She remained still.

‘Ange, come on… Get yourself out that pit.’ He reached down, pulled a clump of her hair.

She raised a hand, yelped. ‘What is it?’

‘Come on, get yourself out that fucking bed…’

‘Why?’

‘Cause I fucking said so.’ He dug a shoe in her ribs, not hard, but enough to make her sit up.

Angela’s eyes drooped as she tried to take in Henderson, standings above her with a mobile phone in his hand. She lifted her arm, ran fingers topped with chipped red nails through her long hair. ‘What time is it?’

‘Never fucking mind that… Here take this phone.’

Angela reached out, took it. ‘What’s this for?’

Henderson had started to pace the room, his shoes thumping on the dusty boards. ‘I want you to phone that school of yours.’

‘What?’

‘You fucking heard… Call them up and ask where this Crawley prick went to.’

Angela stared at him; he had his hands on his hips, then quickly removed one to brush at the stubble on his chin. He moved forward, sat on his haunches as he spoke to her, ‘Look, all you need to say is that he used to be your teacher and that you’re having some kind of a reunion and wanted to ask him along.’

Angela looked weary now, she slumped on the mattress. Henderson leaned forward, pitched himself on his knees as he pointed at the mobile phone. ‘Look, I’ve even put the number in there for you… See, scroll down, Porty Academy… Easy.’

Angela looked at the small screen on the phone, then back to Henderson. His mouth was twitching, there was sweat on his brows. ‘What if they say no?’

He shot up from the mattress, ‘They won’t say no… if they say no it’s because you’ve fucked it up, because you’ve put the shits up them.’ He walked to the doorway, pointed at her. ‘Get on that fucking phone now, call them and find out where this Crawley cunt is because if you don’t your life’s not going to be worth two fucks, Ange. I mean it.’ He left the room and headed into the bathroom.

As she sat on the mattress Angela’s breathing ramped up, she stared at the little screen on the mobile and then she pressed the button Henderson had shown her.

In the bathroom he heard Angela’s voice in the other room. She was doing what he had asked her. He didn’t want to consider the junky whore messing it up; that didn’t bear thinking about. He didn’t want to picture some snooty school secretary refusing to answer a simple question either. He remembered what they were like when he was at school; they were all old boots. All middle-class square pegs that looked down their noses at you. Why would they do you a favour? Why would they help you out of a hole? They had never done anything for him before, that lot; or anyone like them. But Henderson knew that if he didn’t find Crawley soon, he might as well hand himself over to Boaby Stevens right away.

He ran the taps in the bathroom and put his hands under the water, splashed his face. He rubbed the water on the back of his neck and then he ran more through his hair. It felt cold, relieving some of his tensions. It was short-lived though. As Henderson dried himself off with the towel, he realised that Angela had stopped talking in the other room.

She knocked on the bathroom door.

Henderson turned, opened up. ‘Well?’

She stood there with her dishevelled hair flopping in her eyes and the black eyeliner she wore from the night before streaking her face. ‘He’s at Edinburgh High.’

Chapter 24

DI Rob Brennan awoke early, found his eyes fix on the orange swirl of curtain that lapped into the room. The street lamp still burned outside, a blustery wind soughed against the windowpane which rattled in its frame. He slumped, rested his head on the pillow for a moment, then reached for his cigarettes. The first breath of nicotine tasted good to him, stilled the thoughts that were stirring in his head. Through the wall he could hear a games machine playing; already? he thought. He looked at his watch, it had barely gone seven. He was surrounded by wasters: students and the work-shy. How had he arrived at this point? he wondered. He knew the answer instantly, but didn’t want to face it. He raised himself on the edge of the bed, took another long drag on his cigarette and brushed a weary hand through his unkempt hair.

Brennan looked at his feet, wriggled his toes into socks and rose. His trousers hung over the back of a chair, the belt still threaded through the loops. He reached for them, stepped in. His shirt and tie had been beneath them. The tie was in a Windsor knot, slackened, but held in the same place it was the day before by the button-down collar. He looped the crinkled garment over his head and tucked the shirt tails into his trousers. His shoes were on the other side of the room and the floor felt cold beneath his feet as he crossed the boards.

Dressed, Brennan surveyed the room. On the table sat the remains of his visit to the chip shop the night before. He looked at the stale crust of the deep-fried haggis, the scatter of greying chips, and grimaced. He wanted coffee, but knew that was a long way off.

‘What a way to live, Rob.’

He collected his jacket, a pile of blue folders and his mobile phone, headed for the door. It was dark on the stairwell, a lone lamp burned two floors up but Brennan guided himself down the steps with a hand on the banister. The gritty dusting of silt and refuse crunched beneath the soles of his shoes as usual.

Outside the rubbish bags sat ripped and torn, a large seagull stood propietorially over the spillage of potato peelings and empty microwaveable meal boxes. Brennan looked down the street, then raised his eyes: the sky was a milky albumen that threatened a day of rain. He crossed the road and opened the driver’s door of the Passat. As he slotted the key in the ignition, a blast of chart music disrupted the morning’s calm; he reached for the dial, switched off.

On the road to Fettes Police Station, he thought about the day to come, he knew he faced a grilling from the Chief Super about his appointment of the profiler from Strathclyde. Benny would — in all likelihood — use it as an excuse to install Gallagher at the front of the investigation. Brennan gripped the wheel, slapped a palm off the gear stick. That would suit the bastard nicely, wouldn’t it? Gallagher might think he was working his way up the greasy pole, but Brennan had met his type before and still had a few moves of his own. He pulled out as a road-sweeping lorry edged into the middle lane, cursed: ‘Fucking indicate, eh!’

He was losing focus, and he knew it. He needed to batten down his thoughts, get back on the case. Two young girls had been killed, if he was to find their murderer then his focus had to be sharper. He was letting too many ancillary problems creep in and he had to halt that right away. There was a time when he had found no trouble separating the outside world from work, or even the machinations of co-workers from the task; but Brennan was questioning everything now. He was questioning his role in the world and it worried him, not because he wondered where it might lead, but because he knew the job deserved more. It demanded full attention and he was allowing too much that was irrelevant to seep in.

‘Screw the nut, man,’ he told himself as he pulled back into lane.

Ferry Road was already filling with commuter traffic and by the time he reached the Crew Toll roundabout the road to the city had become an immovable mass of cars, stuck bumper to bumper. Brennan watched the disconsolate faces of the drivers, yawning and frowning, as he slowed into the left lane and took the Crew Road exit to the station. At the car park he slotted the Passat in beside a blue Camry and stepped out. The wind was crisp around his ears as he headed for the front door. The place was still quiet at this time, how he liked it. It was one of Brennan’s contradictions: much as he felt compelled to protect the public, felt the hurts of victims’ families, he could only take so much company at one time. Small doses, that’s how he handled people.

The DI made his way to the coffee machine, selected a large black and took his Styrofoam cup through to Incident Room One. His initial instinct was to check the whiteboard for new additions; it remained unchanged. He made his way through to his office, removed his jacket and tried his first sip of coffee. On his desk was a large envelope from the lab. It was marked for his attention and sealed. He pulled out his chair, sat. For a moment he tried to figure at the contents of the envelope but his mind remained blank — he opened it. On the first page was a

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