‘Let’s finish up here and I’ll come with you.’ Breck had already started shutting down the laptop. Fox noticed that he’d left most of his coffee untouched.
‘Where are we going?’ he asked.
‘Back to Salamander Point.’
They used the same Portakabin as before. Breck had asked the site manager what would happen now that the developer was dead.
‘We keep working until we’re ordered to stop – or the wages dry up,’ the man had replied.
But Malcolm Fox had noticed some changes. The sales office was locked shut, no sign of life inside. And once they’d climbed the ladder to the upper level of temporary offices, he could see that over to one side of the site an impromptu game of football was in progress, piles of bricks substituting for goalposts. When Ronnie Hendry arrived, he was sweating and breathing hard.
‘We’re waiting for a delivery of ready-mix,’ he explained, removing his hard hat and wiping a sleeve across his face.
Breck gestured for him to sit at the table. The three men were then positioned as before, Fox maintaining his silence.
‘Just a couple of follow-up questions,’ Breck was telling Hendry. ‘How have things been since Charlie Brogan jumped ship?’
Hendry stared at him, wondering how to react to the pun, but Breck remained stony-faced.
‘The men are worried about pay day.’
‘Your gaffer just said much the same thing.’
‘He’s got more at stake, money he makes for standing around all day with his dick in his hand and not a clue in his head.’
‘You sound aggrieved.’
Hendry wriggled in his chair. ‘Not really.’ But he folded his arms across his chest – a defensive gesture, in Fox’s eyes. ‘You any closer to finding out who killed Vince?’
‘We think the “why” might help answer that. But meantime, I wanted to ask about Mr Brogan.’
‘What’s he got to do with it?’
‘Well, now that he’s gone the same way as Vince Faulkner…’ Breck’s voice drifted off.
‘But there’s no connection,’ Hendry stated, eyes shifting from one detective to the other. ‘Is there?’
‘We can’t know that for sure. I’m assuming Mr Brogan visited Salamander Point?’
‘He was pretty hands-on,’ Hendry agreed.
‘How often did you see him?’
‘Maybe once a week, twice a week sometimes. Gaffer would be able to say for sure.’
‘But it’s you I’m asking. Did he just sit in here with a mug of tea and the plans spread out in front of him?’
Hendry shook his head. ‘He liked to give the whole site a good look-see.’
‘So you’d have met him, then?’
‘Spoke to him a few times. He always had a couple of questions. Seemed like a good guy – not all developers are.’
‘How do you mean?’
Hendry shifted in the chair again. ‘Some jobs I’ve worked on, they turn up wearing pinstripe suits and shiny brogues – one or two from CBBJ were that way inclined. But Mr Brogan… with him it was work boots and jeans. And he always shook your hand without brushing the dirt off after.’ Hendry was nodding slowly at the memory. ‘Like I say, a good guy.’
‘Did Vince Faulkner think the same?’
‘Never said any different, not to me.’
‘He met Brogan, too?’
Hendry nodded again. ‘Mr Brogan knew most of the guys by name. And he remembered who you were. There was always some detail or other he’d toss into the conversation.’
‘Gleaned from the personnel files?’ Fox interrupted. Hendry turned his head towards him.
‘Maybe,’ he said.
‘How often did the two of them meet?’ Breck asked, drawing Hendry’s attention back to him.
It took the man a few seconds to answer. ‘Don’t know,’ he eventually stated.
‘You see what we’re getting at?’ Breck persisted.
‘Not really.’
‘If the two of them knew one another… well, you add Vince Faulkner’s death to anything else happening in Mr Brogan’s life…’
‘And he goes and tops himself?’ Hendry seemed to consider this. He offered a shrug, his arms still folded.
‘Last time we spoke,’ Breck continued, ‘you said you sometimes went out for the evening – a meal and some drinks at the Oliver casino.’
‘Right.’
‘You knew it was owned by Mr Brogan’s wife?’
‘Sure.’
‘Ever see him there?’
‘Probably.’
‘You can’t be sure?’
Hendry had unfolded his arms and was pressing his palms against his thighs, preparing to stand up.
‘I’ve got to get back to work,’ he said.
‘What’s the rush?’
‘There’s nothing I can tell you about Charlie Brogan or why he decided to end it all.’ He was on his feet now, and readying to put his yellow hard hat back on. Breck got up from the table too.
‘Maybe we’re not finished,’ he said.
‘You’re clutching at straws,’ Hendry stated. ‘You’ve hit a wall with Vince, so you’re focusing on Brogan instead. But there’s no connection between the two.’
‘You’re sure of that?’
‘Definitely.’
‘What makes you such an expert, Mr Hendry?’
Hendry glared at him. He seemed to try half a dozen answers for size, dismissing each of them in turn. With a cold smile, he opened the door and exited the Portakabin. Fox closed the door and rested his weight against it, eyes on Breck.
‘Well?’ Breck asked him.
‘About three quarters of the way through…’
Breck was nodding. ‘He’d been cagey enough before that.’
‘But he started holding back. I wonder why.’
‘Might be different if we were talking to him at Torphichen. Maybe having cautioned him first… But we can’t do that, can we?’
Fox shrugged his agreement. They moved out of the room and on to the wooden walkway. Hendry was clambering over foundations and lengths of pipe and ducting, heading back to the football game. The sun had come out, and a few of the men were now topless.
‘Makes you proud,’ Fox commented. ‘Temperature’s halfway to double figures, but at the slightest glimmer of sunshine…’
‘The Scotsman in his prime,’ Breck agreed, as he started back down the ladder.
They were leaving the site when a car pulled up, two men climbing out. Breck cursed under his breath.
‘Dickson and Hall,’ he muttered.
‘I know the faces,’ Fox confirmed. They were Torphichen CID; Bad Billy Giles’s men. Both were smiling, without a trace of humour between them.
‘Well, well,’ Dickson said. He was the older and heavier of the two. His partner was, as Fox’s father would have put it, ‘twa ply o’ reek’, but with a shaven head and Ray-Bans.
‘What brings you here?’ Breck asked, hinting to Fox at their strategy here – namely, brazen it out.
Dickson managed a chuckle as he slid his hands into his trouser pockets. ‘That’s more than a bit rich, Jamie. But since you ask…’
Hall took his cue. ‘Billy Giles has got us retracing your steps. He’s worried you might have left gaps in the paperwork or maybe tweaked your reports.’ He angled his head slightly to take in Malcolm Fox. ‘With a bit of help from Inspector Fox here…’
‘You’re wasting your time,’ Breck stated.
‘And yet here you are, Jamie – the pair of you,’ Dickson said, leaning forward a little from the waist and reminding Fox of one of those toddlers’ toys that you could rock to and fro without them ever falling over.
‘And you’ll be reporting all of this back, of course,’ Breck was saying.
‘You think we shouldn’t?’ Hall asked, feigning amazement. ‘Last I heard, you two were suspended from duty.’
‘So?’
‘So it begs the question what could you possibly be doing here?’