The Color of Blood (35 page)

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Authors: Declan Hughes

Tags: #Loy; Ed (Fictitious character), #Police Procedural, #Mystery Fiction, #Private investigators - Ireland - Dublin, #Mystery & Detective, #Private Investigators, #General, #Suspense Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Dublin (Ireland)

BOOK: The Color of Blood
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“Moon is a pimp,” said Maria. “Rape you until you do as he says. The fat pig driver is going to run us both from the house. Brock can’t refuse. He is a weakling, he keeps whining, ‘I am so sorry.’ Moon has power over Brock.”

“The driver is called Bomber,” added Anita. “Moon says, each of them will fuck us, and then we will behave, or they will fuck us again until we do.”

“Fat fucking pigs,” Maria said, she now on the verge of tears.

“Then we will work in the house, and if we do well, they might let us go. But they never will.”

“Anita was crying on Maria’s shoulder, and Moon was waving his hands at them, making faces, all smiles, like he was full of jokes, you know, getting them to see the funny side?” Tommy said. “And then he just pulls Maria away from Anita, and Bomber starts pawing her, you know, pulling at her clothes, and she slaps him, and he hits her a dig in the stomach, and she falls to the ground. Now Maria starts screaming and struggling with Moon, and he just starts backhanding her across the face, and he’s shouting at her, he’s got the finger pointed and he’s shaking her, and Bomber’s on top of Anita, ripping her clothes off like he’s going to do her there and then, and Brock’s in the middle suddenly, waving his hands around like some fucking vicar or something, like he’s trying to keep the peace. He looked like a total fool, and Moon holds Maria to one side and points his finger in Brock’s face, and suddenly Brock just opens the patio doors and comes out in the garden and slams them shut and walks down toward me. For some reason there’s no security light working, maybe if you’re running a knocking shop with a lot of late-night coming and going that’s a good idea to keep the neighbors sweet, I don’t fucking know, funny what crowds your brain when you’re supposed to be on action stations, anyway, next thing I see is Bomber’s trousers down and his fat arse through the window, so I don’t have any more time to waste, I pull the slide on the Steyr back halfway, to semiautomatic fire — if I have to use it I don’t want the fucking thing cracking around like a submachine gun, I couldn’t handle that man — and I jump up and level the gun at Brock. I don’t have time to frisk him, but I haven’t seen a weapon, so I’ll take the chance.

“‘Turn around,’ I said.

“He turns, and I push him forward toward the patio doors, using him like a shield. As I get closer, I can see… ah fuck it, disgusting so it was.”

“Fat pigs are raping us,” said Maria, her voice low and wavering, like an old man’s. “We live in hell.”

“I get Taylor to open the door, and then I push him in,” said Tommy, breathing heavily now. “And I’m just standing there, like a statue, you know, because I don’t want to shoot anyone. I’m not supposed to be shooting people. I’m a mechanic, for fuck’s sake. And Moon says something like, ‘Good man, Brock, you can have the next go.’

“And I shoot over him, into the wall. And he’s up in an instant, his trousers around his ankles, and he’s going in his coat on the chair, and he has a submachine gun in his hands, a Steyr just like mine, and it’s him or me, and I shoot him twice, three times, center on, hit him twice, and he gets a burst out before he goes down, he’s on automatic fire, and he clips Brock in the side, and I see Bomber fumbling in his clothes and I warn him, drop it, hands where I can see them, and he comes up with a handgun, don’t know what it is, I shout again, and then I shoot him twice, and that’s it. He had a chance, they both had a fucking chance, now they’re both dead, or they look dead, they’re not fucking moving anyway, I’m not going any closer to them to check.”

Tommy was shaking now, and tears were in his eyes. We had passed Seafield Harbour, and I told him to pull in at a stopping place by the Promenade.

“I didn’t want to do it, Ed, I didn’t want to do it. I mean, they’re fucking scumbags, but…”

I couldn’t think of anything to say. Maria could though.

“They would kill you, send us to hell. Savage cunts. Better off dead.”

I looked in the rearview. Both Anita and Maria had bruises on their faces; the misery and fear in their eyes would take longer to heal.

I put my hand on Tommy’s shoulder. Sobs wracked through his body like a rolling tide. Then he sniffed and caught his breath, and took up the story.

“The girls are huddled together, weeping, I tell them to get dressed, we need to get out: the fucking noise of all the gunfire, Saturday night in Beirut, I can hear doors opening down the street. Brock is trying to lam out the front door, and I hit him on the side of the head with the butt of the Steyr. I go through Moon’s coat, get your phones, and the Sig Sauer you took from the Reillys. By the time we’re out the patio doors, Brock’s back up and vanished. There’s three of us now, and we take the route I took, back between the river and the backyards, then round the corner, through the brambles, over the fences — a bit trickier when there’s three — and made it down the lane to the car. When I passed the cul-de-sac, the Guards were already there.”

Tommy stared out at the black expanse of sea. The fog looked to be lifting, and you could see a trickle of moonlight slating the rippled surface of the water.

“You killed two men, Tommy, and I can’t tell you how to feel about that,” I said. “But I can tell you this — you did well tonight, better than I did. You saved these girls, and you probably saved my life. I think you’ve more than made up for everything you did, and then some.”

Tommy nodded silently.

“So you can have your key back. Now let’s get going, we’re not done yet.”

Tommy drove the short distance to Quarry Fields, and we took Anita and Maria inside. They were frightened about staying there, and I persuaded Tommy, whom they now, rightly, considered their protector, to stay with them. That settled, they set about washing away at least some physical traces of what had happened to them.

The answerphone light was flashing. I listened to the message and immediately wished I hadn’t. It was from my ex-wife. It was hard to make out what she was saying, as she seemed to be crying, or laughing, or both. But the gist was that she had given birth to a baby boy that morning, that she knew he could never take the place of Lily, our daughter, but that she felt happy today for the first time since Lily died, and she hoped I could share that happiness too. I couldn’t. I listened to the message again, then a third time. When Tommy Owens came out I was huddled in a ball on the stairs with my head in my hands. He wiped the message, and got me up, and talked me down, and made me wash my face, and fed me coffee and Nurofen, and put the Sig Sauer in my pocket, and told me to go back to work.

 

Twenty-seven

 

I CALLED DAVE DONNELLY AND TOLD HIM THE REASON
the Reillys weren’t coming home to Woodpark was because they were lying dead in the Dublin Mountains. I gave him the location of the quarry and told him Sean Moon and Brock Taylor had been responsible. I also told him that the murder weapon was one of two Steyr 9mm Tactical Machine Pistols that could be found in Taylor’s house in Fitzwilliam Square. He had already heard about the killings there and in Ballsbridge. I said I hadn’t heard about any of that, and didn’t know anything about it either. Dave called me a few names, and I let him. Then I said he should get up the mountains fast, before the workforce at the quarry showed up and some other station got the collar. I asked him if he had traced the phone calls made to Jessica and Shane Howard on Halloween morning. He gave me one mobile number, an 087, which had called Shane Howard; the other mobile, which had called both, used a concealed number. The 087 I recognized as Denis Finnegan’s. I told Dave I expected to have something for him soon on the Stephen Casey/Audrey O’Connor murders. Before I ended the call, Dave said they’d uncovered something about Jonathan O’Connor — he had a record of fire-starting back when he was twelve or thirteen, schools and churches, never detained but close to it, social services were involved, went on for about a year, then stopped.

I switched on Emily Howard’s iBook and read through the most recent e-mails, a sequence of three highly emotional notes negotiating an urgent session with David Manuel. But these e-mails had been sent this evening, when the laptop was in Jonathan’s room in Mountjoy Square, so they couldn’t have been sent by Emily. They had been sent by Jonathan masquerading as his cousin. The last message from Manuel read:

 

Dear Emily,
Will cut short my scheduled ten o’clock; come at ten thirty and we can have forty minutes. But it will be all right — although let me repeat, I believe this to be a legal matter as much as it is anything else, and I am reaching the stage where I can no longer stay silent.
All best,
David

 

When I had left Jonathan last night in Trinity, I thought I had heard him crying. Maybe he had been laughing. I called Dave back and went straight through to message: I told him why Jonathan O’Connor should be considered the favorite for the killing of therapist David Manuel last night, gave him Jonathan’s address in Trinity, and said I considered him extremely dangerous. Then I called both numbers I had for Sandra Howard and, in my best Dave Donnelly impersonation, left the message that Jonathan was not only being sought in connection with the Manuel killing, but was also the prime suspect in the murders of David Brady and Jessica Howard. It was time to stir things up.

I drove fast to Jerry Dalton’s house in Woodpark. It was five in the morning, still dark, the lights in the church still on. I banged on the door, and Dalton answered it as if a caller at this hour was nothing out of the ordinary. He led me into the living room. There was no sign of Emily, or of any of the photograph albums and journals she had taken from Rowan House. The room was a mess of paper, though; handwritten sheets from a lined A4 pad were scattered about; an acoustic guitar lay among them.

“You writing a song?” I said.

“I’m trying. Never really sure you’ve written one until it’s done.”

“Where’s Emily?”

“She’s up with her father. She said if you came back, to go up there, to Bayview. She said it was important.”

I nodded.

“May I sit down?” I said.

“Sure. What happened to your head?”

“A baseball bat.”

“Fuck me. Who did it?”

“A guy called Moon, Sean Moon.”

“I don’t know him, do I?”

“You won’t get to know him now. He’s dead.”

Dalton picked up his guitar and fingered a little run.

“Sounds like you have something to tell me. It might be better if you just came out with it. Better for me, at least, rather than having to prise it out of you, question by question.”

So I told him everything his mother had told me, about John Howard being his father, about being persuaded against her better judgment to leave him behind, about how she had missed him, and how she wanted so badly to know the truth of what had taken place in the Howard house. And I told him how Brock Taylor had been the murderer of his half brother, and now, of his mother. I told him how she died, I didn’t spare him anything. When I was done, he sat for a while in silence, then looked around the room.

“I thought by living here, I’d pick up something… a clue, a hint, a sense of how she was. There wasn’t a trace. How did she seem to you? My mother?” he said.

“She was very beautiful. But scared. As if she’d been in hiding the last twenty years. From you, from herself, from the world. From what she maybe feared all along. That the man who had rescued her was her destroyer.”

“Maybe it wasn’t all as simple as that.”

“Maybe it wasn’t all. But I think we can feel free to condemn the man who murdered her son so that he wouldn’t be in his way without being confused for the lock-’em-all-up-and-let-God-sort-’em-out brigade.”

“Jesus, I’ve seen Brock Taylor so often, in the rugby club, in the Woodpark Inn.”

“I thought chances were,
he
was your father.”

“And now it turns out I’m John Howard’s son. I feel like I’ve contracted a curse.”

He laughed then, and shook his head.

“No, that’s not true. I actually feel… like this is a kind of dream? Like I’m still Elizabeth and Robert Scott’s son, Alan, who helps out at church fetes, and is going to be a doctor. Like my life will be fine.”

“There’s every chance it can be. But Brock Taylor wasn’t finished with the Howards yet. He thought he had money coming to him. That can only mean through Denis Finnegan, somehow. Through the mother’s will? You said Emily’s at Shane Howard’s now. I’d better go there myself.”

“I’ll come with you,” he said, following me to the door.

I stopped him.

“This case is not going to get any safer. And if you are a Howard now, it may get very dangerous indeed for you in particular.”

Jerry Dalton shrugged.

“There’s more to life than church fetes,” he said.

On the short journey, Dalton told me he had come up with the suspicions about Rock O’Connor’s death himself; in her cups, Jessica Howard had referred to O’Connor’s diabetes, and suggested it was very convenient that Denis Finnegan had been the only one with Dr. Rock when he died; Jerry played a hunch and passed me the material about how an insulin overdose can resemble a heart attack. I told him if he ever got tired of medicine, he would make a fine detective: knowing what hunch to play and when was the hardest part of the job.

 

 

The narrow drive to what Anita Kravchenko called “Howard residence” ran up from Bayview Harbour. It was still dark, but the clouds had peeled away; the sky looked like it had been polished and come up shining, like a dark mirror. Shane Howard was standing in the window of the front room, looking out to sea; he saw us arrive and opened the door to let us in. Emily was sitting on the sofa, her pile of photograph albums and journals around her.

“You can put those away now, Emily,” Shane barked.

His daughter laughed at him.

“Dad, it’s too late for that.”

“Your daughter’s right, Shane. It’s too late to keep secrets anymore. Especially when you and your sister don’t have anything to be ashamed of.”

Shane scowled at me.

“Who’s this?” he said, pointing at Jerry Dalton.

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