‘Don’t whinge. Think I want to be here? Should be back at the nick interrogating the wee sods we arrested. Gallagher’s no’ saying anything, but the van driver was beginning to…’ She frowned. Then smiled. ‘You were at it, weren’t you? You and the gorgeous goth! Come on then: blow by blow.’
At it? The way things were going he’d be lucky if she was still there when he finally got home.
Steel pursed her lips. ‘Bet she goes like a bloody steamengine.’
Logan glared at her, then turned around and marched off towards the ranks of cameras, the inspector’s words ringing out behind him: ‘And see if you can’t scrounge up some more tea!’
Half an hour later he was hunched over in the BBC Scotland Outside Broadcast Unit – which was a fancy way of saying ‘Transit Van Stuffed With Weird Bits Of Equipment’. A generator grumbled away somewhere behind a bank of knobs, switches, and flickering lights, just loud enough to be annoying.
‘I’d love to, but it’s company policy.’ The bearded bloke in the polar fleece, blew his nose into a damp hanky; never taking his eyes off the screen in front of him, where a rosy-cheeked reporter was doing a piece to camera, the snow whirling down around her head. ‘…
‘We’re talking about an arson here.’
The man twisted a dial on his little editing desk. ‘Mate, if it was up to me I would…’
Logan sighed. ‘But?’
‘The BBC
Which was the same reply he’d got from every other sod camped outside the cordon of ‘POLICE’ tape.
‘Can you at least
Mr Beard puckered up. ‘Give us a second, OK?’ Then he leant forward, clicked a button, and spoke into a little microphone. ‘That was great Janet, now can we try it again? And make sure you mention the campaign to have him deported.’
The woman on screen scowled.
‘So say “repatriate”, “forcefully relocate”, or “hound out”. Something. Then you can come in, have a cup of tea, and get ready for the next bulletin: we’re live at twelve past.’ He let go of the button. ‘Bloody prima donnas.’
He span around in his seat, ducking to avoid a dented anglepoise lamp. ‘Going to be on
He flicked a switch on the back wall of instruments and a small screen, mounted above what looked like an eight-track recorder, came alive with static.
‘Headphones.’ He pointed at a scabby pair hanging from a bent coat hanger looped through the equipment rack, the cable plugged in next to the screen.
A quick rattle across a dirty keyboard, and the female reporter appeared again. Behind her Knox’s house was ablaze, sheets of orange and yellow billowing out of the lounge window, red sparks mingling with the falling snow, the upper windows glowing with flickering light.
Cut to a puffy-faced man with a strawberry birthmark across one cheek.
Then a woman with her hair scraped back in a Torry face lift.
A teenager with more acne than skin, nose like a sharpened pencil.
Back to the reporter.
Another cut: night, snowing. The crowd had thinned down to the hard-core, frozen few. Then someone emerged from off camera, a lit petrol bomb in their hand. It sizzled across the screen, leaving a trail of glowing white, and the camera swung around to watch it explode against the granite wall of Knox’s house. The flash was bright enough to overload the camera for a moment, and then it was back in focus, just in time to catch the second bomb being thrown. It burst on the sill of the broken lounge window – sending burning petrol all over the curtains.
The screen went blank.
Logan pulled up one side of his headphones. ‘How do I rewind?’
‘Big black knob to your right.’
The Transit’s side door slid open and there was the reporter. She froze, one foot up on the van’s floor, thick flakes of white specking her shoulders and hair; nose and ears a deep shade of pink. Her forehead creased. ‘Where am I supposed to sit?’
Logan turned his back on her, twisting the big black knob till she appeared on screen again.
‘Come
