I Hear the Sirens in the Street
ourselves, then?” I asked in a lower tone.
“His kids are both over the water. His parents are dead. His brother’s in South Africa. There was nothing for him here,” McCallister said.
“I suppose he’d been drinking?”
“He’d been drinking. I’m sure his blood alcohol level will be off the fucking chart. But that wasn’t the clincher …”
He beckoned me to follow him into his office. He closed the door, sat me down and poured me some evil hooch in a plastic cup.
“What was the clincher?” I asked
“There were three bullets lying on the living-room coffee table.”
“He’d taken them out?”
“Aye. He’d taken three out, spun the chamber, pointed the gun at his head and pulled the fucking trigger … He’d done that before more than once. That’s why the wife had moved out.”
“Christ Almighty.”
“Fucking stupid, isn’t it? Doing the IRA’s job for them.”
“Aye.”
“Poor bastard. Why didn’t he go to Michael Pollock?” I said.
“Who’s that?”
“The divisional shrink.”
McCallister gave me a queer look. Why did I know the name of the divisional shrink? And why would anyone go to a stranger to talk about their problems?
“Do you know why we’re in this get up?” I said, pointing at our full dress uniforms.
“The Chief Constable’s coming down to visit.”
“You’re messing with me.”
“Nope.”
“The Chief fucking Constable?
“He thinks there’s something rotten in Denmark.”
“There is something rotten in Denmark.”
“Aye well, we’re to put on a brave face and reassure him that Carrickfergus RUC is a happy ship.”
I smiled at that. No RUC station I had ever visited in Ulsterhad been a happy ship. In the ones along the border the pathology was a constant, palpable terror that any moment Libyan-made rockets were gonna come pouring in from a field in Eire; in the ones in Belfast you feared a riot or a mortar attack; in the quieter, less heavily defended country stations it could be anything from an ambush by an entire IRA active service unit to a car bomb parked down the street. And no peeler ever felt safe at home or in his car or at the flicks or at a restaurant or anywhere. There was never any down-time. Blowing your brains out seemed a reasonable enough way out.
And although Burke wasn’t that popular a bloke, he was a familiar face and before he became a really heavy drinker had been a decent enough peeler.
I went into the main incident room. The air, like the weather, was foul. Some of the female reservists were crying.
There was nothing I could say or do. I went down to the evidence room to see if I could liberate some grass or ciggies but the duty officer was a God-botherer called Fredericks who wouldn’t countenance any untoward shit.
Back up to my office by the windows. A cup of tea. A smoke.
McCrabban knocked on the door. He was in his dress greens too.
“Shame, isn’t it?” he said.
“Aye, it’s a crying shame.”
Crabbie looked embarrassed, was going to say something, couldn’t bring himself to, excused himself and left. Did he want me to put in a good word for him about the sergeantcy vacancy? Probably, but with these Presbyterians you could never tell anything.
I stared out the window for ten minutes, watching boats chug up and down the filthy lough.
Another door knock and Chief Inspector Brennan came in.
Full duds and a shave.
“Put your cock away, Duffy, the Chief Constable’s on his way.I don’t know what we did to deserve this, but there it is,” he said.
“Well, sir, it’s not really about us, it’s—”
“The next promotion cycle I was going to be made superintendent. You can’t have a chief inspector running a cop shop like Carrick. Superintendent they were going to make me. That’s all over now. Fucking Burke and his fucking games. Fucker. Poor dumb fucker … Have you got a drink, Duffy?”
“I might have some vodka under the—”
“Better not, Hermon’s a tough nut. Jesus! What a cock up!”
He left the office so that he could wail to someone else.
I watched the clock and around eleven the Chief Constable did indeed come down. He landed by helicopter on the Barn Field and drove to the police station in a convoy of three police Land Rovers.
Not exactly low key.
Still, Jack Hermon was a popular chief constable of the RUC. He had fought Thatcher tooth and nail for better pay and conditions, he had encouraged the recruitment of Catholic officers, he had sacked the worst of
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