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The Cold, Cold Ground

The Cold, Cold Ground

Titel: The Cold, Cold Ground Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Adrian McKinty
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you?” he asked.
    “I can take you to Carrick station if you want.”
    “Ta.”
    I drove the long way back, avoiding the city centre completely, taking Balmoral Avenue and Stockman’s Lane which were in the leafy, comparatively well-off southern suburbs. At Uni I had not only learned that Belfast rioters hated rain but also any neighbourhood that was close to a golf course.
    Still we had to drive around hijacked cars and a jack-knifed bus.
    I stuck on the radio. The BBC were confirming the bad news. Raymond McCreesh and Patsy O’Hara were either both dead or dying. I didn’t know McCreesh but O’Hara was the INLA commander in The Maze so those boys would definitely put on a big show of force in Belfast and even more so in Derry where O’Hara was from.
    I turned off the set. Aye. It was going to be bad.
    “Why did you come today?” Walter asked. “Hardly to pay your respects.”
    “Hardly. How many men do you think Tommy killed? I mean, personally.”
    Walter nodded and we drove in silence while I rummaged in the cassette box.
    “What’s your feeling about The Kinks?”
    “The usual love-hate.”
    “Look for something else then. I need to keep my eyes on the road.”
    Eventually he stuck in Bessie Smith which was a nice soundtrack to the unfolding Belfast tragedy.
    We avoided the worst of the trouble and I pulled in at Carrick railway station.
    “Thank you,” Walter said.
    He opened the car door but didn’t get out.
    “So,” he said.
    “Do you have any leads?”
    I shook my head. “Not really, but I did learn something today.
    If somebody wanted to kill Tommy, mixing him up with a homosexual serial killer was a smart move. Tommy’s the head of the IRA’s internal security wing and not a single comrade shows up? He’s being wiped from history commie style.”
    Walter nodded.
    We stared at one another. I was waiting for it.
    Waiting …
    “Do you know Cicero?” I asked.
    “They beat him into us in school,” he said.
    “Us too. Father Faul made us read his murder trials. His defences of accused killers. Cicero would always start his orations by asking cui bono ? Who benefits? So I’ve been wondering who benefits from Tommy’s death?”
    “You tell me,” he said.
    “Let me run a few ideas past you. Tommy’s the head of the Force Research Unit and if he dies there are many current FRU investigations that would get suspended. That might buy someone some time.”
    Walter shrugged. “What else are you thinking?”
    “A rival? Tommy had to have made many enemies and rivals at the top.”
    “They wouldn’t dare.”
    “The people he interrogated, over the years. Important people. They could hold a grudge.”
    “Perhaps.”
    Now the time for my ace … “And then there’s Freddie Scavanni, isn’t there? Tommy dies and Freddie Scavanni moves into Tommy’s place.”
    He nodded and crucially did not deny that Freddie was next in line.
    “But if Tommy Little died when he was on his way over to see Freddie, wouldn’t that set off all the alarm bells in the world? Wouldn’t Freddie get the full Spanish Inquisition from the FRU and the IRA?” I said, airing my doubts as much as asking him.He sighed. “That’s why it can’t have been Freddie.”
    “Do me a favour, Walter, tell me again about that phone call Tommy got the night he was killed.”
    “He got the phone call. He talked. He hung up. He was on his way out anyway, but … I don’t know … maybe the phone call gave him an added urgency.”
    “What precisely did he say to you?”
    “He said that he had to, let me think … he had to ‘see Billy White and then he had to take care of some business with Freddie’. Yeah, that’s it.”
    I flipped open my notebook and skipped back through the pages. “Previously you said Tommy told you he was going to ‘take care of some business with Billy and then go see Freddie’. Which was it? It’s important, Walter.”
    He thought for a moment.
    “I don’t remember. It wasn’t important at the time. I didn’t know then that it was the last thing I would ever hear him say.”
    “You’ll let me know if anything else occurs to you?”
    He nodded, got out of the car and went to catch the train.
    2 p.m. Carrickfergus
    I was reading the killer’s postcard to me and making no headway with it when the CID phone rang. Daedalus – inventor – Athenian – labyrinth – mirrors – bull worship – Crete – Poseidon. Ring. Ring. Ring. Ring. Ring. Ring. Ring.
    “Will somebody please

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