And now, now it’s happening again.

‘Where the fuck’s Maurice?’

I’m walking towards her, across the grass, across Soldier’s Field. I say, ‘He’ll be here.’

Detective Chief Superintendent Peter Noble, George’s boy, out from behind his fat new Millgarth desk, between me and her.

I know what he’s hiding: there’ll be a raincoat over her, boots or shoes placed on her thighs, a pair of panties left on one leg, a bra pushed up, her stomach and breasts hollowed out with a screwdriver, her skull caved in with a hammer.

Noble looks at his watch and says, ‘Well, anyroad, I’m taking this one.’

There’s a bloke in a tracksuit by a tall oak, throwing up. I look at my watch. It’s seven and there’s a fine steam coming off the grass all across the park.

Eventually I say, ‘It him?’

Noble moves out of the way. ‘See for yourself.’

‘Fuck,’ says Ellis.

The man in the tracksuit looks up, spittle all down him, and I think about my son and my stomach knots.

Back on the road, more cars are arriving, people gathering.

Detective Chief Superintendent Noble says, ‘The fuck you put that sodding siren on for? World and his wife’ll be out here now.’

‘Possible witnesses,’ I smile and finally look at her:

There’s a tan raincoat draped over her, white feet and hands protruding. There are dark stains on the coat.

‘Have a bloody look,’ Noble says to Ellis.

‘Go on,’ I add.

Detective Constable Ellis slowly puts on two white plastic gloves and then squats down on the grass beside her.

He lifts up the coat, swallows and looks up at me. ‘It’s him,’ he says.

I just stand there, nodding, looking off at some crocuses or something.

Ellis lowers the coat.

Noble says, ‘He found her.’

I look back over at the man in the tracksuit, at the man with the sick on him, grateful. ‘Got a statement?’

‘If it’s not too much trouble,’ smiles Noble.



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