warm it for you. Whatâs the use of looking? We wonât find it in the dark. But luckily itâs a moonlit night, and the moon is close to us.â
I got out a pencil and made him say it again and wrote it down in my notebook.
âWhatâs this all about?â he asked.
âNothing important,â I said and drove back to the police station.
I knocked on Chief Inspector Brennanâs door.
âEnter!â he said.
He looked up from the
Daily Mail
crossword. âYou seem worried, whatâs going on, Sean?â he asked.
âWe may be in trouble,â I said.
âHow so?â
âI think we have a sexual murderer on our hands, perhaps even a nascent serial killer.â
âHave a seat.â
I closed the door. His cheeks were ruddy and he was a little the worse for drink.
âWhat makes you think that?â he asked in a cold burr, leaning back in his pricey Finn Juhl armchair. I filled him in on all the details but he was sceptical of my thesis. âNorthern Irelandâs never had a serial killer,â he said.
âNo. Anyone with that mindset has always been able to join one side or the other. Torture and kill with abandon while still being part of the âcauseâ. But this seems different, doesnât it? The sexual nature of the crime, the note. This is not something weâve encountered before.â
âI already put the paperwork through that this was a hit on an informer,â Brennan said with a trace of annoyance.
âIâm not ruling anything out, sir, but at this stage Iâm thinking itâs not that.â
âLet me see that piece of music.â
I passed across the photocopy under which I had written: âYour tiny hand is frozen. Let me warm it for you. Whatâs the use of looking? We wonât find it in the dark. But luckily itâs a moonlit night and the moon is close to us.â
He examined it and shook his head.
âHeâs mocking the victim, sir. And us. Heâs taking the piss. Heâs telling us that heâs cut the victimâs hand off and heâs taken it somewhere else. Heâs making game of us, sir.â
Brennan shook his head and leaned forward. He took his reading glasses off and set them on the table. âLook, Sean, youâre new around here. I know you want to make a name for yourself. Youâre ambitious, I like that. But you canât go bandying words like âserial killerâ around for all and sundry. The shitâs hitting the fan everywhere. You cannae throw a brick out there without clobbering a journalist. Theyâre all looking for an angle, arenât they? And believe me, I know Carrick, so I do. Serial killers. Come off it. We donât do that in these parts. Ok?â
âIf you say so, sir.â
He smiled in a conciliatory manner. âAnd besides, for a serial killer you need more than one victim, donât you?â
âOur guy in the Barn Field and then the hand from the other bloke. Thatâs two.â
Brennan passed the musical score back across the table. He took a sip of cold coffee from a mug on his desk. âWho else have you told about this theory of yours?â
âMcCrabban and Sergeant McCallister. Iâll have to tell Matty too.â
âGood. Nobody else. Whatâs the status of your investigation?â
âWe might get a break soon, sir. Now we have two sets of fingerprints working their way through the channels.â
He nodded and put his glasses back on. I could see that I was being dismissed. I got to my feet. âDo your job, do it well and do it quietly,â Brennan muttered, examining the
Daily Mail
again.
âYes, sir.â
âSean, one more thing.â
âYes, sir?â
ââIdle fellow but he gives us a buzz.â Thirteen across. Five letters.â
I thought for a second. âDrone, sir?â
âDrone? Drone, oh yes. Ok, you may go.â
I exited.
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