Goffâs, the horsey crowd out on the Naas Road.â
Goffs, thought Minogue. High glam: millionaires, film stars, sheiks and princes, pop tarts â any celebrity might show up at these world-renowned bloodstock auctions.
âName of Noel OâHagan,â Malone said. âThe photographer. Heâs a freelancer. He says there were other newspaper fellas there too. It was a kind of a celebrity gig. There should be other pics somewhere handy.â
Malone looked over Minogueâs shoulder at Kevin, Donavanâs assistant, who was letting a stream of water play on the bloodstains by Shaughnessyâs ear.
âAnd the rented car,â Malone said. âShaughnessy was number eleven to rent it. Itâs a year old, the Escort.â
âWhatâs the story so far on the contents?â Minogue tried.
âI checked with Eimear again. Theyâve inventoried the boot already. Very messed up. The bit of board over the spare wheel and that, well itâs broken. Like, something heavy had been dumped on it.â
âThe weight of the body?â
Malone shrugged.
âEimear says she doesnât think so. There was something more compact, says she, but right heavy. And thereâs a good-sized ding on the bottom of the car. Major, like. A bad road? Thatâs what left the hole under the boot, it looks like.â
âWhatâs the situation with prints, might I ask?â
âThereâs a crew working through from the boot,â Malone replied. âTheyâre still at the inside of the car like. Thereâs no wallet yet. Passport, camera â nothing. There was a fair-sized bag of laundry. All menâs clothes. Guide books, maps, bits of stuff like biscuits, empty Coke cans. He smoked, or someone in the car smoked. Eimear says they see hairs coming from the carpet now too.â
âAre there good prints coming out?â
âWell, yeah, as a matter of fact. A lot, even from the outside. Theyâll start the comparison search on Shaughnessyâs this afternoon.â
Donavan was humming. Minogue tried again to pin the name of the tune.
âTen renters before Shaughnessy,â he murmured.
âThatâs the story so far,â said Malone. âYeah. And then thereâd be cleaners, staff borrowing the cars out there.â
Minogue watched Donavanâs assistant wiping pieces of sponge in a circular motion, dropping the pieces into a specimen bag hanging at the sides of the table â âThe Moon Behind the Hill,â that was the tune. Donavan stopped humming. Minogue turned back toward the pathologist.
Water still trickled from the hose at rest by Shaughnessyâs elbow. Donavan was finished the external? Patrick Leyne Shaughnessy would shortly be sawn and eviscerated.
The music gave way to a too-chatty presenter with a strong Ulster accent extolling the virtues of Clare music in general. An impertinence, Minogue decided.
Malone murmured by his shoulder now.
âSpots of blood from around the lid of the hatchback,â he said. âTheyâre in being typed.â
The click of more instruments being laid on the stainless steel brought Maloneâs glance to the table. He bit his lip, looked back at Minogue.
âClobbered in the open doorway, the boot, what do you think?â
âWell it looks like he didnât react,â he said. âBut thereâs a spray pattern to sort out still, to be sure.â
âHe knew the guy, then,â Malone went on. âOr the fella ran up, got his first one in?â
The whirr always reminded Minogue of the dentist. Maloneâs blink lasted too long. Minogue eyed the saw, which the assistant was readying. Donavan leaned over his clipboard, staring at the schematic of the back of the body.
âSay heâd been drinking,â said Malone. âClosing time, you know? After hours even. A session maybe, buying rounds of drink and all. All hail-fella-well-met
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