‘That’s good. From a therapeutic point of view it’s probably a bit more effective than discussing all your problems with an imaginary person.’
For God’s sake. He slumped in his seat, both hands covering his eyes. ‘Here we go again. .’
‘I’m just saying it’s not entirely healthy. And you
‘Leave it, OK? ’ Jesus, nag, nag, nag.
‘Logan, I’m serious: it’s really not healthy to keep-’
‘Take the bloody hint.’ He dropped his hands from his face and jabbed a finger in Goulding’s direction. ‘I can still do you for assaulting Professor Marks.’
Silence.
Goulding sighed, then wandered over to his wall full of whiteboards. ‘I’d like to work up a profile on Agnes Garfield. We know who she is, but it might help tell us
‘I don’t have any say on the budget for this one.’
‘I’ll do it for free, on the condition that you catch her. Roy didn’t deserve to die like that.’
‘Free? ’ Logan raised an eyebrow. ‘In that case, knock yourself out. I’ll get the case files sent over. And if it helps, I think she might have tortured someone to death in Kintore too.’
The office door swung partially open, and there was Chalmers. She froze on the threshold, then knocked. As if they didn’t already know she was there. ‘Sorry, Guv. That’s the warrant in now.’
Logan stood. Put his phone away. ‘He still refusing to cooperate? ’
‘Won’t say a word.’
‘Cuff him, then call Control and tell them to send a patrol car: give Marks the full blues-and-twos treatment. March the little sod out the front door in handcuffs so everyone can see.’
She nodded. ‘Guv, about Agnes Garfield. .? ’
‘You stay with him till the patrol car gets here. Make sure he’s processed properly — fingerprints, DNA, the lot.’
‘See, I was thinking: Roy Forman was in the Gordon Highlanders, right? A trained soldier, unarmed combat and all that? Would an eighteen-year-old girl
Ah. . Chalmers had a point. ‘Maybe she had help? ’
Goulding picked up a dry eraser. ‘Roy was an alcoholic. Give him a bottle of meths and a straw and he’d do anything you want.’ The eraser cut a swathe through a scribbled mind-map, leaving the ghost of words behind. He picked up a red pen and wrote ‘AGNES GARFIELD’ in the middle of the board and trapped it in a lopsided box. ‘When you stick that idiot Marks in his cell, do me a favour? Make sure there’s someone noisy and smelly next door. It’ll drive him mad.’
Logan took the grumbling Punto for another tour of the surrounding streets. Still no sodding parking space. In the end he had to dump the car on the Beach Boulevard and walk.
A cold wind stirred sand and grit in the gutter, made the trees shiver.
On the other end of the phone, Samantha sighed. ‘
‘I’m
‘
Logan grimaced. ‘Yeah, because Reuben’s the negotiating type.’
The little red man went green. A hatchback lurched to a halt, the bmtch-bmtch-bmtch of driving bass thumping out through the closed windows.
‘
Logan wandered across the road, taking his time, getting the evil eye from the hatchback’s acne-ridden boy- racer driver. ‘I’m not killing him, and I’m not fitting him up either.’
A scrunching noise — probably Samantha putting her hand over the mouthpiece — then a muffled conversation.
He nipped across the other side of the road, weaving his way between cars and trucks waiting at the roundabout. ‘Look, I’m going to have to go. I’ll give you a call later, OK? It’s-’
And she was back. ‘
‘And that helps because. .? ’
‘
Onto Justice Street, where a pair of bulky tower blocks loomed over the surrounding granite buildings, dark windows glinting in a stray beam of struggling sunshine.
‘Sorry, but I don’t-’
‘
He stopped. ‘She’d planned it all out. She knew I was looking for her, because I’d been to her house. So. .’ A frown. ‘She tracked me down, followed me home. .’ Something cold caressed the back of his neck.
Logan spun around, his free hand clenched into a fist.
No one there.
A thin drizzle drifted down from the clay-coloured sky, misting the windscreens of parked cars, painting an anaemic rainbow in that one slice of sunlight.
‘
‘Ah, right. .’ Jumping at his own shadow, like an idiot.
‘
She was right: Agnes Garfield wasn’t a criminal mastermind, or the next Hannibal Lecter, she was just an eighteen-year-old girl with mental health problems who wasn’t taking her medication any more.
The poor girl was more scared of him than he was of her.
A warm breath escapes her lips, curling white in the light of the open chest freezer. Shiny packages wrapped in tinfoil, so many precious things. .
Rowan leans forward until her cheeks rest against the cold plastic tray. Soothing. Calming. Damping down the fire in her head.
Everything will be OK.
The fifth tenet: ‘Do not fear the darkness, make it fear you.’
She closes the freezer lid and the room goes black, just the gurgle and buzz as the compressor kicks in, taking it back down below zero again.
Shapes fade out of the gloom: the boxy outline of the big chest freezer, the scythe leaning against the wall, the lonely pegboard stained by the ghosts of implements past. The old wooden table. The sickly sweet stench of death.
‘Light a fire in God’s name. .’
She takes a deep breath and straightens her back. It’s time.
The door opens with a creak onto the next room. A barn, with dusty bales of hay stacked in the corner, heady with the smell of mildew. Mouse droppings make Morse code patterns on the dirt floor.
That won’t do.