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Authors: T F Muir

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Everything was linked.

Believe that, and you would be surprised at what you could uncover.

The downpour was diminishing, no longer beating the ground, just patting it. Jessie peeked out from beneath the umbrella, as if to test the strength of the rain. ‘I heard most of that,’ she said. ‘So you think it’s convenient?’

‘Could be,’ he said, tugging her towards the plastic sheet. A shoeless foot protruded from one end, toenails painted an electric blue. He looked around. Janice must have been really distracted for a vehicle to hit her out here. ‘This way,’ he said, and they walked towards Janice’s car.

Gilchrist showed his warrant card to the first PC and said, ‘You find her mobile?’

‘Not yet, sir. We’re about to start searching the grass verges.’

‘Start close to her car,’ Gilchrist instructed. ‘At the edge of the road, maybe in the hedgerow. Better still, have someone get her number and give it a call. Once you find it, check her records. I want to know who she talked to last.’

With that, he turned and stared at the body.

A chill slid over him, as if Death had reached out and stroked his skin. He had come up against some nasty creatures in his thirty-plus years with Fife Constabulary, seen cruelty that defied belief, gruesome scenes that could choke the breath from your throat. But at that moment he felt as if he were standing at the edge of a black precipice, his thoughts filled with doubt, afraid to take the next step, with nothing between himself and the devil.

‘What’s up?’ Jessie asked.

‘I think Stan’s chat with Janice has just flushed Magner out.’

CHAPTER 19

It was close to midnight when Gilchrist entered the interview room in Strathclyde HQ on Pitt Street, Glasgow. Jessie took the seat to his left, with Stan on the other to the right. Opposite them sat Thomas Magner and his solicitor, no longer the slick-haired Thornton Pettigrew, of Jesper Pettigrew Jones, but a white-haired man with a deep tan and white teeth that boasted of too much sun or too much money – or probably both.

With the help of Strathclyde Police, Stan had tracked Magner to the Urban Bar and Brasserie on St Vincent Place in Glasgow city centre. He had been enjoying a meal and a bottle of Krug Vintage Brut in the company of an attractive blonde young enough to be his daughter. Gilchrist was convinced she had been hired for the occasion.

When cornered by two detectives from Strathclyde, Magner had dabbed his lips with a napkin, stood up, and held out both hands in mock-arrest to the shocked gasps of other patrons. Then he had excused himself from his blonde companion with all the airs and graces of a knight about to slay a dragon.

A short interview with Magner’s girlfriend-for-hire confirmed Gilchrist’s suspicions. She had only met Tommy the day before, in Maison Bleue, Edinburgh, spent the night with him at the Balmoral Hotel on Princes Street, and not left his side, or his wallet, since.

Well, there he had it. Another perfect alibi.

Magner’s solicitor was the first to make a move.

He slid a card across the table to Gilchrist, then another to Stan, and sat back – Christopher Brooks Jones of Jesper Pettigrew Jones.

‘Don’t I get one?’ Jessie said.

Jones’s mouth twisted in a what-do-you-think? smile.

Gilchrist slid his card to Jessie, who smirked at it, then said, ‘Right. For the record . . .’ She introduced all five present, ending with place, date and time, and noting that Magner’s attendance was voluntary, and that he was free to leave at any time.

Then she eyed Magner. ‘How’s your hand?’

Magner turned it over to reveal a fresh plaster. ‘Getting better.’

Jessie returned his gaze. ‘Who’s the bimbo?’

Jones leaned forward, his mouth in a lopsided twist. ‘Excuse me?’

‘Why? Did you burp?’

Jones’s eyes failed to blink. ‘You asked, Who’s the bimbo?’

‘Good to see your hearing aid works.’ Back to Magner. ‘Well?’

Jones leaned forward and said to Gilchrist, ‘We have a problem here. You are obliged to advise my client why he is being questioned.’

‘It’s a continuation of an earlier interview,’ Gilchrist said. ‘We’re investigating multiple murders.’

‘About which my client has already advised you he knows nothing.’

‘Correct,’ Jessie said. ‘But now we have another one to add to the list.’

Jones raised his eyebrows in surprise. ‘And when and where did this alleged new murder take place?’ he asked Gilchrist.

‘This evening. Outside Anstruther,’ Jessie replied.

Jones looked at his client, eyebrows still high, then faced Gilchrist again. ‘So, how—’

‘You’re right,’ Jessie interrupted. ‘We do have a problem. Usually, when I talk to someone, they answer
me
. You know, I speak to you, you speak to me. That sort of thing. One on one. Face to face. Understand?’

Jones smiled at her, then turned to Gilchrist. ‘As I was saying—’

‘Let me repeat my question, Mr Magner – who’s the bimbo?’

‘This is out of—’


Shut it
.’

‘I really do have to object—’

‘Put it in writing,’ Jessie snapped. ‘Address it to him, if you want,’ nodding at Gilchrist. Then she turned her attention to Magner. ‘Are you going to answer the question or just sit there looking dumb? Who’s the bimbo?’

Magner returned Jessie’s look but said nothing.

‘To clarify, I’m not talking about your solicitor,’ she added. ‘Even though bimbo could be an apt description. I’m talking about the blonde bombshell you picked up last night to establish your alibi.’

Magner shifted in his seat, as if about to speak, but Jones turned his head and leaned in. ‘You don’t have to say anything, Tom.’

Magner nodded at his solicitor’s wise words, then said, ‘I’ve a busy day ahead of me, Chris. Besides, I’ve got a blonde bimbo to get back to tonight.’

Jones chuckled, then sat back with a smile. ‘As you will, then.’

Magner’s eyes burned at Jessie. ‘I don’t know the bimbo’s name.’

‘So you pick her up, wine and dine her, spend the night with her, and don’t have the common decency to ask her name?’

‘Is that a crime?’

‘Not yet. Was she expensive?’

‘She’s not a prostitute, if that’s what you’re asking. But I’ve spent a couple of thou since we met, so I guess you could say—’

‘All that money, and you haven’t even bought her a going-away present yet.’

‘I don’t believe she’s intending to leave any time soon.’

‘I wasn’t talking about her.’

Jones chuckled, put his hand to his mouth, and winked at Gilchrist.

Magner smiled, although Gilchrist caught the tiniest hint of annoyance.

On the drive to Glasgow earlier that night, they had discussed their interview strategy, and agreed that Jessie should lead, try to wriggle under Magner’s skin, get him to say something he might regret. She was doing well, but Magner looked as cold as stone.

‘How did you meet Miss Anonymous?’ Jessie asked.

‘I walked up to her in a bar and said, Hi gorgeous, I’d like to fuck your brains out.’

Jessie laughed. ‘With a face like yours? That’s chancing your arm.’

Magner kept his composure.

Jessie pressed on. ‘More like you flashed her a few hundred quid and told her there was plenty more where that came from if she stuck by your side for a night or two. Of course, you wouldn’t tell her she was going to get dumped before the end of the weekend.’

‘Is there a question in there?’ Jones complained.

‘Why don’t you ask him?’ Jessie said, nodding to Gilchrist. ‘Got a mobile phone?’ she asked Magner.

‘Of course.’ He removed it from his jacket and slid it across the table.

‘I didn’t ask to see it. But I understand why you’re keen to let me check it out – to prove you never made any calls to or received any calls from Janice today.’ The mobile was a top-quality Samsung. She worked her way through the menus to Call Log, then said, ‘I must say you’ve surprised me.’

‘Why?’

Jessie stared hard at Magner. ‘You never asked who Janice was.’

‘I assume you’re talking about Janice Meechan, although I fail to see why that’s an issue.’

Gilchrist had to admit that Magner was good. Great, even. Give Jones his due, too – he hardly twitched. Of course, Jones would have been kept in the dark, fed only scraps Magner deemed safe to hand over. How could you lie if you didn’t know the truth?

‘She’s your late business partner’s sister-in-law,’ Jessie continued. ‘Or, to be more precise, your late business partner’s late wife’s sister. And the woman you’ve been screwing since Christmas.’

‘I’ve heard that rumour,’ Magner said. ‘So is that what this is about?’


This?

‘This interview.’

‘Do you deny having an affair with her?’

‘Of course I deny that. Janice is a lovely woman, and a wonderful wife to Perry, and a fine mother to Jane and John. Is this how you speak of someone who’s in mourning for the brutal death of her sister and her family?’

Gilchrist noticed the present tense, and for the first time that night felt the tiniest of nips worrying his gut. So far, all they had to go on was instinct alone. But they were nearing the point when they needed to uncover some hard evidence.

And at that moment, it felt like there was none to find.

Jessie eyed Magner’s phone. ‘You didn’t ask why we were interested in you contacting her today.’

‘I couldn’t give a shit about why you’re interested in Janice. Something to do with the tragic death of her sister and her family, no doubt.’

‘I’m interested in why
you
contacted
her
.’

‘She’s an employee. She’s been with our company for the last ten years. She’s also my partner’s . . . sorry, my
late
partner’s sister-in-law. What’s so strange about me contacting her, today or any other day?’

‘Did
she
call
you
today?’

‘I haven’t spoken with her since yesterday, when I called the office.’

‘Did she call and leave a message today?’

‘If she did, I didn’t get it.’ Magner held out his hand, palm up. ‘You’ve got my phone. Check it and see.’

‘Can you be reached on any other numbers?’

Magner slid a hand into his pocket, retrieved his wallet, and opened it. ‘Here,’ he said, and removed a business card. ‘These are all the numbers I have.’

‘Do you know Janice is dead?’

Magner blinked once, twice, then said, ‘No. I didn’t. How . . .?’

‘Hit-and-run.’


What?

‘You heard.’

Jones reached for Magner’s hand and squeezed.

Gilchrist thought he had seen it all, but this was play-acting at its worst.

Magner nodded to his phone. ‘I’d like to make a call.’

‘Who to?’

‘Perry, of course.’

‘I might have to confiscate this phone,’ Jessie said.

Jones slid his hand into his suit pocket.

‘No calls,’ Jessie snapped. ‘They can wait. You can phone when we’re done.’ She picked up Magner’s business card. ‘How did Janice compare to her sister, Amy?’

Jones frowned.

Magner said, ‘Now you’ve lost me.’

‘Amy McCulloch, aka Charlotte Renwick?’

Magner’s eyes turned to beads of ice.

‘You screwed her, too, didn’t you? Well, actually, you raped her.’

Jones said, ‘As your solicitor, Tom, I’m instructing you not to answer that.’ Then he glared at Jessie. ‘If you continue in—’

‘I’m not interested in anything you’ve got to say,’ Jessie barked at him. Back to Magner. ‘I take it that’s a no?’ She gave him two seconds, then said, ‘Thomas Magner has refused to answer the question under instruction from his solicitor.’

Neither Gilchrist nor Stan said a word, just listened as Jessie continued to fire questions that Magner took in his salesman-smooth stride – the phrase perma-smirking bastard sprang to mind. And not a tear in sight for Janice, or Amy, or Brian, or the kids.

Fifteen minutes later, Gilchrist felt a ripple of relief as Jones leaned forward. ‘It seems to me that you’ve got nothing on my client,’ he said. ‘You’re fishing.’ He glanced at his watch. ‘It’s getting late, so I suggest you either charge my client with whatever the hell you think you can get away with, or we call it a night.’ He harrumphed a throat clearing and sat back.

Gilchrist hated to admit it, but Jones had a point. Jessie’s best attempts to rile Magner had failed. Not that she had handled the interview poorly, rather Magner had not slipped up once, shooting back answers with barely an intake of breath. You had to be a brilliant liar to do that. Or more worryingly, completely innocent.

That thought sent another stab of doubt through Gilchrist’s system. Did he have it all wrong? Was it only coincidence after all?

Defeated, he turned to Stan. ‘Anything you’d like to ask?’

Stan shook his head.

He turned to Jessie. ‘Anything else?’

She glanced at the clock on the wall and stood. ‘DS Jessie Janes leaving the interview room at twenty minutes to one.’

Jones waited until the door closed, then said, ‘So, this interview is over?’

‘For now,’ Gilchrist said. ‘We’re through, yes.’ He switched off the recorder.

Magner retrieved his phone from the table.

Jones eased himself to his feet. ‘I think it only fair to warn you that I’ll be writing a letter of complaint to Chief Constable Ramsay over the manner in which this interview was conducted. Never in my forty years of professional experience have I come across anything so outrageous. I’ll be seeking to have DS Janes severely reprimanded, and it would give me the greatest satisfaction to see her career terminated.’

‘You’re free to file a formal complaint,’ Gilchrist said. ‘Do you have the Chief Constable’s address?’

‘I’ll find it. Good night.’

Gilchrist waited until the pair of them shuffled out and the door closed, then turned to Stan. ‘What do you think?’

‘I watched his eyes every second, boss.’ Stan took a deep breath, then let it out with a shake of his head. ‘I have to tell you, he’s good.’

Not what Gilchrist wanted to hear. ‘Good as in . . .?’

‘I hate to say it, boss, but good as in innocent.’ He shook his head again. ‘I just don’t see it. Sorry, boss.’

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