20

Lennon stood waiting in the hallway of the terraced house when the forensics team arrived from Carrickfergus at first light. They picked over Quigley’s corpse first while the photographer took daylight shots of the boy in the yard. Lennon’s eyes were dry and hot as he watched from the kitchen window. He’d gone home for a couple of hours, but sleep had eluded him.

He looked at the boy’s body, his face turned up to the sky, the tarpaulin that covered the yard overnight pulled back to let the light in. The acute angle of his neck suggested the blow to his head hadn’t killed him. Seventeen or eighteen, nineteen at most. He wore a tracksuit and Nike trainers, most likely fakes bought at a market stall somewhere. Chances were he was from the neighbourhood. He probably made a point of carrying no identification, but they’d know who he was before long. Some mother would find her son’s bed had not been slept in, and when the talk of a youth’s dead body lying in a yard nearby reached her, she would know. When she came running to Quigley’s door, he would deal with her.

The photographer came back into the kitchen. He brought the camera to Lennon and showed him the little screen. ‘Look,’ he said, scrolling through the images. ‘Here.’

The image showed a knife in the boy’s hand, tucked beneath him. Lennon looked out the window again. The body obscured the weapon.

‘The killer didn’t get far,’ the photographer said. ‘Looks like he slipped and fell bad.’

‘Maybe,’ Lennon said. ‘He’s lying on his left side, but his back and his right’s dirty too. Look where his head is. He didn’t break his neck and roll over.’

‘Who’s to say where that dirt came from?’ the photographer said.

‘We’ll let forensics have a look before we jump to any conclusions. Have printouts of those on DCI Gordon’s desk as soon as you can.’

‘Will do,’ the photographer said as he headed for the living room.

Lennon went to the back door and scanned the yard, taking in every piece of litter, every puddle. A layer of scummy green algae covered the concrete, a muddle of footprints just visible on the surface. They could be anybody’s from the old woman’s to her dead son’s, from the boy to the doctor who confirmed him dead. The rain that had fallen before the tarpaulin could be raised dulled them all the more. Useless.

‘It’s too perfect,’ Lennon said to himself.

His mobile rang. He answered it.

‘Something interesting just turned up,’ DCI Gordon said.

‘Same here,’ Lennon said.

‘You go first,’ Gordon said.

Lennon told him about the knife the photographer had spotted.

‘Well that’s that, then,’ Gordon said. ‘Almost.’

‘Almost?’

‘The duty officer at North Queen Street logged a report that two officers broke up a fight between rival gangs at the interface between the Lower Ormeau and Donegall Pass. They chased some of the youths along the Lower Ormeau. The kids split up, and the officers followed two of them into the alley behind Quigley’s house. That’s where they lost them.’

‘Did they get descriptions?’ Lennon asked, stepping aside to let one of the forensics team past.

‘Vague, but probably enough. Both males, mid-to-late teens, short dark hair, both slender, both wearing tracksuits and trainers. One of them, the taller of the two, wore an Adidas tracksuit and Nike trainers. Sound familiar?’

Lennon looked at the boy’s body. ‘Yes,’ he said.

‘Mind you,’ Gordon said, ‘there are plenty of Adidas and Nike fans in this part of the world. It’d be quite a coincidence, though.’

A fucking huge one,’ Lennon said.

‘Language,’ Gordon scolded. ‘But of course that means—’

Lennon finished the thought. ‘There was another kid here.’

‘As soon as the body’s identified, I want every single person that lad ever knew interviewed. Clear?’

‘Clear,’ Lennon said.

‘Good,’ Gordon said. He hung up.

‘Inspector?’ a voice called from behind.

Lennon turned.

A constable leaned in from the living room. ‘You’d better come out front.’

Lennon followed him through the living room where most of the forensics team still examined Quigley’s body, and out to the hall. It was early yet, and the air outside had an autumn chill. A thin crowd gathered on the street, children and women hoping for a glance at a body.

One woman stood apart, her path blocked by a policeman. She was barefoot with a dressing gown held loose around her. Her hands shook as she stared at Lennon, her mouth open, her eyes full of dread and hope.

Lennon went to her.

‘I’m sorry,’ he said as she collapsed in his arms.

Collusion
cover.xml
001 - Title.xhtml
002 - Contents.xhtml
003 - Copyright.xhtml
004 - Otherbooks.xhtml
005 - Dedication.xhtml
006 - Chapter_1.xhtml
007 - Chapter_2.xhtml
008 - Chapter_3.xhtml
009 - Chapter_4.xhtml
010 - Chapter_5.xhtml
011 - Chapter_6.xhtml
012 - Chapter_7.xhtml
013 - Chapter_8.xhtml
014 - Chapter_9.xhtml
015 - Chapter_10.xhtml
016 - Chapter_11.xhtml
017 - Chapter_12.xhtml
018 - Chapter_13.xhtml
019 - Chapter_14.xhtml
020 - Chapter_15.xhtml
021 - Chapter_16.xhtml
022 - Chapter_17.xhtml
023 - Chapter_18.xhtml
024 - Chapter_19.xhtml
025 - Chapter_20.xhtml
026 - Chapter_21.xhtml
027 - Chapter_22.xhtml
028 - Chapter_23.xhtml
029 - Chapter_24.xhtml
030 - Chapter_25.xhtml
031 - Chapter_26.xhtml
032 - Chapter_27.xhtml
033 - Chapter_28.xhtml
034 - Chapter_29.xhtml
035 - Chapter_30.xhtml
036 - Chapter_31.xhtml
037 - Chapter_32.xhtml
038 - Chapter_33.xhtml
039 - Chapter_34.xhtml
040 - Chapter_35.xhtml
041 - Chapter_36.xhtml
042 - Chapter_37.xhtml
043 - Chapter_38.xhtml
044 - Chapter_39.xhtml
045 - Chapter_40.xhtml
046 - Chapter_41.xhtml
047 - Chapter_42.xhtml
048 - Chapter_43.xhtml
049 - Chapter_44.xhtml
050 - Chapter_45.xhtml
051 - Chapter_46.xhtml
052 - Chapter_47.xhtml
053 - Chapter_48.xhtml
054 - Chapter_49.xhtml
055 - Chapter_50.xhtml
056 - Chapter_51.xhtml
057 - Chapter_52.xhtml
058 - Chapter_53.xhtml
059 - Chapter_54.xhtml
060 - Chapter_55.xhtml
061 - Chapter_56.xhtml
062 - Chapter_57.xhtml
063 - Chapter_58.xhtml
064 - Chapter_59.xhtml
065 - Chapter_60.xhtml
066 - Chapter_61.xhtml
067 - Chapter_62.xhtml
068 - Chapter_63.xhtml
069 - Chapter_64.xhtml
070 - Chapter_65.xhtml
071 - Chapter_66.xhtml
072 - Chapter_67.xhtml
073 - Chapter_68.xhtml
074 - Chapter_69.xhtml
075 - Chapter_70.xhtml
076 - Chapter_71.xhtml
077 - Chapter_72.xhtml
078 - Chapter_73.xhtml
079 - Chapter_74.xhtml
080 - Chapter_75.xhtml
081 - Chapter_76.xhtml
082 - Chapter_77.xhtml
083 - Chapter_78.xhtml
084 - Chapter_79.xhtml
085 - Chapter_80.xhtml
086 - Chapter_81.xhtml
087 - Chapter_82.xhtml
088 - Chapter_83.xhtml
089 - Chapter_84.xhtml
090 - Chapter_85.xhtml
091 - Chapter_86.xhtml
092 - Chapter_87.xhtml
093 - Chapter_88.xhtml
094 - Chapter_89.xhtml
095 - Chapter_90.xhtml
096 - Chapter_91.xhtml
097 - Chapter_92.xhtml
098 - Chapter_93.xhtml
099 - Chapter_94.xhtml
100 - Chapter_95.xhtml
101 - Chapter_96.xhtml
102 - Chapter_97.xhtml
103 - Chapter_98.xhtml
104 - Chapter_99.xhtml
105 - Chapter_100.xhtml
106 - Chapter_101.xhtml
107 - Chapter_102.xhtml
108 - Chapter_103.xhtml
109 - Epilogue.xhtml
110 - Acknowledgements.xhtml