‘Shut the door, eh, Janet? Freezing me nuts off here.’

‘You’re freezing yours off? What about mine?’

‘There’s a thermos in the cab…’

Logan stuck the headphones back on and set the report running again. Shutting out the argument.

‘But events escalated this evening, as tensions, already running high, exploded into violence.’

The first petrol bomb was too quick – the cameraman didn’t have time to catch much more than the rough shape of someone wrapped up in a padded jacket hurling the bottle. But the second time he’d got the camera around in time to catch the thrower centre frame.

Logan hit pause.

It was either a very effeminate man, or a slightly butch woman. Difficult to tell with all the padding. They had a black-and-white bobble hat pulled down over their ears, wisps of dark hair sticking out of the bottom. Eyes screwed up, nose crinkled. A checkered scarf covered the lower half of their face, and they were wearing what looked like a blue North Face jacket – the logo just visible on the left chest – with matching gloves.

So that probably meant no prints on the bottle.

Logan frowned, then took off the headphones and hung them back on the improvised hook. ‘Do you have any other shots of who threw the petrol bomb?’

‘You’re bloody impossible, Gavin! How am I supposed to work under these conditions?’ The reporter stormed out and slammed the side door shut.

Gavin rubbed his hands across his face. ‘No idea. Maybe in the crowd shots?’

‘Any chance you could—’

‘Mate, I’ve got a live bulletin on in ten, a…’ He lowered his voice, ‘A reporter with PMT who won’t deliver her bloody lines properly, a dodgy sound desk, and about three thousand other things I’ve got to do before we hand over to the London studio. What do you think?’

Logan sighed. ‘OK, OK. I’ll get a warrant.’

The man nodded. ‘Good idea. Now, if you don’t mind…?’

Logan stood off to the side, watching the woman from BBC Scotland doing her live broadcast for the News at Ten. ‘It’s too early to tell yet, Simon, but Grampian Police issued the following statement this afternoon…’

Behind her, Knox’s house was a blackened shell, steam and thin ribbons of greasy smoke rising from the blackened windows while the Fire Brigade rolled their hoses up.

A fake English accent sounded at Logan’s shoulder. ‘’Allo, ‘allo, what’s all this then?’

He didn’t even have to check. ‘Evening Colin.’

The wee reporter rubbed his leather-gloved hands together, the rigid finger joints sticking out at odd angles. ‘Brass monkeys, but.’

‘Isobel give you a late pass, did she?’

‘Why, fancy a pint later?’

‘Can’t: on the wagon.’

‘Fuck me, must be serious.’ Colin blew into his cupped, gloved hands, wreathing them in a white cloud. ‘Any off-the-record statements you’d like to make for your old mate?’

Logan frowned for a minute. ‘Yeah. Can you say: “sources close to the investigation think the media are a bunch of sketchy bastards for standing about filming Knox’s house burning down when they should have been calling the Fire Brigade”?’

‘Ah…’ Colin bit his top lip and stared at his shuffling feet. ‘It was…Well, you always think someone else must’ve…Ahem.’

‘Yeah, I’ll bet you do.’

Logan hunched his shoulder. Now the fire was out, winter was reclaiming the street.

‘You still got Grumpy the Photographer with you?’

‘Driving us mental with his moanin’. You’d think he’d be happy to get a nice juicy story like this, wouldn’t you? Got to be better than coverin’ some crappy cow auction at Thainstone.’

Logan glanced back along the street to where DI Steel was slumped in the passenger seat of a pool car, cigarette smoke drifting out into the frigid night.

‘How’d you like to help the police with their enquiries?’

35

The photographer’s battered Volkswagen was parked under a streetlight, three doors down from the smouldering remains of Knox’s house. Probably moved to keep its delicate rusty bodywork safe from the riot Colin’s article had caused. The car’s owner was out in the middle of the road, the hood of his parka zipped all the way up, hiding his bald head, a huge camera pressed to the fur-trimmed porthole. Capturing the Fire Brigade’s retreat.

Colin made a loud-hailer with his mangled hands. ‘Hoy, Sandy, you nearly done?’

The man stayed where he was, taking another shot of a massive white fire engine grumbling and hissing its way out through the police cordon, the flash freezing the snow in midair.

Colin pulled a face. ‘God forbid we should interrupt his muse. HOY, BALDY!’

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