‘Mr O’Donnell, we’re doing our best to get answers.’
‘You didn’t do your best back then; how can we believe you now?’
Lottie sighed and glanced at Boyd for help.
He straightened his back. ‘The body was washed in bleach and wrapped in black bin bags, which were then ripped open, leaving her body exposed to the weather and wildlife.’
Jesus, Boyd, Lottie thought, there was no need to be so blunt. But she didn’t blame him. The family were not displaying the emotions she would have expected. The overriding emotion in the room, the one she felt more forcefully than any other, was resentment; maybe anger. That usually came a couple of days later. After shock and sorrow. There was something else too. An underlying sensation that she couldn’t identify. Not yet. Later, maybe.
‘You’re a bad bastard,’ Finn shouted.
Freeing himself from the constraints of the bodies on the couch, he lunged at Boyd. His fist connected before Lottie could get her hands out of her pockets. As she moved, Cillian grabbed his brother in an armlock and wrestled him to the floor.
‘Shut your mouth,’ he snarled. ‘You’re an eejit. Assaulting a guard. What do you think you’re doing?’
‘I’m going to kill the fucker.’
‘Boys! Shut up!’ Donal stood and put a foot on Finn’s back. ‘You’re a disgrace to your sister’s memory. And to your poor mother.’
When Lottie glanced Boyd’s way, he was rubbing his cheek and eye socket, glaring at the men on the floor. She placed a hand on his arm and held him back. Things were bad enough without him retaliating.
‘Did Lynn have a baby?’ Lottie asked.
Finn got to his feet.
She scanned the men’s faces. All three registered varying degrees of the same expression. Horror.
At last, Donal spoke. ‘Not that I know of. Why?’
‘We suspect she had given birth.’
‘This just gets worse,’ he said. ‘Is there a child out there somewhere?’
‘I intend to find out,’ Lottie said. ‘One final thing.’ She opened the flap on her bag and took out a piece of paper. ‘This was found … on the body. Do you recognise it?’
‘What’s that?’ Donal said. ‘Where did you get it? I don’t understand.’
‘It’s a photograph of a sterling silver Claddagh ring. Does it mean anything to you?’
The O’Donnells remained tight-lipped, shaking their heads. A dead loss to pursue it now, but Lottie knew it meant something to them. Their faces told that story.
‘Look, you’re all in shock,’ she said, though that wasn’t the word she wanted to use. ‘We’ll call back later. Give you time to get your heads around this awful news. Let me know if you remember anything about the ring. Make some tea and talk to each other.’
‘Tea? Tea, she says,’ Finn said, his voice coming to life. ‘I know what I’d like to do with a pot of boiling tea. And drinking it isn’t on my agenda.’
The naked anger in his words stunned Lottie. She had to get out, and quickly. Otherwise she, not Boyd, would be the one lashing out.
Seventy-Seven
It had started to drizzle while they’d been inside, and the temperature had risen a little.
‘I’m going to see Queenie McWard,’ Lottie said. ‘I’ll drop you at the office. Find out what else Kirby has dug up.’ She crossed the road to the car park.
‘I need a doctor.’ Boyd was still rubbing his cheek.
‘You won’t die. But if you really feel you need one …’
‘That lunatic should be locked up.’
‘I’ll lock you up if you don’t shut up.’ She unlocked the car. ‘Get a grip.’
Boyd stared at her across the roof. ‘What’s eating you?’
‘Something was off in there. Did you feel it?’
‘Unsettling.’
‘I can’t put my finger on it. But it’ll come to me.’
‘Right. Why did you tell them that Lynn had had a child? That’s a bit of a conundrum, isn’t it?’
‘I wanted to see their reaction.’
She started the car and headed up under the bridge, past the train station. The traffic lights were red. The wipers swished across the windscreen, dragging scum with them, making visibility problematic.
‘Those brothers were straining at the leash,’ she said. ‘It’s like they can’t stand each other.’
‘Most siblings are the same.’
‘I loved my brother.’
‘He died when you were four. How can you remember that far back? He probably pulled your pigtails and you hated him for it.’
‘How’d you know I had—’
‘Just saying.’
‘Well don’t.’
She glanced at Boyd. His head was resting back on the seat, eyes closed, the red mark pulsing on his cheek. She wanted to reach out, to feel the tenderness of last night, but now was a different time. Now it was work. And that was the way it had to stay. Professional. Gripping the steering wheel, leaning over it, trying to see through the film of grease, she waited for the green light. She couldn’t start a relationship with Boyd. No way.
‘Hate,’ she said.
‘What?’
‘That’s what it was.’
‘I’m a bit lost.’ Boyd ran his fingers over his cheek and winced.
‘The tension in that room. Among the O’Donnell family. It was more than anger. It was pure hatred.’
* * *
Raindrops trickled down the window. The cemetery looked drab and grey in the distance. Lottie went up in the elevator, then made her way along the corridor to Queenie McWard’s room.
The old lady was half sitting up in bed, twiddling her rosary beads. She appeared to have aged thirty years.
‘Saw the fire last night. It was one of the teachíns.’
‘Teachín?’
‘That’s Irish for a little house. Did you not go to school? My Bridie did. Learned a lot. Got a job. Did she tell you that?’ Tears rested in the hard crevices of the old woman’s face. It was lined like a delta waiting for the tide to come in. ‘Until that good-for-nothing proposed marriage. That was all fine, but he was suffering from a broken heart.’
‘You mean Paddy?’
‘Yes, Paddy. Good-for-nothing, that’s what he is. Did I say that already?’
‘I’m sorry to have to ask questions at this sad time, Queenie, but have you any idea why someone would want to burn down their home?’
‘And murder my daughter and grandson? We are outcasts in this town …’
‘I don’t think that’s true at all. As long as I can remember, there’s been a traveller community in Ragmullin. Of course, there are the usual public order offences, but you get that everywhere and—’
‘Prejudice. That’s what’s rife. Always has been and always will be. That’s the reason the teachín was burned.’
Lottie sighed and stared at the ceiling.
‘Don’t be rolling your eyes, young lady. I may be old but I’m not blind. Not yet.’
‘I was just thinking. This may have nothing to do with prejudice. I think it might be related to something Paddy’s involved in.’
‘Paddy’s always involved in something or other. But when he married my Bridie, he promised me he was going to be good. I thought he was doing okay for himself and my girl.’
‘Doing what?’
‘This and that.’
‘Queenie, I need to know if he was into dodgy dealings; something that brought the wrath of someone down on his family.’
The old woman tucked an elbow beneath her birdlike frame and tried to raise herself up in the bed. The scent of lavender wafted from the sheets as Lottie leaned over to assist. A hand of bones with a ring on each finger pushed her away. ‘Don’t need your help.’
Once she was sitting, Queenie squinted over the rim of her spectacles. ‘Boxing. That’s what he was into.’
‘Bare-knuckle fights?’ Lottie thought of Kirby and Lynch, trying to get to the root of the activity.
‘Nothing illegal, so he said. Travelled the country to boxing clubs. Training young lads.’
That might account for his absences, Lottie thought.
‘My Bridie was in here crying like a baby more days than I care to count. Always about him. Her Paddy. She hadn’t a clue what he was up to. So I sent for him. Came in here like a lamb to slaughter, he did. I had my say and he had his.’ She clamped her lips together.
‘And? He told you he was teaching boys to box?’
‘He did. Boys and girls nowadays.’