Rob.’
Brennan smirked, leaned over Gallagher, he was the taller of the two men by some way. ‘Jim, lad, let me tell you something, if I catch a poacher on my land he can think himself lucky if he gets away with an arse-full of lead.’
‘You’re all wrong, Rob …’ Gallagher inhaled a deep drag on his cigarette, ‘I’m all about the team, me.’
‘Your team only has one player.’
‘Oh, come on … We’ve a lunatic to catch!’ He stepped to the side, waved to Pettigrew as he opened up. ‘Rob, you’ve no rank on me, and you’re not the most popular DI in the force either. I wouldn’t go throwing up a genuine offer of friendship.’
A smile spread on Brennan’s face, ‘Why not?’
‘Let’s just say it could backfire.’
‘If you’ve got a threat to put on me, Jim … Let’s have it.’
Gallagher dropped his cigarette, pressed it into the ground with the sole of his shoe. He was staring down as he spoke, ‘I don’t make threats, Rob.’ He edged towards the morgue. ‘… I don’t need to.’
Chapter 14
BRENNAN WATCHED DI Jim Gallagher approach the morgue, make his way up the steps. He waited for a moment, took a breath of air and started the slow trail behind him. DS Stevie McGuire was waiting for him, said, ‘What was that all about?’
Brennan held back for a moment, watched Gallagher enter the front door and strike up a conversation with Dr Pettigrew, then, ‘Just Jim being Jim … Look, did you check him out like I asked you the other day?’
‘His caseload, aye, aye …’
‘Well?’
‘Nothing spectacular, he seems to be flitting over to Glasgow quite a bit, helping out CID there with some tit-for-tat gang stabbings. But mainly he’s looking at the cold cases like our Fiona Gow.’
‘That it?’
McGuire scratched at his earlobe, ‘He’s counting his days, can’t be far off the pension now.’ He dropped his hand, ‘Is there something I should know about, boss?’
Brennan reached over, touched McGuire’s shoulder. ‘No. Not at all. I’m just a bit wary of him.’
‘In what way?’
‘He’s an old hand, you don’t get to his age in this racket without knowing where a few bodies are buried.’
McGuire’s eyes sunk in his head, his voice trailed off in a dull monotone. ‘Sounds tenuous?’
‘I just don’t trust him … Why is he taking such an interest in our case when he seems to be able to pick and choose the cases he works these days?’
A bin lorry started to roll down the street, the noise threatened to drown them out; McGuire pointed to the morgue, raised his voice, ‘Look, we should go in.’
‘Yeah, I know … Just keep an eye on Jim, let me know if he pulls any fast ones.’
Inside the building Brennan removed his overcoat and jacket, folded them over the crook of his arm, then walked the few paces to the cloakroom and hung them up. Gallagher and Pettigrew were already in there.
‘Morning, Rob.’
Brennan nodded to the doctor. He was tempted to have a dig about taking his time to get round to this postmortem but figured there would only be a grating reply about having to do private-practice work to pay for the Mercedes. He stilled his nerve and watched as Pettigrew bunched his brows on the way out the door. Gallagher stood square-footed in the middle of the room for a moment longer, a thin-eyed stare on Brennan, and then jerked his head to the side and followed the doctor out.
‘Ready to roll?’ said McGuire as he hung up his coat.
‘Let’s go.’
The steps down to the morgue were hard granite, the officers’ heels clacked on every one like hammer blows. No one spoke, the only sound came from the doctor as he lunged through the swing doors and made his way to scrub up.
Brennan and the other officers fitted themselves into green gowns and waited for the doctor by the edge of the room. The smell of the place was already settling in Brennan’s nostrils; he knew it would be on his clothes and skin for the rest of the day. His colleagues
Sean Platt, David Wright
Rose Cody
Cynan Jones
P. T. Deutermann
A. Zavarelli
Jaclyn Reding
Stacy Dittrich
Wilkie Martin
Geraldine Harris
Marley Gibson