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Authors: Lin Anderson

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BOOK: Final Cut
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Her hand moved to her throat, remembering Emma and the policeman walking together across the snowy field. How pleased Emma had been to go out alone with the detective. Claire had questioned her closely after the policeman had left. She’d wanted to know whether Emma had told him about Nick, but hadn’t dared ask outright.
Sometimes, she realised, she was afraid of her daughter. Afraid of the intensity of her stare. Of the humming she could hear coming from her bedroom. Of the sight of the small figure sitting in darkness when she opened the door.
She returned to the kitchen to find that the pasta had boiled dry in her absence. She rescued what hadn’t stuck to the bottom of the pot, tipped it into an oven dish and poured over the sauce. Her hands were trembling with anger or fear, she didn’t know which. She slid the dish in to the oven, then fetched the open bottle of wine, poured herself a glass and sat down with it at the table.
Claire didn’t want her daughter to talk to the forensic woman, but realised she couldn’t refuse. Not after Emma had sent the policeman that drawing. She lifted the glass to her mouth. The liquid struggled to make its way down her tightened throat. She felt like crying, but wouldn’t let herself. If she started, she knew she would never stop.
A suffocating blackness began to press down on her, taking her breath away. A familiar pain grabbed her chest. She pulled open the cutlery drawer, selected a small sharp knife and pressed the point into her wrist, willing all the pain to concentrate on that spot.
The problem was she wasn’t sure whether Emma knew what had happened – back then. She thought about the drawing and wanted to scream. The image of that small boy’s body below the ground. The words
Don’t leave me here alone.
All too terrible to contemplate.
The knife point had finally broken the skin. Claire watched as a trickle of blood ran over her wrist, then released the blade and threw it into the sink.
She would not go back there. She would not walk through that black tunnel again. She had not been to blame. She swallowed the rest of the wine in the glass, then washed the knife and put it back in the drawer. The wound on her wrist was barely visible.
Claire set about making a salad. They would eat the meal in front of the television. She didn’t want to sit opposite her daughter at the kitchen table and worry about what Emma was thinking.
When the news came on, Claire tried to switch channels, but Emma protested loudly enough for Claire to relent. There was very little on the remains. Just that they had been confirmed as human and were those of a child. No gender had been established. Forensic experts were studying material taken from the site to try to establish how long the body had lain there.
The next story involved a soldier gone AWOL and the possibility a body found in a burned-out skip might be that of Private Fergus Morrison. The police were looking for any information relating to the incident at a civic dump on Sunday evening.
Claire switched channels, looking for anything that didn’t involve violence or death.
‘Can I go upstairs now?’ Emma gave her a pointed look.
‘It’s warmer down here. Why don’t you put on a DVD.’
The girl was staring at her again.
‘I’d rather go upstairs.’
Claire decided to tell her about the woman on the phone.
‘She’s coming to see me?’
‘She wants you to walk through the woods with her, in case it helps you remember anything more.’
Emma’s face lit up. ‘Will Michael be there?’
‘Probably.’
The girl stood for a moment, a small smile playing on her lips, then regarded her mother. ‘Would you like to watch
Pirates of the Caribbean
with me?’
‘I’d love to.’ Claire tried to keep the relief from her voice. ‘I’ll clear up and come straight through.’
As she rinsed the dishes and stacked them, she watched the reflection of her daughter in the darkness of the window. Not for the first time, she wondered what her relationship with Nick had done to Emma. She couldn’t take that time back, no matter how much she wanted to. It was over now and they would both have to live with the consequences.
She refilled her wineglass, then corked the bottle.
‘Hurry up, Mummy.’
Claire checked that the back door was locked, then did the same at the front. They were miles from anywhere, she reminded herself. No one knew they were here. No one that mattered.
Claire entered the warmth of the sitting room and nestled down on the couch beside her precious daughter.
17
He got lucky on the third phone call. The scrapyard did have a Peugeot Estate, blue, just in.
‘Went off the road and hit a tree, back’s smashed, but it’s got some nice pieces on it.’
He thanked the guy and said he’d be round in an hour.
‘No problem, mate, but if someone strips it before you arrive, it’s not my fault.’
He bit back a sharp reply and rang off. He could feel his temples throb as the blood rushed to his head. This had to be the one. It wasn’t the nearest salvage yard to the crash, but it was close enough.
He took his time getting ready, ignoring the warning from the idiot on the phone. Stripping the car of its hubcaps and badge was not the purpose of his visit.
He chose a black waterproof hooded jacket with multiple pockets, a hat and a pair of leather gloves. With the hat pulled down and the hood up, there wouldn’t be much of his face to see. On the way to the front door, he lifted the route map from the printer. He entered the workshop and headed for the small room at the back where he picked up evidence bags and a couple of pairs of latex gloves.
Outside, the wind cut through him like a knife.
He checked in the boot of the car for the toolbox and selected a couple of screwdrivers. He wanted to look the part. He slid into the driver’s seat. The distant hills were frosted with white, but the sky was clear of the promised snow.
He switched on the radio and flicked through for news bulletins, but there was nothing more on the human remains story. He reminded himself that a child’s bones lying that long in the open would be fragmented. They wouldn’t even be able to tell whether it was a boy or a girl. He prided himself on knowing these things, although even he was amazed at what had developed in the last few years. That was the problem. The measures he had taken to protect himself then might not be enough to shield him now.
The street outside the salvage yard was lined with cars. He drove past and went looking for a space farther on. After spotting a CCTV camera, he ignored the parking on the main street and drove round until he found a space in front of a row of tenements.
It took ten minutes to walk back to the yard. He hung around outside then followed another two men on their way in. He made a point of not asking for the location of the blue Peugeot. Better to find it for himself. He followed a younger bloke who eventually veered off towards a black Fiat Punto with fancy hubcaps, just short of what looked like the Peugeot.
The man on the phone had been right, the car was a mess. He checked the number plate first, making a note of it. The back was completely bashed in, the roof dented where it had flipped over. He pulled open the driver’s door and manoeuvred himself inside, then replaced the leather gloves with the latex ones. This was the moment he loved. It would have been even better had he been in a position to wear a forensic suit. He’d considered passing himself off as a SOCO who’d come for another look at the car, but had decided against drawing attention to himself. As far as the yard were concerned, he was just another punter looking for cheap rip-offs from banged-up cars.
He sat for a moment breathing in the scent of the car’s interior. It smelled of female with no hint of cigarette smoke. That pleased him. When he got up close to her he didn’t want her stale breath taking the enjoyment away.
A wave of pleasure rippled through him when he spotted dried blood above the windscreen. So she’d been hurt. He checked for more, finding what looked like splashes on the dashboard and the door, but not enough to suggest the bitch had been seriously injured.
He swivelled round to inspect the back and spotted the child booster seat for the first time. For a moment the breath left his body. When he’d seen the startled face in the windscreen, there had been no one in the passenger seat, but that didn’t mean there hadn’t been a kid in the back.
He ran his eyes over the seat, chastising himself for not bringing a kit with him to test properly for blood. There was a darkened spot on the side wing. He hesitated for a moment, then rubbed his latex finger across the stain and licked it, tasting the crusty metallic flavour.
There had been someone else in the car when it went off the road. A child. His heart sped up to match his rising excitement. So there were two of them to deal with. He contemplated the seat. It was the type made for older children, say five to ten.
He felt around under the seat and found a plastic hair clip in the shape of a flower with a few strands of white-blonde hair attached. He sniffed the clasp, catching the scent of shampoo. He took an evidence bag from his pocket and slipped the clasp and hair strands inside. The bitch had a daughter. This was getting better all the time.
He began to go systematically through the various compartments, dashboard first, then door pockets. The car hadn’t been cleaned for a while. He pulled out a newspaper dated a month earlier from under the seat and two empty crisp bags, cheese-and-onion flavour. The glove compartment held crumpled tissues. He extracted these and dropped them into an evidence bag. Below was a lipstick called Pink Spice, a brush bound around with medium-length brown hairs and a map of the Glasgow area. He put the make-up and hairbrush in separate bags.
At the very bottom of the glove compartment was the instruction book for the car. Two phone numbers were written on the front page. He made a note of both.
He slid over to the passenger seat and directed his search under it, where he found half a packet of Loveheart sweets and a Tesco receipt for £63.24. He ran his eye down the list of groceries, which included a bottle of decent red wine. She’d paid the bill with a debit card and had amassed 346 points.
His last find was a pair of well-worn black slip-on shoes with a small bow. He eye-measured the shoe size against his own and decided she was probably around a UK six. He extracted a larger bag from his pocket, put the shoes inside and popped the sweets in with the crisp packets. The receipt he put in his wallet.
Through the windscreen he spotted the young guy approaching carrying a pair of hubcaps from the Fiat Punto. He slipped on the leather gloves and busied himself with one of the screwdrivers. His concern was unnecessary. The guy passed him by without a second glance.
He waited for a moment before pocketing the leather gloves, then began systematically going through every compartment and door pocket one more time, just in case. He was running his hand along the underside of the driver’s seat when he felt a piece of paper jammed beneath the metal frame.
He eased it free and pulled it out, his heart beating wildly.
Bingo.
The crushed Christmas card envelope was addressed to a Mrs C. Watson.
He allowed himself a smile.
He had found the bitch.
18
The thing you noticed first about Ivan Solonik were his hands. Disproportionally large for his squat, broad-chested body, they seemed to possess a life of their own.
Solonik’s hands were what worried Brogan, that and his tiny brain. Brogan would be the first to admit that in most circumstances the pea-brain didn’t matter. It was the hands that counted. Stories abounded about those hands and what Solonik could do with them. Snap a neck like a dry twig. Gouge out your eyes with those thick, blunt-ended fingers. Beat your kidneys to a pulp.
Brogan believed Solonik’s hands capable of doing all those things and more. His own men, born and brought up in the less salubrious areas of the city, possessed many skills suited to Brogan’s line of work. The Glasgow underworld was a good training ground, but couldn’t compare to being a member of a Russian mafia gang.
The hands hung at Solonik’s side like haunches of red ham. Brogan had witnessed them punching a head until the skull cracked and splintered, then snapping the neck just to make sure. He could hear the sound even now in his own head. Jesus, nothing could survive those hands.
Brogan hadn’t wanted Solonik around, but the pea-brain had been part of the deal. He was there to keep an eye on Brogan, make sure the ‘partnership’ went smoothly. Prokhorov’s words, not Brogan’s. Brogan wondered once again whether he had got in above his head. But hey, this was the new world. If you didn’t cooperate with The Organisation you didn’t do business.
Brogan tried to focus his attention on the latest shipment details laid out on his desk, but Solonik’s presence made it difficult. The guy had this quality of silence. He could stand next to you like a statue for hours on end. You couldn’t hear him breathe. Christ, the bastard didn’t even fart. Brogan wanted to tell Solonik to take an hour off, go eat, fuck one of the girls, but he didn’t speak any Russian.
He made an eating gesture at Solonik, then a sexual one, the same in any language. Solonik just stared through him. Brogan gave up and poured himself a drink from the open bottle on his desk. Vodka. Sixty per cent proof. One small and powerful compensation for having Solonik around.
Brogan ran his eyes over the list of munitions. It was just like old times in Northern Ireland before peace broke out and put him out of business. Assault rifles, grenades, missile launchers, automatic rifles. Just one small part of the burgeoning Russian–Scottish enterprise. Weapons, prostitution, drugs, extortion, gambling – the money was rolling in. Developing ways to launder it was the real challenge. It was easier now for the police to confiscate the proceeds of crime. The drug barons kept their bank accounts empty and no money stashed under the bed. They invested it instead: property, expensive restaurants, chic nightclubs. The nouveaux riches of the Merchant City liked to spend their money and they needed places like the Poker Club to spend it in. Glasgow was the new Dublin, upwardly mobile, looking for fun.
BOOK: Final Cut
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