“You think Inverness runs to an all-night snack bar?” Fiona said, the professional sceptic.
Caroline flashed her a dark grin. “Don’t make the mistake of falling for the tourist board propaganda. Inverness is a lot more Morvern Callar than it is Local Hero.”
“Does that mean you know where to score me a wrap of speed?”
Caroline’s eyebrows rose. “I suspect you’re either too early in the morning or too late at night for any action like that round here. I take it that was a joke?”
Fiona’s grin was savage. “Only technically. Jokes are supposed to be funny, and the way I’m feeling right now is anything but. Better make do with the all-night snack bar and a shot of caffeine. If I do end up in the arms of the law, the last thing I need is for them to discover I’m pumped full of amphetamines.”
“Hang on, there we go.” Caroline was off on a tangent, waving over to her left where a DIY super store occupied most of the horizon. Its vast car park contained a fish and chip van, a police car and the business end of an articulated lorry. She veered into the slip road and cruised across to the police car.
“You get the directions. You’ve got the right accent. I’ll get the breakfast,” Fiona instructed, clambering out of the car and stretching. Desperate as she was to get to the bothy, she needed food and drink more than the five minutes she might save by not stopping now. She leaned on the high counter, smelling the rancid agglomeration of stale fat, cheap vinegar, fried onions and diesel. The menu was written in magic marker on what had once been a white board Describing its present colour was beyond Fiona’s vocabulary. Old men’s underwear was about the closest she could come to it. The board offered fish, chips, burgers, sausages, rolls and pies. Another sign announced the availability of ‘Tea, coffee, asorted skoosh’. Fiona smiled at the large man behind the counter. Judging by his pallor, he lived off his own cooking.
“Two chip rolls, please,” Fiona said. It was probably the safest option. Besides, all that complex carbohydrate would keep her going for a few hours. “And two teas,” she added.
“Aye, right,” the lard mountain said. He turned away and tended his hissing fryer. Fiona turned to see how Caroline was getting on with the police officers. She was bent over, leaning into an open window, her face all cheerful openness. Would she and Lesley have made it, Fiona wondered? Probably not. First love seldom did. And then she’d almost certainly have lost Caroline as a friend. With a sense of dawning amazement, Fiona reached the complex realization that Lesley’s death had actually given her a gift. She scratched her head, deciding to file away the thought for another time, when she could consider it properly. Right now, she was struggling to hang on to any sense of reality in what was increasingly resembling a nightmare.
Caroline straightened up with a nod and a smile and set off back towards the car. Catching Fiona watching her, she gave the thumbs-up sign. “There you go, darling’,” the chip van man said, plonking down two overstuffed bread rolls on a pair of paper napkins. Fiona handed over a fiver and waved away the change, concentrating instead on juggling the two chip rolls and the two polystyrene beakers of tea.
Back in the car, they fell on the food and drink. Between mouthfuls of surprisingly tasty chip butty, Caroline explained where they were heading. “Lachlan Fraser’s place is out towards the airport. The bobbies knew him, right enough. Not for any bad reasons, you understand. Just because…well, they know these things.” She drove intently, sandwich in one hand, tea between her thighs, careful on the corners not to spill her drink.
The streets started to waken as they drove, yellow oblongs of light suddenly breaking the grey facades of houses. Now the occasional car or milk float hummed past them, and the first blurring of light in the east started to leak into the night sky. Fiona wondered where Kit was. Whether she’d be in time, or whether she was already too late. Whether the killer would stick to the plot, or settle for an approximation.
If she had allowed her imagination to run away with her instead of forcing what she knew from The Blood Painter into a locked box in the back of her mind, she could probably have conjured up a reasonable approximation of what was happening right then a couple of hours’ drive away.
Kit was groggily struggling back to consciousness, a woozy giddiness shot through with flashes of excoriating pain. He’d taken a second strike to the head, his long containment in darkness leaving him unequal to avoiding the blow that fell as soon as the tailgate of the Toyota was opened.
Apart from pain, the first sensation he was aware of was cold. He was freezing. He managed to open his eyes and found himself in the middle of a scene that felt like the worst sort of deja vu. He knew this place because it was his; he knew this situation because he had created it. He was sitting naked on the toilet, both arms handcuffed to steel eyes that had been bolted into the wall. His legs were chained together, the chain passing round the back of the toilet bowl, rendering him almost incapable of movement.
He was alone. But he didn’t expect that to last.
He knew what was coming next.
Caroline pulled up outside an old two-storey stone building with a peeling red and white sign that read ‘Fraser’s Garage’. It looked as if it had been there long before the existence of the internal combustion engine. Most of the facade was taken up by a pair of wide wooden doors with a Judas gate cut into one. To one side, there was a plain wooden door with the number thirty-one on it. On the upper storey, a light shone from behind a frosted-glass window. Fiona leaned across to hug Caroline. “Thank you,” she said. “I owe you big time.”
“Hey, it’s not over till it’s over,” Caroline said. “You don’t think I’m pulling out now, do you?”
Fiona leaned back in her seat. “Don’t, Caroline. You have to go home now.”
Caroline shook her head. “No way. I’ve not come this far to turn my back and leave you to it. You can’t bring me all this way and then send me home when the trouble really starts.”
“This isn’t a game, Caro. If I’m right, the man who’s got Kit has already killed three people. Without compunction. He won’t think twice about killing anyone who stands between him and what he wants to achieve. I won’t put you in that place.” Fiona’s resolve was clear in her voice as well as her face.
“Since he’s that ruthless, you need to even up the odds a bit.”
“No. I know what I’m doing. I can’t take the chance of ending up with your blood on my hands. I can’t live with that.” Fiona undid her seatbelt and opened the door. “Please, Caro. Go home. I’ll call you later, I promise. I’m getting out of the car now, and I’m not going any further till I see you turn around and drive away.” She pushed the door wide and climbed out, then leaned back in. “I mean it.” She closed the door gently and stepped back.
Caroline smacked the flat of her hand against the steering wheel in a gesture of frustration, then put the car in gear and moved off. Fiona watched as she did a three-point turn and headed back in the direction they’d come from. As the taillights of the Honda disappeared round the corner, she turned to face the small door. She took a deep breath and pressed the doorbell.
There was a long moment of silence, then heavy feet thundered down a flight of stairs. The door opened to reveal a man in his late twenties dressed in work boots, jeans and a padded tartan shirt hanging loose over a grey T — shirt. In one hand, he held a mug of tea. His expression revealed a mild and friendly curiosity.
“Lachlan Fraser?” Fiona asked.