6
DS Ewen Cameron called Irvine from the other accountant’s house an hour later. She was standing in Marshall’s driveway as the Scenes of Crime team pulled up to the house in a van. Cameron was a fifteen-year street veteran and still his voice wavered.
‘They’re dead,’ he said.
‘How many?’
Please, no more kids.
‘Two. Husband and wife.’
‘Were they tortured?’
He made a sound. Irvine wasn’t sure what it was supposed to have been.
‘Yeah, you could say that,’ he managed to say eventually.
‘Did they have any children?’
‘Looks like it from the photos in the house. A daughter. We’re still trying to track her down.’
‘But she’s not in the house?’
‘No.’
‘Good.’
Armstrong came out of the house and stood beside her.
‘They found Scott and his wife,’ she told him. ‘Same story over at that house.’
‘Shit.’
‘Yeah. But doesn’t sound like their kid got caught up in it. At least, not yet.’
Armstrong shifted from foot to foot. Irvine looked at him. It was clear he wanted to say something.
‘What is it?’ she asked.
He stopped shuffling and met her eyes.
‘This is what the Frank Parkers of the world do, you know.’
‘Kenny, I’m not some bimbo straight out of school. I mean, I spent my time on patrol and I earned the right to the job I have now. I know what these people are like.’
‘Do you?’
‘I do. I’ve seen …’ She turned away from him as the first of the forensics team walked past her to enter the house. ‘I’ve seen enough,’ she went on. ‘To know what people are capable of.’
‘And you still treated him like he was worthy of respect.’
She turned to face him, angry now.
‘That’s bullshit, Kenny, and you know it. I was doing my job. Following a line of inquiry and trying not to let my personal feelings get in the way of that.’
He started shuffling again. Didn’t look at her.
‘I’ll quite happily snap the cuffs on him if the time comes for it. But right now he might be able to help us find out who did this. Because we’re no closer now than when we started.’
‘He’s poison,’ he said, looking at her now.
She decided to ask him straight out. It felt like he wanted to tell her anyway. ‘What is it with you and him?’
Armstrong watched as more forensics drew up at the kerb.
‘I had a good mate who was undercover. Maybe three years ago now. Anyway, Parker found out and stitched him up. Made him look like a dirty cop and he went inside for eighteen months. Lost his job, his pension and his wife.’ Armstrong looked down the street, seeing something much further than the house at the end of the road. ‘He killed himself when he came out. First day, in fact.’
‘How do you know it was Parker?’
Armstrong gave her a look.
‘I’d take him over a thousand Frank Parkers.’
He left her and went back into the house.
The day dragged long. Time stretched out interminably. Irvine left Armstrong on scene at around five-thirty, he not saying very much to her now after the argument about Parker. She could do without his mood.
Back at Pitt Street she was surprised to see Liam Moore still at his desk. She told him that they were getting exactly nowhere: every witness smeared from the face of the planet.
‘You’ve got to give him credit,’ Moore told her. ‘I mean, he is committed to this scorched earth policy of wiping out everyone and anyone who can connect him to the bad drugs. It’s impressive in its singular purpose.’
‘Impressive?’
He shrugged his massive shoulders.
‘It’s all relative.’
‘I suppose.’
‘What about this Parker guy? Think he can come up with anything?’
‘I don’t know. I only met him the once.’
‘Keep an open mind. Armstrong will get over it.’
‘Yes, boss.’
Moore snorted, leaned back in his chair and stretched. Irvine waited for the chair to break under his bulk. She was grateful it held out.
Moore looked at his watch and then out at the almost empty office outside. Most everyone had gone home already. ‘Getting late,’ he told Irvine.
She looked around at the office then at her own watch. ‘I hadn’t noticed.’
‘Go home. Nothing more to do tonight.’
She stood and opened the door of Moore’s office.
‘And Becky,’ he said behind her. ‘We will get this guy.’
She turned back to look at him and nodded. Not sure that he was right.