place; I want airports and ports from here to the fucking white cliffs of Dover on alert and every force in the country notified. Now.’
‘Yes, sir.’
He hung up.
McGuire looked quizzical. ‘What’s going on?’
‘We’ve got our man.’
‘What?’
Brennan ran for the car. ‘Come on. We’ve got to get to the Royal.’
On the road to the hospital Brennan relayed the conversation he’d just had with Lou to McGuire. The DC rocked forward in the driver’s seat, gripped the wheel. ‘I know this guy’s name.’
‘They call him the Deil… Nasty piece of work.’
‘But he’s a dealer, right. What on earth does he want with the kid?’
‘You tell me, Stevie… You tell me.’
Brennan looked at the road ahead, the fizz of orange street lamps, the blur of car headlights as the traffic snaked its way through the city. His heart rattled off his ribs; his mind stumbled from thoughts about the missing child and her murdered mother to the minister and the manse house in Pitlochry where things had all gone so wrong for them. This city swallowed people whole, he thought. Edinburgh took people from all points of the compass and used them for its own end. It was no place for the weak or the insecure, the lonely or the dependent. The city’s streets were bright under the street lamps but they hid the shadows and the darkness that lurked there. Carly had come to the city to escape her hurts and the place had taken her in, but on its terms. He saw Tierney greeting her at the bus stop, promising her a helping hand and all the time planning what he could take from her, what he could do with this fragile young life that would benefit him, put a few quid in his pocket. Was life so cheap here? This wasn’t some war-torn hell-hole; this was Edinburgh, this was the capital of a civilised nation. Or so it was claimed.
Brennan opened the window and tried to grab some air, let the cool night’s breeze blow on his face. He felt tired, worn down. Emotionally, he had nothing left to give, but he knew he had to carry on. It was his job, and no one else, he was sure, cared about the job as much as he did.
At the hospital McGuire turned a hairpin, brought the small VW into the cross-hatchings where the ambulances parked at the front door. A man in blue-green overalls shouted at them. McGuire approached and showed him his warrant card as Brennan ran for the front desk.
There was a dour woman in her bad fifties behind the counter. She sternly refused to acknowledge the queue of people in front of her. Brennan swept to the front, ignored the protests and slapped a hand down in front of the woman.
‘Melanie McArdle.’
‘You cannot just come in here and-’
McGuire appeared, card in hand. ‘Police!’
The woman removed her glasses, looked to a small computer screen, spoke as she tapped at the mouse in her hand. ‘I really should let you speak to a-’
‘Spare us, love. Just give us the ward,’ said Brennan.
She shook her head, turned to face them and put her glasses back on. ‘It’s 202. That’s two floors up, turn right.’
The officers took off running for the lifts. They sidestepped an operating trolley as they ran for the sliding doors which were closing. Brennan managed to get a hand inside and prise them back. The lift was cramped, night visitors and nurses. A doctor with a clipboard and an old woman in a wheelchair. Brennan could feel the sweat pooling on his spine; he wiped his forehead with the back of his hand as he watched the floor numbers light up. When they reached the second floor he pushed his way to the front to be first out of the doors.
He turned right and ran towards the far end of the corridor, the leather soles of his shoes slapping noisily on the hard tiled floor as he went. A woman in a white coat pinned herself against the wall as Brennan and McGuire dashed for the door marked 202. She seemed to be in shock as they halted before the small glass window and peered in, and then she spoke: ‘What’s going on here?’
‘Who are you?’
The woman held her ground. ‘I should be asking you that.’
Brennan removed his wallet, flashed his warrant card. ‘DI Robert Brennan, Lothian and Borders Police, and this is DC Stephen McGuire.’
‘Oh.’ She put a hand in her front pocket, turned a stray brown curl behind her ear with the other. ‘You’re here with the others.’
‘Others?’
‘There’s been some officers here already. There’s still one in there.’
Brennan turned back to the window, peered in. There was a WPC sitting by the bed. He nodded to McGuire to go inside; the DC opened the door.
‘How is she? I mean, what’s her condition?’
‘She’s lost a great deal of blood and is still unconscious, but there’s no organ damage that we’ve found. She’s very lucky to be alive.’
Brennan bit his lower lip — this wasn’t what he had hoped to hear. ‘Is she going to recover?’
The doctor peered down the hall. ‘It’s really too early to say, Inspector. The next few hours will be critical…’ She seemed to be looking for something, someone. ‘Look, this is all very ir regular. I’m not sure you should be in there at all. The woman has suffered a near-life-threatening trauma.’
‘Do you know who that is in there?’ said Brennan.
‘A woman who was stabbed, very badly. I know, I treated her.’
‘Well, unless you live in a bubble, Doctor, you’ll know there’s been a child missing in Edinburgh… I’d say that woman you have through there has been looking after her, so she might just be our best chance of finding the kid alive. Does that make sense to you?’
She backed off. ‘Look, I need to see the administrator. I’m not au fait with the procedures for-’
Brennan turned for the door. ‘You go tackle the red tape, love — let me know when you’ve got it in a pretty wee bow, eh.’
As he stepped inside, McGuire looked round, spoke: ‘She’s out cold, boss.’
Brennan moved towards the bed, nodded to the WPC. ‘No change at all?’
‘She’s sedated… She’s grumbled a bit and moved about some, but no words,’ said the uniform.
Brennan looked over Melanie McArdle’s face. She was bruised and beaten. Black stitches sat out proud from her forehead and a white bandage had been taped across her nose; he wondered what horrors it disguised. The woman had been savaged. No one should have to go through that, he thought.
Brennan turned away, walked to the window and looked out into the night sky. The city was sleeping now, but he knew there would be no rest for him until McArdle was found. He removed his coat, pulled out a chair. ‘Go home and get some sleep, you pair.’
They looked at each other. ‘I think we’d sooner wait, sir,’ said McGuire.
Brennan sat down, spread his jacket over himself, said, ‘Suit yourselves.’
Chapter 45
It was a cold night. Brennan wondered how the patients in the hospital must be feeling. Was there no heating in these places? Were the cutbacks biting so deep? He tried to get comfortable on the chair, but his lower back ached whichever way he turned. He tried not to think about how much rested on Melanie McArdle coming round, revealing what she knew… If she knew anything.
The woman had nearly been killed, brutally stabbed through the back — what were the chances of her talking after that kind of going-over? In Brennan’s experience, the wives were often harder to crack than the criminals themselves. It took something spectacular to put them over the edge, into that territory where things like pride and loyalty no longer mattered; was Melanie there yet? He hoped she was, for the child’s sake, but he knew for Melanie