Slaughter's Hound (Harry Rigby Mystery) (2 page)

BOOK: Slaughter's Hound (Harry Rigby Mystery)
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No, he was nothing special, not Ross McConnell. They never are.

‘Harry …?’ he enquired, one eyebrow cocked. He already knew, of course. I’d have been checked out long before I slid in behind the wheel of a McConnell cab. When you’re an ex-INLA blagger trying to go legit, like say for example one Ted McConnell, you need to be that bit squeakier clean than the
competition
.

‘Rigby,’ I said.

‘Harry Rigby,’ he said. ‘Rigby, Rigby, Rigby …’ He glanced down at Herb, who was roaching the jay, then back at me. ‘You’re never the Rigby who killed his brother,’ he said. I nodded. ‘Gonzo,’ he said. ‘Am I right?’

‘That’s right.’

‘I knew him. Years ago now, but yeah. Mad fucker.’

It wasn’t a question so I let it go. From the kitchen came the sound of a thin whistle. ‘Kettle’s boiled,’ I said. ‘Anyone else for a brew?’

‘Ross was just leaving,’ Herb said.

‘I’ll take a quick espresso,’ Ross said. ‘If it’s not a bother.’

‘No problem.’

He was still standing when I got back, head tilted, one whole wall given over to Herb’s books, most of them hardbacks and mostly non-fiction, travel and adventure, war histories, some popular science. A Patrick Leigh Fermor biography tucked under one arm. He toasted me with the espresso, had a sip, winced at its bitterness.

‘So what’s it like out there?’ he said. ‘Busy?’

‘Quiet enough so far,’ I said. ‘It’ll pick up later on.’

‘Good, good.’

So there we all were, the two of us sipping coffee, Herb on a toke in the armchair, a quarter million Germans frozen solid in Stalingrad and still hoping Von Paulus’d tell Hitler to stick his
Sieg Heil
up his Austrian hole. The silence getting brittle, Toto glancing up again at the bookshelves. I rolled a smoke and
wandered
over to the far wall, Herb’s gallery, framed photographs from when he’d worked as a snapper, some of them standalone shots, portraits, a couple of full-length newspaper covers. The one I liked best was a
Sligo Champion
cover from a couple of election campaigns ago, Bertie Ahern touring the provinces, shocked, staring down at the egg that had just been smashed against his tie, and over it the headline, ‘Bertie Scrambling for Power’.

Herb leaned forward to tap some ash, knocked a musical little tinkle out of the glass ashtray, loud enough to get Toto and I looking around. Herb cleared his throat. ‘Anything cooking?’ he said.

Me he was asking. I glanced at Toto. He put his hand up in mock surrender. ‘I’m not even here,’ he said. ‘You have business to do, don’t let me stop you.’

Herb nodded me on. ‘Finn rang,’ I told him. ‘Looking three bags.’

‘Oh yeah?’

‘Just now.’

‘He got three last month, didn’t he?’

‘That’s right.’

‘That’s a lot of personal use.’

Herb didn’t do half-measures. Five-ounce bags of primo bud. Sweet as Bambi going down, a kick like Thumper dreaming snares. He could’ve cut it with oregano, packed the bags with branch, the way some of Toto’s dealers did, but Herb liked his customers happy, his trade steady and sure.

‘The surfers are in next week,’ I said, ‘out to Enniscrone. The wild water women, something like that.’

‘So he’s what, dealing now?’

‘I doubt it. Probably just sorting some people out.’

Toto with another book in his hand,
Schrödinger’s Kittens
, one of John Gribbin’s. Taking a keen interest, it looked like, in radical quantum mechanics.

‘But sorting these people out,’ Herb persisted, ‘for money.’

‘What I’m saying is, Finn doesn’t need to deal.’

‘Hardly giving it away free though, is he?’

‘Want me to have a word?’

‘Suss him out, yeah. See what’s what. Last thing we want is some amateur pissing about. There’s cops in Bundoran running around with boogie boards now.’

‘Will do.’

Toto put his espresso down on the coffee table, held up the Gribbin. ‘Herbie,’ he said, ‘d’you mind …?’

‘No worries, man. Work away.’

The Gribbin went under his arm with the Leigh Fermor. ‘I’ll drop them back next time,’ he said. ‘Harry?’ He raised an eyebrow and nodded towards the hallway. ‘Mind if I have a word?’

For some reason I took my coffee with me, following on as he ambled out through the kitchen, into the garage. He pressed the door-release button, said, ‘How’s your probation going?’

‘Alright, yeah. Five more months, thereabouts.’

A wry smile. ‘Thereabouts?’

‘Five months, four days.’

‘And you’re clean, right?’

He wasn’t just talking smack or coke. He meant anything that might cause him trouble if I was pulled over driving a cab in which Ted McConnell had a 40 percent stake. A daft question. I was hardly going to fess up to a sideline dealing kiddie porn from the cab’s trunk. Then again, it wasn’t really a question. Especially as Toto McConnell’s definition of clean didn’t include the bags of grass I trundled around town for Herb.

He opened the door of his three-year-old nothing-special navy Golf and got in, put the books on the passenger seat. ‘This Finn guy,’ he said, ‘wants the three baggies. You vouch for him?’

‘He’s never let me down yet. Pays up front.’

‘But you know him, right?’

I nodded. ‘It’s Finn Hamilton.’

He cocked his head. ‘The property Hamiltons?’

‘That’s the family, yeah. Except Finn’s an art dealer.’

‘Bob Hamilton’s boy.’ Now he was nodding, filing it away. Might be useful to know somewhere down the line. ‘Has a gallery down the docks,’ he said, ‘the old PA building. Or am I mixing him up with someone else?’

‘No, that’s him.’

‘Nice work if you can get it,’ he grinned. ‘Am I right?’

‘If you like art.’

He shrugged. ‘I like it. What’s not to like?’ He turned the key in the ignition, the Golf giving a throaty roar before settling down to a purr. He closed the car door, then wound down the window. ‘Meant to ask you,’ he said, ‘if you knew Malky Gorevan.’

Letting me know, he knew I’d done my time, or a good chunk of it, in Dundrum. And maybe letting me know he knew more, that I’d walked earlier than I should have all things considered, a six-year stretch erring on the liberal side when you go down for blowing away your brother, especially when that was enough, in the first place, to have you banged up with all the rest of the criminally insane. Tipping me off that people might be
wondering
why I’d skated out so soon, and if maybe some kind of deal hadn’t been done, Harry Rigby agreeing to payback, a juicy morsel in the right ear once in a while, for his early release.

‘Yeah, I knew Malky,’ I said. ‘Mad fucker.’

‘Wouldn’t be in Dundrum if he wasn’t,’ Toto said.

‘True enough. How’s he doing?’

Malky Gorevan had the distinction of being one of the very few ex-paramilitaries not to walk on a Good Friday pardon, partly because no one really gave a shit if the INLA ever went back to war, but mainly because Malky, who was serving
multiple
concurrent sentences, would have been designated Ireland’s first bona fide serial killer had he not wrapped himself in the flag. If Malky ever got out of Dundrum it’d be for the short ride north to face a sheaf of outstanding warrants, Malky a hero in certain circles for being that rarest of gems, an INLA man who’d figured out the intricacies of the mercury tilt car bomb.

‘Malky’s Malky,’ Toto shrugged. ‘Last I heard he was still
talking
about sell-outs, Adams and McGuinness on his shit-list.’ He shrugged again, Malky old news, yesterday’s man. ‘Listen,’ he said, ‘Herbie might have a bit of work for you, if you’re available. No problem if you’re not.’

‘What’s doing?’

‘Herbie’ll fill you in.’ He stuck his hand out, and we shook again. ‘Good to meet you, Harry.’ The nothing-special eyes grey and cold as grave chippings. ‘Catch you later.’

He reversed out, got turned and was gone. I waited until I heard the front gates close, then wiped my hand on the seat of my trousers and tossed what was left of the cold coffee into a potted bush that needed watering. Six days since it had rained.

3
 
 

‘That’s his fourth,’ Herb groused as I came back into the living room. ‘First it was a Joe Campbell, last time it was a nice
hardback
on Spinoza, the feeling brain. The fuck am I, a library?’

‘Maybe you need to start imposing fines.’

‘Right, yeah.’ A bleak grin. ‘Maybe skim off the top, tell Ted it’s all Toto’s fault.’

Camped about six thousand miles due west, the McConnells would have been a shit-kicking rabble of inbred, rebel-yelling, crank-cooking sister lovers. They were the first to organise properly in Sligo, this something of a spin-off from the Peace Dividend up North, Ted being the kind of diehard ex-INLA who wouldn’t be fully happy until everything was the way it’d been before the Ulster Plantation, when every chief had his own fief and a surfeit of spears. They’d started with dope, moved on up to coke and E, were dabbling now in H. They had hardware and were happy to use it, generally for hoot-‘n’-holler drive-bys but at least once to lethal effect. Cold. Opening a van door in the middle of town, three o’clock on a Saturday afternoon. One round through the forehead, two in the chest. The backsplash spattering the guy’s girlfriend, the kid she held in her arms.

The dogs in the street knew Toto’d been the shooter. The problem there being, dogs don’t do so well on a witness stand, tend to crumble under cross-examination.

Herb took a drag on the jay, held it down, popped a
smoke-ring
. Settled back in the Ezy-Chair. ‘What’d he want, anyway?’

‘Was asking about Finn, if I vouched for him.’

‘I hope you didn’t, the flaky fuck.’

Herb took a dim view of what he reckoned were Finn’s
unnatural
proclivities for skiing, surfing and charitable innovations. Herb being of the opinion that if Finn wanted to help those less well-off than himself, which was pretty much everyone bar the Hamiltons these days, he might consider donating a chunk of Hamilton Holdings’ before-tax profits instead of haranguing people to dig into their own pockets.

‘I told him,’ I said, ‘Finn always pays up front.’

‘You tell him who he was?’

‘That he’s Finn Hamilton, sure. The rest he knew.’

‘Dundrum?’

‘He knows I was in Dundrum, yeah. Asking if I knew Malky Gorevan.’

‘But you didn’t tell him about celling with Finn.’

‘No.’

Sins of omission. What the bishops like to call mental
reservations
.

‘Maybe that’s what he was asking about,’ Herb said.

‘Don’t sweat it. At the end there he was offering me more work, said it was there if I was available.’

‘He mentioned that?’

‘What’s the gig?’

‘A run to Galway tomorrow, there’s a shipment due in. Small enough, ten grand’s worth, but the good stuff. He was asking me to take it on, but, y’know.’

Herb didn’t get out much, in part because he was a low-level paranoiac, but mainly because he just didn’t like people. His credo was pretty simple: always assume everyone’s an idiot.

He’d been a snapper once, a good one, hooked up with an agency. We’d worked as a team for a few years, freelancing local news, stringing for the nationals. I did the words, Herb took the shots, and once in a while we’d work some off-the-books research consultancy, which was a fancy name for what amounted to prowling hotel car parks for proof of some wayward husband’s mid-life crisis.

Happy days.

Then Herb got his face stove in. Someone had told someone else that Herb had a photograph the someone else wanted.

I was the someone who’d done the telling. Inadvertently, as it happened.

Not that the who mattered. The bruisers were still walking around, free to stove at will. Herb stayed home, his complexion pasty, skin like old dough. The way it can get when most of both jaws and one cheekbone are underpinned by steel plate. Anyway, Herb ended up staying home a lot, huffing mucho weed. One day Toto McConnell, this back when Toto was still dealing himself, asks if Herb’ll rent him some space. Herb’s not interested in any sublets, but Toto’s talking about turning the upstairs, the attic, into a grow-house.

A couple of years later Herb’s salting away a couple of grand a month to top up his disability benefit, easy money. Two years after that, he moved out to Larkhill, went to Toto with his idea for a couple of cabs, nice cover for deals-on-wheels. A front to get him onto the Revenue’s books and keep them sweet, so no one got the urge to pick up the phone and ring the Criminal Assets Bureau, wondering how no-income, disability benefit Herb could afford a four-bed on its own grounds out in the burbs.

‘How come the short notice?’ I said.

‘His regular guy popped a kneecap last night.’

‘And now he’s under wraps.’

‘No, I mean he popped his
own
kneecap. Five-a-side up at the Sports Complex, went in for a sliding tackle and up she blew.’

‘Jesus.’

‘Yeah. So what d’you think? Toto’s pretty keen to get it
tomorrow
, has the stuff promised for Saturday night. Says he’ll do
twenty
percent.’

‘Two grand?’

‘I get the impression, reading between the lines, Toto’s
greasing
some serious wheels.’

‘So we’re not talking smoke.’

‘Coke, yeah.’

‘Shit.’

‘Two grand, Harry. Five big to me for brokering, okay, but that’s still tidy money for a spin to Galway.’ He sat forward in the Ezy-Chair, offered across the spliff. When I declined he slotted it into the ashtray, stood up. ‘Just think about it, okay? No harm at all in seeing Toto right.’

He took a little side-wobble setting off, then stabilised and headed for the hall. Right on cue my phone rang, the caller ID flashing up
Dee-Dee-Dee
.

I sat the phone on the coffee-table, rolled a smoke and let it ring out. Herb came back in with Finn’s three baggies, tossing them on the table just as the message-minder buzzed, the screen lighting up to let me know I’d missed four calls from Dee.

BOOK: Slaughter's Hound (Harry Rigby Mystery)
12.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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