Gallows Lane (Inspector Devlin Mystery 2) (18 page)

I had spent most of that afternoon reinterpreting over and over what Costello had said. Had he meant to suggest that evidence
might
be found? Or that evidence
should
be found?

I told Debs at eight that I was going straight to Club Manhattan with Rebecca Purdy. I almost told her what I was actually planning on doing; but then stopped. I knew that she’d advise me against it, that she’d say it was wrong. And I didn’t want to hear her say it because I’d have to agree with her.

I also contrasted my proposed behaviour with what Patterson had done. He had planted evidence for his own promotion. What I was doing was not for promotion but to catch someone who had to be caught. Because that was what justice demanded, I told myself. I cut short my internal monologue before the issues of justice became too hazy.

I parked about a quarter of a mile short of Decko’s house and cut in through the fields bordering it. It took me less than two minutes to reach the perimeter of Decko’s land. His property was bounded by a high drystone wall, which probably cost the equivalent of my annual wages. With more difficulty than I anticipated, I clambered over the wall and dropped down among the trees which lined the driveway.

Decko’s house was huge, occupying a good three-acre site; the house itself squatted in the centre, lit like fairyland, its windows thrown open to the night air. Even from this distance I could tell Decko was entertaining. From his back garden I could hear a party in progress, the dull thudding of something approximating music causing the very ground to shudder seismically. Above the monotony of the thudding and the shouting of a rapper who sounded like he’d been shot, the shrill shrieks of women and drunken cheers of men rose in unison. I wanted desperately to skirt the house and come round the back to see who was there. More importantly, I wanted to do what I had come here to do and get out before Decko or his cronies spotted me.

My original plan had been to leave Kerr’s religious tract somewhere on Decko’s property, as evidence that he had been here – something to connect him with Decko. To be honest, I hadn’t really thought it through too clearly. I scanned the front of the house to make sure I wasn’t being watched. It was then that I noticed Decko’s car parked to the side of the house nearest me. This prompted me to be a little more creative. A sheet of paper found lying in someone’s driveway doesn’t prove anything; the same piece of evidence found in their car is a little harder to explain. Though, of course, this would only work if Decko’s car was unlocked. Which it wasn’t. But his passenger window had been left halfway down, presumably because of the heat.

Keeping to the shadows, and painfully aware that, on the passenger side, I was exposed to the house, I reached into the car and tucked the leaflet into the pocket of the passenger seat, wincing with each movement, in case the car was alarmed. Then I figured that the open window would have disabled the alarm. Once finished, I slipped back into the shadows again and kept moving until I was out on the roadway and nearing my own car.

It was as easy as that. That one innocuous action, placing a single sheet of paper in someone else’s car, was all that I needed to link Decko O’Kane with James Kerr and give us reasonable cause to take a DNA sample for comparison with that found under Kerr’s fingernails.

And that same innocuous action was all that was needed to make my career – and so much more – implode, if it all went wrong.

*

Club Manhattan was heaving with people by the time I arrived. I noticed a number of officers whom I recognized making their way through the crowds, among them Helen Gorman, out of uniform and dressed for the occasion. Her brown hair was fashioned in a bob, her figure accentuated by a tight striped T-shirt. When she saw me she waved. I made my way over to her, having to shout to be heard.

‘How’s things?’

She gave me the thumbs up and pointed towards the bar. I followed her over.

‘Would you like a drink, sir?’ she asked.

‘Probably best not to on duty, Helen,’ I said.

‘I’m not on duty,’ she replied, then ordered me a Coke. The barman from my previous visit took the order, flashed me an insincere smile and headed off in search of our drinks.

Helen looked younger than she seemed in the station. Her eyes were bright and clear, her skin supple and toned, her mouth thin-lipped. She brushed a strand of her hair from her face and tucked it behind her ear, though it immediately fell back again.

‘I think I have something with the break-in,’ she stated, when her beer had arrived.

‘Really?’ I said.

She nodded a little too vigorously. ‘Our thief wore size nine Gosto trainers,’ she said, punctuating the sentence with a final sharp nod of her head, as though that piece of information in itself was enough to crack the case.

‘And?’ I asked, expecting more.

She widened her eyes slightly, as if to encourage me to share her excitement. I realized I was being a little unsupportive.

‘That’s great, Helen,’ I said, smiling as sincerely as I could. ‘How did you find that out?’

She answered me just as the music in the club got louder. I shrugged my shoulders to indicate I hadn’t caught what she said.

She leaned towards me, her hand on my chest, the skin of her cheek lightly touching mine. As she spoke, her lips, wet and cold with her beer, continually brushed against the skin of my ear, making me shiver involuntarily. ‘I went round every shoe shop until someone found a match with the photo you took,’ she said.

I pulled back a little from her, nodding. ‘That’s great work, Helen. Harkin’s are lucky you’re handling this for them. I don’t think anyone else would have put so much energy into it.’

She leaned towards me again and, when she spoke, her voice seemed to have deepened a little.

‘I want to do well, sir. Make a name for myself. You know?’

‘I’m sure you will, Helen,’ I said, speaking close to her ear. The line of her neck was smooth, her skin pale and lightly perfumed. I tried to pull away from her again, but she held on to my shirt front as she continued.

‘I was glad it was you, in the office,’ she said. I pulled back from her, my hands raised in a gesture of surrender. She blurted out a laugh. ‘Not like that! I heard you’re going to be the next Super. I wanted to work with you.’

‘Helen,’ I said, genuinely. ‘I’ve enjoyed working with you. But I doubt I’ll be the next Super. Someone has misinformed you.’

She stared at me, her eyes glazing slightly, her smile light. She was nodding her head as I spoke and continued to do so for several seconds after I had stopped, as if unaware that I had finished. I guessed that she couldn’t actually hear what I was saying; talking this over with her in the bar might not have been such a good idea.

‘Would you like a dance?’ she asked, already moving in time with the music, linking my arm in hers.

‘Best not to, Helen; I’m a little old for this place,’ I said, feeling flustered. I was aware of several of the other Garda officers glancing over, smiling.

Finally I caught sight of Rebecca Purdy, accompanied by a female officer. I excused myself from Helen on the grounds that Costello had asked me to check on progress with the girl. Helen mocked a petted lip, then backed on to the dance floor.

Rebecca Purdy looked her age this time. She seemed tiny among the officers flanking her, her confidence shattered. Her shoulders were stooped, her head bowed slightly, perhaps to hide the yellowish and purple bruises her cosmetics had failed to conceal.

‘Anything?’ I asked her, scanning the room as we spoke.

‘Nothing,’ she said. ‘I saw some people I know . . .’ She cleared her throat and then continued. ‘I saw some boys I recognized before, but no one from that night.’

Whoever the boys were, they were giving her a wide berth this evening and would, I suspected, for many evenings to come.

‘It’s hard to tell, though. There are so many people here. I can’t really see anything.’

‘I know someone who might help us with that,’ I said.

Jack Thompson was perfectly happy to allow us the use of his office and turned on the CCTV monitors. While Rebecca flicked between scenes, he asked her how she was feeling, and whether he could get her anything, before moving on to the question of how she had got into the club that night. He wanted to make sure, he explained, that someone so young would not gain entry again.

Rebecca blushed as he spoke. Her friends wouldn’t be too happy about losing their method of admission. The married bouncer would likely lose his job too, although it was no more than he deserved.

‘I had fake ID,’ she said.

Thompson raised his arms in a semi-shrug. ‘What can I do?’

‘I’d start by retraining your door staff,’ I suggested. ‘And reminding them of the age of consent, for one.’

Thompson looked at me quizzically, but in an exaggerated fashion, and I suspected that he already knew of his bouncer’s extra-marital proclivities.

The conversation was cut short by Rebecca, bouncing in her seat, pointing at the screen. ‘It’s gone,’ she cried. ‘I think I saw him, but it’s gone. He’s bald.’

The images on the screen had changed and Thompson had to work with the monitor controls to retrieve the previous camera feed.

‘The toilets,’ he said. ‘The corridor of the toilets.’

I ran out of the office and out on to the dance floor, shouting for some of the other officers to follow.

By the time I made it to the Gents there was only a young man in there, combing his hair in the mirror.

‘Was a bald man in here?’ I asked.

The youth stared at me in surprise.

I repeated the question, a little more forcefully, adding that I was a Guard.

‘He just left,’ he said.

‘Wait here,’ I shouted, then went back out, scanning the dance floor. Two fellow officers came over. ‘We’re looking for a bald guy,’ I said. ‘Needs to be big, needs to have a tattoo.’

We split and moved through the crowd. The heat and the mass of bodies pressing against me brought sweat to my forehead and made me feel nauseous – a sensation not helped by the insistent thudding of the music and the flashing lights. I could feel my breath quickening and I struggled to get air. For a second I felt strange, divided from the rest of the room, as if peering through a sheet of glass at the people swaying and shifting in front of me. I felt off balance, dizzy.

Better not to stop, I told myself, and kept pushing my way through, trying to examine the men in the crowd as I went.

I saw one bald man dancing near the edge of the floor. His build, though, was wrong, his arms bony, their musculature under-developed, and his skin was tattoo free. A second possibility stood near the bar. Again, though his head was shaved, he was too thin. One of the other Guards waved across the dance floor at me and pointed towards the far wall. Then I saw our man, standing at the fire exit, where people gathered to smoke. By the time I registered him, he had turned from me and was making his way past the smokers. I did not see his face, though he must have recognized mine.

I shoved my way over to the exit, which led out to a side alley and eventually to the car park. The crowd seemed to thicken around me, pushing and jostling, like cattle, towards the promise of fresh air. When I brushed past one couple, the girl shrieked and her male partner grabbed at my arm and shouted something unintelligible. Finally, I made it out through the doorway.

‘Which way did he go?’ I shouted to the smokers standing around, but most of them were too drunk or stoned to notice or care. One girl pointed up the alley, towards the car park. I glanced in the opposite direction which seemed to lead out on to the main road.

I turned and jogged up the dark alley as the girl had suggested, my chest heaving, the warm night air burning my lungs. I really needed to stop smoking. After a couple of hundred yards I had to stop and lean against the gable wall of the building to my right to catch my breath. I bent double, wheezing, my lungs feeling like they would explode. That sensation returned, as if the alley had lengthened or altered in some other way. I looked at my hands and they seemed to belong to someone else.

‘Fuck,’ I thought. My stomach churned and I thought I would be sick. I leaned my arms on my knees for support as I tried to steady myself, my breath catching in my throat.

Then I heard the screech of brakes as a car turned in from the car park, its headlights dazzling me as they raked across the mouth of the alley. Several beer crates stacked against the wall careered off the car’s bonnet as it sped towards me. I had nowhere to go, nothing to hide behind. I squeezed myself against the wall just as the car passed me, cracking my leg. As it pulled out on to the road, I was able to see the model and colour – a silver BMW coupé. But I had been unable to see the registration plate in the glare of the lights, nor did I get a good look at the driver as he’d passed, other than his hand and arm clamped on the wheel, and a baseball cap which obscured his face.

*

A barman brought me a cup of tea while I sat in Thompson’s office, looking back over the security footage, hoping to see my assailant. The best image was the one Rebecca had spotted, of the man walking towards the toilets. It confirmed that he was the man I had chased, but wasn’t clear enough for us to make an identification.

I was feeling fairly shitty about the whole thing until I was reminded that we had at least an eye witness when one of the Garda officers from outside came in and said, ‘There’s a boy in the toilets wondering if he can leave now?’

‘Bring him in,’ I said.

The ‘boy’, it transpired, was actually in his thirties and was called David Headley. He was remarkably lucid and sober, which he explained was due to his being designated driver. ‘It’s my wife’s birthday,’ he said. ‘She still insists on coming to places like this.’ He winced slightly and nodded at Jack Thompson. ‘No offence.’

‘None taken,’ Thompson replied. ‘I only come here because I work here.’

‘Anything you can tell us about the bald man in the toilets?’ I asked.

‘He didn’t wash his hands,’ Headley said, smiling at his attempt at levity. ‘I didn’t really see his face. He stood beside me at the urinals. Kind of intimidated me. I couldn’t pee when he was standing there. Then you panic that he thinks you don’t really have to pee, you just like standing beside men at the urinal. I kept my head down, I’m afraid. Didn’t see much.’ He blushed slightly as he spoke.

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