peaceful spot.’
‘And never far from a hellish one either. Thanks for the drink, Father.’ Rebus got up.
‘I see your team won yesterday.’
‘What makes you think I support Hearts?’
‘They’re Prods, aren’t they? And you’re a Protestant yourself.’
‘Away to hell, Father,’ said John Rebus, laughing.
Father Leary pulled himself to his feet. He straightened his back with a grimace. He was acting purposely aged. Just an old man. ‘About the Gar-B, John,’ he said, opening his arms wide, ‘I’m in your hands.’
Like nails, thought Rebus, like carpentry nails.
3
Monday morning saw Rebus back at work and in the Chief Super’s office. ‘Farmer’ Watson was pouring coffee for himself and Chief Inspector Frank Lauderdale, Rebus having refused. He was strictly decaf these days, and the Farmer didn’t know the meaning of the word.
‘A busy Saturday night,’ said the Farmer, handing Lauderdale a grubby mug. As inconspicuously as he could, Lauderdale started rubbing marks off the rim with the ball of his thumb. ‘Feeling better, by the way, John?’
‘Scads better, sir, thank you,’ said Rebus, not even close to blushing.
‘A grim business under the City Chambers.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘So what do we have?’
It was Lauderdale’s turn to speak. ‘Victim was shot seven times with what looks like a nine-millimetre revolver. Ballistics will have a full report for us by day’s end. Dr Curt tells us that the head wound actually killed the victim, and it was the last bullet delivered. They wanted him to suffer.’
Lauderdale sipped from the cleaned rim of his mug. A Murder Room had been set up along the hall, and he was in charge. Consequently, he was wearing his best suit. There would be press briefings, maybe a TV appearance or two. Lauderdale looked ready. Rebus would gladly have tipped the mug of coffee down the mauve shirt and paisley-pattern tie.
‘Your thoughts, John,’ said Farmer Watson. ‘Someone mentioned the words “six-pack”.’
‘Yes, sir. It’s a punishment routine in Northern Ireland, usually carried out by the IRA.’
‘I’ve heard of kneecappings.’
Rebus nodded. ‘For minor offences, there’s a bullet in each elbow or ankle. For more serious crimes, there’s a kneecapping on top. And finally there’s the six-pack: both elbows, both knees, both ankles.’
‘You know a lot about it.’
‘I was in the army, sir. I still take an interest.’
‘You were in Ulster?’
Rebus nodded slowly. ‘In the early days.’
Chief Inspector Lauderdale placed his mug carefully on the desktop. ‘But they normally wouldn’t then kill the person?’
‘Not normally.’
The three men sat in silence for a moment. The Farmer broke the spell. ‘An IRA punishment gang? Here? ’
Rebus shrugged. ‘A copycat maybe. Gangs aping what they’ve seen in the papers or on TV.’
‘But using serious guns.’
‘Very serious,’ said Lauderdale. ‘Could be a tie-in with these bomb threats.’
The Farmer nodded. ‘That’s the line the media are taking. Maybe our would-be bomber had gone rogue, and they caught up with him.’
‘There’s something else, sir,’ said Rebus. He’d phoned Dr Curt first thing, just to check. ‘They did the knees from behind. Maximum damage. You sever the arteries before smashing kneecaps.’
‘What’s your point?’
‘Two points, sir. One, they knew exactly what they were doing. Two, why bother when you’re going to kill him anyway? Maybe whoever did it changed his mind at the last minute. Maybe the victim was meant to live. The probable handgun was a revolver. Six shots. Whoever did it must have stopped to reload before putting that final bullet in the head.’
Eyes were avoided as the three men considered this, putting themselves in the victim’s place. You’ve been six-packed. You think it’s over. Then you hear the gun being reloaded …
‘Sweet Jesus,’ said the Farmer.
‘There are too many guns around,’ Lauderdale
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington