking on a philosophy student.’ He reached across and patted Calum’s meaty shoulder. ‘You sure you and Mark are related?’

‘That’s what the grown-ups tell us,’ he replied and twitched his face in a brief smile.

‘I’m going to need a driver’ – Kenny held up his plaster cast with his other hand – ‘for a few weeks. You up for the job?’

Calum nodded. ‘What about Mark?’

Kenny sucked on his bottom lip before answering. He did like the fella but only in small doses. A smile stretched his face as he imagined the complaints from Alexis when he set Mark as her protector. He needed to find out what the hell was going on and sitting in the flat with Alexis was going to get him nowhere.

There was also the issue of his father. He was still as determined to find the man, regardless of the mess his life was in.

He called Alexis.


Babe.’ She started crying almost immediately she heard his voice and his stomach lurched in response.

‘Nothing else has happened, has it?’ he asked.

‘I need you here. Where the hell are you?’

‘I’ve got stuff to do, so I’m going to send Mark up to sit with you...’

‘The hell you are.’ She recovered quickly, such was her irritation. ‘He’s a boring twat. I need you, Kenny. You need to be here.’ There was a strong taste of panic in her voice.

‘You need to be patient with me, Alexis. Let Mark in. Make him a coffee and I’ll be there before you know it.’ He cut the connection before she could complain any more.

Next he called Ray McBain.

‘Meet me for a coffee?’ he asked.

‘Yeah, cos crime has paused for the day to allow me the chance of a cappuccino with my mate.’

‘Sarcasm is the lowest,’ said Kenny. Wondered where he
’d
heard that recently. Ian. Shit, he
’d
forgotten all about Vi. ‘Have you got the time or not?’

A pause while Ray held his phone out in front of him to check the hour. Kenny wondered how everyone managed before this piece of technology took over lives.

‘As luck would have it I’m out and about today. Meet me at eleven. Starbucks in Byres Road?’

While walking back to the car, stomach heavy with his breakfast, he called the next on his list of contacts.

‘Good morning, Dimitri and O’Neill. Your problem is our problem. How can I help?’

‘Dimitri, do you stay up all night to practise these greetings?’

‘Yeah, and you’re the only schmuck that phones. How sad is that?’ Dimitri laughed.

‘Okay,’ said Kenny. He was resigned to Dimitri’s permanent good mood. ‘Enough of the jibber-jabber. Any news?’

‘Yeah. There’s a couple of newspapers ready to run with the ad. I’ve sent a pdf to you by email. Not had a chance to see it yet?

‘Not had a chance to do much, mate. Long story. Can’t be arsed telling it.’

‘Fine.’ Dimitri brushed off Kenny’s brusqueness. ‘I have the pay-as-you-go phone we’re using for any callers. You want to keep it?’

‘Aye. I’ll be by some time later on today; you can give it to me then.’ He hung up and almost collided with a teenage girl pushing a pram. She was about five feet six, skinny as a pole-dancer’s pole and dressed in a pair of jeans and a cropped T-shirt that displayed the ring through her belly-button.

‘Sorry,’ Kenny said.

The girl said nothing, simply looked at him through her fringe. The woman with her, possibly her mother, was dressed identically, but she had a good deal more flesh for her piercing to cling to. The mother, who was holding the hand of a small blonde boy, gave Kenny an appraising smile.

As the small family group walked on, the child made a break for independence. His grandmother shouted him back.

‘Kai, ya wee bastard, come back here.’

Just before Kenny shut his car door he heard the girl remonstrate with her mother. ‘Mum, I wish you wouldn’t talk to him like that.’

‘Well, he is a wee bastard, isn’t he?’

‘Oh my God,’ the teenager said. ‘You are unbelievable.’ And stomped away from her mother to retrieve the boy.

Kenny looked at Calum. ‘Well, that wee tableau didn’t work out quite the way I expected.’

Calum raised an articulate eyebrow. ‘Where to now?’

• • •

The Starbucks on Byres Road was right next to the Hillhead underground station. Calum stayed with the car while Kenny went off for his meeting. He walked in the shop and looked around for Ray. The room was small and dark and crowded with students. Some were hunched over books, others over laptops and some were hunched over each other.

He climbed the stairs at the back to find himself in a larger space with more light and some low sofas. Ray McBain sat at one with two large cups and a chocolate muffin on the table in front of him.

‘I had to threaten someone with deportation to get this seat,’ he said to Kenny. ‘Hurry up and sit down before someone else claims it.’

Kenny sat down on the sofa beside Ray and, turning to face him, their knees brushed against each other.

‘Cosy,’ said Kenny. ‘Good job I don’t mind my personal space being violated.’

‘How’s the arm?’ Ray asked as Kenny reached for his coffee mug.

‘Oh, you know. Broken.’ Kenny made a face. ‘How’s the nurse?’

‘Oh, you know, glad she finally met a real man.’

‘So she got to meet Little Ray, did she?’

‘I like to call him Ray of Sunshine.’ Ray grinned.

‘There’s an often-used line if ever I heard one.’

‘And yet I never tire of using it.’ Ray tore a piece of sponge from his muffin. ‘So, that’s the social niceties dealt with, what you wanting?’

‘Did you ever get anyone for that prostitute that was killed in my “friend’s” flat?’

Ray shook his head and sat forward. ‘
You
got any information on that?’

‘Nope.’ He paused, wondering just how much to tell Ray. He accepted that there always had to be a fair exchange but he wanted to find the crazy fucker who was hurting Alexis and deal with him on his own. Outside of legal constraints. ‘My friend, the one who lived in that flat, is currently staying with me.’

‘You need to bring her in, Kenny, she’s a possible witness.’

‘She wasn’t there when it happened. Besides, she’s terrified. This fucker has battered her twice already. If you force her to give a statement, she’ll be on the next plane to whichever South American country speaks French.’

Ray chewed on another mouthful of muffin.

‘Your body is a temple,’ said Kenny.

‘Temple of Doom,’ replied Ray. ‘Ah, the old jokes are the best. You think the beating you got the other night has anything to do with whatever is going on with your friend?’

Kenny shrugged. ‘I wouldn’t rule anything out.’ Another sip of his coffee. ‘What about that young pro that died the other night?’

Ray twisted his expression into a question mark.

‘There was an overdose the other night from this strong batch of heroin that’s apparently powdering our streets,’ Kenny explained.

‘You think that wasn’t an overdose?’

‘Her number was on Alexis’ mobile. I called her behind Alexis’ back. Went to meet her to see if she knew anything about the people Alexis was working for. That very night, she died.’

‘Could be a coincidence?’ As he said it Ray’s expression matched Kenny’s. Neither of them put too much stock in such things. Ray sat back in his seat and considered Kenny’s comments. ‘I think I might have a quiet word with the autopsy guys and see if there is anything out of the ordinary.’ He twisted in his seat and his knee knocked against Kenny’s again. He smiled and raised his eyebrows. ‘We’ll have to stop meeting like this.’ He clasped his hands in front of his gut, noticed Kenny noticing the size of his gut. ‘Shut it,’ he said, ‘I’ll go jogging this weekend.’

‘Aye, and then have a haggis supper to celebrate.’

‘It’s all about a balanced lifestyle, buddy.’

‘So if you get any information that’s contrary to the old junkie overdose story, you’ll let me know?’

‘If you get anything on the guy who’s doing this, you’ll let me know?’

Kenny nodded.

‘Fucking liar,’ said Ray. ‘If you go after this guy on your own, I can’t protect you from the law, Kenny.’

Kenny grimaced. Ray was far too clever at times.

‘What about your dad?’ Ray asked. ‘You any closer to finding him?’

For the next few minutes Kenny filled Ray in on recent events. Minus any mention of Harry Fyfe. Once he
’d
finished talking, Ray looked at him, saying nothing, as if making his mind up about something.

‘I know you went to see Harry Fyfe.’

Fucker. Kenny said nothing. What could he say?

‘Trust is like your virginity, Kenny. You can only lose it once.’ Ray’s expression was unreadable.

‘Oh, can the lecture,’ Kenny said, shifting in his seat. He looked at his mug and the coffee stains that ringed the inside. He wondered at the timeline between rings. Two minutes between that mouthful and the next one. He looked back at Ray.

‘Let me help you out here, Kenny,’ Ray said. ‘You say to me, “I’m sorry, Ray, it will never happen again.”’

‘Right.’ Kenny loosened his tie a little. ‘Sorry.’

‘And the rest, Kenny?’

‘Fuck off, ya prick. I said I was sorry.’

Ray grinned. ‘Man, I’m having a good couple of days. I get to see Kenny O’Neill beaten up and then I get to make him squirm.’

‘Want another coffee?’ Kenny asked, trying to change the subject.

‘And don’t change the subject,’ said Ray, punching his good arm.

‘Hey, mate, I’m under a lot of pressure here.’

‘This thing... this advert in the papers with your dad’s photo in it. You think it will work?’

‘It’s got to,’ Kenny replied. ‘If someone doesn’t want to be found, it can be nigh on impossible to find them.’

‘Are you not worried that it could all go horribly wrong?’

‘Well, if it turns out my dad’s an arse then I’ll just not see him again, but I’ve got to try, Ray.’

‘That’s not what I mean, Kenny.’ Ray paused for a couple of beats. ‘In the letters, your dad said that he had to disappear to keep you safe. What if bringing him back into your life resurrects all that bad stuff that made him vanish in the first place?’

‘Well, for one... no, because who holds a grudge for over eighteen years? And for two, I’m a big boy. I can look after myself.’

Ray thought about that for a moment before replying. ‘One, you forget I’m a policeman and believe me people can hold a grudge for a lifetime. And for two...’ he looked at Kenny’s arm – ‘Right now you’re a wee bit disabled.’

BOOK: Beyond the Rage
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