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“I can’t wait long.”

“It’s just a bowl of soup.”

He was only having soup. She had never known anyone sit down to soup as a meal. Soup was a watery precursor to a meal, a poor man’s filler to stop the children eating all the potatoes. She looked at Terry with renewed admiration. He seemed impossibly sophisticated.

He did the reticent smile again, and she realized that he was working her. She wondered if other women had weaknesses for bonny men. They never seemed to talk about it.

“Did I hear that you were related to someone in the case?”

Now would be a good time to mention her fiancé, but she wasn’t sure if she still had one. “How would I know what you’ve heard? We’ve never spoken to each other before.”

“I know, and it’s a damn shame,” he said, and made her smile.

The waitress came straight back over with two mugs of tangy brown tea and his soup. Terry used his spoon, scooping the soup away from himself, impeccably mannered.

“I wanted to ask if we could work together on the article about the previous case.”

“It’s my idea, why would I want you to work on it with me?”

“Well, I thought about that: I could help you write it up. If you want to move up from the bench you’d want Farquarson to use a substantial chunk of your unaltered copy. Otherwise they’ll just think you’re a researcher. It’s harder than you think, and I’ve got experience of writing long articles.”

She knew he was exaggerating his experience a bit. She’d taken his copy to the print room once or twice and read it on the stairs. It was good, but it wasn’t that good. Still, he would be able to organize the ideas at least, show her how to get from one paragraph to another and keep herself out of it. It was a chance to get her name on something.

“I could be Samantha, your lovely assistant.” He patted his hair. “Add a bit of glamour to the act.”

Paddy smiled despite herself. Terry was arrogant. She saw him allying himself with certain people in the newsroom, the smart guys who picked the right stories and knew what was going on. He was blatantly ambitious, eager to make a space for himself in the world. If he kissed a girl he wouldn’t be prudish about it. He wouldn’t do self-effacing voluntary work with the poor or refuse to have sex until his wedding night. He was the anti-Sean.

“I know where one of the boys lives. I’ve been to his house.”

“So, he is a relative?”

Paddy didn’t want to mention Sean to him. She wanted to keep them separate. “A distant relative.”

“Is that why you’re interested in the case?”

“No, I’m interested because the police are making a lot of jumps. The boys disappeared for hours. Then they took the baby past Barnhill, which is where they live. It’s got acres of overgrown waste ground, but they took him miles away to Steps. Then, supposedly, they crossed over a live rail, did the deed, and got a train back into town, but they weren’t seen on the train or in the swing park or walking back to Barnhill. They could have been helicoptered in for all anyone knows.”

“They were seen, on the train. A witness came forward last Friday.”

Her heart sank a little. “Witnesses can be wrong.”

“This seems pretty solid. It’s an old woman. She’s not an attention seeker. The police must be pretty sure or they wouldn’t be telling anyone about her.”

“Aye, well.” Paddy sipped her tea. “Just because they’re sure…”

They watched the echoes of cars and buses blur past the steamed-up window. Paddy wanted to tell him about Abraham Ross, how the police made sure he picked Meehan out of a lineup. Mr. Ross was certain Meehan was the man. He fainted at the lineup he was so sure, but then he changed his mind before the trial. Witnesses could be swayed, they could change their minds. The woman might be an idiot.

“I’ve got a car,” Terry said suddenly, hesitating because it sounded as if he was boasting.

They looked at each other and laughed.

“Good for you,” said Paddy. “I can eat my own weight in boiled eggs.”

She had meant it half as a reference to her miracle diet, half as a hollow boast. Terry didn’t understand either but found it terribly funny, so funny he lost his tentative smile and opened wide, laughing loudly. For a first conversation with the object of a month-long crush, it was going incredibly well.

“No,” he said. “I wasn’t just boasting about the car. I meant, d’you want to come to Barnhill with me and have a look? I’m busy tomorrow, but we could go on Friday after work.”

She hesitated. Valentine’s Day fell on the Saturday, and she would want to stay in on Friday waiting for Sean’s reconciliatory call.

“I could do with the protection,” he continued. “It’s a bit rough up there, and I’m a lover, not a fighter.”

It was the first time Paddy had ever heard a Glaswegian man admit openly that he couldn’t beat anyone in a fight at any time.

“You’ll need protection. It’s a bit grim up there. Could you make it Saturday afternoon instead?”

“Excelente,” Terry said, toasting her with his mug. “If we work well together, maybe we could do a couple of paragraphs about the hunger strikers’ march as well.” The march was due to take place on Saturday, and everyone in Glasgow knew there was going to be trouble. If they had been talking to each other, Trisha would have forbidden her to go. “You could bring your Papish eyes and tell me what you see.”

“How do you know I’m a Pape?”

“Is Patricia Meehan your undercover name?”

“No, my undercover name’s Patricia Elizabeth Mary Magdalene Meehan.”

He grinned. “Mary Magdalene?”

“My confirmation name,” she explained. “You get to choose a saint you like or want to emulate.”

“You wanted to emulate a prostitute?”

She shook her head. “I didn’t know what she did for a living. She was the only woman with a job.”

They smiled at each other.

“Saturday’s fine.”

“During the day,” she said, in case he thought she meant anything by it.

“Great,” he said.

She made up an elaborate lie: she would meet him, but she had urgent business in town on Saturday and could only meet him at the far end of King Street, at a bus stop that was far enough away from the paper to ensure they wouldn’t be seen together. Terry flashed his smile at the table as she made the arrangement, knowing why she was doing it. Even the suspicion of spending free time with a man from the paper would be tantamount to civil death.

Outside the café the harsh light was bright. The lunchtime buses rattled past, full of mums with young kids and students from the poly. Paddy looked up the quiet road and back at the café. It was in a siding to a main road, and it didn’t have a hanging sign. It was well hidden from passersby. She only knew about it because of the time Caroline was in Rotten Row having Baby Con.

“How did you find me up here?” she asked.

“You come here a lot, don’t you? I’ve seen you.”

The words hung between them, as shocking as an inadvertent kiss on the lips, and Terry seemed suddenly flustered.

He punched her arm. “See you later, then,” he said, and spun around, heading down the hill like an angry speed walker.

TWENTY-FIVE . DR. PETE’S CONDITION

I

The sun forgot to rise on Thursday. Outside the newsroom windows the city was stuck in perpetual twilight, the sky darkened by a bank of thick black cloud. Every light in the newsroom blazed bright. It was two in the afternoon, but it felt like a busy midnight shift, as if some great catastrophe had occurred in the dead of night, causing them all to be called back in to draw up a fresh edition.

Paddy was looking for Dr. Pete to ask him about Thomas Dempsie. She had been all over the building, buzzing about on errands, excelling herself by doing three canteen runs in fifteen minutes. Keck had warned her to slow down. Pete was nowhere, and the pack of early-shift workers were lawless without him, laughing at underlings and drinking at their desks in full view of Father Richards and the editors. It was bad form for them to make their indolence so blatant: it would make it harder for Richards to take their side when the inevitable fresh dispute came up.