‘Oh God.’ Mr Overalls slapped a hand over his nose and mouth, staggered off a dozen paces and threw up all over a Peugeot’s bonnet.
Two small bodies lay curled on their sides in the BMW’s boot. A little boy and a little girl. Heidi and Toby Skinner, barely recognizable. Sunken cheeks, cracked lips, electric cable wrapped around their wrists and ankles. Faces smeared with blood. Still and pale.
Baird chewed on her bottom lip. Looked away. ‘You shouldn’t have let him jump, Guv. You should’ve dragged that bastard down from the ledge so we could all kick the living shite out of him.’
Poor little sods.
Baird was right.
Logan let out a long shuddering breath. Stood upright. Squared his shoulders. Snapped on a pair of blue nitrile gloves. Cleared his throat. ‘Denise, I need you to get on to the Procurator Fiscal. And we’ll need the Pathologist. Better get the Duty Doctor out too.’
A nod. But she didn’t turn around. ‘Guv.’
Two little kids. How could any father do that?
Logan reached into the boot. Brushed the hair from little Heidi Skinner’s face. Seven years old.
‘Guv? You shouldn’t touch them. The SEB need to take photos.’
A flicker. There. That was definitely a flicker.
You wee beauty!
Logan scooped Heidi out of the boot.
‘Guv!’ Baird grabbed his sleeve, voice low and hard. ‘Have you lost your bloody marbles? The PF—’
‘Get the car! Get the sodding car, now!’
Logan pulled on his jacket, then poked his head into the CID office. Wheezy Doug was hunched over the photocopier, jabbing at the buttons as if the machine had suggested his mother was romantically intimate with donkeys on a regular basis.
No sign of Stoney. But DS Baird was on the phone, elbows on the desk, one hand pressed to her forehead.
‘Uh-huh... Yeah... OK, well, let me know.’ She put the phone back in its cradle and looked up. ‘Hospital says Heidi Skinner’s responding well to the IV fluids. Just woke up.’
‘What about Toby?’
‘Heidi’s freaking out. Three days, locked in a boot with your brother. In a car parked in the sunshine... I’d be freaking out too.’
‘Denise: what about Toby?’
She puffed out her cheeks. Stared down at the phone. ‘He was only six, Guv.’
‘Sodding hell.’ Something heavy grabbed hold of Logan’s ribcage and tried to drag him down to the grubby carpet tiles. A deep breath. Then another one. ‘I should’ve checked the car park’s ANPR sooner. I should’ve done it soon as we found out the car was missing. I should’ve...’ He mashed his teeth together. Clenched his fists. Glowered at the filing cabinet. Then took two quick steps towards it and slammed his boot into the bottom drawer, hard enough to rattle the mugs and kettle balanced on top. Hard enough to dent the metal. Hard enough to really regret it five seconds later as burning glass rippled through his foot. ‘Ow...’
‘Three days.’ Baird slumped further down in her seat. ‘It’s a miracle she’s alive at all. Doctor said any longer and her internal organs would’ve started shutting down.’
Wheezy jabbed away at the photocopier again. ‘Don’t know about anyone else, but I’m going to the pub tonight and getting sodding wasted.’
Baird nodded. ‘I’m in. Guv?’
Logan turned and limped back towards the door. ‘I’ll see you there. Got something to sort out first.’
Marjory stood up and held a hand across her desk for shaking. Her smile looked about as real as the potted plant in the corner. ‘Mr McRae, I was beginning to think you’d changed your mind.’
Three walls of the office were covered with racks of schedules, complete with photographs of various bungalows, flats, and semidetatched rabbit-hutches in Danestone and Kincorth.
Logan settled into the chair on the other side of the desk. ‘Been a rough day.’
‘Well, not to worry, there’s still time.’ She dug into a tray on her desk and came out with a chunk of paperwork. Passed it across to him. ‘As you’ll see, there are no demands or conditions. They asked for a four-week entry date, but I went back to them with your proposal for ten days and they accepted.’ The fake smile intensified. ‘Now, if you need help finding a new property in a hurry, we’d be delighted to help you with that. We’ve got a lot of excellent homes on—’
‘I’ve got something sorted, thanks.’ Even if it was a static caravan, equidistant from Aberdeen’s worst roundabout, a sewage treatment plant, and a cemetery. At least the chicken factory had moved somewhere else. That was something.
And ten days from now, Samantha would be getting the specialized care she needed. Everything else was just noise.
‘Oh. Well, I’m sure you know best.’ Marjory handed him a pen. ‘If you sign where I’ve put the stickers, we’ll get everything faxed over to Mr Urquhart’s solicitors and that’s that.’
Logan skimmed the contract, then scrawled his signature where the big pink stickers indicated.
‘Excellent.’ She took the paperwork back. ‘Congratulations, Mr McRae, you’ve sold your flat.’
It should have been a moment of joy. An excuse to celebrate for a change. But after what happened to poor wee Toby Skinner?
Logan scraped back his chair and stood.
Time to go to the pub. Meet up with the team. And try to drink away the horror of two little bodies, locked in a car boot.
The celebration could wait.
— boxes, bins, and dead little bodies —
‘Gah...’ Steel pulled the e-cigarette from her mouth and made a face like a ruptured frog. ‘Look at it. Could you no’ have picked a better day to move?’
Rain rattled against the kitchen window. Wind howled across the extractor fan outlet — mourning the end of an era.
Logan wrapped a strip of brown parcel tape around the last box. ‘Don’t know what you’re moaning about.’ He printed ‘BOOKS’ across the top in big black-marker-pen letters, then put it with the other two by the front door. ‘Not as if you’ve actually been helping.’
‘Supervising’s helping.’
‘Not the way you do it.’ Logan stuck the marker back in the pocket of his jeans.
His footsteps echoed from the laminate floor to the bare walls and back again as he checked the bedroom for the final time. Empty. Then the living room. Empty. Then the kitchen. Empty. And the bathroom. Every trace of him was gone — packed away over the last ten days and carted out to the removal van. Nothing but echoes and three packing boxes left to show he was ever there at all.
Steel slouched along behind him. ‘You’ve got OCD, you know that, don’t you? Place is cleared out.’
The front door clunked open and Duncan was back. Rain had darkened the shoulders of his brown boilersuit, plastered his curly fringe to his forehead. A smile. ‘Nearly done.’ He stacked two of the last boxes, hefted them up with a grunt, then headed back down the stairs again.
Logan turned on the spot. One last slow three-sixty.
No point being sentimental about it. It was only a flat. A container to live in. Somewhere to sleep and brood and occasionally drink too much.
Still...
Steel sniffed. Dug her hands into her pockets. Stared off down the corridor. ‘Susan says you can always come stay with us for a bit, if you like. Don’t have to be trailer trash, down by the jobbie farm.’
Logan grabbed the final box. ‘It’s a lovely offer. But can you imagine you and me living together? In the same house? Really?’
‘No’ without killing each other.’
He pulled a thin smile. ‘Thanks though. Means a lot.’
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