The Dark Place (14 page)

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Authors: Sam Millar

BOOK: The Dark Place
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“Is there no way out of the mind?”

Sylvia Plath,
Apprehensions

“Y
ou still haven’t told me where you went last night – or should I say this morning?” said Naomi, pouring a steady ribbon of black coffee, before handing it to Karl.

Background music from Downtown Radio’s afternoon show lilted over the room. Fleetwood Mac’s “Go Your Own Way”.

Cupping the mug, Karl considered how the coffee’s blackness resembled his mood perfectly.

“This fair trade coffee tastes like bloody muck. Can’t we just get our normal coffee? Where the hell’s all that expensive Rio coffee?” moaned Karl, trying desperately to sidestep the looming interrogation. His brain was still quaking with the drainage of whatever shit Cathy had injected into his body.

“You’re just in one of your hate-the-world moods, finding fault in everything. Anyway, you were just about to tell me where you were at five in the morning and how you got all those mysterious scratches on your face.”

Trying desperately to come up with a feasible story, Karl’s brain suddenly began kicking into gear. Hated the thought of lying to Naomi, but could find no other escape route. Truth be told, he was still somewhat
confused about last night, almost as if it had all been a bad dream.

“I already told you: I banged into a skip, over beside Saint Anne’s Cathedral. If you must know, I met up with an old schoolmate from years back. He happened to be at that cocksucker’s signing down at Eason’s and –
arrghhhh!
” Some of the coffee spilt from the cup on to his left leg. “Fucking bastarding coffee!”

“Karl!” screamed Naomi, rushing towards him. “Get those pants off, quickly, before the coffee burns through to your skin! Hurry!”

“It’s nothing,” said Karl, grimacing. He hadn’t meant to spill so bloody much.

“Don’t be silly. Get your pants off –
now
.”

“I love it when you talk dirty.”

“This isn’t funny, Karl. You could have scalded yourself, badly.”

“Another inch, and I’d have done more than bloody scalded myself.”

As Karl peeled off the offending pants, he reluctantly agreed with himself that the pain was worth it, if only to keep Naomi’s mind away from last night.

“Oh, you poor thing,” soothed Naomi, seeing the red welt quickly forming on the wounded leg. “I’ll have to get some ointment from the medicine cabinet. I’ll be back in a sec.”

The words of “Go Your Own Way” faded quickly, train-rushed by a news jingle.

“This is the news on Downtown Radio,” stated the newscaster’s bland voice. “Police have confirmed that the body of a woman was found floating in the River Lagan, in the early hours of this morning.”

Karl did not make an immediate association with the words.

“Initial reports suggest the woman was one of the homeless people living in and around the old church at Custom House Square …”

“Karl? Are you okay?” asked Naomi, entering the room, startling him.

“What? Oh … yes …” He suddenly felt dizzy.

“What was that about a woman’s body being found in the Lagan?”

“I … I’m listening to it.” He needed air. Everything spinning.

“Karl? What’s wrong? You don’t look too good. Perhaps we should go to the hospital? That burn could be a lot worse than we realise.”

“… shot in the head …”

The words caught Karl like a meat hook to the throat.

“The truth is rarely pure, and never simple.”

Oscar Wilde,
The Importance of Being Earnest

I
t was two days later when Karl finally decided to make his way to Hicks’s office, dreading what he might hear concerning the body found floating in the Lagan.

Inside, he found Hicks spreading ketchup over a flat-looking hamburger and tired salad.

“How the hell can you eat in this place?” asked Karl, trying to block the cloying stench of dead bodies from entering his nostrils.

“There was no need for you to come here. I told you that on the phone. I could just as easily have brought you the damn report, Karl,” said Hicks, bringing the hamburger to his mouth. “Seems as if you’re almost spoiling for a fight with Wilson.”

“I’m not looking for a fight, Tom, unless it concerns getting justice for Martina and Ivana.”

“They’ve already arrested someone for Ivana’s murder, so you can stop dragging her name into your crusade.”

“Vincent Harrison? Come off it. The cops are trying to squeeze a round peg into a square hole. The lad’s obviously innocent.”

“Really? I believe that when enough murky patterns emerge, one can make a clear enough picture out of them.”

“What murky patterns?”

“Harrison’s numerous court appearances, as a juvenile.”

“What for?”

“Well, at fifteen he was charged with GBH against his then girlfriend. Charges were later dropped when the girlfriend changed her story. Two other times he appeared in the dock, and both times violence was involved. This time the victims were men – gay men.”

“I see,” said Karl, hating being caught wrong-footed by his best friend. “So, Harrison is now a homophobic stalker?”

“Sometimes you’ve got to open your eyes to the obvious, Karl. Murder isn’t always complicated.”

“You still haven’t told me if the body out there is Martina’s,” said Karl, stealing a quick glance towards the main room. Two bodies lay side by side in sheet-covered gurneys.

“It’s definitely hers. The dental records confirm it. When the body arrived late last night, I wasted no time in conducting my own autopsy, working through to the wee hours of this morning. The kidneys and liver were missing, and once again we had accelerated formation of cells and protein.”

“It’s the same bastard doing this?”

“I never jump to conclusions, no matter how easy the leap. Keeping all options open is my preferred policy. Her sister will have to come and identify the body, of course, just to make it official.”

“I haven’t told Geraldine yet. I’m not looking forward to it. What do you say in a situation like this? I feel I let her down.”

“That’s all very laudable, but I always warned you about keeping your emotions detached from the cases you get involved in. Once you become personally involved, you can’t remain objective. I don’t have that luxury and need to retain a clinical detachment.”

“Easier said than done.”

“Well, if it helps, I’ve no doubt Martina Ferris wasn’t killed in Scotland,” said Hicks, pouring coffee into a cup.

“What makes you so certain?”

“When I conducted the autopsy, I discovered particles of seaweed had coagulated inside the body. The seaweed in question is indigenous to the Antrim coast.”

“Trying to throw the cops off the scent? Do you think he’s panicking, thinks someone knows who he is?”

“That’s feasible, I suppose. Interestingly, there were tiny splinters of paint trapped between her fingernails.”

“Paint? What kind of paint?”

“Specialist paint called Neo X2. It’s used to paint barracks and places of that nature.”

“Barracks?”

“For the military and police. And don’t give me that look.”

“What look?”

“The there-must-be-police-involved-somehow-in-these-murders look.”

“Well? Who knows?”

“Your paranoia will end up sending you in the wrong direction,” said Hicks, sipping his coffee. “Do you want to see the body before you go?”

“Stop trying to be smart. You know I don’t have a strong enough stomach for that sort of thing. I take the hint. I’m going now.”

“Good. If there are any more developments, I’ll
phone
you.”

Turning to go, Karl hesitated. “Tom … there was a woman’s body found floating in the Lagan, two days ago. What can you tell me about her?”

Nodding, Hicks indicated his nose towards the bodies. “Cathy McGlone. That’s the body over there, beside Martina Ferris’s.”

Karl fought the temptation to look. “What … what are the cops saying?”

“Not too much, other than she ran some sort of Fagan homeless gang, over near Custom House Square.”

“Just because they’re homeless doesn’t make them criminals.”

“What the hell’s eating you? I never said it makes them criminals, so there’s no need to be so defensive. I’m simply stating what the police report said.”

“I’m sick of people pinning everything on homeless people. Pin it on the fuckers with money.”

“Calm down,” replied Hicks, looking at Karl curiously. “Why the
interest in McGlone?”

“How … how did she die? The news said something about her being shot.”

“She was murdered. Shot in the head four times. Quite brutal, almost like a frenzy.”

Karl felt his stomach do a trapdoor sensation. His haemorrhoid began burning the arse off him. He needed to take a shit.

“Any … any clues about her attacker?” asked Karl, poking a finger in the offending area.

“Don’t do
that
, Karl. It’s disgusting. Can’t you see I’m eating?” Hicks swallowed another well-chewed chunk of meat, washing it down with coffee. “No, no clues as such, but there are some fingerprints imprinted upon the neck. Vague prints. Time will tell if we can capitalise on them.”

“That’s something.”
Fuck!

“One thing, though.”

“What?”

“Cathy McGlone had a record as long as Gerry Adams’s face.”

“What … what the hell is
that
supposed to mean?”

“McGlone used to be nicknamed Yo-Yo because she had been in and out of prison so many times.”

“Oh?”

“Police were looking for her six years ago when she suddenly and mysteriously vanished,” continued Hicks.

“What … what did the cops want her for?”

“Attempted abduction of a child, over near the Malone Road. Luckily, an alert neighbour spotted something suspicious and immediately called the police. McGlone escaped, but the police found her fingerprints at the scene. They’ve been searching for her ever since.”

Fuck!
“Wow …”

“At least it gives the police something to work on, as far as the killings are concerned. I would say that when all this comes out in the wash, McGlone’s name will be plastered all over it.”

“Everything nicely tied up in a bow, eh?”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Nothing.”

“Are you sure?”

“Am I ever sure of anything?”

“There’s something you’re not telling me, Karl, and I know from past experience that you won’t unless you have to. A little bit of advice from your best friend. When you walk into a coalmine and see the canary, feet up, common sense should tell you it’s time to get the hell out of there. Understand?”

Look, I … have to go … the smell … can’t stick the smell of hamburgers and death any more.”

Outside, Karl began retching, his entire body shaking with pain. Shockwaves radiated from the base of his spine.

Suddenly, he felt terribly unclean.

“See how love and murder will out.”

William Congreve,
The Double Dealer

E
arly next morning, Karl shocked himself awake, momentarily disorientated and saturated in sweat. He was frightened, not by last night’s nightmare; instead it was the devastating fear of a man whose world has suddenly grown completely beyond him and out of control. His stomach felt tight, as if he’d been performing crunches all night. Cathy kept appearing over and over again in the nightmare, laughing, telling Karl what a great fuck he had been.

Thankfully, Naomi was still sleeping, her breathing coming deep and slow. She had managed to nearly twist her way out of the sheets. They were pulled all the way down to her waist, her bare breasts exposed. Karl reached, pulling the sheets over her, before exiting the bed.

In the kitchen, waiting for the coffee to brew, he thought about his choices, their limitation.

You should have acted sooner
, said an accusing voice in his head.

“Couldn’t have. Not enough evidence.”

Ha! That’s never stopped you before. If anything, it encouraged you
.

“This is different.”

Bullshit! You had sex with Cathy. Possibly killed her with all those drugs fucking your head about.

“Don’t talk shite!”

“Karl? Who’re you talking to?” asked Naomi, suddenly appearing at the doorway, startling him. She looked as unnerved as Karl.

“What? Oh! Myself. I’ve … finally flown over the cuckoo’s nest.” He forced a smile. “Coffee?”

“You’ve been acting strangely, ever since that night you claimed to have banged into a skip. Have you something you want to tell me?”

Something in Naomi’s voice was warning Karl that this was a new level, almost an accusation. The word
claimed
sounded ominous.

Believing that the best defence is a wimpy offence, Karl stuttered, “Claimed? What the hell is that supposed to mean?”

“Cathy. Who is she? You kept saying her name, over and over again, in your sleep. You must think I’m stupid, Karl Kane! You’re hiding things from me. Terrible things. I can tell. I know you too well.” Naomi’s bottom lip began trembling. It made her more beautiful, that look, and precious, and fragile, and the bastard in Karl made him feel an even bigger bastard. “We haven’t made love in almost a week. Think I didn’t smell her on you, despite your late night showering that night? I don’t care what you think of me, but don’t
ever
think of me as a fool.”

“It’s not how it looks, Naomi,” said Karl, scratching at the nicotine patch on his arm, wishing for a cigarette. “You’ve got to believe me.”

“Believe
you?
That’s a joke. Tell you what. Take a deep breath, Karl Kane. Get your tongue in gear, but so help me God, if one lie slips out of your mouth, you’ll never see me again. And that’s a promise.”

“I need a cigarette.”

“You can smoke your head off as soon as I walk out of here – for good.”

No longer able to contain it, Karl released all the pent-up air trapped in his lungs. Bullet-biting time had now arrived. There was no escaping it.

“Okay … look, I should have been up front with you from the start, Naomi, but as they say, there’s no fool like an old fool. I didn’t know how you’d react.”

“I knew it!” declared Naomi, tears forming. “I knew it! You cheating bastard!”

“No! It’s not like you think. Just listen. That’s all I ask … please.”

For the next twenty minutes, Karl did his best to relay all past events concerning Cathy.

“I went to the hospital the next morning,” continued Karl. “I told you it was to get a check-up about my cuts, but it was a check-up for sexually transmitted diseases … that’s why I haven’t tried to make love to you. I’m sorry, Naomi.”

Naomi’s face was ashen. She didn’t speak.

“McGlone more or less raped me, Naomi. Can’t you see?” pleaded Karl, the tone of his voice becoming frantic. “Once she stuck that needle in me, I was totally powerless. What could I have done? Answer me, for fuck sake, instead of standing there, judging me with those accusing eyes.”

“Did you kill this … McGlone, dump her body in the Lagan?” Naomi’s emotionless voice sounded like ice sliding down a glass.

“What? I can’t believe you’re seriously asking me that. How can you even think I’m capable of such a thing?”

“How? At night, over the last few months in bed, you’ve been tossing and turning in your sleep, mumbling …”

“Mumbling? What … what kind of mumbling?”

Naomi’s face reddened.

“You … you keep mentioning the two police officers who were killed a few months ago. The bad one, Bulldog …”

Karl’s heart moved up a notch.

“What … what did I say?”

“Mostly incoherent babbling.”

“Stop bullshitting me. What the hell did I say?” The question came out harder than he had intended.

Naomi suddenly looked frightened. “You … you said you were glad you killed him – killed them both.”

Karl suddenly felt light-headed, feeling as if someone just cracked his skull with an iron bar. The room moved slightly. “I … I …” He looked away from Naomi, no longer able to hold her stare.

“Karl,” said Naomi, her voice a whisper.

“What?”

“Sometimes …” her voice slipped away.

“What? Sometimes what, Naomi?”

“Sometimes good people have to do bad things,” replied Naomi, silently turning before leaving the room.

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