Malone pushed the plate away.
“They could be long gone,” he said. “Nobody has said that out loud yet.”
The second cup of coffee was not up to the mark. Minogue didn’t want to argue about it with a waitress whose English was poor, who looked harried, and almost in tears.
“I’ll take care of it,” said Malone.
Malone rolled his eyes when his phone went off. Minogue watched the waitress try to juggle a tray while getting a bill to two brittle-looking fashion plates in their forties. To have to smile in the job was the worst of it, he remembered Iseult saying several times.
Malone hunched lower over the table, his finger is in his ear now.
“Right this very minute?” Minogue heard him say, and then, “Are you sure about this? Really? Well you better not be spoofing me.”
He took his hand from his head and looked at Minogue.
“Are you ready for this? There’s something after happening up at a place in Dorset Street, one of those hotels. There was shooting. Not five minutes ago.”
He took away his hand, and turned aside from Minogue again.
“Who says?” he demanded. A frown settled on his forehead while he listened. Then he said a yeah and hung up.
“Are you coming?” he asked Minogue.
“Not my parish, Tommy, but thanks.”
“I’m serious. Come on. Seeing is believing, they say.”
“I’m not a fan of shootings. Go on yourself.”
“You’ll miss your chance. One of them is dead.”
“One of who?”
“They think the West Ham one is the one is dead. The other fella is touch and go. If it is them, like.”
Chapter 49
No less than five detectives, two openly displaying submachine guns, were marauding on both sides of the tape. The uniforms milled about, many of them edgy with the show of guns. One of the detectives yelled at Malone as he pulled up by a squad car. As though to placate him, two uniformed Guards skipped over.
“Move on there, you can’t park here. Move on.”
Minogue fumbled for his wallet. Malone was ahead of him.
There were brown faces in the small crowd gathering across the street. What little traffic was abroad this hour of the day had been stopped, and Minogue saw more tape going up across the whole street by the traffic lights farther on.
“Oh look who shows when the time is right,” said the detective who had yelled. There was little sign of humour on his face.
“Tell your sister me answer is still no,” said Malone. Minogue watched the detective’s reaction.
There were plainclothes in the hallway, and more standing on the stairway. The place smelled damp, and Minogue took an instant dislike to the feel of the carpet, and the tacky mirrors, the thoughts of how many lonely nights people had spent here.
“Too many heroes in the one place,” said Malone to a red-faced detective who seemed to be waiting on some answer from his phone. The detective reached over to try to swat him on the way by. Minogue had to wait until he stepped back.
He held up his card, and followed Malone upstairs. There was a burnt smell here on the stairs now. Malone took the stairs two at a time. Looking up, the man standing in a doorway looked familiar to Minogue but he could not fix on a name. Did nobody secure crime scenes anymore, he wondered. Well, now. Best he keep that question to himself until later.
The man said something to Malone, and shook hands, and he looked down at Minogue. He made his way over to the top of the stairs.
“Top of the morning to you,” he said to Minogue, and extended a hand. “Brian McNamara, Serious Crimes. I’m the ringmaster here.”
McNamara’s face put Minogue in mind of an Easter Island statue. In his late thirties, Minogue guessed, an expert in controlling his impatience. For no clear reason, he wondered if McNamara didn’t have a kind of a divorced look to him.
“There’s people would pay money for such a mighty Clare name like that,” he said to him.
McNamara had a neutral nod for Minogue, but no remarks that could be even mildly congenial.
“You have an interest in these fellas here, I was told.”
“I think so,” was all Minogue could think to say. “I hope so.”
McNamara craned his neck to see what he could between the banisters leading to the upper floors. More armed detectives appeared, and then Minogue could see two fully kitted ERUs two floors up, the chins of their balaclavas pulled down under the helmet straps. They seemed to be taking their time.
“Every floor,” said one of them.
The smell of cordite was stronger, but there was the beginnings of some kind of aftershave too. McNamara turned back to him.
“They took the live one,” he said. “The other one can wait.”
He seemed to have divined Minogue’s unspoken question.
“Mightn’t make it,” he added. “The way he left here.”
An ambulance attendant came out of the room, carrying a bag. He was looking for someone. The someone seemed to be McNamara. He said something to McNamara about dressings. McNamara said they didn’t want them.
McNamara filled his cheeks with a breath, held it for several seconds, and then let it out.
“It won’t be textbook,” he said in a voice little above a murmur. “Will it, now.”
Minogue was tempted to let McNamara in on how many sites he had worked on, sites that had been trampled on too. But McNamara’s remark took on its intended meaning before he said so, however. Collusion was being called for, if he and Malone were going to get anywhere. He wondered what favour Malone had called in to be allowed into the site before the Technicals showed up and began their painstaking prowls, like ghosts or Hallowe’en figures in their suits.
“If it was textbook forensics we did every time, we’d be in the ha’penny place,” he said to McNamara.
McNamara looked at the splintered edge of the door. He seemed to weigh Minogue’s words.
“A quick once-over then,” he said, and reached into his jacket, “while the going is good. Very quick. But if the Scenes lads arrive, you’re out that door in a flash. Nod’s as good as a wink?”
“In a flash,” said Minogue.
McNamara handed Minogue one, then another glove. Malone was already pulling on his own.
“What’s that smell,” Malone said. “That perfumey one. Do you smell it?”
“Maybe it’s yourself you’re smelling,” said McNamara.
“If it was I’d be passed out on the floor. No, there’s some pricey kind of smell. Men’s stuff.”
McNamara gave him the eye. Malone shrugged.
Minogue looked ahead before each footstep, stopping each time. The blood on the carpet was almost black already, and gave off no sheen.
“How’s this for witnesses, Brian?”
“Zero. There’s no night staff.”
“Access, I wonder?”
“Child’s play from the outside. Have a look at the delivery door out the back, on your way out. That’ll tell you plenty.”
Minogue looked back at the splintered doorframe, and the door, with its smashed edge sticking out like feathers.
“Classy joint,” Malone said.
“They might have a nice honeymoon suite,” McNamara murmured. “Tell herself, why don’t you.”
“That’s it,” said Malone. “You’re off the guest list.”
“Not that I was ever on it.”
“Sonya only felt sorry for you,” said Malone. “Thought she might be able to get you fixed up, you know.”
McNamara had no smile, but in his voice Minogue now heard the dry restraint of the Claremen he had grown up around.
“If you mean getting me a date with some wall-eyed cousin from Hong Kong, yous were doing me no favours. It’s Sonya or nobody for me. She’s too good for the likes of you.”
“You’ll answer for that one in the ring. Mister Tough Guy.”
Ah, Minogue realized, a cohort from the Garda Boxing Club.
McNamara took a plastic bag from his pocket, and held it in his palm, arranging its contents.
“UK driver’s licence. Justin Anthony Kilcullen, the one carted to hospital.”