The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

We need to be the embodiment of probity, now we’re supposed to be private investigat­ors

- Cross Purpose (£8.99) is the first in Claire MacLeary’s Harcus & Laird crime trilogy, featuring an unlikely pair of middle aged female private investigat­ors. The second, Burn Out, and the third, Runaway, are available now. All published by Saraband Publis

Yes, Fatboy conceded, this new arrangemen­t suited everybody. He and the girl had come to an understand­ing. He’d palm her enough to purchase a bevvy, she’d return the favour by giving Fatboy and Willie the run of her place. They’d be safe enough there. For a while yet, anyway. Safe to cash up, to sort out stock, to plan for the next session.

A slow grin spread across Fatboy’s face. Kymberley Ewen’s set-up might be rubbish, but he could sit in relative comfort and safety while wee Meston did his bidding elsewhere.

And if things did turn sour, well, there were plenty more tower blocks in Seaton. Plenty more folk who’d be willing to give him the run of their place in exchange for a few bob.

“Gonna gie us a toke?”

Fatboy opened his eyes. One of the wee boys was perched alongside him. “What did you say?”

The lad pointed to Fatboy’s spliff. “A toke?” he offered a gap-toothed grin.

Fatboy couldn’t believe it. Still, he had to hand it to the wee fella, for cheek if nothing else.

He passed the spliff into a chubby hand.

“Go on, then,” he grinned.

Deserted

A red light was winking angrily on the telephone as Maggie came through the front door. She stretched out a forefinger to the answering machine.

Pressed “play”. She hoped to hear a familiar voice, but all Maggie could hear was a long tone, disembodie­d, like a foghorn at half kilter, followed by a sharp beep.

There was silence. She wondered if the caller had thought the better of it and hung up.

She got a lot of that these days: callers whose courage deserted them at the very last minute, folk who decided they didn’t want to deal with a woman.

She could see that was going to be a problem, particular­ly in macho Aberdeen. She waited for a few moments, then bent over the machine and depressed the “stop” button.

Maggie made her way down the hall. Behind the kitchen window, the sun sat low, casting tiger stripes across the sky.

The garden was unkempt, the vegetable patch sprouting with shot cabbages, the grass ragged at the edges, the borders choked with old vegetation.

She sighed. More expense. Dejected, she set her bag down on the work top. Her spirits always soared when the agency got a new inquiry. Now, she felt a sharp stab of disappoint­ment.

With Wilma’s help, she’d put in some serious groundwork since the day she’d picked up those files from George’s office. And business was building steadily, but she couldn’t afford to let up.

Get on with it. There was a pile of paperwork waiting to be tackled. And no Colin.

He’d asked to stay over with a friend. Now she came to think on it, he’d been doing an awful lot of that lately.

“Hello-o?” Wilma turned her key in the back door. She no longer bothered to knock. “I saw the light on. How’s you?”

“Fine. I’m not long in.”

“Well, I won’t hinder you. I just came round to see if you knew about that young lassie found dead at St Machar? Heard it on the news.”

Maggie gasped. “Poor soul.”

“D’you reckon she was done in?”

“Doesn’t follow.”

“Oh, but they said…”

Conclusion­s

“I’ve told you already,” there was real bitterness in Maggie’s voice, “you don’t want to believe everything you hear.”

“But the telly…”

“Wilma, you have to stop jumping to conclusion­s. We need to be the embodiment of probity, especially now we’re supposed to be private investigat­ors.”

Maggie felt herself flush. In the light of her recent escapades, that was rich.

“You an’ your fancy words.” Wilma experience­d not the slightest twinge of conscience. “Betcha it was some guy from Seaton Park.”

“Seaton Park? What’s that got to do with it?” “Well, they’re saying the quine was a student.” Dear God! Alarm bells went off in Maggie’s head. After years of showing contempt, Colin had lately taken an interest in the opposite sex.

She’d even unearthed a men’s magazine one morning when she was changing his bed. She’d been shocked at the time.

Reassured herself that sort of thing was tame compared with what was available on the internet. The incident did make Maggie wonder, though: what else her son was keeping from her?

If he was still skipping school, for instance? And if he was, what exactly did he do all day down the other end of town?

Her mind ran away. What if this poor girl was one of the students he hung out with? What if he’d chatted her up? Gone into the graveyard?

Made a clumsy overture? Been rebuffed? Calm down, woman. You’re tired, that’s all.

“You’ve got Hillhead here.” Wilma laid a pencil on the table. “The university there.”

She placed a second pencil parallel to the first. “Seaton Park’s the obvious shortcut between the two.” She whacked down a folder in between.

“Yes, I can see that. But what’s the problem? I would have thought the fresh air…”

“Maggie Laird,” Wilma cut her off mid-sentence, “are you honestly trying to tell me you’ve never heard of students being attacked in Seaton Park?”

“Well, I’ve maybe read the odd thing in the paper – somebody getting relieved of their mobile, that sort of thing, but I’d no idea…”

“As for Hillhead…”

“What’s the matter with it?”

The minute she opened her mouth, she regretted posing the question.

Expensive

Wilma snorted. “Just about everything – lousy accommodat­ion, hardly any facilities, expensive bus fares.”

She harrumphed again. “Wrong thing in the wrong place, if you ask me. As for them nobs at Aberdeen University. Couldn’t put one foot in front of the other, some of them.

“Plus there’s been nothing but bother since they built that place.” She paused for breath. “Didn’t your husband ever say anything about Seaton Park?” “George didn’t say much about anything lately.” “Well, let me tell you, the place is hoatching with junkies, drop-outs, hoodies, you name it. And there’s damn all in the way of lighting.

“It’s bad enough in the daytime,” Wilma made a scary face, “but I wouldn’t go near the place after dark.”

Maggie threw a covert glance at her watch. “I’m sure it can’t be that bad.”

“You haven’t seen what I’ve seen up at ARI: broken noses, fractured jaws, knife wounds.” Wilma was in full flow. “I wouldn’t want to go into detail on the sexual assaults.”

Despite herself, Maggie’s curiosity was piqued. “And these happened in Seaton Park?”

More tomorrow.

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