by it, the sense of mystery and adventure, the lost silver and the thought of Alston Street still standing, waiting to be explored. The temptation to run away to Grahamston must have been huge.
From the instant the name fell from Mrs McKendrick’s lips, it reminded him that Central Station was where the first of the shootings took place. Cairns Caldwell shot down within a couple of hundred yards from the Rennie Mackintosh Hotel and right above the tracks of the station, right above the old village. And the man that fired the shot had simply vanished as if he’d dropped into the bowels of the earth.
There was little doubt in his mind. Grahamston was where he’d find McKendrick. The only real question was whether he wanted to find him.
Winter was scared, there was no getting away from it. He was a photographer, a recorder, a witness. What the fuck was he doing? The fear was in his chest, like a battalion of butterflies eating away at him. It was only images of Addison and Rachel that were making him go on. If he was right then McKendrick had shot his best mate who was lying wired up to a machine that was keeping him barely alive. He had tortured Sammy Ross to get the names, places addresses, whatever it was he needed to let him take out the people at the top, the middle and the scummy bottom of the drugs trade. Now he had mobile phones that had provided him with a death list and maybe Rachel’s name was on it. No way could Winter stop now.
He had next to no idea what he was going to do when he got to Grahamston, or at least to wherever McKendrick was hiding in the maze under the station, but he knew he was going to look. Maybe he could find enough proof to take Alex Shirley there, catch Ryan and clear Addison, save Rachel. Fuck it, he didn’t know.
Over the years he’d heard various stories of how to get into the areas below ground at Central that the public aren’t meant to. Uncle Danny had got him interested enough that he had always listened out for the tales that spilled from office workers, engineers, electricians and plumbers that had been down there for one reason or another and said too much once they’d had a drink. All the shops in the Argyle Street area had large areas below them and many, maybe most, had access that led to others, although most were blocked off these days.
Some guys told of knowing someone who had been down there and seen the street with shopfronts intact. Some had seen a butcher’s shop, others mentioned a spirit merchant. Another who said his uncle was a telecom engineer and did work down there said the access was via the stairs from platform 3 and that under the platform was a lift that took you into the bowels of the place. It opened up into a pitch-black area with tunnels going off in all directions. Down one of those was Alston Street. According to him it ran from the edge of the foundations of the station to the edge of where Debenhams stands. But it was always a friend of a friend; he’d never met anyone who claimed to have been down there themselves and seen it. Probably with good reason.
There was truth in the spaces down there though, he was sure of that much. He knew there was a massive maze-like area under the Arches because he’d been down there once while a friend that worked in the Argyle Arcade said there was a tunnel that ran the length of it too, below all the jewellers’ shops. There used to be a basement below the old What Every’s that allowed you to go down one side of Argyle Street, inside the shop, and back up on the other. More tunnels than the Great Escape and Colditz combined. Whatever lay below the station, old street or not, there was no end of places that a man could hide if he had a mind to. Or if he was out of his mind.
The most likely story he’d heard of how to get in came from someone who didn’t believe a word about Alston Street and that was maybe why Winter believed him. A pal of his, Jamie Rowan, said that there was a passage which ran behind McDonald’s at the corner of Argyle Street and Jamaica Street, across the road from the Grant Arms and right above the heart of old Grahamston. Jamie said that when he was young, he and a couple of mates used to lift this metal sheet in the middle of the passage and spend their day below ground getting full of Buckie and White Lightning and wandering around feeling the reverberation of the trains.
That was years ago though, Rowan would only have been about fifteen and he was over thirty now. Chances were that health and safety had put an end to it. But you never knew.
The passage itself was easy enough to find coming in off Jamaica Street and the bits of bush that sprang across the entrance wasn’t a problem. Winter waited till there was no one passing by and pushed his way through. The place was a tip and there was the usual collection of broken bottles and used condoms at his feet. It was narrow, just enough space to walk through, and there wasn’t much light but he was happy enough with that as it hid what he was up to. He edged along warily until he got about halfway back and, sure enough, he heard metal ring beneath his shoes.
It was partly overgrown but he ripped the weeds back and found the edges of the half-inch thick, rusted cover. It must have slipped through the safety net because it wasn’t bolted to the ground, just lying there. Maybe because it wasn’t covering anything, he thought.
He managed to get his fingers under a corner of the sheet but could barely budge it. Then he got both hands under, wondering if he’d ever get them out again, and heaved. Christ it was heavy. He could only lift it a few inches but pulled it to the side, rested then lifted and pulled again. He lifted and yanked it best he could till he’d moved it maybe a foot from where it was. He looked and couldn’t believe it: there was a hole beneath it. Jamie had been telling the truth. It took him ten minutes but he wrestled with the sheet enough till he could see the top of a flight of wooden stairs and had made a space big enough for him to get through. Shit.
It was starting to get dark which didn’t do much for his confidence. Not that there was exactly going to be much in the way of sunlight anyway down in the old foundations of Alston Street or the disused platforms of Central but it made him even more unsettled. He’d seen enough old horror movies to know that going into the monster’s lair as the sun went down was a really stupid idea.
One last look to make sure no one was watching and he dropped onto a step a few feet down, glad of the torch that he could feel nestled in his back pocket, and began to descend. He climbed down maybe a dozen steps then felt his feet hit level ground. He turned and saw he was in a room like a hallway with a corridor leading off to the right, north he was guessing it was, towards Central Station. It was why he was there and no matter how shit- scared he was, he was going on.
The torch picked out walls that were tiled to maybe four feet high in yellow ceramic and painted in dirty yellow above that. Other parts were whitewashed and it rang of a Romanian hospital or a lunatic asylum. All of a sudden, there was unexpected daylight and he realized he was under one of the reinforced glass walkways on the street above. Footsteps rang over his head and his guess was that he was somewhere under Union Street. He could see double doors at the end of the current corridor and made his way tentatively towards them. Thankfully, they were unlocked and he went through. The walls in the next passage were white tiled to above shoulder height but clearly hadn’t been touched for donkey’s years. They led to another set of double doors then another. He edged along in the gloom, having no idea what was in front of him or behind.
At the next set of doors were stairs and he followed them down two flights, all too aware of the growing chill and the smell of damp. He could hear dripping water too and had the impression that it was running behind the wall nearest to him. Abruptly the wall on his left shrunk back and he could make out a large recess that held the remains of what looked like a generator, some polystyrene blocks and planks of wood. A storeroom of some sort. After flashing his torch into the corners, he moved on, becoming aware of every footstep rattling round him. He determined to walk as softly as he could. If there was anyone down there then he was in no hurry to warn them that he was coming.
A sheen of dust covered the walls and the floor, giving off a stale odour that mixed unpleasantly with the damp. His nose tickled and the hairs stood up on the back of his neck but his sgriob didn’t budge. All he sensed was his own fear and uncertainty. Another pair of doors and another set of stairs. It was colder, damper and darker. He had a choice of two ways to go and followed his nose, passing low brick walls, no more than a couple of feet high which he took to be old boiler supports. Other walls held the ghosts of doors long since vanished and behind them were what seemed to be the arches of the foundations. He surely couldn’t go much lower.
Wary of his footing as the ground below him got rougher, he flashed the light on the floor and saw the nestle of dust had been disturbed. He crouched and was fairly sure it had been footsteps but the big question was how recent they were. Days or months? He nibbled his lip and looked ahead into the darkness, realizing he had no real idea of how long he’d been down there – fifteen minutes maybe – and only a vague idea of how to return to the surface. At the end of that corridor, he again had a choice of directions but was able to see that on only one of them did the dust seem to have been displaced. That was the way to go.
It was much wider down there now, the narrow hospital corridors having been replaced by large spaces that seemed to have no edge and he hugged close to the wall for fear of staggering in the wrong direction. Then something else caught his eye, picked out by the torchlight amid the murk. He reached down and picked it up, an