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“But you don’t want outsiders objecting when a murderer gets away with it?”

He grinned at her and shook his head, looked up at the sky through the small window. The low morning light suited his face, highlighting his large nose and casting a shadow from his black eyelashes over his cheek. “Paddy, murderers get away with it all the time. Lack of evidence, no witnesses, happens every day. We’ll get Lafferty. We might not get him for this, but we’ll get him for something.”

“Like you got Patrick Meehan?”

“Ah, Paddy Meehan. See, now, that wasn’t a police call. MI5 did that. Stupid. It was a fuck-up from start to finish.”

She sat back and glared at him. “So the system works? You set people up all the time?”

“Our job is to make the streets safe for people like you, Paddy. The truth is, the justice system doesn’t work. People get out all the time, bad people, vicious men just like Lafferty. If Lafferty gets done for something and it takes him off the streets so you can go home, would you be as against the way we work then?”

“Principles matter. Doing the right thing matters even if it’s against your own interests.”

He was looking at her neck, distracted, his eyes half-closed.

“Burns, have you been sent here to tell me to back off?”

“You know why I came here.”

“No, I don’t.”

He swung his weight off the bed suddenly and was across the room in one fluid step. He cupped her face in both his hands and lifted her to her feet until her face was tight to his, her nose to his nose, eye to eye, open mouth to open mouth. She felt the stubble on his chin scratch her lips. He hadn’t been home yet, hadn’t shaved after the night shift or had a wash. He smelled delicious.

George Burns stood in his flash shirt and trousers, in his adulterous Protestant shoes and explored her with his dirty, dexterous fingers, peeling her clothes off and letting them drop to the floor.

They fell on the single bed, Paddy underneath him, and they laughed because it was so narrow. They worked their way to the side of the bed and Burns’s hard purple cock stuck out of his trousers as she knelt between his knees. He sighed like a slit tire as she kissed and licked it. Lost in a fog of sensations and smells they slid onto the carpeted floor, gliding noiselessly over one another, fuck-fuck-fucking until they both came in glorious messy Technicolor.

They lay on the floor panting, occasionally flapping hands across to cover up the most damning bits of skin.

Burns caught his breath. “Wait till I tell the guys about this one.”

Paddy grinned and flailed a lethargic slap at him with the back of her hand. She could have slept in the chair. She could have slept on a sack of jaggy sticks, actually, she was so relaxed.

Burns sighed into her hair. “That’s why I came to see you.”

“So you could get your end away?”

He shook his head and pulled her close, still breathless from the exertion. “Don’t be like that with me. Just for a minute, let’s be nice to each other.”

“You haven’t got your ring on today,” she said spikily.

“No, come on.” He squeezed her shoulder. “Give it five minutes.”

She leaned heavily on Burns’s chest to push herself up to sitting and turned away to pull her sweater on. “I won’t back off about Lafferty, no matter how often you do that to me.”

“I did it to you?” he said playfully. “You did it to me. I was just lying there.”

She lay back, resting her chin on his chest, breathing in the smell of him. A floor below they could hear the low hum of a vacuum cleaner. A car hooted its horn a mile away in the street.

“Okay.” Burns looked at her, his fingers in her hair. “Lafferty works for a guy called Paul Neilson. Neilson used to go out with Vhari Burnett’s sister. He’s squeaky clean, no record for anything.”

“Vhari had a sister?”

“Kate Burnett. She’s disappeared.”

“Is she dead?”

“No one knows. There’ve been a couple of sightings but nothing solid. Someone saw her at a restaurant a few nights ago but we’ve heard nothing since then.”

“What about the brother?”

He frowned down at her. “There isn’t a brother. The parents never mentioned a boy. Just the two girls.”

She was sure Evelyn at the Easterhouse Law Center had said Thillingly spent his last day with Vhari’s brother. She cast her mind back over the conversation: Bernie, Evelyn said his name was Bernie, and he had a garage. But if Vhari’s parents wouldn’t admit to him, there had to be a reason.

“What about Thillingly? Do they still suspect him?”

Burns took his fingers from her hair and sat up, hugging his knees with his arms and looking around at the mess of clothes on the floor.

“Well, do they?”

He found his underpants and stood up to pull them on, completely unabashed. “You have to understand, Paddy, the police’ll do anything to protect their own. But we get the job done. We do.”

“It’s not good enough.”

They looked at each other. Burns raised an angry eyebrow.

“You can’t frighten me when you’re standing there in nothing but your skanties, Burns.”

He ignored the comment and yanked his trousers on, pulling up the zipper like a final statement. His chest was broad with a T of black hair reaching down under his waistband. The scar on his stomach was pink and puckered. It looked like a bottle opener might well have pierced it and she wondered if he was lying about his wife at all.

“You’re giving evidence to the inquiry today, aren’t you?”

“Yeah.” She stood up and scrambled into her panties and skirt, anxious not to be the last one naked in the room, perching on the bed to fit her tights on over her feet. “Are they even looking for Kate Burnett?”

“Leave it, Paddy.”

“What if she turns up dead? What if I turn up dead?”

He slipped his feet into his toggle loafers and pulled his shirt over his head without undoing the buttons. “I was asking about the inquiry because I was going to take you there myself, make sure you’re safe.”

“Oh, that’ll be great for my reputation: pitching up in a flash sports car with the slag of the year.”

She meant the comment to be taken playfully but Burns misunderstood. He stared at her. “You’re a bit of a snide cow, actually, aren’t ye?”

She couldn’t think of an answer. Burns picked up his jacket and walked out of the room, leaving her sitting alone on the end of the mean little bed.

TWENTY-SEVEN. BERNIE’S IN

I

Bernie’s garage was not quite what she expected. Knowing what she did about Vhari Burnett’s family background Paddy had supposed her brother’s garage would be a dealership for smart new cars, but it was in a derelict area at the bottom of a sharp hill a long way from the main road.

She headed down toward the blackened Victorian railway arches. Beyond them lay the motorway and farther yet the river. Blocks of tenements had been knocked down on either side of the road, leaving just their footprint on the land. A couple of shanty workshops were still operating from what would have been the back court; she could hear radios blaring and see lights on inside, occasional drills and mechanical bits turning over. A square, single-story pub was set on the corner of a sea of dusty rubble.

The tall arches under the railway bridge had been converted into workspaces, not the ramshackle hodgepodge of organic economic development but uniform government-subsidized workshops that spoke of an economy in terminal decline. Yellow brick filled in the grand arches of blackened Victorian bricks, each with a double garage door in the middle, painted red with a unit number stenciled onto it.

Paddy walked toward them and felt the damp river air clinging to the bricks. Most of the units were dark and locked, some of them permanently. Only one or two had signs denoting a business operating out of them. Unit 7 was one of the few arches with the lights on and the red doors open. It was at the far end of the lane, across the road from a scrap merchant’s yard. A sign on the fence declared that the yard was PROTECTED BY DOG, and below the claim was a silhouette of a snarling wolf.