'Yes, sir.' 'Good.
The inspector's Range Rover had developed an overwhelming reek of dog. Lucy, the spaniel responsible, lay behind the grille that separated the boot from the rear seat on a tatty tartan blanket, snoring and twitching as Insch drove them up the A90 to Peterhead. Logan in the passenger seat, Alec in the back, fiddling with his camera. 'So ...' Alec plugged in a couple of radio mikes. 'I know this is just meant to be you and him, one-to-one, but think Robertson will let me film it?' Logan scowled at the scenery drifting past. 'It'll all just be bollocks anyway. He's a nasty, ignorant, murdering wee shite; he doesn't know anything. This is a complete waste of time.' Alec scooted forwards, till his head was poking between the driver and passenger seat. 'But he's the Mastrick Monster! This'll make a brilliant scene for the documentary. Fancy doing a quick piece to camera when we get there? Go over the background: why he'll only speak to you?' 'No.' 'Oh, come on,
Peterhead Prison wasn't the prettiest of buildings: an oldfashioned Victorian lump of concrete and barbed wire, home to three hundred and twenty of Scotland's worst sex offenders and other vulnerable prisoners. People who'd get the shit beaten out of them in any other prison. People like Angus Robertson. Logan paced back and forth in the little office with 'THERAPY ROOM - 3' on the door, trying not to hyperventilate. He wiped his sweaty hands on his jeans. Christ it was hot in here, even with the window open. He turned and looked out through the bars. From here you could see over the high outer wall with its festive topping of razor wire, across the south breakwater of Peterhead harbour, and past that to the North Sea. Dark grey water flecked with white. Sky the colour of ancient concrete. And between the two, seagulls wheeled in lazy circles, waiting for the fishing boats that were becoming rarer every year.