What Will Burn James Oswald (booksvooks txt) đ
- Author: James Oswald
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âAfternoon, Jo. Itâs been a while. I take it this isnât a social call.â
McLean was only half joking about it having been a while. Jo Dalgliesh, sometime reporter for the Edinburgh Tribune, although more freelance these days, had been all over his story in the summer, thwarting all attempts by the high heidyins to hush the whole thing up and hope nobody noticed. He had fed her a few choice details on the understanding she kept his name out of it as much as possible, and fair play to her, sheâd stuck to the deal so well this was the first time theyâd spoken in months.
âYou driving? Only I heard that posh car of yours got nicked and then parked in a shop window. Thatâs got to be embarrassing for Police Scotland, hasnât it?â
âThat what you wanted to talk about? My stolen car? Only, Iâm not exactly in the loop on that investigation.â
âNo, no. Youâre still trying to find out who killed that old wifey up at Bairnfather, arenât you? Heard that wasnât going so well. Whatâs it been? A month? Two? Shouldnât you have arrested someone by now?â
McLean had known Jo Dalgliesh a long time, and the fire of hatred towards her that had burned for years had more or less extinguished itself. She had her uses, and was on balance one of the more reliable and less back-stabbing of the journalists heâd dealt with in recent years. There were times, however, when she reminded him of why she had been such a thorn in his side for so long, even if she had saved his life from a homicidal maniac with a very sharp knife once.
âCut to the chase, will you, Dalgliesh? Iâm a busy man.â
âAye, well. Fair enough. Weâre all busy these days. And being the busy kind, I heard on the grapevine that you attended an unexplained death this morning. Over Fountainbridge way.â
âWeâre not viewing it as suspicious, if thatâs what youâre after. Canât really comment until the post-mortemâs done.â
âSo you canât deny or confirm that the deceased in question is Brian âMad Bastardâ Galloway then?â
Sometimes he wondered why Dalgliesh bothered calling him. Sheâd not have asked the question if she hadnât already known the answer, and so this was either a bid to get a little extra inside knowledge, or her annoying way of letting him know the story was about to hit the papers and other news media. He was surprised it hadnât already. Social media usually knew what was going on long before the police did.
âThereâll be an official announcement soon enough. But since next of kin have been informed, I guess I can confirm it.â
âRumour has it he overdosed and died in his armchair. Staring out the window at the wreck of his life.â
âWe havenât found any evidence of anything stronger than a prescription painkiller. The exact cause of death wonât be known until theyâve carried out the post-mortem. I expect thatâll be tomorrow, after which thereâll be a full press release for you lot to spin however you want.â
âIs that a note of sarcasm I hear in your voice, Tony?â
âNot really, Jo. I know how you operate. This is celebrity gossip, not news. You need to put as much lip gloss on it as you can, right?â
A momentâs pause as the barb sunk deep. âAnyone ever tell you how much of a cynic you are?â
âIt may have been mentioned a few times. Mostly by you.â McLean knew the conversation was coming to a close if Dalgliesh was resorting to old insults. He was relieved at the thought of dismissing her from his mind, whilst oddly grateful to her for reminding him that the press would have more interest in Gallowayâs death than they might in Don Purefoy or Steve Whitaker. Or Cecily Slater for that matter. He was about to say goodbye and hang up, when a thought occurred to him.
âYouâre looking for an angle on Galloway, right?â
âIs the Pope Catholic? Aye, of course Iâm looking for an angle. Not that youâd ever give me much.â
McLean ignored the insult. âWell maybe I can point you somewhere. Itâs nothing I actually know, so donât come crying to me if it doesnât pan out. But let me give you two names to add to Mad Bastard.â
âHang on. Let me get a pen. Need to write this down. A lasting memento of the one time Tony McLean was helpful.â
âVery funny, Dalgliesh. Two names. Thatâs all Iâve got. The rest youâll have to find out for yourself.â
âGo on then. The suspense is killing me.â
âTommy Fielding. Gail Elmwood.â
Another silence, longer this time. McLean glanced around the office, saw the door wide open on to the corridor that led a short distance to his superiorâs office. This wasnât how he liked to work, but she was forcing his hand.
âGail new chief superintendent Elmwood?â Dalglieshâs voice was husky and McLean pictured her drawing on her vape.
âAnd Tommy Dadâs Army Fielding. Yes. Like I said, might be nothing, and you didnât get it from me if it turns out to be something. I wouldnât mind a heads-up, though.â
âAye. Sure. Iâd better be off then. Speak later, Tony.â
McLean opened his mouth to say âbyeâ, but the line was dead.
Perhaps to try and atone for his conversation with Dalgliesh, McLean spent the rest of the afternoon diligently working his way through the paperwork that had begun swamping his desk. Every few minutes heâd pause and glance at the door, but no one came in. No one even walked past, as far as he could tell. Chances were that the chief superintendent was away at Gartcosh anyway, and nobody had heard him mention her name and Fieldingâs to one of the cityâs more persistent muckraking journalists.
Finally it was time to head to the major incident room
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