Read Evil for Evil Online

Authors: Aline Templeton

Tags: #Scotland

Evil for Evil (11 page)

BOOK: Evil for Evil
10.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Funny’s not what I’d call it.’ His boy, sitting slumped over his paunch, suddenly flared up. ‘The bastard screwed me. I’m not used to living like this, you know.’ He made an angry gesture round the cramped room. ‘I’d a job and a good house and a future. Gave up the lot to come here and farm, going to build a new house and all.’

Fleming, having heard the story from the invaluable Georgia, cut his lamentations short. ‘Why do you think he was trying to keep you off his property?’

‘You’ll have to tell us that, Inspector,’ Sorley said. ‘But in the light of what’s happened, maybe there was someone he wanted rid of, and knew the right place to put him.’

‘Who?’ MacNee said. He made no attempt to disguise his scepticism, and Sorley bridled.

‘You lean on him and maybe you’ll find out. But what I can tell
you is what happened to me. I went over, just walked across at low tide. Next thing I know, there he’s threatening me with that wolf. And that’s another thing you want to look at.’ Sorley was warming to his task, his scrubby ponytail bouncing up and down to emphasise his points. ‘Keeping a wild animal – shouldn’t be allowed.’

‘We have that in hand,’ Fleming said.

‘Do you think maybe it was the vandalism made him a wee bit unfriendly?’ MacNee drawled. ‘What do you know about that?’

The blank looks on their faces might have been more convincing if Sorley hadn’t changed colour and Steve Donaldson’s hand hadn’t gone up as if to loosen the already open collar of his checked shirt.

‘You see,’ MacNee went on, ‘I’d be downright antisocial myself, if there were folk around putting graffiti on my wee baby’s headstone.’

Hugh Donaldson’s watery eyes met MacNee’s unflinchingly. ‘Who told you that? Never heard anything about that. It’s likely a story Lovatt put around to cover himself.’

Admittedly, Georgia had got the story from Kerr Brodie, but to Fleming it had the ring of truth, especially after meeting the pond life. Having established the accusations against Lovatt were prompted by spite not evidence, it was tempting to leave and find a hot, cleansing bath. Still, they were in a position to give her information Georgia didn’t have.

‘Mrs Lovatt Senior,’ she said. ‘What was she like?’

‘Toffee-nosed old bitch,’ Steve Donaldson said.

His father’s eyes were cold as a snake’s. ‘She was a mean, grasping, greedy old besom. Bled me dry with rent over the years, then cut out her own son when it came to her will.’

‘You know him?’ Fleming asked with interest.

‘He’s a good lad – grew up here, but I haven’t seen him for years. They never got on – she threw him out, told him he was never to come
back. I thought maybe when she died Steve would get a better deal on a new lease from him, with us being pals. But oh no! The old bitch saw to it she’d carry on buggering up our lives, even once she’d gone.’

It was an interesting example of the sort of feud Georgia had said Innellan specialised in. This one looked set to run for a generation or two. At the very least.

With a glance towards MacNee, Fleming got up. ‘Thank you for your cooperation,’ she said formally. ‘That will be all for the moment, though of course there may be more questions later.’

As they walked back down to Innellan, MacNee said, ‘Nice guys, eh? See what’s wrong with the law in this country? We can’t lock them up and throw away the key just because we’d all be better off without them.’

‘If you ruled the world, Tam, there’d only be about three people left at liberty and I’m probably flattering myself that I’d be one of them. And your friend Brodie – he certainly wouldn’t be, would he? I’ve been meaning to ask you, what was that about? Has he previous?’

MacNee grunted. ‘Not that I know of.’

His manner was discouraging, but Fleming persisted. ‘You obviously know something about him, though.’

‘Aye. All of it bad.’

‘Tam, if I enjoyed pulling teeth I’d have gone in for dentistry. What sort of bad?’

With a sigh, MacNee said, ‘You know how, if you buy a stick of rock in Rothesay, it has “Greetings from Rothesay” all the way through? That kind of bad.’

She wasn’t going to be brushed aside. ‘How do you know?’

‘He lived in the same tenement as me. He was in with some bad stuff.’

Remembering MacNee’s earlier reaction, Fleming said, ‘Guns?’

‘They never pinned anything on him. But guns, aye, and the other stuff that goes with them. That’s all. OK?’

Fleming was sure that wasn’t all, but from the shut look on MacNee’s face, she was also sure it was all she was going to be told. She changed the subject.

‘Where, I wonder, is Tony Drummond?’

‘Drummond? You want him?’

‘No, I specifically don’t want him. I want to go to his house when he’s not there, officially to hear directly from his son what happened. In reality, I can’t think there’s anything useful either he or the other boy, Craig someone, could tell us.’

‘So? Why do you want to see him, then?’

‘I want to find out more about this story of the island being haunted – who told him, where the rumour started. And I don’t want a headline “DI seeks occult explanation for mysterious death”.’

‘Right,’ MacNee said slowly. ‘Think someone’s used scare tactics, then?’

‘Frankly, we’re clutching at straws here. Sorley’s was the only interview yesterday that offered anything to follow up.’

‘See them?’ MacNee jerked his head towards the village they were approaching. ‘If you dangled a treacle scone in front of their noses, they’d be afraid to take a bite at it in case a word slipped out.’

Fleming laughed. ‘So what is it they’re afraid might slip out?’

‘Maybe they don’t know themselves. Maybe it’s nothing. Maybe someone brought the man from somewhere else completely and dumped him here to die,’ MacNee said gloomily.

‘I know why I bring you along. It’s to keep me cheerful and motivated. That’s the Drummonds’ house there, and there’s no car in the drive. Any chance he’s away and the family aren’t?’

 

Elena Tindall shivered as she came out of the chalet. Last night’s honeyed warmth had disappeared, and though the sun was still shining there was a sharp breeze and her cheap jacket was too thin to give protection. It looked as if a change in the weather was on the way; there were small waves ruffling the surface of the sea and away on the horizon a line of clouds was massing.

She had a lingering headache and after all she had drunk last night it wasn’t surprising she’d slept only fitfully, and the rags of the dream about wolves at her throat hung about her still. Everything seemed fractionally out of focus this morning, as if a sheet of glass had come down, separating her from reality. She could be grateful for that, she thought, as she walked down the rudimentary gated road that led from the chalets and caravan site down to Innellan.

The village was very quiet. Elena saw a tall woman and a much shorter man coming out of the house tacked on to the Smugglers Inn, but there was no one else around when she took the track that ran round the shoreline, past Lovatt’s Farm.

She became aware of a strange, echoing sound, intermittent but persistent, and broken by barks and grunts. The deer, of course; she knew stags bellowed sometimes, and there were enclosures up towards the house. They seemed to be challenging each other, roaring and replying.

As she looked in that direction, a woman appeared in the yard at the other side, a thin woman with wavy long brown hair. She was carrying a bag of rubbish which she put into a bin before going back inside. It wasn’t the woman she’d seen on TV.

Elena stood very still, watching her for a moment unseen. As she walked on a man appeared, coming down over the rough grass towards the track she was on, a tall, dark-haired man. He wasn’t the man she’d seen then either.

Matt Lovatt?

He was playing with a dog, a huge, handsome, wolf-like creature, tussling and pushing it. It was joining in the fun with, Elena thought, a certain measure of respect, and the man was laughing; the bond between master and dog was evident. As the game came to an end the man gave an order and the dog immediately lay down. He rolled it on to its back, holding it there with his hand across its throat for a long moment, before allowing it back on its feet.

Catching sight of Elena he stood up, looking faintly embarrassed, and she saw with a severe sense of shock that his face was badly disfigured by what looked like burn tissue.

‘Sorry about the display of dominance,’ he said as she reached them. ‘He’s a big fella – has to know who’s boss.’

The dog was standing beside him, ears alert, extraordinary slanted eyes fixed on Elena. The man ruffled his head with obvious affection and pride.

‘He’s beautiful. Would he let me pat him?’

‘Of course. Mika, stay.’

The dog did not turn its head as she went over and stroked the thick, soft ruff of fur round its neck. It showed no interest, no sign it had even noticed her touch.

‘A nice enough morning,’ its master said pleasantly. ‘But I’ve a feeling the weather may be on the change.’

She replied in the same vein. ‘Not too soon, I hope. I’m staying in one of the chalets.’

‘Wonderful view from up there. Hope you enjoy your holiday.’

He nodded and moved off, the dog at heel, heading back to the farmhouse. Elena continued her walk, with that light-headed feeling of unreality even stronger than before.

There was a rough path leading off to her left and she followed
it through the whin bushes towards the shore until it came out in a small, pretty, sandy bay, unexpected on this rocky shore. The tide was going out and on the coarse sand a trail of little shells showed the high-water mark.

Elena bent to pick one up. The twin shells were still joined butterfly-style, pink and perfect with a pearly sheen, and she studied them as if some extraordinary secret they held would yield to her scrutiny. A fit of shuddering took her. It was close to decision time.

She took a long, deep breath. Then slowly, deliberately, she crushed the pretty shells to fragments between her fingers and dropped them on the sand. She didn’t notice a sharp shard piercing her finger until she saw a smear of blood on her hands.

She walked briskly back up the hill to the chalet and got into the car without going inside. She needed petrol and a warmer jacket and she wanted, anyway, to see what Kirkcudbright had to offer.

 

The hunger was a gnawing pain in Fergus’s belly now, and knowing the time had become an obsession. He tried to tell himself it wasn’t very late, it was just that with nothing to do time passed slowly.

Anyway, what could he do if Brodie meant to leave him here to die? He could batter the door and scream, but it could be weeks before any of the owners of the lock-ups came here again. He’d come under fire in Iraq but he’d never been as scared as he was now.

A sort of fatalism possessed him. From the start he’d never had any luck in his life, until he joined the army where everything was arranged for him and he’d a bit of money to spend. He’d blown that now.

So what was the point of all the pain and the misery if this was where it finished?
What was the point?
That was all he wanted to know, before the end came.

Rosie Drummond was looking harassed when she opened the door to DI Fleming and DS MacNee, her plump face creased with anxious lines and her fair curly hair wild, as if either she hadn’t had time to brush it or had run her hands through it since. There were shadows under her brown eyes. There was no sign of her husband.

‘Oh dear,’ she said, in tones of helplessness. ‘More questions? Jamie’s been up half the night and I’ve just settled him on the sofa with a DVD in the hope he’ll drop off.’

‘You look as if you could use some sleep yourself,’ Fleming said sympathetically. ‘Look, I don’t want to upset the poor kid again. The officers yesterday took his statement, so perhaps we could just have a chat with you meantime?’

Rosie’s face cleared. ‘Oh, thank you. Yes of course. Come through to the kitchen. Coffee?’

The house had obviously started out as a traditional two down, three or four up, but the ground floor was now open-plan, in an
L-shape. Everywhere there was the comfortable clutter of a family too busy getting on with life to be obsessive about tidiness, and Rosie made disjointed apologies as she took them through to the kitchen area, lifting a basket of washing off the island unit as she waved them to stools by the breakfast bar.

The sound of shrieks and canned laughter came from the sitting area round the corner and Rosie went to peer anxiously round.

‘It’s all right,’ she reported. ‘He’s gone to sleep. Now, coffee …’

Fleming noted the smart coffee-maker with relief, and MacNee’s face brightened too as Rosie set a packet of chocolate digestive biscuits down in front of them, asking what they needed to know.

‘I just wanted to get events clearer in my own mind,’ Fleming said untruthfully and allowed Rosie to give a dramatically enhanced version of the official report. Once they reached the account of Jamie’s nightmares, Fleming felt she could broach the subject that interested her.

‘By the way, there was something in Jamie’s statement which rather intrigued me – something about the island being haunted? Is this a local legend someone’s told him?’

Rosie looked embarrassed. ‘I’m afraid it was me. Oh, I’m kicking myself now, I can tell you.’

‘Really?’ This was an unexpected bonus. ‘Where did you get it from? Is it a good story?’

‘Not … not really. It’s just – well, wailing and stuff.’

‘Sounds interesting,’ Fleming said lightly. ‘What sort of wailing?’

MacNee very quietly got out a notebook as Rosie said, ‘I know it sounds silly, but I first heard it years and years ago. My family had a house here that we came to for weekends from Glasgow. I was probably – oh, twelve, thirteen maybe.’

What age was she now? Early forties, probably, but Fleming didn’t want to interrupt the story to ask.

‘It was my sister and me. We were out along the shore, mucking around when it was getting dark one night. It wasn’t late – must have been March, April maybe, because I remember going back for tea afterwards.

‘It was quite a still night, no one about, and then we heard the wailing. It was just … sort of crying, on and on, not like anyone calling for help or anything, coming from the island. But no one lived there, and it was really creepy. We just ran away home and didn’t tell anyone.’ Rosie shivered in recollected terror.

‘We used to make up stories about it to scare ourselves but we weren’t brave enough to go there again before we went back home. We never heard it after that and I sort of forgot about it. And of course, I don’t believe in ghosts – not really.’

The disclaimer lacked conviction. She went on, ‘But years later, I’d a nephew staying who wanted to go out fishing one evening, and Tony had stuff to do so he babysat while I took Johnny out in the boat. We were round the other side of the island and we heard it again – sort of groaning this time. There was no one to be seen, and it totally spooked me. I didn’t want to scare Johnny – he was only seven or eight, I think, so I just said it was the sort of noise the wind made sometimes. Maybe it was, even, but it didn’t sound like that.’

MacNee’s pen had frozen on the page and he looked up. Fleming felt a chill run down her spine, and it took quite an effort to sound casual. ‘It sounds very alarming! Was Johnny convinced?’

‘I don’t know. I never asked him. Well, he’s probably forgotten anyway – it’s a long time ago. Goodness, he’s … what, nineteen now, I suppose. I can’t believe he’s that age! More coffee?’

Fleming passed across her mug, trying to work out how to phrase her next question so that it wasn’t an accusation. ‘But … Jamie heard the story somehow?’

Again, Rosie looked embarrassed. ‘I just didn’t think. He came in a few weeks ago – he’d gone out after supper, and it was getting dark, and he said he’d heard someone crying and wailing on the island. And of course, they’d been talking about the poor Lovatt baby being buried there – you know what ghouls kids are – and he was all set to tell his pals it was the baby’s ghost.

‘I’d have hated that to get back to them – they’ve been finding things difficult enough here, without that sort of stupid gossip. So I told him about the other times. God, I wish I hadn’t now! I can’t think how we’re going to get it out of his head.’

There was a lot of material there, opening up several promising lines of enquiry. But Fleming wasn’t ready to do the sort of probing about times and dates that Rosie would tell her husband about, and have him asking questions long before she was ready to answer them.

‘It’s easy with hindsight, isn’t it?’ she said with a smile. ‘I hope your husband’s sympathetic – I’m not sure mine would be!’

‘Sympathetic? Tony? I haven’t told him where Jamie got the story – he’d go crazy!’ She looked alarmed. ‘You won’t – you won’t tell him, will you?’

Fleming looked at MacNee, now on his fourth chocolate digestive. ‘I don’t know what you’ve found to write in your notebook, Sergeant, but if Mr Drummond comes in suddenly, you may have to tear out the pages and swallow them.’

With Rosie laughing, and Jamie still asleep, they got up to leave.

 

The question was, when did you decide to start yelling? If Brodie had only been delayed – or worse, if he came back while you were beating on the door with your bare fists – you’d look a right eejit. Or worse, he’d go radge and then anything could happen.

Fergie bit at his last remaining nail. He couldn’t quite believe this
was really happening – that he’d been shut up in this place to die. It wouldn’t happen quickly, either. Death from starvation could take days, especially if you’d access to water. He didn’t, though. There wasn’t a tap.

He knew all about dehydration, after Afghanistan. You could die of dehydration in – like, about ten minutes there. He’d never heard of anyone dying of dehydration in Scotland, but if there wasn’t any water, you could. How soon would it start? Suddenly he felt a raging thirst.

What time was it?
If he ever got out of here, he’d buy a watch. He’d never needed one before. Either he was in a situation where time didn’t have much meaning, or else the place was full of people who’d order you to move when you had to move.

He didn’t know what to do. He’d never been good at decisions. The ones he’d made himself were mostly bad, and now there was no one to make this one for him. He began to cry, in a dismal, hopeless sort of way.

Fergie was still crying when the garage door was flung open and he sat blinking in the sudden flood of light.

Brodie stood in the aperture, eying him in disgust. ‘What the hell’s the matter with you, Crawford?’

‘I-I thought you weren’t coming back,’ he snivelled.

‘Wasn’t coming back? For God’s sake, man, I told you I’d be here in the morning, and it’s twelve o’clock!’

‘Twelve o’clock?’ Fergie knuckled his eyes. ‘I thought – I didn’t know what time it was.’

‘Get yourself a bloody watch! And get in the car.’

Fergie stumbled out after him. So life didn’t end here, in this brick-walled prison. He just didn’t know what would come next.

 

‘We certainly got more than we bargained for there,’ Fleming said to MacNee as they drove away from Innellan.


Embarras de richesses
,’ MacNee said with a smug expression and an execrable French accent.


What
did you say?’ Fleming stared at him, dangerously taking her eyes off the narrow road just as she rounded a corner.


Embarras de richesses
. It means so much good stuff you don’t know where to start.’

‘I know what it means, thank you very much. I was actually quite a star when it came to Higher French, and if I can ever persuade Bill to take a holiday for long enough to let us get across the Channel, I intend to prove it.’ Then she paused. ‘If I can remember any of it, that is.’

‘You could brush it up. Have a chat with Louise.’

‘Louise?’ Fleming again risked their lives on a tight corner. ‘Who’s
Louise?
Does Bunty know?’ It was said jokingly, but there had been problems last year when MacNee’s adored wife Bunty had suffered badly from depression, though according to Tam she had made a good recovery.

‘Don’t be daft,’ MacNee said scornfully. ‘Hepburn – just started in CID, you know? She’s all right.’

High praise indeed, from MacNee. ‘Of course I know Hepburn. Didn’t realise that was her first name.’

‘Her mum’s French. When I dumped a pile of reports on her desk, that’s what she said – “
embarras de richesses
”.’

‘If she’s managed to start teaching a chauvinistic Scot at least some elements of a foreign language, I’ll make a point of getting to know her.’

‘Ah well, that’s
French
,’ MacNee said. ‘The Auld Alliance – the happy days when the Scots and the French fought the English.’ As
a clincher, he added, ‘I read in a book about Rabbie Burns that he spoke French. He told someone his wife thought he was “
le plus bel esprit et le plus honnête homme du monde
”.’ The accent was even worse this time.

‘Did they add what his wife actually said about him – “Our Robbie should have had twa wives”?’ Fleming asked dryly. ‘Anyway, why are we talking about Burns, for goodness’ sake? This stuff – I’m a bit dazed. Spectral cries and groans coming from the island – what did you make of that?’

‘Hardly know where to start. By Rosie’s account, there’s been someone in distress there maybe twenty-five, thirty years ago, depending what age she is, then around twelve years ago and again just recently. Is this maybe some sort of thing the teuchters do? Like kind of ritual sacrifice?’

‘I resent that. Despite being denied the glories of culture as practised in the backstreets of Glasgow, I think even us hayseeds would have noticed if people were disappearing regularly,’ she said acidly. ‘But Tam, seriously, are we to assume there were three separate episodes, years apart, that there was an ongoing cause for cries that were occasionally heard, or that Rosie and her son just have vivid imaginations? Do you suppose other people have heard it too?’

‘Two wee girls, scaring themselves on a dark night, and a laddie who knows a baby’s buried on the island – if the wind was blowing through a crack or something, you could easy convince yourself it was someone crying. But I tell you what’s getting to me—’

‘You don’t need to,’ Fleming said heavily. ‘“Round the back of the island” – it was chilling when she said that. The shape of the cave would amplify the sound, of course. It could have been that poor tortured guy dying, too weak to scream for help. If she’d just gone to
see, if she hadn’t that silly idea about ghosts in her head, she might have investigated and saved his life.’

‘If you gave Rosie a penny for her thoughts, you’d be wanting change,’ MacNee agreed. ‘Nice lady, though.’

‘Give you a chocolate digestive and you’re anyone’s,’ Fleming said absently, then went on, ‘We’ll get some sort of confirmation about date of death, of course, but the timing sounds plausible to me. Once we get it, we can start questioning to see if anyone else heard strange sounds around that time.

‘I’d like to investigate the most recent one too. Oh, I know Jamie may have imagined it, but it’s worth asking. And if Lovatt’s keeping everyone else off the island, we should check out his household to see if anyone there has a rational explanation.’

‘No time like the present,’ MacNee suggested, but Fleming shook her head.

‘I’ve got a meeting this afternoon. I’ll get Andy and Ewan to come down tomorrow. It’s not what you’d call a matter of urgency – nothing’s going to happen if we don’t make use of the “golden hour” on this one.’

MacNee gave her a pitying look. ‘Will you never learn?’ he said.

 

Elena Tindall swung across the heavy metal cattle gate and bolted it. It was a laborious operation: getting out of the car, opening the gate, driving the car through, getting out to go back and shut it before driving on to repeat the process a few yards on. There were two of these gates enclosing a field, each having to be latched to stop cattle from straying. She was nervous about the cows too, though the great black beasts grazing nearby didn’t even lift their heads to look at her.

Still, it had been a satisfactory expedition to Kirkcudbright. She’d got what she needed, found a reasonable deli and a newsagent
which had
Vogue, Marie Claire
and
Vanity Fair
as well – a pleasant surprise. And it had occupied part of what could be a long, empty day too.

She stowed away her purchases, then fetched another bottle of Barolo from the case and took it, along with a glass and her copy of
Vogue
, to the chair by the picture window overlooking the bay.

As Elena set down bottle and glass on the window ledge, she noticed binoculars, half-concealed by the curtains – a thoughtful provision for visitors, presumably. She put them to her eyes and adjusted the focus.

They were high-magnification lenses and the road below, running through Innellan, became suddenly close and so clear that she could have counted the pansies in the Smugglers Inn window box. She could see round the bay, along past the Lovatts’ farmhouse. And she could see the island.

BOOK: Evil for Evil
10.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Carnival of Secrets by Melissa Marr
The Lucifer Deck by Lisa Smedman
Scorpion Reef by Charles Williams
The Grey Tier by Unknown
Wish Upon a Star by Sumsion, Sabrina
The Rabid Brigadier by Craig Sargent
Lawless by Jessie Keane
Melt by Robbi McCoy