Read Killing the Shadows (2000) Online
Authors: Val McDermid
Maybe she was already too late.
The smell of coffee woke Steve. He blinked for a moment, rubbing the sleep out of his eyes, suffering the dislocation of waking in an unfamiliar place. He pushed himself upright and saw Terry sitting at the table, a mug in her hands. “I was beginning to wonder if last night was too much for you and you’d slipped into a coma,” she teased.
“What time is it?” he asked, unaware as to how late he’d slept.
“Twenty past nine.”
Steve swung his legs to the floor and jumped to his feet. “You’re kidding,” he exclaimed, sounding more shaken than delighted.
“It’s Saturday, Steve. People sleep late.” She grinned. “Even coppers.”
“I can’t believe nobody’s phoned. The surveillance…Neil should have called to say he was going off for the night,” he said, talking more to himself than to her. “And the AC, his plane’s supposed to have been on the ground two hours ago.” He crossed to his phone and pager. He stared dumbfounded at the blank displays. “What’s wrong?” he said, grabbing his phone and frowning at it.
Terry came up behind him and put her arms round his waist. “I switched them off. You need to let go, Steve.”
He pulled away and swung round, his face a mixture of anger and incredulity. “You did what!” he shouted. His mouth opened and closed, words for once failing him.
“The world won’t end if you’re out of reach for a night,” Terry said, a note of uncertainty in her voice.
“I’m in the middle of a major operation,” he yelled. “I’ve got a team on a murder suspect. Jesus, Terry, anything could have happened. How could you do something so fucking irresponsible?” As he spoke, he was reaching for his clothes, pulling on boxer shorts and trousers.
“You didn’t tell me,” she blazed back at him. “How was I supposed to know? Last time we were interrupted, it wasn’t even your case. You gave me no indication that you had anything important on the go.”
Steve paused halfway through buttoning his shirt and gave her a livid glare. “It’s confidential, that’s why I didn’t say. I don’t talk about my work to civilians.”
His words cut like a whip. But rather than making Terry flinch, they sharpened her response. “Unless they’re Fiona Cameron?” she raged.
“Is that what this is about? You’re jealous of Fiona?” Steve couldn’t believe what he was hearing.
Terry’s voice dropped and she stared evenly at him. “No, it’s about trust, Steve. It’s about openness. It’s about not treating me as if I’m a child. All you had to do was mention at some point that you had something going on that might just interrupt our time together. Fucking hell,” she exploded again. “What about common courtesy?”
Steve thrust his arms into his jacket and grabbed his coat. “I’m a senior police officer. People need to contact me out of hours.”
“Mr. Indispensable. You don’t want a lover, Steve. You want an audience.”
He shoved phone and pager into his jacket pocket and made for the door, shaking his head. “I don’t fucking believe this.”
“You should have told me, dickhead,” she shouted, her anger directed as much at her own impulsiveness as his taciturnity.
His only reply was the slam of the door as he walked out. By the time he got to his car, his hands were still trembling with the adrenaline surge of pure rage. “Fucking unbelievable,” he muttered under his breath as he threw himself into the driver’s seat. He switched on his pager. Five messages. Steve cursed under his breath as he scrolled through. Two from Fiona from late last night. One from Neil just before eleven. One from Neil a few minutes after six. “Shit, shit, shit,” he said, as the last message revealed itself. The Assistant Commissioner had paged him over an hour ago.
He turned on his phone and called his home number, then keyed in the combination that would release his messages from the answering machine. Fiona again, requesting an urgent call back. Neil, announcing he’d decided to stay on Coyne all night, just in case. Neil again, reporting that he’d handed over to Joanne and would be at the Yard if he was needed for an arrest and search. And a message from the AC, saying he was expecting Steve’s call.
He rubbed his hands over his face, trying to calm down to the point where he could make his case for the arrest of Gerard Coyne. After a minute of deep breathing, he decided he was as ready as he’d ever be. He’d just have to lie and say his pager battery had died without him noticing. The hour he’d lost probably hadn’t made much difference. But it could have done.
As he dialled the AC’s number, he felt a pang of regret. He’d had such high hopes for him and Terry. And, as usual, it had crashed and burned.
He could only hope he’d have better luck with Coyne.
Four hundred miles away, Sandy Galloway was picking at a bacon roll in the canteen at St. Leonard’s. He’d been waiting for Fiona Cameron for almost two hours, and he wasn’t best pleased. The woman had been at panic stations when she’d rung him the previous evening, but now she couldn’t even be bothered to make their appointment on time. She hadn’t even left a message for him, either with force control or at the reception desk of her hotel. The hotel that his budget was paying for, he reminded himself crossly.
He’d spoken to Sarah Duvall, as he’d promised. He’d watched the end of his cop show, then called her at Wood Street. She was a bright lassie, that one. She’d gone through the discrepancy between Redford’s statement and what the Dorset police had found in some detail. She’d explained why she’d initially been uneasy, then ran through the reasoning she’d gone through since. It had clearly stilled her qualms, and he was inclined to think she had jumped the right way.
Which meant, of course, that Fiona Cameron was barking up the wrong tree altogether. Galloway was just fed up that she hadn’t bothered to keep him informed of her plans.
It had never occurred to him to check the fax machine that sat behind the secretary’s desk in his outer office.
T
he directions were carved in her memory like a grave inscription. “Take the A839 out of Lairg.” Back out of the town centre, across the narrows of the River Shin before it opened out into one of the two inlets at the bottom of the loch. Down the river bank for a short distance, then a turn west, a rounded hillock on her right. Fiona checked in her rear view mirror that Caroline was still behind her.
“About a mile out of the town, you’ll see a track on the right signed Sallachy.” Yes, there was the metal led track. Conveniently, there was a phone box on the other side of the road. Fiona pulled up and pointed exaggeratedly to the kiosk. Caroline gave her the thumbs-up and gestured at her watch, overtaking Fiona, to park right by the phone. Fiona checked the time. 9.37. She had an hour. Moving off, she swung hard right to make the turn.
“Carry on up the track (it’s pretty rough going, you’ll appreciate why I’m lending you the Land Rover) for about five and a half miles.” She did as instructed. The road, which soon became a rough track of loose stones and hard core, ran about forty feet above the loch side, with scatterings of trees on the steep shore. On her left, a conifer plantation lined the road, stretching up the hill until the flattening of the ridge stole the horizon. But Fiona, now completely focused on the task ahead, had no eye for the beauties of the landscape around her. She passed a handful of cottages as the plantation came to an end in exposed heather-covered hillside. There was no sign of life, other than a thin thread of peaty smoke emerging from a chimney.
After a mile or so, the road began to climb and the trees began again. But this time, instead of regimented rows of conifers, there was a mix of trees. Rowans, birches, alders and tall clumps of contorted Scots pine grew in the apparently random chaos of a well-managed wood that was cut off from the road by a high deer fence with occasional tall wooden stiles.
Abruptly, the trees ended on a bend. Ahead was a ravine, crossed by a sturdy-looking wooden bridge with tubular steel rails on either side. “You cross a river gorge, the Allt a’ Claon.” No mistaking it, she was on the right track. Halfway across the bridge, Fiona slowed to a crawl and looked down fifty feet of craggy rock to the river’s rough and tumble below. It was flowing fast through the channel it had cut itself, bursting into white foam as it hit the boulders that had fallen into its path. Cut off from the sparkle of sunlight by the high walls of its gorge, it gleamed the dark cloudy brown of unpolished amber.
Fiona let in the clutch and carried on, the tension in her body transferring itself to the hands that gripped the steering wheel like claws. “There’s a left turn up ahead, which you take.” She took it, wrestling the wheel as the Land Rover protested at the loose shale under its wheels. Time to move into four-wheel-drive, she thought, carrying out the operation Lachlan had demonstrated. The Land Rover juddered slightly, then the wheels gripped more tightly and she was moving forward easily over the rough surface.
“About half a mile up this track, there’s another left turn. The track takes you back across the river ravine on a rope bridge. It’s a lot stronger than it looks, but better not go faster than five miles an hour.” Fiona made the turn and approached the bridge, a construction of narrow wooden planks suspended on rope cables anchored to thick poles on either side of the gorge. Her heart pounded. It looked far too fragile a construction to bear the weight of the Land Rover. She had to trust Kit’s words, however. She rolled to a halt by the start of the bridge and carefully engaged first gear. Then at little more than a walking pace, she edged forward. The bridge creaked ominously as it took the full weight of the vehicle, but although she felt its sway beneath her, it held firm as she slowly advanced over the thirty-yard width of the gorge.
When she regained solid ground, she let out the breath she hadn’t even been conscious of holding. She took her clammy hands off the steering wheel and wiped them on her thighs. “Fuck, I hope I’m right about this,” she said out loud. “And I hope I’m in time.”
“You cross the river into some trees and the bothy’s about a mile ahead of you.” The end was almost in sight. She drove on into the belt of trees that crowded the track. A couple of hundred yards further on, she rounded a bend and, to her astonishment, almost ran over a man who was walking down the track towards her, a long-handled axe over his shoulder and a bundle of sticks under one arm. She skidded to a halt and wound down the window. The man, who was muffled up in anorak and close-fitting woollen hat, a scarf wrapped tightly round his neck and chin, raised a hand in greeting. “I’m looking for Kit Martin’s bothy,” she said. “Am I on the right road?”
His dark brows furrowed. “The writer? Yes, it’s about a mile up the track.” Judging by his accent, he wasn’t local born and bred, but he obviously knew the area. No doubt one of the in comers who, like Kit, had snapped up many of the properties that came on the market, tempted by the low prices and the peace of a rural lifestyle.
“Thanks,” she said. “You’ve not seen him today, I suppose?”
The man shook his head. “I’ve just come out for some wood.”
Fiona waved and drove on. Soon she emerged from the trees on to open hillside. The wiry brown stems of heather in its winter plumage stretched up the hill, broken up by rocky outcroppings that varied from a single boulder to uneven patches stretching for as much as thirty yards. Ahead there was another clump of trees. She guessed that was the windbreak for Kit’s bothy and pulled over to the side of the road before she reached the woodland.
This was it. There was no turning back now. Fiona felt sick with fear and anticipation, but she had to go on. She grabbed the carrier bag containing her purchases from the mountaineering shop and the hardware store and shoved it inside the waxed jacket. Taking a deep, shuddering breath, she opened the door and clambered out on to the roadside.
Fiona knew she couldn’t approach the bothy head on. If the killer was there with Kit, he’d doubtless be watching the road in. She studied the lie of the land and made her decision. She struck off into the woods at an angle to the road, pushing through the young saplings and tramping down the brambles that obstructed her path. It was hard going, especially since she was conscious of trying to make as little noise as possible.
After about ten minutes, the trees ended abruptly in a wide clearing. At the centre was a single-storey stone building with a slate roof. She was facing the end wall, which had no windows. Perfect for her plans. She glanced to either side, disconcerted by the absence of a vehicle. If the killer was there with Kit, they had to have arrived in something. What if she was already too late? What if he’d done what he intended and killed Kit already? She’d never felt so scared. Or so alone.
“Don’t overreact,” she muttered under her breath. At worst, they only had a couple of hours start on her. It was important to the killer that he complete the murder ritual as it was outlined in the book. There hadn’t been enough time for him to have exsanguinated Kit and painted the walls. Either they weren’t there yet or the killer had driven off into Lairg for supplies.
Or else she had guessed completely wrong.
Refusing to allow that thought to settle, Fiona opted for action. Adrenaline pumping, she ran in a low crouch from the trees to the shelter of the gable end, grateful for the flexibility of the lightweight boots. Then, with infinite care, she inched along the wall to the rear of the bothy. At the end, she chanced a quick look round the back. No sign of life. There were three windows in the wall, she noted. She wiped a sheen of sweat from her forehead and boldly turned the corner.
Fiona could feel the thud of her heart in her chest as she tiptoed to the edge of the first window and looked carefully round the edge of the frame. The room spread before her was obviously Kit’s bedroom. There was no sign of activity. It was a curious sensation to look in on a life so familiar and yet so strange. A surge of emotion swelled in her chest, making her catch her breath.
She swallowed hard and swiftly crossed the window, slowing again as she approached the second window. This looked like a later addition, having a markedly different size and shape to the other two. As she drew nearer, she could see it was completely obscured by a blind. This was almost certainly the bathroom. If she was right, this was where Kit would be held prisoner. She moved her head through various angles to try to catch a glimpse inside round the edges of the blind, but she could see nothing.