The Cold, Cold Ground

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Authors: Adrian McKinty
something as I went in. It was a pamphlet about the imminent “Second Coming”. He was young and had the insolent air of the recently converted. I refused the pamphlet and went straight to see Mrs McCawley. She was wearing a yellow polka-dot dress that I hadn’t seen before. You don’t expect old folks to go swanning around in polka-dot dresses, yellow or otherwise, but somehow Mrs McCawley pulled it off. She’d been a beauty in her day and had run away to America after the war with some GI, only returning after his heart attack in the ‘70s.
    I told her she looked nice and then my problem.
    “Dewey 780-782,” she said right off the top of her head.
    I got the score of La Bohème from 782 but The Grove Dictionary of Music was missing from the reference shelf. I was about to go back to Mrs McCawley and complain but who should I spot reading it in the Quiet Area? None other than Dr Laura Cathcart.
    I sat next to her. “Good afternoon,” I said.
    She gasped, surprised, and then she smiled. She slid the dictionary entry across to me.
    She was looking at the entry on La Bohème . “How did you figure that out?” I asked.
    “How did you?”
    “I had to ask someone,” I said.
    “I had a pretty good idea. At St Brigid’s we did a musical and an opera every year.”
    “You were in La Bohème ?”
    “No, I auditioned for Mimi and didn’t get it. Still, I recognized it.”
    “You should have said something yesterday.”
    “I didn’t want to until I was completely sure.”
    She bit her lip. She seemed pale and she looked like she’d been crying. I remembered her appointment at the coroner’s office. “Did you go up to Belfast?”
    “Nah. They called it off until tomorrow. Nobody could get into town because of the funeral.”
    “Makes sense.”
    She put her hand on mine. “I’m sorry,” she said.
    “About what?”
    “You know. Us.” She made a dramatic face and put her hand on her forehead like a silent-movie actress: “What might have been!”
    “What still could be.”
    She shook her head firmly. “No, definitely not. I just can’t. I went out with Paul for two and a half years. It’s a long time.”
    “Of course.”
    “He went to London. He wanted me to go with him. I said no.”
    “You don’t have to explain,” I said.
    She cleared her throat and slipped her hand from mine.
    “You can get on with your wee thing if you want,” she said.
    “Wee thing! It’s police work, darling, serious police work.”
    I read the libretto for La Bohème but there were no more obvious clues. I passed it over to her.
    I watched her face while she read.
    Her lips were moving. She read the Italian and the English silently to herself. She enjoyed the sound the Italian words made in her mind. I was digging on that when my pager started beeping.
    “Excuse me,” I said.
    I asked Mrs McCawley if I could use her phone.
    I dialled the station.
    It was McCrabban.
    “Another one,” he said.
    “Jesus! Another body?”
    “Aye. Sounds like it’s our boy from the mystery hand.”
    “You’re joking. Where?”
    “Boneybefore.”
    “Where’s that?”
    “Out near Eden Village.”
    “Assemble the gear, sign out a Land Rover.”
    “And there’s been another press call for you. This time from the Carrick Advertiser , they were asking about the body in the Barn Field.”
    “Bollocks. What did you tell them?” I said.
    “Nothing. But they’ll keep calling until you give them something,” Crabbie muttered.
    “Tell him something like: an anonymous tip led Carrickfergus RUC to a body in an abandoned car on Taylor’s Avenue. A homicide is suspected and leads are being pursued by Carrickfergus CID. The victim was a white male in his early thirties, as yet unidentified. Police officers kindly request the public to phone in tips or information about this incident to the Confidential Telephone or Carrickfergus CID. Sound ok?”
    “Aye.”
    I hung up the phone and went back to the Reading Area.
    She saw my face. No

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