Death to Pay (16 page)

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Authors: Derek Fee

Tags: #Thriller & Suspense, #British Detectives, #Mystery, #Traditional Detectives, #Police Procedurals

BOOK: Death to Pay
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‘I’m not goin’ to help it. You remember an auld biddy that used to pal around with Lizzie called Nancy Morison?’

Sammy thought for a while. ‘A little auld one, fond of the gargle, used to hang around Lizzie like a pet dog. I think I saw her at the Black Bear yesterday.’

‘Aye, that’s the one. Someone did her in last night on a building site out Dunmurray way. They dropped a concrete block on her head. Made a right mess of her.’

‘What the f..’ Rice stood up and struggled into the kitchen. Where was that bitch of a wife when you needed her? He pulled at a series of shelves becoming more irate and destructive as he went. By the time McIlroy joined him in the kitchen, the floor was covered in the contents of the shelving units. ‘Fucking Solpadine,’ Rice said. ‘Where does she hide the fucking Solpadine?’ The contents of another shelf hit the floor. He noticed the red package in the corner of the next shelf and pulled it out. He picked up a glass and filled it full of water before dropping two tablets into the glass. He drank the whole lot down as soon as the tablets had dissolved. ‘Now run that past me one more time,’ he said as he made his way back to the living room.

McIlroy repeated the message concerning Nancy Morison.

Rice could feel a small improvement in his headache. ‘Did I change planets when I came back here this week? I can understand someone takin’ Lizzie out. She could have filled Windsor Park with the people who had a grudge against her, but some stupid auld biddy. There’s something very strange goin’ on here. Where did the Morison woman live?’

‘Malvern Street, the other end from your old house.’

‘Was she married?’

‘Aye, old codger used to work in the shipyard.’

‘Connected?’

‘Wasn’t interested. Maybe he’s Jewish or something,’ McIlroy smiled.

‘It’s no jokin’ matter, Ivan. People around here look to us to make sure they’re not killed in their beds. We’re the ones that do the killin’ around here and not vice versa. Two auld dolls with their heads bashed in, in as many days, doesn’t do our reputation any good.’

‘The peelers are on it.’

‘The majority of them fools couldn’t find their own arseholes with a map and set of instructions.’

‘What are we goin’ to do about it?’

Rice’s head was pounding again. ‘You’ve got someone in Wilson team.’

‘Aye.’

‘Lean on him. I’ll go higher, but I want information from the horses leading the charge not just from the owner in the stands watching the race. Something that affects us is going down, and I want to know what it is. And I want the bastard behind it.’

 

CHAPTER 32

 

 

 

The hostess ushered Wilson to the table. The other seven guests were seated and had already started on their meal. Kate looked up from her plate and raised her eyes to heaven. It wasn’t the first time he’d been late for a formal dinner, and it probably wouldn’t be the last. These kinds of networking dinners were a feature of Kate’s life but not his. For him, listening to the lawyers, doctors and politicians drone on was on a par with a visit to the dentist. And Ian Wilson detested his visits to the dentist.

‘Apologies,’ he mumbled as he took the only vacant set at the table. ‘Busy day.’

Each guest had a place card set before them with their names printed on it. The host and hostess had the seats at the top and bottom of the table with the other six guests arraigned on either side. Wilson quickly glanced at the place names and saw that this evening’s guests were from the legal and political milieu. How Roy Jennings would love to be in Wilson’s seat. It was a mark of the difference between the two former cadet colleagues. Jennings would squeeze every ounce of benefit from a relationship with a woman as well connected as Kate. He turned to the lady to his side and recognised her dark features and brooding demeanour.  Her place card said Ellie Smith.

‘No riots to-night?’ his host said from the top of the table. He was a judge, who had put many rioters in jail.

‘They appear to have run out of steam,’ Wilson answered and started on his plate of smoked salmon. He thought about where he would prefer to be, and it was almost anywhere else.

‘Ian is more concerned with the two murdered women than with the riots,’ Kate interjected.

‘Lizzie Rice,’ the judge said absent-mindedly. ‘Had her up before me once but the prosecution case feel apart. Horrid woman. You must be awash with suspects.’

The other guests at the table laughed. Except for Kate and Ellie Smith.

‘We’re working our way through them,’ Wilson said.

‘Ah, so an arrest is imminent?’ the judge remarked.

‘I wouldn’t say that. However, I am hopeful that you’ll get the opportunity to pass judgement on the murderer.’ Wilson ducked his head toward his plate.

The host moved the conversation on smoothly to the next subject involving some raucous goings-on at the Stormont Assembly. Kate was actively involved in giving her opinion on the latest political fracas. Wilson relaxed. He was now fully integrated into the conversation, and the concentration would no longer be on him.

‘Are you following the rugby?’ Ellie Smith asked.

‘As much as I can. We’re pretty busy right now.’ The main course of roast lamb, scalloped potatoes and steamed vegetables arrived.

‘I’ve been reading about the murders,’ Smith said. ‘They’re quite gruesome. Reminds me of the last days of apartheid. People can be incredibly cruel. I’m sure you’ve heard about the Soweto necktie?’

‘It made the papers, although in description only,’ Wilson looked up the table and saw Kate in animated conversation with the host. She really was a phenomenon. The combination of brains and beauty was terrifying. He looked into Ellie Smith’s face. She certainly would not have been called beautiful and there was a kind of sadness in her eyes. He wondered what had happened to cause it. ‘How are you enjoying Belfast?’ he asked.

‘I could do without the weather,’ she laughed, and it animated her face. ‘But I’m enjoying trying to help Kate progress this idea of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. I understand that you don’t approve of the idea.’

‘I think it’s a lost cause. People here don’t want to rehash the past. We’ve already had the principles on television doing the mea cupla bit. There are still a lot of bodies out there that people don’t want to talk about.’

‘Don’t you believe that those who were involved in atrocities should be punished?’ she asked.

Wilson laughed. ‘This is Northern Ireland. We have people who committed murders sitting in pubs drinking pins of Guinness while they should be languishing in jail. ‘

‘It was part of a political settlement,’ the politician sitting across from Wilson said.

Wilson looked around the table and realised that the other dinner guests were listening to his conversation with Ellie Smith. ‘I’m a policeman,’ he said. ‘That means that I uphold the law and gather evidence that puts criminals before the courts. What happens after I pass the file to the Director of Public Prosecutions is not my business. But it burns me up when I see people that I know have broken the law in the worse possible way living like normal citizens.’

‘So you don’t believe in rehabilitation?’ the Judge said from the top of the table.

‘My views are simple,’ Wilson said. ‘I investigate crimes, and I catch the perpetrators. If you or our political friends think that it is expedient to let them go, that’s your business.’

‘The murders you’re investigating at the moment, where do you think they come from?’ Smith asked. ‘The method is quite cruel. You may feel like murdering someone, but you don’t generally want to cave their heads in. There’s obviously some unresolved issue behind the murders. A Truth and Reconciliation Commission might have resolved whatever pain is causing the killer to react.’

Seven pairs of eyes stared at Wilson. He was uncomfortable being the centre of attention. ‘I have no doubt that the two murders have their genesis in the past. The Rice murder was carefully planned and carried out, the Morison one less so. There is undoubtedly a motive. As there is in most murders. This isn’t a barroom brawl that ends in a stabbing. There is someone out there who wanted these two women to die. When we find the why, we’ll find the who.’

The main course plates had been removed by a waiter and desert plates distributed. It was all very civilized. Murder among the educated classes was a topic of dinner conversation not an everyday reality despite at least three lawyers being present. ‘You cannot transpose an idea from South Africa to Ulster. You have to be from here to understand the context,’ Wilson said.

‘But I am from here,’ Smith said quietly.

‘But you spent most of your life in South African,’ Kate said from down the table.

‘That’s right. I went there when I was very young. But Ulster still means something to me. That’s why I’m so interested in helping out here.’

The deserts were passed around.

‘I have to side with Ellie on this one,’ Kate said. ‘We will never have real peace in the Province until we fully understand and accept our responsibility for what happened during the ‘Troubles’.’

Seven pairs of eyes looked at Wilson again. ‘No comment,’ he said and started on his blueberry tart.

 

 

‘We come from different worlds,’ Wilson said as they settled into Kate’s car. She was always the designated driver since she had reduced her alcohol consumption to almost zero since becoming pregnant. Although he had wanted to attack the Judge’s fine whiskey, he had refrained for Kate’s sake. ‘Those people wouldn’t last a day on the streets.’

‘Well it’s lucky for them that they’ll never have to go there. We can’t all be white knights titling at windmills.’

‘But ultimately they belong to the class of people that free the murderers I catch.’

‘And I belong to that class too?’ there was a tremor in her voice.

‘You’re the most beautiful and intelligent woman I’ve ever met and most days I wonder why the hell you hooked up with me. You’re at home with judges and Members of the Assembly. I’m a home with criminals, junkies and paedophiles. Your friends exude power. The people I deal with generally have broken lives.’

‘I wouldn’t like it if you were a barrister,’ she said softly. ‘You’re worth ten of the people I deal with every day principally because you have integrity and empathy. They only think of themselves and how they can get ahead. I don’t want the fact that I have to live in that world to come between you and me. I want our child to have two parents who love each other but who can reconcile the fact that they are different.’

He put his hand on her knee. ‘Loving you is the easiest thing in the world. I know that we have to mix with your colleagues and the people who can advance your career, but I sometimes feel that they’re slumming when they’re looking at me and talking about what I do.’

‘Why don’t we have that nice female sergeant of yours and her boyfriend over for dinner and what about Donald Spence?’

He smiled. ‘Forget the dinner. Next time we’re having a pub thing I’ll give you a call. You should meet them in their natural habitat.’

She pulled into their parking space and manoeuvred herself out of her seat belt. She leaned over and kissed him. ‘I love you and so will our child.’

Wilson kissed her and smiled. In his mind, he was wondering what would happen on the day that his world and Kate’s would collide.

 

CHAPTER 33

 

 

 

‘I hated this fuckin’ dump,’ Ivan McIlroy moved through the corridor which ran through the centre of the building that used to be East Belfast Comprehensive School. The walls of the corridor were covered in graffiti, and the doors had been stripped from the classrooms. There was an acrid smell of stale urine and faeces in the air. ‘I’m glad they closed the bastard, and if they need someone to burn it down, then I’m their man.’ He turned and looked at Ronald McIver, who was walking directly behind him. ‘Happy days, eh!’

McIver didn’t answer. He wanted to get this meeting over as soon as possible so that he could get back home and relieve his sister-in-law who was babysitting his wife. The circle of life was completing for the woman he loved more than anything. After coming into the world, she had been babysat and now on her way out she required babysitting again. It was a sad reflection on life.

‘What was wrong with the ‘Black Bear’?’ McIlroy asked when McIver remained silent. ‘Do you want to relive our schooldays?’

‘I don’t want to be seen talking to you,’ McIver said his voice deadpan.

McIlroy laughed. ‘Fuckin’ Peeler. I’m a busy man. What have you got?’

The two men stood facing each other on either side of the corridor. ‘Nothing,’ McIver said. He took the roll of notes McIlroy had given him at their previous meeting from his pocket and tossed them across the corridor.

McIlroy caught the roll and looked at it. ‘You’re doin’ it for nothing?’ He tossed the roll of note into the air, caught them and put them in the pocket of his donkey jacket.

‘I’m not going to inform on the work of my team,’ McIver said putting as much steel as he could muster into his voice.

McIlroy frowned. ‘I thought that I made myself plain in the ‘Bear’. It’s like the Taigs. Once in never out. You’re my man and no matter what you say you’re goin’ to feed me what Wilson is up to.’ His smile exposed a row of brown teeth. ‘I don’t give two fucks about you. I could hurt you real bad like I used to when you were a wain. But I prefer to do a bit of business with your old lady.’

McIver threw himself at McIlroy. The two tussled for a moment before McIlroy punched McIver hard in the stomach. McIver doubled over, and McIlroy was about to launch a right cross to his head when he stopped. He didn’t want to mark his face, in case he would have to explain the injury to Wilson.

McIver leaned against the wall of the corridor. He was struggling for breath. A tear of frustration came out of the corner of his eye. He was about to betray a man who had been nothing only good to him. His wife was going to be used to coerce him into helping a group of criminals and thugs. He looked at McIlroy’s smiling face. He remembered that same smiling face in this corridor as its owner extracted lunch money from the few children whose parents could afford to give it to them. He had been a thug then, and he was a thug now. He fished around in his pocket and came out with his service pistol, a Glock 17.

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