The Missing and the Dead (21 page)

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Authors: Stuart MacBride

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BOOK: The Missing and the Dead
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Inspector McGregor slipped her glasses back on. Scanned the intel section of the Operation Schofield briefing sheet. Her face soured. ‘All we have at the moment is, the delivery was “from somewhere down south”.’

‘Guv, I think we—’

‘Logan. Please.’ Young pinched the bridge of his nose. ‘It’s not a case of someone else taking credit for your work. You and your team will still get the mention in dispatches and all the pats on the back you deserve, but
this
much heroin?’ A half-shrug. ‘It’s too big to be handled at a divisional level. I’m sorry, but that’s the way things work these days.’

‘I see.’

Inspector McGregor sighed. Pulled a thick manila folder from her in-tray. ‘And while we’ve got the Detective Superintendent in the house, I thought we should consult him on this.’ She opened the folder and pulled out a wodge of A4 stapled in one corner. ‘We got a call from Aberdeen City Division: the case against Graham Stirling collapsed half an hour ago. It’s over.’

Logan closed his eyes and swore. Curled his hands into fists. ‘But he
did
it. They can’t let him walk!’

‘The Judge ruled most of the evidence inadmissible. The Fiscal’s office is spitting blood. And Professional Standards have requested copies of every complaint, reprimand, and comment made about you in the last five months.’

The paperwork thumped onto her desk.

‘He tortured Stephen Bisset. He broke every one of his fingers, he ripped out his teeth, he castrated—’

‘We know what he did.’ The Inspector opened the folder. ‘That’s why we need to go over this.’

Logan stuck his chin out. ‘You
always
get complaints when you’re in uniform. You’re in contact with the public the whole time: people don’t like being arrested or searched. And not a single one of those was upheld!’

‘That’s not—’

‘The only way you don’t get any complaints against you, is by sitting behind a desk all day.’

She stared at him. ‘Meaning?’

Ah. Too far.

He cleared his throat. ‘Meaning Professional Standards have no idea what it’s like to break up a fight outside a Peterhead nightclub at two in the morning. People whinge. It’s what they do.’

‘Logan, we’ve received a formal complaint that you’ve been taking bribes from drug dealers.’

‘First I’ve heard of it.’

She checked the top sheet of her pile of paper. ‘Complaint was made this morning, by a Mr Brown.’

‘Buster Brown? Are you kidding me?’

Young folded his arms. ‘We take allegations of corruption
very
seriously.’

‘I arrested him last week for possession with intent. This is his idea of revenge.’

‘Sergeant,’ Young leaned back in his seat, ‘if you’ll take a bit of advice: given the allegations made against you yesterday, my former colleagues are going to be all over you like flies on a turd. You need to minimize your exposure to anything that smells of shite.’ He poked the paperwork. ‘
This
, smells.’

‘I didn’t have any choice! Graham Stirling—’

‘It doesn’t matter if you had a choice or not. It’s how the thing looks in hindsight that matters to Professional Standards. Now, is there anything to this complaint about you taking money from dealers?’

‘Of course there isn’t. Two months ago, Buster Brown claimed I’d knocked him off his bicycle and broken both his legs. I did him for shoplifting and possession the week before, so he was getting his own back. Didn’t seem to occur to Buster that being in a wheelchair for the last fifteen years
kind
of undermined his story.’

Inspector McGregor peered at the sheet again. ‘That was him? Thought it was Ricky Welsh.’

‘No, Ricky was the fake assault in custody.’

‘Ah. So he was.’ She spread her hands on the desk. ‘Well, you’ll have my full support when the rubber heelers get here. I consider you an asset to B Division, Logan – this morning’s warrant proves that – but the Superintendent’s right, you need to be squeakier than clean.’

As if Buster Brown’s fictional complaints were anywhere near as serious as the Graham Stirling fiasco. As if they’d make any difference. As if Chief Superintendent Napier hadn’t already made up his mind to rain down a monsoon of crap on Logan’s head.

Still, when you’re drowning …

Logan nodded. ‘Yes, Guv.’

‘In the meantime,’ Young stood, ‘as the press seems to have decided Neil Wood was responsible for our dead wee girl, I think it’s about time we posted an officer outside his bed-and-breakfast full time. His father gets out of hospital later today and I don’t want him winding up on a mortuary slab for the sins of his son. Can you sort that, Wendy?’

Inspector McGregor’s face didn’t move for a moment. As if she’d pulled on a mask. ‘I’ll put in a request and see what the Big Boss says. Staffing levels are tight across the division as it is.’ She stuffed the stack of complaints back into their folder. ‘But we’ll do what we can.’

‘Thank you.’ A nod. ‘Good to see you again, Logan. Remember what I said. Keep your head down and your nose clean. Don’t give Napier any more rope than he already has.’ Young paused on the threshold. ‘And phone him back. If there’s one thing Napier hates, it’s being ignored.’

The Inspector waited till the door swung shut behind Detective Superintendent Young before sagging in her seat. ‘How, exactly, am I supposed to magic up an extra body to go stand in front of someone’s house? Do we not have enough to deal with as it is?’

Logan curled forward and thumped his forehead against her desk. ‘They’re letting him go …’

A sigh. ‘Had two people hand in their notice this month already. The Mire’s a plague ship and we’re dropping like flies.’

‘How can they let Graham Stirling go? Did you
see
what he did to Stephen Bisset?’

‘Logan, we—’

‘And he’s not going to stop at one, is he? Not now he knows he can get away with it!’ Another thump. ‘Gah …’ Logan sat back, rubbed at the line above his eyebrows. ‘How could they let him
go
?’

She grimaced. Swivelled her chair around and stared out of the window.

Blue sky, blue sea, herring gulls making lazy swirls in the sunlight.

Should’ve been raining.

Logan slouched further into the seat. Stared at the ceiling tiles. ‘I’m completely screwed, aren’t I?’

No answer.

Eventually, the Inspector cleared her throat. ‘They got the post-mortem report in, late yesterday. Most of our little girl’s recent injuries appear to have happened after she died. Probably caused by rocks as she got chucked about by the waves.’

‘Completely and utterly screwed …’

‘Logan!’

A sigh. ‘Thought it wasn’t our case any more.’

‘Humour me.’ McGregor didn’t look around, kept her face to the window where he couldn’t see it. ‘A dead six-year-old girl washes up on our doorstep and no one reports her missing. Why?’

‘OK … Cause of death?’

‘Someone stove her head in with a length of metal pipe. Then dumped her in the water. Young says there’s evidence of abuse too. Probably long term.’

Poor little soul.

Logan puffed out his cheeks. Let the breath escape slowly. ‘Which brings us back to Neil Wood.’

‘How do we prove it? The sea’s not that forgiving with DNA and trace. We don’t even know where she went into the water. Official line from the pathologist is a child of our victim’s size and weight would have neutral buoyancy – she could have been dumped where she was found and the tide washed her out and back in again. Or she could have come down the coast on the current. Impossible to tell.’

‘That’s a big bag of no sodding help.’

The Inspector stuck one foot up on the windowsill, laced her fingers behind the back of her head. Stared out at the expanse of rolling blue. ‘I know you’re hacked off about what happened with Graham Stirling, but grumping about it isn’t helping. You want me to give you some time off?’

‘Yeah, because
that’s
going to look good when Professional Standards get here. Suspended without pay, pending investigation.’ He covered his face with his hands. Groaned. ‘Brilliant. I should have let Stephen Bisset die in the woods. I should’ve been a good little boy, stuck to procedure, and left him to die.’

‘No one’s saying that.’

‘No?’ Logan sat up. ‘That’s
exactly
what they’re saying. Do what you’re told, be a parochial plod, don’t think for yourself. We’re nothing but robots in peaked caps and itchy bloody trousers. No wonder they won’t trust us to run our own drugs investigation.’

She didn’t turn around. ‘Are you finished?’

‘Sorry, Guv.’

‘OK: it’s frustrating that we don’t get to pursue the drugs bust, but that’s the world we live in now. Deal with it.’

‘Not just the drugs, though, is it? There’s no point talking about the dead little girl, because they took that off us too. Every time we turn up something big, someone comes in and takes it off us.’ He knocked on the desk with his knuckles. ‘And at least
I
got a result! More than Young’s MIT can say.’

Outside the gulls drifted and screamed.

Waves made thin white lines against the shore.

A car drove by on the road below, music bellowing its distorted ‘Bmmmmtshhh-bmmmmtshhh-bmmmmtshhh’ as it passed. Fading into silence.

Inspector McGregor frowned at the ceiling. ‘So why
hasn’t
anyone reported her missing? Who doesn’t miss a dead little girl?’

Back to that again.

Fine.

‘Well …’ Logan frowned, dredging stuff up from the black, inky depths. ‘I had a case, years ago, back when I joined CID: unidentified dead wee girl. Turned out her mum was trafficked into prostitution from the Eastern Block. She was dead by the time the kid went missing, so no report.’

‘Not a lot of help.’

‘Our victim could be staying with friends or relatives while her parents are out of the country? Or … what if she
has
been reported missing, but it was a long time ago?’

‘Hmm …’ Inspector McGregor chewed on the inside of her cheek for a bit. ‘If it was you, why would you dress her up as a schoolgirl, then kill her?’

‘You mean, apart from the obvious? These people like little girls to look like little girls.’

‘True.’

He stared at the thick file of complaints on the Inspector’s desk. ‘But why kill her? Why not keep her and … keep doing what you’ve been doing?’

‘Accident maybe? Or maybe she tried to escape? And maybe she’s not dressed up, maybe she
is
a schoolgirl.’

Logan took out his notebook. ‘It’s term time. Even if she
was
staying with relatives, the school would know she wasn’t in class. Might be worth chasing up?’

Inspector McGregor nodded. ‘Well, the MIT have probably thought of that, but let them know anyway. And when you’ve finished writing up this morning’s raid, let’s have a chat about how you’re going to achieve your appraisal development actions. All that community liaison stuff.’

Wonderful.

‘Don’t suppose Young gave you a time of death?’

‘On the girl? Probably sometime over the weekend. Friday at a push. Water’s still pretty cold, even in May.’

‘What was the point of doing a post mortem if they couldn’t come up with anything useful?’

‘You’re a little ray of sunshine, Logan. Did anyone ever tell you that?’ The Inspector took her feet off the windowsill and swivelled back round to her desk. ‘Anything else?’

‘My Chiz – the one who gave us Klingon and Gerbil – when we picked her up she was in possession of Class A and B drugs, and a heap of stolen property too.’

‘I see.’ McGregor pulled a notepad out from beneath a pile of forms and opened it. ‘And this Covert Human Intelligence Source of yours, is she on the books?’

‘Not yet. She’s got a wee girl of her own. Doesn’t get to see her very often. If we do her for the drugs and stolen goods …’

‘You’ve promised her something?’ Inspector McGregor rummaged through the piles on her desk again. Then sat back and scowled at her notepad. ‘I don’t believe it. That’s three pens Hector’s had off me this week and it’s only Wednesday.’

‘I haven’t promised my Chiz anything. Mind you, today her intel netted us at least
eight grand’s
worth of heroin, so …?’

A sigh. ‘I’ll see what the Big Boss says. But if we’re keeping her on, we do it properly. She goes on the books with Aberdeen and everything is firewalled. Info comes through the Dedicated Source Unit – no more informal tip-offs.’

He stood. ‘Thanks, Guv.’

‘And phone Napier back!’

18
 

Logan finished the background section and moved onto the main body of the report of the raid on Klingon and Gerbil’s love-nest slash drug-den. Torturing the English language as only a trained police officer could.

He’d got to the bit where,

 

Four trained MOE specialists from the OSU removed the property’s front door by means of concussive force in order to gain entry. This was successful.

 

… when the Sergeants’ Office door thumped open and in walked Steel.

She had her fake cigarette in one hand and a mug in the other. ‘This where you been hiding, is it?’

He went back to his form. ‘Have you sorted someone to pick Helen Edwards up from the bus?’

‘I’m doing the questioning here, Disaster Boy.’ She dropped into the chair behind the opposing desk. ‘How could you screw up the Stirling case?’

‘I’m not asking you to fly to the moon, I’m asking you to go collect the person who might be able to identify
your
murder victim from the bus stop. How hard can it be?’

‘You got any idea how much crap I’m getting from the Great Pointy Hats because of you?’ She dumped her mug on the desk and dug a finger into her ear. As if she was searching for a brain. ‘Been on that phone for the last hour.’

‘Look, Helen Edwards might be your victim’s mother. The
least
you can do is—’

‘You’re in no position to lecture anyone, Laz – no’ after yesterday’s wee fiasco. Lucky they’ve no’ fired you yet, screwing up like that.’

‘I saved Stephen Bisset’s life!’ He glared at her. ‘You know what? Enough. I seized about a hundred grand’s worth of drugs today. How about you? How much success have
you
had lately?’

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