Killing for Keeps (21 page)

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Authors: Mari Hannah

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Police Procedural, #General

BOOK: Killing for Keeps
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48

D
C Brown was standing to attention, hands behind his back, feet slightly apart, facing his boss’s desk. Half an hour ago, he’d been relieved of duty in Blanchland
and summoned to the MIR by Naylor. Five minutes ago, Kate Daniels had burst into the incident room, nearly taking the door off its hinges. Without checking the murder wall, something she always
did, she marched across the room and ordered him to her office, humiliating him in front of the squad.

‘Lunch?!’ Her face was almost crimson. ‘You went for
lunch
?’

‘And then a walk in the woods,’ Brown said. ‘I weighed up the odds and made a decision.’

‘The wrong one!’ she yelled.

Swallowing hard, Brown didn’t know what to say. His boss looked jaded. Drawn. He knew she’d had a hell of a day; a hell of a week. He’d seen her angry before – but never
like this – and still she wasn’t done.

‘Let me rewind here.’ She crossed her arms, her eyes boring into him. ‘Hank and I are up at a murder scene in Glasgow thinking that the guy you’re babysitting has rocked
you off, and you’re sitting in a pub somewhere filling your face? Tell me that’s not true, Andy! Make me understand how you thought that was a good idea.’

‘With respect, boss, it was! McKenzie and Theresa were stir crazy. Price was on a rest day. He did a forward recce before we set off. I took all the necessary precautions. Asked him to
check the route first, make sure there was no one dodgy hanging around. There were the usual suspects walking their dogs, couple of people fishing on the reservoir. He knew who they were. He even
came along with his dog to cover my back.’

‘Oh, that’s OK then. Are you
mad
? Do you have
any
idea the trouble you are in?’

‘Why am I in trouble?’ Brown knew that sounded lame even before the words had passed his lips. From the minute he’d been summoned from Blanchland he knew he was for the high
jump, if not from Naylor, then from her. Fortunately, Naylor had been called away to HQ and wasn’t in the office when he arrived. ‘Boss, McKenzie wasn’t locked up or under
arrest.’

‘Don’t backchat me, Andy. I’m perfectly well aware—’

‘Will you hear me out?’ He paused, apologized for raising his voice and interrupting her. Aware of the eyes of the team through her office door, he felt ridiculous standing there,
trying to vindicate himself. Since he’d joined the Murder Investigation Team, the DCI had only good things to say about him. Until today, they’d never exchanged a cross word. He’d
dealt with the situation as he saw fit. He didn’t feel he deserved such a public reprimand. Again, he tried justification. ‘My role was saving their lives, not detaining
them.’

‘It wasn’t their lives that concerned us. It was yours!’ Kate took a breath, dropped her voice a touch. ‘Jesus, Andy! Did you not think for one millisecond how going AWOL
might look to the rest of the squad if they tried getting hold of you? How it would look to me – to Hank? To anyone else with a brain bigger than a walnut?’

‘They were hell-bent on going. If I hadn’t gone along, they’d have walked out anyway.’ Brown resented the implication that he had no sense, even though he could see how
worrying it might have appeared to her. ‘There was nothing I could do! Theresa was even worse than McKenzie. She wanted out of the house and I couldn’t convince her otherwise. She can
moan for Scotland, that one. She had to get out of there and, to be perfectly honest, so did I.’

‘Ah, I understand.’

‘No, with all due respect, I don’t think you do, boss.’ Brown shifted his weight from one foot to the other. ‘I did everything I could in order to make it as safe as
possible for all concerned. I’m sorry, OK? I’m a townie. How did I know you can’t get a mobile signal up there if you move more than two metres from the house?’

Kate huffed. ‘You should’ve called first!’

‘I never thought—’

‘Why the hell not?’ Kate’s voice was getting louder by the second. ‘Hank and I have been going crackers, thinking something awful had happened to you. Lisa is in chunks.
You owe her
big-style
. You bloody idiot! You never
ever
do that again! Do you understand?’

And suddenly he did. He felt like a kid being scolded by a parent for running off, or a dog whose owner slaps it for not coming to heel when called –
which is precisely why they never
do
. This was her way of showing him how much she cared. How worried she’d been. He’d rather have had a Bonio.

H
aving vented her anger on her young DC, Kate called the squad together for a full briefing. When it was over, she sent Hank off home to see his family – it was the least
she could do after the day he’d put in. Grabbing a sandwich to go, she left the station, bound for Blanchland, taking Andy Brown with her.

There was no way he was going home yet.

He had no bloody idea how relieved she was to hear that he was safe. At first he seemed almost oblivious to the anxiety he’d caused his colleagues in the few hours he’d been off the
grid. She’d enlightened him good and proper, terrifying him in the process. Although he didn’t know it yet – she intended to let him stew a while – she had absolutely no
intention of taking the matter further. Technically, he’d broken the rules. But hey, who was she to point the finger? No, it was over: Junior was back with his mummy.

I
t was dark by the time they reached McKenzie’s cottage: eight thirty-three, to be precise. Andy Brown rapped hard on the door. Creeping around outside wasn’t to be
recommended with an armed officer in the house on high alert because some raging lunatic was out to get McKenzie. When Craig O’Kane found out about his brother, all hell would break
loose.

The latch came off and the door opened.

Kate showed ID, asking the armed officer to remain in the hallway while she and Andy had a word with the occupants. Andy led the way into the living room. Acknowledging Theresa with a nod, he
stepped aside, letting his boss take centre stage. McKenzie was sitting in his usual fireside chair, legs raised on a footstool, newspaper on his knee, not one but two crisp packets on the floor
beside an empty plate – the remains of his supper.

The DCI got straight to the point. ‘Right, Arthur, I want to know who it is.’

McKenzie’s eyes slid over her from head to toe, a method employed by his kind when they were trying to put professional women down. Kate was used to it, immune to it even. It made her all
the more determined to make his life difficult until she was ready to leave. And that would depend very much on his reaction to her line of questioning. Not that she expected straight answers. She
was only there to gauge his response – to see the whites of his eyes, so to speak.

‘What the fuck are you on about?’ he said.

Kate so wanted to wipe the grin off his face. Her eyes took in both McKenzie and Theresa. ‘You two think you’ve played me, don’t you? Well, I’ve got news for you.
Detective Brown here may have babysat your alibi, but I know you sent someone up to Glasgow to kill O’Kane, and I’m going to prove it if it’s the last thing I do.’

‘O’Kane’s dead?’ McKenzie grinned. ‘Ace! Which one? We’ll throw a party.’

‘You know fine well which one. And believe me when I tell you, the other one’s not going to be a happy bunny. If I were you, I’d dig in for a while. Because Craig is coming
after you and I might not have the funds to provide any more protection – unless you cough up a suspect.’

‘Is she always this dim?’ McKenzie was smirking at Brown. Another put-down. Address the male officer and ignore the female, irrespective of rank
.
‘Even if I knew what
she was harping on about, does she really believe that I’d implicate myself in something as serious as a murder? The stupid cow is talking shite.’

Brown told him to show some respect.

Slowly, McKenzie shifted his gaze to the DCI and slipped his hand into Theresa’s. ‘I told you once before, I’m going straight. Theresa and I both are. We’re not the same
people we were years ago. Ask anyone. We run a reputable business. We have a solicitor and everything. In fact, if you continue to make such wild accusations, Detective Chief Inspector, I might
have to give him a call.’

49

T
he incident room was in semi-darkness when Kate arrived, shortly before ten o’clock. Everyone had knocked off and gone home. Lights were dimmed, computer screens blank,
as she made her weary way towards the glow of her office at the far end of the room. The blinds were half-closed but she could see a figure waiting there, way before she reached the door.

Bright.

Kate slowed.
Not now.

After going ten rounds with Andy, and ten more with McKenzie, she couldn’t stomach another row – especially with the head of CID. Tired and agitated, she’d left McKenzie in a
strop, accusing her of harassment. It was useless talking to him. The tosser deserved all he got from whoever was currently dishing out the violence. Shame she couldn’t butt out of his
dispute with O’Kane and let the stupid sods kill each other.

For a moment, she considered tiptoeing away, making out that she’d gone straight home. But unless Bright had changed his aftershave, she knew it wasn’t him before she reached her
office door. A whiff of Jo Malone – Dark Amber & Ginger Lily

identified her visitor as Jo Soulsby. Kate had bought her the cologne for her birthday.

Jo’s presence, even at this late hour, was a nice surprise, if not a little baffling. Given that they hadn’t seen each other for days, or spoken since their brief squabble on Friday
morning, Kate wondered why she was there so late in the evening when she could be tucked up in bed or lounging in front of a good movie.

Trying not to appear as downhearted as she felt, she turned the handle and opened the door. Jo was sitting in the easy chair Kate had bought from an antiques shop and installed for the comfort
of visitors, feet tucked up beneath her. She was casually dressed in a pair of old jeans and a rugby shirt, hair tied up loosely, a few strands hanging loose around her face. A pair of tatty
sneakers lay untidily on the floor, kicked off to make her even more at ease in her surroundings.

She looked right at home, engrossed in a novel: Louise Welsh’s
The Girl on the Stairs.

‘Good choice!’ Kate was pointing at the book. She bent down and planted a kiss, first on one cheek, then the other. ‘To what do I owe this pleasure?’

‘Sit down, I’ll get you a coffee.’

Closing the paperback, Jo stood up and gave her a hug, hanging on for a bit too long. Kate told her not to bother with the coffee. It was too late in the day for that and she had a much better
idea. She needed something stronger after the day she’d put in. She was technically off duty, on her own time. Opening her bottom drawer, she took out two shot glasses and a bottle of Jim
Beam Devil’s Cut bourbon.

Pouring them both a dram, she held up her glass. ‘I so need this,’ she said.

‘I don’t think you do,’ Jo said awkwardly. ‘Not for me.’

‘Not a social call then?’

Kate was right about that. Jo told her that she knew all about O’Kane’s death, Andy’s disappearance and McKenzie’s alibi. As part of the team, most of that was
understandable, but she’d left the best ’til last and didn’t hold back.

‘I also know about Whitby, Towner, and your bloody awful row with Bright.’

‘How the hell?’

Meltdown . . .

Hank had grassed her up.

Kate downed her drink in one, felt the bourbon do its job, warming her insides as the amber liquid entered her system. Even without the alcohol, she was punchy. Having told her to forget all
about Whitby, in the time it had taken her to drive to Blanchland and back, Hank had blabbed to the one person in the world whose approval mattered.

Kate wouldn’t forgive him this time.

OK, so he was concerned about her. That didn’t give him the right to involve Jo in her screw-ups. When was he ever going to learn to keep his nose the hell out of her business?

Lifting Jo’s untouched glass to her lips, Kate slugged off the bourbon, picked up the bottle and poured another, slopping some on her desk in the process, not bothering to wipe the excess
away. She didn’t know what to say, what to think.

‘You could have told me, you know,’ Jo said gently.

‘What, and risk the condemnation I can see in your eyes? Or is that for the drink? It’s hard to tell these days.’ Kate stared Jo down. They were no longer together. There was
no reason to explain her actions. Why should she? She had nothing to feel ashamed of or guilty about. She wasn’t about to apologize for doing her job. If she felt like a bloody drink,
she’d have one. Resentment bubbled to the surface and she blurted out exactly what was on her mind: ‘If I’d wanted you to know, I’d have told you myself. He had no
right!’

‘He had every right. Don’t be angry with him, Kate. He meant well.’

‘Oh yeah? Wonder who else he’s told.’

‘What? Come on! You know he’d never do that! He thinks I can help.’

‘Well, you can’t. No one can. I’m a big girl. I have to work this out all by myself.’

‘You’re not though, are you? Working it out, I mean. He said you weren’t. He told me how upset you were. How you weren’t—’

‘Coping? Is that what he said?’

‘I was going to say feeling your best. That’s true, isn’t it?’

Kate didn’t believe her. She glanced out of the window at the building across the street. It was dark. Empty. Just like her. So, now she wasn’t merely ‘unfit for duty’,
she wasn’t coping.
Jesus Christ, was this a conspiracy?
Did everyone think she was heading for a mental breakdown? She turned back to Jo, her face set in a scowl. ‘Roll up,
roll up for the freak show. The great Detective Chief Inspector Daniels does it again. Is Hank selling tickets yet?’

‘What’s Hank got to do with it?’ Jo looked genuinely bewildered.

Kate stared at her as the penny dropped. If it wasn’t Hank who’d grassed, it had to be Bright – but why? He and Jo had never seen eye to eye. For him to confide in her went
beyond unusual, it was unprecedented. The sharing of such confidential and potentially harmful information came as a body blow to Kate. And with it came an epiphany.

She desperately needed help.

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