Slaughter's Hound (Harry Rigby Mystery) (38 page)

But even if it all meant nothing I still wasn’t entitled to put myself away. Didn’t have the right. I could point the finger at Finn or Saoirse Hamilton or Gillick or anyone else I chose, it didn’t change the fact that it was my fault Ben was dead. And the very least I owed him was to live with that, to suffer that torment.

The Grange was burning so hard now my skin felt singed. The roar of the flames so loud that it took me a second or two to realise the phone was ringing.

Herb.

‘Yeah?’

‘Harry? Where are you?’

‘You don’t want to know.’

‘Listen, Harry.’ Maybe my hearing was still off from my eardrums being blasted by the .38, or maybe it was the popping and crackling from the house. But he sounded different,
something
choking his throat. ‘Dee rang, there’s been a development with Ben.’

A surge of irrational hope. ‘Yeah?’

‘Yeah. She said, uh, fair warning, she’s filing charges against you, reckless endangerment, some shit like that.’

‘Aye, right.’

‘Harry, maybe you should, y’know, take off.’

‘Yeah, maybe.’

‘If you need anything, let me know. I can bring it anywhere.’

‘Appreciate that, Herb. I’ll be in touch.’

I hung up and heard her coming, the angry whine of an engine in reverse, then the crunch of gravel as she emerged from the trees. A gear-change, and the Rav4 came roaring around the fountain, braking hard, the tyres spitting stones.

The .38 like an anchor in my hand.

I thought she might come on raging about how someone had parked a Saab across the road, boxed her in. Instead she simply opened the door and stepped out onto the gravel.

She was her mother’s daughter, alright.

The ice-blue eyes, the iron will. The SIG pointing at my chest, both hands braced on the butt.

‘Just put it down,’ she said softly. ‘Just let it go.’

The .38 hit the grass with a muffled clunk.

She’d played me from the start. Letting me think she was a crazy, scared kid. Because we’ve all seen the same movies, haven’t we? Read the same books.

Grainne Hamilton was seventeen going on seventy and about as crazy scared as a marble slab.

Not once did she glance at the blazing house.

‘I can’t get the Saab started,’ she said. ‘So let’s go. You drive.’

I got in. She crammed herself back against the passenger door, the SIG pointed at my ribs.

We drove into the forest. She hadn’t killed anyone yet and I didn’t know if she had what it took to go that far. So I asked, just to gauge where she was, when she’d realised Finn and Saoirse were ripping off her trust fund to start all over again in Cyprus.

‘Just drive,’ she said.

‘Was Maria in on it?’

‘Maria, Jesus.’ She shook her head. ‘All she had to do was play the game, sit tight, marry Finn when the time was right.’

‘Which’d net him a Cypriot passport.’

‘Except she couldn’t help herself. Started screwing around with you. Thinking she’d teach Finn a lesson.’

‘And then she gets pregnant.’

She shrugged. ‘He couldn’t be told. Couldn’t go without
taking
you out too.’

‘He was here all along,’ I said, ‘wasn’t he?’

She nodded. ‘In the boatshed, yeah. I thought, yesterday morning, you’d worked it out. When you went for a stroll down to the cove.’

‘Which is why you started on about the will, Finn making changes to the trust fund. Just to see how much I knew.’

‘Pull in here,’ she said. The Saab looming large in the
headlights
. I eased the Rav4 to a halt, careful not to make any jerky movements. ‘Okay,’ she said, ‘get it out of the way.’

I got out and went around to the Saab, sat into the driver’s seat. She came and stood by the driver’s off-side, the SIG still braced. I reached under the dash, found the wires. A couple of sparks, then a low hum. I gave the accelerator a nudge, let the engine roar.

‘Now get it off the road,’ she said.

I put the Saab in reverse, went bumping down into the
undergrowth
.

She waited on the verge of the road as I climbed back up the incline. When I was close enough so she couldn’t miss, she said, ‘Far enough. Down.’

Not so much as quiver in those delicate hands. I went down on one knee, then the other.

‘Grainne,’ I said, ‘think it through. Right now you’re walking away clean. You want to give them a reason to hunt you down?’

She took it onboard, a faint glitter in the ice-blue eyes. Hunkered down so that we were on the same eye-level, the SIG in one hand now, resting on her knee.

‘And you’ll do what?’ she said. ‘I mean, when the cops ask you what happened here, what’ll you say?’

‘I won’t even be here. I’ll be gone.’

‘Chasing Maria?’

‘There’s a good chance the kid is mine.’

‘And you wouldn’t be even slightly interested in the money.’

Seventeen years old and neither woman nor girl nor fully human, but flesh drawn tight over the machinery of greed.

A survivor, this one. She’d do okay.

‘I’ll do you a deal,’ I said. ‘I find you Maria and you get the money. She has Finn’s flash-drive, the codes.’

She nodded slowly, pursed her lips. ‘Y’know,’ she said, ‘I’d probably be just as quick tracking her down myself.’ Then squeezed the trigger.

Not a knee-capping, exactly. She wasn’t all that precise. But she was so close she couldn’t miss and the round punched through my thigh.

No pain at first, just the shock of the impact sending me into convulsions as I keeled over into the dead leaves. I was vaguely aware of her standing up and dropping the gun, swearing as she cradled her wrist. Then a spurt of flame and pain bolted through my thigh, set my bones on fire. Screaming made it worse, every nerve scraped raw. And no one to hear anyway, not after the drone of the engine finally faded away.

I lay still in the leaves with my eyes closed and teeth clenched, trying not to breathe. After a while the pain dulled and I began to get cold. I heard a whoo-whoo, the sound faint, its tone
curious
. Then the shakes started, just a shiver at first, but soon I was shuddering all over. Numb below the waist and faintly damp, the artery pulsing slow now, draining out.

This motionless ease, measure me by

It could have been minutes or hours. No way to know.

Just as it all started to fade away, the world bleeding dark from the edges in, I had one last glimpse of a shadowy Ben, those hopeful eyes peering up from under his fringe, but when I reached to brush the hair from his eyes I found he had no eyes, no features at all save a raw hole of a mouth twisted into a leer and it was Gonzo, yes, Gonz waiting for me and saying put it down, just let it go, you can’t go on, you’ll go on, and the leaves faintly rustling, whispering, yes, I will, yes, yes

Acknowledgments
 
 

My deepest thanks, as always, to the good people at Liberties Press: my editor, Daniel Bolger; PR gurus Caroline Lambe and Alice Dawson; and publisher Sean O’Keefe.

I owe a great debt to Ed O’Loughlin, for taking the time to read this story and bring to it an eye as sharp as his opinion is blunt.

As always, John McFetridge and Adrian McKinty have provided sterling support from opposite ends of the planet. The borderless Peter Rozovsky, too, went far beyond conventional kindness.

Much of what is good in this book belongs to them; all of its failings are mine.

Thanks too to my agent, Allan Guthrie of Jenny Brown Associates, an endless source of advice and support.

I will always be grateful to my parents, Harry and Kathleen Burke, for making books part of the furniture as I was growing up.

I am hugely grateful to my favourite genius, Ken Griffin, for the use of the Rollerskate Skinny lyrics quoted in the book.

As for the Three Regular Readers of my blog, Crime Always Pays, this book would not have been written without their invisible presence at my shoulder, urging me on. Unfortunately, I can never get back the time I stole away from my wonderful wife and daughter, Aileen and Lily, in order to write this book. Hopefully the inevitable fame and riches to follow will be some compensation.

Oh, and Lily? Perhaps next time I’ll write a book that isn’t broken, with pictures to go along with its words … 

About the Author
 
 

Declan Burke
has published four novels to date:
Eightball Boogie
(2003),
The Big
O (2007),
Absolute Zero Cool
(2011) and
Slaughter’s Hound
(2012).
Absolute Zero Cool
was shortlisted in the crime fiction section for the Irish Book Awards 2011, and received the Goldsboro/Crimefest ‘Last Laugh’ Award for Best Humorous Crime Novel in 2012. He is the editor of
Down These Green Streets: Irish Crime Writing in the 21st Century
(2011), and the co-editor, with John Connolly, of
Books to Die For
(2012). He hosts a website dedicated to Irish crime fiction called Crime Always Pays. Declan lives in Wicklow with his wife and daughter, where he is not allowed to own a cat, or be owned by one.

Copyright
 
 

First published in 2012 by
Liberties Press
7 Rathfarnham Road | Terenure | Dublin 6W
Tel: +353 (1) 405 5701
www.libertiespress.com | [email protected]

 

Trade enquiries to Gill & Macmillan Distribution
Hume Avenue | Park West | Dublin 12
T: +353 (1) 500 9534 | F: +353 (1) 500 9595 | E: [email protected]

 

Distributed in the UK by
Turnaround Publisher Services
Unit 3 | Olympia Trading Estate | Coburg Road | London N22 6TZ
T: +44 (0) 20 8829 3000 | E: [email protected]

 

Distributed in the United States by
Dufour Editions | PO Box 7 | Chester Springs | Pennsylvania 19425

 

Copyright © Declan Burke, 2012
The author asserts his moral rights.

 

eBook ISBN: 978–1–907593–64–2
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

 

A CIP record for this title is available from the British Library.

 

Cover design by Fidelma Slattery
Internal design by Liberties Press

 

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated, without the publisher’s prior consent, in any form other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent publisher. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or storage in any information or retrieval system, without the prior permission of the publisher in writing.

 

The publishers gratefully acknowledge financial assistance from the Arts Council.

 

All characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

 

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