Logan smiled back. ‘It was a team effort,’ he said.
‘Bollocks it was. We’re all going out tonight again, not a big sesh, just a quiet drink. If you want to join us. . . ?’
Logan couldn’t think of anything he’d like more.
He was feeling a lot better about himself as he walked down the corridor to the incident room and DI Insch’s morning briefing. WPC Jackie Watson wanted to go out with him again tonight. Or at least she wanted him to join her and her colleagues for a drink after work. Which was kind of the same thing. Sort of. . . They still hadn’t talked about what had happened the night before last.
And she still called him ‘sir’.
But then he still called her ‘Constable’. Not the most romantic of pet names.
He opened the door to the incident room and was met by a thunderous round of applause. Blushing, Logan made his way to a seat at the front, settling down in the chair as his face went beetroot red.
‘OK, OK,’ said DI Insch, holding up a hand for silence. Slowly the clapping faded to a halt. ‘Ladies and gentlemen,’ he went on when it was quiet once more. ‘As you all know, last night Detective Sergeant Logan McRae returned Richard Erskine to his mother, after discovering the child at his grandmother’s house.’ He stopped and beamed at Logan. ‘Come on: stand up.’
Blushing even harder, Logan pulled himself out of his seat and the clapping started again.
‘That,’ said Insch, pointing at the embarrassed DS, ‘is what a real policeman looks like.’ He had to call for silence again and Logan sank back into his seat, feeling thrilled, delighted and horrified all at the same time. ‘We’ve found Richard Erskine.’ Insch pulled a manila folder from the desktop and pulled out an eight-by-six photograph of a red-haired boy with freckles and a gap-toothed smile. ‘But Peter Lumley is still missing. Chances are we’re not going to find him kipping at his grandma’s: the father can’t be arsed with the kid. But I want it checked out anyway.’
Insch took another picture from his folder. This one wasn’t so palatable: a blistered, swollen face, black and speckled with mould, the mouth open in a tortured scream. A post mortem photograph of David Reid.
‘This is what Peter Lumley is going to end up looking like if we don’t get him back soon. I want the search area widened. Three teams: Hazlehead golf course, riding stables, park. Every bush, every bunker, every pile of manure. I want them searched.’ He started rattling off names.
When Insch was finished and everyone had gone, Logan brought him up to date on the dead girl they’d found in a rubbish bag. It didn’t take long.
‘So what do you suggest?’ asked Insch, settling back on the desk and rummaging through his suit pockets for something sweet.
Logan did his best not to shrug. ‘We can’t put on a reconstruction. We’ve got no idea what she was wearing before she went into the bin-bag and they won’t let us re-enact dumping a body. Her picture’s gone into all the papers. We might get something out of that.’ The only good thing about Aberdeen being the ‘dead kiddie capital of Scotland’ right now was that the national tabloids and broadsheets were more than happy to parade the dead girl’s photo for their readers.
Insch located an old-looking Murray Mint and popped it in his mouth. ‘Keep on it. Someone out there must know who the poor wee sod is. Norman Chalmers had his fifteen minutes in court yesterday: remanded without bail. But the Fiscal’s no’ happy. We come up with something solid, or Chalmers walks.’
‘We’ll find something, sir.’
‘Good. The Chief Constable is worried about all these missing kids. It looks bad. Lothian and Borders have been on “offering their assistance”. Even sent us up a preliminary psychological profile.’ He held up four sheets of paper, stapled together, the crest of Lothian and Borders Police clearly visible on the covering page. ‘If we don’t watch out, Edinburgh are going to take over. And we’ll all end up looking like sheep-shagging, small-town halfwits.’
‘That’s nice,’ said Logan. ‘What’s the profile say?’
‘Same thing these bloody things always say.’ Insch flipped through the sheets. ‘Blah, blah, blah, “crime scene indicators”, blah, blah, “pathology of the victim”, blah, blah.’ He stopped, a wry smile on his face. ‘Here we go: “the offender is most likely a Caucasian male, in his early to late twenties, living alone or with his mother. He is most likely intelligent, but does not do well academically. As a result he will have a menial job that brings him into contact with children”.’
Logan nodded. It was the standard profile for just about everything.
‘You’ll like this bit,’ said Insch, putting on an academic voice: ‘“The offender has difficulty forming relationships with women, and may have a history of mental health problems. . .” Mental health problems! Talk about stating the bloody obvious!’ The smile vanished from his face. ‘Of course he’s got mental bloody health problems: he kills children!’ He crumpled up the profile and lobbed it, overhand, at the wastebasket by the door. It bounced off the wall and skittered across the blue carpet tiles, coming to rest under the second row of chairs. Insch snorted in disgust. ‘Anyway,’ he said, ‘it looks like DI McPherson’s not going to be back for another month at least. Thirty-seven stitches to keep his head together. Lovely. Nothing like some mad bastard with a kitchen knife to get a couple of weeks with your feet up in front of the telly.’ He sighed, not noticing the pained look on Logan’s face. ‘That means I’ve got his caseload to carry as well as my own. Four post office break-ins, three armed assaults, two violent rapes and a partridge in a bloody pear tree.’ He poked a friendly finger in Logan’s chest. ‘And that means I’m delegating the Bin-Bag Girl to you.’
‘But. . .’
Insch held up his hands. ‘Aye, I know it’s a big case, but I’ve got my hands full with David Reid and Peter Lumley. They might not be connected, but the last thing the Chief Constable wants is a paedophile serial killer running loose, picking up little boys whenever he feels the urge. Every other DI we’ve got is up to their ears, but you found Richard Erskine without adult supervision, and the media think the sun shines out of your arse. So this one’s yours.’
‘Yes, sir.’ Logan’s stomach had already started churning.
‘OK,’ said Insch, hopping down off the desk. ‘You get going on that. I’ll go see what kind of Muppets I’ve inherited from McPherson.’
Logan’s little office was waiting for him. Expectantly. As if it knew he was carrying the can now. There was a copy of the photo they’d released to the media sitting on his desk. The one they’d taken in the morgue, touched up so she didn’t look quite so dead. She must have been pretty when she was alive. A four-year-old girl with shoulder-length blonde hair that curled softly around her pale face. Button nose. Round face. Round cheeks. According to the report her eyes were blue-green, but in the photo her eyes were shut. No one liked looking into the eyes of dead children. He took the picture and fixed it on the wall next to his map.
So far the response to the media appeal had been negligible. No one seemed to know who the little girl was. That would probably change by this evening when her picture went out again on the television. Then there would be a flood of helpful people phoning up to give them a whole heap of useless information.
He spent the next two hours poring over the statements again. He’d read it all before, but Logan knew the answer was in here somewhere. Whoever dumped the body lived within spitting distance of that wheelie-bin.
At last he gave up on the cold mug of coffee he’d been nurturing for the last hour and stretched the knots out of his back. He was getting nowhere. And he still hadn’t spoken