until theyâre outside. Say heâs been blathering away with the few jars on him. Money talk. Fellas go out with him. âGive us a lift there, will youâ¦ââ
âEasy done, all right,â Minogue said.
Malone eyed the body for several moments.
âWell-to-do, you know,â he said. âLots of stuff , like. The watch, the clothes. You know the Yanks, the way they are, the way they look. Maybe Shaughnessyâs pulling tenners out of his wallet all night. So itâs a local. I say weâre going to find two fellas, two drinking partners. They wait their chance, wallop him, follow through â maybe in a panic, or pissed â finish the job. Then they decide to hide the body back up in Dublin. Where it belongs, to their way of thinking?â
Minogue thought of the American tourists heâd first seen as a kid. Heâd been mesmerized by the diverâs watches, those expanding metal watchbands, the tanned, hairy forearms. Perfume, the jaws always going on them. And now? Heâd seen video cameras the size of paperbacks, outdoor gear and packsacks with pockets and straps for everything. Still the big, capped teeth, the ready smiles, the ponderous way a lot of them walked. All overweight? Swaggering? How they seemed to occupy that part of the path or the space where they stopped to look around.
Maybe Mr. Patrick Leyne Shaughnessy had seriously pissed off some unemployed, restless and angry young fellas, men very goddamned fed up of hearing about a booming economy, fed up of watching tourists pulling endless amounts of cash out of their wallets.
Donavan was looking over. He pointed to Shaughnessyâs head.
âThis abrasion up here by the right side of the temple,â he said. âThat starts at the cheekbone in actual fact.â
Minogue stepped back to the table. Malone, his face tight, followed.
âFalling, you could guess,â Donavan added.
Minogue couldnât see any difference in colours where the skin was scuffed. Hanlon manoeuvred around him. Lots of blows say rage, drunken; panic: the basics here.
âHow many times was he hit?â he asked Donavan.
âWell, now. You have the base of the skull fractured, with bits of it up here. See those little bits on the x-ray there on the right?â
Donavan picked up a scalpel and examined the blade.
âWe have corresponding scrapes here on the right side of the head as he went down. I would hazard a guess that the first blow sent him to the ground. Defenceless, maybe even mortal. An iron bar?â
Hanlon leaned over the side of the table and snapped three pictures. What hitchhiker would be walking around with an iron bar handy?
âSo other blows landed after he went down. Hereâs a pattern on the side of the face that backs that up.â
Minogue followed Donavanâs finger. Kevin helped to turn the head.
âBut, thing is, thereâd be more to it â a collateral fracture even â if he was hit on cement now,â Donavan went on. âOr a roadway. I donât see, I donât recognize, gravel or tar here yet.â
Minogueâs mind slipped away again. Shaughnessy opening the boot lid: heâd have heard someone step up behind him? A word, a shout? He hadnât raised his arm to fend of the blow. Drunk? He looked at the board. Shaughnessy was a hundred eighty-three centimetres. That was just over six feet. Hit hard the first time, Shaughnessy would have gone forward and down at the same time. The spots of blood on the underside of the hatchback looked like the outer edge of a spray pattern, fair enough. It could also be from clumsy, strained efforts to shove Shaughnessy into the boot. Eighty-nine point something kilos, about two hundred pounds: over fourteen stone? Well thatâd take lifting. For an instant Minogue saw a pack of teenagers flailing at Shaughnessy.
He looked down at his notebook.
âCan I take photocopies with me today,
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