"Aw, she's chust the wee bit o' a thing. Needs building up. Will you check up on Tommy Jarret for me, Hamish?"
"I'll do it now," said Hamish. "Won't be a minute. I've got a phone in the car, although thae mobiles can be a pain. The number of places in the Highlands where they won't work!"
He went out to the police Land Rover and picked up his mobile phone and dialled police headquarters in Strathbane and got through to Jenny McSween, nicknamed the Keeper of the Records.
"Wait a minute, Hamish," said Jenny. "I'll just feed that name into the computer."
Hamish leaned against the side of the Land Rover and waited, enjoying the feel of the sun on his face. The three holiday chalets were hidden behind screens of birch trees to give the occupants privacy. Through the flickering leaves of birch he could see Felicity's pale face at a window.
Then Jenny's voice came on the phone. "Thomas Jarret, arrested last year, for possession of ecstasy and cannabis. Got off a pushing charge. Said they were for his own use and since only small amounts were found, he got away with it. Arresting detective, Jimmy Anderson, thinks he was pushing but couldn't make anything stick. Thomas Jarret was or is a heroin addict, you see."
"I see," said Hamish bleakly. "Thanks, Jenny."
He went back into the croft house and told Parry what he had learned.
"I'll haff that cheil out on his ear," growled Parry. "I cannae thole drugs."
"Let's go and have a word with him," said Hamish. "He may be reformed. I'm all for giving folks a break."
Parry, his face grim, walked ahead of Hamish and towards one of the chalets. He knocked at the door. "Mr. Jarret, we'll chust be having a wee word wi' ye."
The door opened and a pleasant-looking young man stood there. He had a mop of curly brown hair and brown eyes in a tanned face. Those blinked rapidly when he saw Hamish's uniform.
"Can we come in?" asked Hamish.
"Y-yes."
He backed away into the chalet living room. A word processor was on a table by the window, surrounded with piles of manuscript.
"Sit down," said Tommy nervously.
"I'll get straight to the point," said Hamish, sitting down and taking off his peaked cap and then twisting it round and round in his hands. "You were arrested for possession of drugs. The arresting detective was convinced you were pushing."
"I've been clean for six months. Honest," pleaded Tommy. "And I wasn't pushing. I went to a rehab in Strathbane. Ask anyone. In fact, I'm writing a book about my experience with drugs to warn other people what it's like."
"Why were you found in possession of ecstasy and cannabis when you were a heroin addict?" asked Hamish.
Tommy gave a rueful smile. "If you can't get your drug of choice, you'll go for anything." He rolled up his shirtsleeves. "Look, no track marks, and Mr. McSporran here will tell you he's never seen me other than sober."
"It iss not the drink I'm worried about," said Parry.
"It's therapy-speak," explained Hamish. "Sober means he hasn't taken any mood-altering chemical. Am I right, Tommy?"
"Yes, I never even drink booze now. Please give me a chance," said Tommy earnestly. "You know I haven't been any trouble, Mr. McSporran, and I pay my rent on time."
"Aye, that's right," said Parry reluctantly.
Hamish made up his mind. "I'd let him be for the moment, Parry. I believe what he says."
Outside in the sunlight, Parry said, "You seem mighty sure of yourself, Hamish."
"Like I said, I'm all for giving folks a chance. He seems a nice fellow to me. Come on, Parry. Strathbane s become a sink o' iniquity. I've seen a lot of good young people wrecked. This one seems to have pulled himself together."
"I s'pose," said Parry. "He's no trouble. Let's hope your judgement is right, Hamish Macbeth."
"Och, I am never wrong," said Hamish with simple Highland vanity.
But when he had returned to Lochdubh and locked his hens away for the night, Hamish went into the police station office and phoned Detective Jimmy Anderson.
"Tommy Jarret?" said Jimmy in answer to Hamish's query. "I mind him. Got away with possession and up in front of a lenient sheriff. Got nothing more than a stay in a rehab and a hundred days' community service."
"Wait a bit," said Hamish. "He was a heroin addict?"
"Aye."
"That's a pretty expensive drug to be taking in the Highlands of Scotland. Where did he get the money?"
"Some aunt of his left him money, seems to be true. Respectable parents. Well off. Father a bank manager. Neat bungalow outside Strathbane, member of the Rotary Club, polishes the car on Sunday, get the picture? So he can afford heroin. I tell you another thing that made me mad. Couldn't get out of him where he got his supply from. I mean, he's lucky to be alive."
"Why's that?"
"I believe there's a lot of adulterated stuff around and some bastard at the Three Bells pub down at the old docks was pushing talcum powder. The street price of heroin in Aberdeen was a hundred pounds per gram. Why are you asking about Tommy Jarret?"
"The name cropped up," said Hamish.
"Meaning the wee bastards in your parish. I don't trust any o' thae junkies."
"Lot of drugs in Strathbane?" asked Hamish.
"Aye, it's a plague. It's the new motorways. We're no longer cut off up here so they zoom up the motorways from Glasgow and Manchester. The drug barons make money and more young people die every year."
"What would happen, I wonder," mused Hamish, "if the stuff were legalised? I mean, there would be controls on the quality of the stuff and all the drug barons and drug cartels would be out of business."
"Whit! It's statements like that which explain why you're a copper and I'm a detective. That's a load of dangerous rubbish you're talking, Hamish."
"Just thought I would ask," said Hamish meekly.
He rang off and then changed into his civilian clothes and went out for a stroll along the waterfront. He didn't mind at all being a mere village copper. Hamish Macbeth had sidestepped promotion to Strathbane several times. The waters of Lochdubh lay placid under a pale sky, with only the ripples from a porpoise to disturb the calm surface. The violent world of cities such as Strathbane seemed pleasingly remote.
"Dreaming, Hamish?"
Hamish, who had been leaning against the harbour wall, turned and found Dr. Brodie's wife, Angela, surveying him with amusement.
"I was thinking of pretty much nothing," said Hamish. "Except maybe drugs."
"I don't think we've got any cases in Lochdubh."
"Good."
She leaned against the harbour wall beside him and he turned back and rested his arms against the rough stone, still warm from the day's sunshine.
"Why do people take drugs, Angela?"
"Because they like the effect. You should know a simple thing like that, Hamish. Then in the young, it's bad and exciting."
"But all those warnings," protested Hamish. "All those kids dying from ecstasy pills."
"Addicts never think it'll happen to them. And the young feel immortal anyway."
"What if it were legalised?"
"I don't know. I don't think so. The illegality itself is a deterrent. Can you imagine if young people, children maybe, had unlimited access to LSD?"
"You're right," said Hamish with a sigh. "What's the solution?"
"Everyone starts refusing?"
"I cannae envisage that."
"It could happen. Just become unfashionable. Like smoking. You're having a quiet time these days, Hamish."
"Long may it last. I wouldnae like to see another murder in Lochdubh."
"There may be one shortly."
"Who? What?"
"Nessie and Jessie Currie are joint chairwomen of the Mothers' Union at the church this year."
"Oh, dear." Jessie and Nessie were middle-aged twin sisters, both unmarried.
"The others are complaining it's like being run by the Gestapo."
"Can't they vote them out?"
"Not for another year."
"What are they doing that's so bad?"
"Well, at the cake sale, they criticised the quality of the baking and reduced little Mrs. McWhirter to tears for one. Then they have lately become obsessed with germs and the church hall has to be regularly scrubbed. They have pinned up a cleaning rota and all women must remove their shoes before entering the hall."