Выбрать главу

The difference with R2S was that the guys who invented it had been in the job and thankfully knew just what cops, forensics and photographers needed from it. One of the pair who had come up with it had actually been a photographer with Grampian Police and that probably explained why it ticked so many boxes for Winter. The system allowed him to drop photographs, 360-shots, information, 999 audio calls, whatever, onto the big picture and the whole lot was a joined-up signature that was accessible not only to Strathclyde cops, but all of the Scottish police forces and beyond.

It made Winter’s job a lot easier in the court room too. Instead of having to stand there like a spanner holding a glossy A3-sized photograph or handing it round the jury, the whole business was much slicker. The images could be displayed on a screen, enlarged or viewed in sections, turned upside down or back to front. They could be viewed from any other point in the crime scene, giving jurors the chance to see how it would actually have looked from wherever a witness was standing.

There were instances when his work was just too much for some juries to handle. Ironically, the more he liked a crime scene, the less other people seemed to want to look at it. So, in some instances, the R2S team would create a 3D virtual replica of a scene, or perhaps of a body, so it would be more palatable to the sensitive souls on the jury than the real thing. He was pretty sure that would happen in the unlikely event the suicide had to go before a jury, though a fatal accident inquiry was far more likely.

During an investigation, whenever any fresh bit of info became available — whether a new photo or witness statement, a name or place or a blood type — it flashed up to all users of the system. They were even alerted by text message to say that something new had been added. It was an obvious but long-awaited piece of common-sense thinking that meant all parties in an enquiry could communicate with each other.

The R2S for the Cambuslang suicide was split into two distinct parts: the platform from which the guy had stepped in front of the express, thereby leaving various bits of himself behind, and the street where the head was found. In both, Winter had first photographed the scene with the spherical camera, which produced the 360-degree image that every other bit of audio and visual evidence could be dropped onto. It meant he was now able to sit in the cold comfort of his Pitt Street office and pan round both scenes, taking in witnesses, tarmac and platform, disembodied head, severed hand and shoulder bone. He grudgingly admired Paul Burke’s picture of the foot that was still wearing a shoe and a sock despite being rudely separated from the rest of the leg.

It had only been a day since the suicide and they still didn’t have a name for the victim. He was tagged up as ‘Unidentified Male’ while the cops waited for someone to realise they had lost a husband or father or son. The portrait photo Winter had taken wasn’t exactly the kind of thing they could show on the six o’clock news.

His reverential study of the Cambuslang pics was rudely interrupted by his mobile phone ringing. It was Addison.

‘Awrite, wee man? How’s things in the boiler room of police investigations? I’m bored off my tits being stuck in here all day. You fancy a pint later?’

There were no medium-sized people in Glasgow; everyone was either ‘wee man’ or ‘big man’. Winter stood six feet tall but Addison’s extra four inches in height meant he was duly obliged to label his mate ‘wee man’. The two of them were best pals, something that didn’t please everyone in the Strathclyde cops but neither of them gave a monkey’s. They had shared many a night propping up the bar together or sitting beside each other at Celtic Park. Their shared but differing knowledge of police operations worked for both of them. They knew enough to be able to talk about each other’s work but they also knew when to shut up — at least Winter did. Sometimes Addison never knew when to stop and that had only got worse since he’d been off active duty.

However, Winter knew that having a drink with a grouchy Addison would be as nothing compared to how bad tempered he’d be the next time if he didn’t. The only way to keep the DI relatively happy these days was to go along with whatever he wanted. Anything for a quiet life, Winter thought.

‘Aye, sure. I’m just about finished up in here anyway.’

‘Music to my ears, wee man. Why don’t you haul your lazy arse over to the TSB and I’ll see you in there. Say, in an hour?’

The Station Bar in Cowcaddens was their favourite drinking haunt but it always rankled with Winter that it was round the corner from Addison’s station in Stewart Street and nowhere near as handy for him, as he was usually stuck in Pitt Street. Still, he’d long since stopped trying to win that argument as well. Anyway, they kept a good drop of Guinness and that overcame all objections.

When Winter got to Port Dundas Road and pushed his way through the main door of The Station Bar, he saw that Addison had unsurprisingly beaten him to it and was standing at the bar, pint in hand and half of it already gone. He saw Winter coming and tapped his glass, signalling to the barman to pull another two pints.

‘Let’s grab a seat,’ Addison said with a nod of his head to the tables in the rear lounge. ‘With all the time I’m spending parked on my arse, I’m losing the ability to stand for more than two minutes at a time.’

Addison slid his lanky frame behind a table in the corner, puffing out his cheeks and exhaling bitterly. Winter immediately sensed a rant coming on and tried to cut his pal off at the pass.

‘Have you seen the forecast for tonight? They’re saying we’re going to get heavy snow.’

‘Aye? Brilliant. Just what I bloody need: another reason for me to be cooped up inside. That probably means the game won’t be on tomorrow either. Fucking great. It’s not bad enough that I can’t do any proper police work but now I’m going to have to do without the football as well. This shit is really ripping my knitting, I’m telling you.’

So much for stopping him from going off on one, Winter thought.

‘I tell you, wee man, I don’t know how much longer I can put up with this,’ Addison continued. ‘Every other fucker is out there doing the fun stuff and I’m playing at strategy planning with jumped up admin assistants and wet nursing cops who couldn’t lace my boots when it comes to proper police work.’

Addison’s rant was interrupted by the beaming face of a grey-haired lady, who thrust both it and a rattling can between the two men. She looked at Addison without a response so she shook the can once more.

‘For a Christmas party for disadvantaged children,’ she announced cheerily.

Addison’s face didn’t crack. ‘Let me see your ID.’

The woman’s smile fell as she reached, embarrassed, into her bag and produced a laminated card that proved she was indeed genuine.

‘Okay,’ Addison nodded, still not putting his hand in his pocket. ‘I didn’t say I was going to give anything, I just wanted to check you weren’t at it.’

‘Here.’ Winter dropped a couple of pound coins in the woman’s tin and smiled apologetically for his friend.

‘I hate bloody Christmas,’ Addison muttered.

‘So you’ve said a thousand times.’

‘Aye, and here’s another thing. You know that Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer? See how the other reindeer laugh and call him names, right? And then when he leads Santa’s sleigh, they all want to be his pal? Well, if I was Rudolph, I’d have told them to fuck right off.’

Winter knew it was going to be a long session. He began to switch off and let the tirade flow over him, becoming engrossed not for the first time with the ugly yet beautiful scar visible under Addison’s hairline: the sniper’s bullet had nearly torn his head off his shoulders; it had left a thick, jagged and permanent reminder.