Lottie watched Boyd pacing in small circles, avoiding the puddles on the ground. Cigarette smoke hung low, suspended around him in the mist.
‘Moroney was investigating a drugs ring,’ she said, taking a final drag before stamping out the butt beneath her boot.
Boyd ceased his pacing. ‘And how do you know that?’
‘He told me.’
Boyd stood still.
‘What?’ she said. ‘Don’t be looking at me like that.’
‘Like what? Lottie, what were you up to with Moroney?’
‘I wasn’t up to anything.’
He grabbed her arm. She smelled the freshness of the rain rising from his clothes. Drops dripped from his hair to his cheeks and nose. Too close. She took a step back, shook her head and walked away.
‘You’d better tell me,’ he shouted after her.
Eighty-Three
McMahon was pacing the office, as pent up as Boyd had been earlier. Lottie slammed her bag on the floor beneath her desk.
‘I think your friend Henry “Hammer” Quinn might be behind the Moroneys’ murders,’ she said.
‘That’s not possible.’ He came to a stop beside her desk.
‘Why not? Moroney told me he was investigating a drugs ring. He must’ve had something worth killing him for.’
‘Well, it wasn’t Hammer, because I had him arrested late last night. Picked up from his home. He spent the night in Store Street garda station.’
‘Shite. It had to be one of his associates then,’ she said, biting her lip, wondering if she had it all wrong. Again.
‘Hammer was interviewed extensively. He admitted a few things but he swears he hasn’t seen or heard from Jerome in two years. Says he had nothing to do with the murders here in Ragmullin. Much as I hate to admit it, I tend to believe him.’
‘Jesus, that’s some turnaround. You’re the one pontificating that all this has to do with drugs.’ Lottie slapped her hand on the desk and a stack of files shuddered without falling. The whole investigation had started off with the murder of Tessa Ball. Was she the crucial link in everything?
‘I’m not saying it’s not to do with the drugs. Just that Hammer and his gang aren’t involved. I believe we need to find out who was supplying Lorcan Brady and Jerome Quinn with the heroin, and who they were supplying the cannabis to,’ he said.
‘And the fish food we found in Brady’s house,’ Lottie fumed. ‘Add that to your list while you’re at it.’
‘What about it?’
‘There was no fish tank.’
‘Ha! It’s used to cut the heroin. Makes it go further. Makes more money.’
‘I’ve heard it all now.’
‘Oh I doubt that.’
Lottie shuffled her chair into her desk, then took the first file from the bundle and opened it. The typed words swam before her eyes as she tried to divert her attention from McMahon going into her office.
Her phone rang.
‘Yes, Don,’ she said to the desk sergeant.
‘There’s an Annabelle O’Shea down here asking for you. I told her you were busy but she’s insistent.’
She’d never phoned Annabelle back. What could be so urgent? But her friend might be the welcome relief she needed. ‘Show her into the interview room if there’s nowhere else available and I’ll be down in two minutes.’
McMahon said, ‘I’m calling a team meeting. Five minutes in the incident room.’
‘I’m busy,’ Lottie said, and made her escape.
* * *
Might as well be on Mars, Lottie thought as she entered the airless interview room. The outside world ceased to exist once you seated yourself at the steel table, its legs screwed to the floor.
Her breath caught in her throat. ‘Annabelle! What happened to you?’
‘I need to speak with you, Lottie.’
Dragging a chair across, she sat beside her friend, who didn’t look at all like the confident doctor she’d known for most of her life.
Annabelle raised a bandaged hand and pushed back a loose strand of hair behind her ear, the lobe of which was covered in dried blood. With her other hand she traced a line around her neck and her trembling fingers drew down the roll of her black polo-neck sweater.
‘Jesus Christ.’ Lottie stared at the marks circling her throat. ‘What happened?’
‘Have you to switch on that recorder before I say anything?’
‘If you’re making a formal complaint, I’ll get someone to sit in with us and I can record the conversation.’ Lottie sat rigid, unsure whether to wrap her arms around her friend or to call an ambulance.
‘No, I don’t want anyone else. I’ll tell you first. Then you can decide what you want to do.’
‘Maybe I’ll record it to be on the safe side. It might not stand up in court, but if you don’t want another witness, that is your choice.’
Flicking the switches, Lottie formally identified herself and got Annabelle to say her name for the tape. She really should be upstairs dealing with the Moroney killings. But her friend looked too distraught for this to be anything other than serious.
‘Now, Annabelle, tell me what happened to you. How you come to have those injuries.’
‘I’m not sure, Lottie. It’s kind of personal, but at the same time, I’m so afraid.’
‘You’ve presented with visible injuries to your hand, neck and ear. They will have to be photographed. Who assaulted you?’
Annabelle whispered something.
Lottie said, ‘I’m sorry, but you need to speak up for the tape.’ Had she just accused her husband of assault? Oh God, she needed Boyd to sit in.
‘My husband, Cian O’Shea.’ Annabelle’s voice was stronger now. ‘But that’s not the reason I’m here.’
‘If that bastard did that, he must be charged.’
‘Hear me out. Then I’ll decide what I want to do.’
Gripping her friend’s hand, Lottie looked into her eyes and felt the reflection of intense sadness. She knew Annabelle was a master of her own circumstances, but not even one of her affairs warranted the abuse she must be suffering. And what could be more important than reporting her husband for assault? ‘Go ahead.’
She waited as Annabelle swallowed, blinked back tears and pulled her hand away.
‘I know you thought Cian was a good man. A quiet guy. Waiting patiently by while I partied and shagged my way though life. Maybe that was true, but once he found out about my affair with Tom Rickard, something shifted dramatically inside him. It was like that affair snapped his heart in two.’ She paused, swallowed, took a deep breath, exhaled and continued. ‘I could handle the taunts. The dagger stares. The name-calling. I could handle all that… I thought. I wanted to leave many times, but the twins… You see, he would never let them go with me. He repeated that so often, Lottie, I feared he meant more than just not letting them leave. Do you follow me?’
Lottie thought for a moment. This didn’t sound like the Cian she thought she knew. But she had felt something was wrong when she visited the other day.
‘I do follow you. But even if Cian did those horrible things to you, I don’t think he would harm his own children.’
Annabelle laughed, and Lottie flinched at the manic sound. It was like the wail of an injured animal.
‘He would, you know. If he can rape me in our own kitchen, with the twins not far away, he can do anything he damn well pleases. But Lottie—’
‘Rape? Jesus, Annabelle! I’m getting Boyd. This has to be formal.’
‘Hear me out first. I think Cian is involved in something very dark. Dangerous. He spends hours locked away in his study, and I mean locked. He put a code device on the door to stop me entering and snooping. But I did go in. He left it open on purpose, to test me. I was suspicious before… but now… now I’m sure.’
‘Sure of what?’
‘He’s doing something dreadful. He disappears from the house every night and doesn’t come back until morning. I don’t know where he goes, but last night I heard him leave around four a.m. He came home as I was leaving for work. He was… Oh Lottie. He was covered in blood.’
‘What!’
‘Blood.’ Annabelle paused. ‘Can I have a drink of water?’
‘Sure, and I’m getting Boyd. Wait here a minute.’