Eddy dropped his hands from his face.
In front of him, around the bonnet, by both doors were the black silhouettes of men in flack vests, heavily armed, all with weapons trained on him.
Standing outside Morrow knew it would take a month to preserve the scene properly. A square half-mile of drab concrete littered with rubble, dust and fibres. A marsh beyond it made the place damp, meaning everyone who had been here in the past five years would have left a detectable trace of themselves.
Stunned that his co-conspirator was dead of a heart attack, Eddy Morrison had confessed and given them a map of Breslin’s machine works, a crude drawing of a loading bay opening with a lintel dropped over the doorway and a pathway cut through a couple of big halls into the very back of the dark building. This was the last place they had seen Aamir, in a boiler at the back Aamir had killed his guard, Eddy claimed, and run off. Morrow didn’t believe it. It made Eddy sound too innocent. Those stories were rarely true.
Harris sidled up next to her. ‘What ye thinking, ma’am?’
They could preserve the scene for evidence or plough straight in and find out what happened. She looked at the split lintel over the door. ‘OK, let’s call it life and limb. Harris, you’re coming with me.’
‘Thank you, ma’am,’ He sounded obsequious and immediately blushed and regretted it.
They got torches out of the boot, issue searchlights with handles and batteries that weighed four pounds. Harris used his weight to lift one and Morrow lugged the other one through the doorway, carefully picking a roundabout path that no one else would choose, skirting around the obvious way in order to preserve the evidence. The place was crumbling in on itself. As her torch beam licked up the walls she could see layers of the walls collapsing down to the floor, dust thick as snowdrifts, a great bubbled mess on the floor. Harris spotted the trails of footsteps back and forth from one room and silently made her aware of it by circling his torch over it. As they approached the back room the footsteps took on a darker colour; Morrow thought at first it was a quality of the dust, that it was just darker underneath, until Harris stopped swinging his light and she saw the smears on the bare concrete. Brown, like the Anwars’ wall in the hall. Blood.
Eddy had told them about Malki but Morrow wouldn’t have believed how pitiful he looked. A skinny boy, much too thin, not like Omar, not all muscle and sinew waiting to put on weight when his mouth finally caught up with his metabolism, but sickly thin, ill-fed thin, the bones of his skinny knees showing through his white tracksuit. And his brand new trainers, a shock of white against the black darkness of the boiler.
She stood on the metal ladder and swept the torch across the belly of the boiler. Aamir Anwar was gone.
They called it off. At seven in the morning the fingertip search around Breslin’s was called off and all the officers were bussed back to the station to sign up for their overtime claims. The helicopter veered across the bay, taking its searchlight with it, the dinghys on the marshes found mooring and their passengers disembarked. The diving teams packed up and went home. Not a trace had been found of Aamir Anwar.
Morrow stood by the metal steps as SOC officers sorted around Malki Tait’s body, picking through the detritus of a building crumbling in on itself. It was freezing here and smelled of metal and dust. The SOCs had rigged up bright spotlights, pointing them at the ceiling for the soft, deflected light. Thick flexes from the portable generator were strung across the dirty floor. Morrow felt the cold, shuddered at the strange way sound moved around the room and thought of poor Aamir and how terrified he must have been alone here with a dead body, and how frightened he would have been for his daughter, how frightened and cold and lonely.
She pulled her coat tight around her middle, thought warm thoughts of Brian, how still he was, how he could let her be and sit quiet in her company.
Morrow smiled to herself. She knew exactly where Aamir was.
40
Towards Leadhills the M74 broadens into three lanes of perfect tarmac that snake gracefully through big soft hills. Great feats of engineering lift the road across the uneven ground so that it remains perfectly level while the land around it dips and rolls, making the road separate from the land, of it, but steadier, more perfect.
Through a cleft of massive hills the road slopes down to the right for three miles and then rights itself to the left, rolling clockwise around a hill moulded by time and rain into a colossal green bowling ball. On the vale below a narrow silver river snakes deep through mossy green fields like a wire through cheese.
Aleesha had chosen the music, Glasvegas, which she insisted Roy should love or not be regarded seriously as a person. It wasn’t the sort of music he was used to listening to, in the nightclubs he’d worked in the music was older, more dance tunes, everything she liked was a bit guitary.
She was looking out of the window at the vale, her bare feet resting on the dashboard, a red enamelled ring on her big toe. She didn’t want a seat belt on. Said they scratched her neck.
‘Wow.’
‘Ever done this drive before?’
‘No.’
‘Beautiful.’
‘Hm.’
He was coming up to the curve, going fast because that was how she liked it, in the inside lane. Aleesha was in a hurry to get away.
‘Can I have my hand back?’ he said.
She looked at the big meaty hand beneath her good one, resting on the gearstick. She held it up by the index finger. ‘This old thing? What do you need this for?’
Roy smiled. ‘I need it to drive, to steer the car we’re driving in at seventy miles an hour.’
She flipped around in the seat so that she was kneeling facing him, still holding his hand by the finger. ‘You know, Roy, if you loved me really, if you really, really loved me, as a sign of how much you loved me, I think you could do everything with one hand too.’
‘Like a love token thing?’
‘Like a sign of how incredibly close and alike we are, you could do that.’ She was leaning towards him, breathing on his ear in a way she knew was distracting, one of her lips touched the rim of his ear. He felt a shudder in his cock.
Behind them an articulated lorry was nudging up the middle lane, and Roy was vaguely aware that the lorry was going too fast for the curve they were coming up to, too fast and in the wrong lane, boxing them in. Behind him, a hundred feet away but closing, was a pale blue sports car.
Aleesha worked her warm tongue around the folds on his ear.
Morrow and Harris, Gobby and Routher ran up the cold concrete stairs, the sound of their steps following them, echo catching the echo so that they sounded like a squadron running in formation.
There he was, standing outside the door, sentry-stiff on the mat, his cardigan buttoned up to his neck, hands flat by his thighs. Honour may have dampened his eyes but his training allowed him to do hard things, bad things.
Morrow gave him a look that ordered him back into the hall. As she followed him in Lander stumbled backwards into the living room, followed by Morrow and the three men. She raised a finger as if she might slap him. ‘Where is he?’
He hesitated, ran his tongue along the stubbled line of his moustache and looked at them again. His hand came up slowly to a door at the back of the living room. For no reason other than annoyance, Morrow kicked the door open.
The bed was army made, blankets and sheet, the corners folded as neatly as an envelope. It was his feet she saw first, gnarled old man’s feet, yellowed hard skin with a white tinge, like bracken, over brown skin. He was dressed in purple and gold striped pyjamas, Lander’s probably; they were too short for him. He had a cut on his ankle and a plaster on his wrist. His hands were limp by his side, his mouth hanging open, teeth worn down through to the pulp, like a sheep’s.