When a teenage boy shoots a young woman dead in the middle of a busy Glasgow street and then commits suicide, Detective Harry McCoy is sure of one thing. It wasn't a random act of violence.
With his new partner in tow, McCoy uses his underworld network to lead the investigation but soon runs up against a secret society led by Glasgow's wealthiest family, the Dunlops.
McCoy's boss doesn't want him to investigate. The Dunlops seem untouchable. But McCoy has other ideas . . .
In a helter-skelter tale ā winding from moneyed elite to hipster music groupies to the brutal gangs of the urban wasteland ā Bloody January brings to life the dark underbelly of 1970s Glasgow and introduces a dark and electrifying new voice in Scottish noir.

- 320 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
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Bloody January
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10th February 1973
ONE
McCoy stopped for a minute, had to. He put his hands on his knees, bent over, tried to catch his breath. Could feel the sweat running down his back, shirt sticking to him under his jumper and coat. He looked up at the uniform. Another one of Murrayās rugby boys. Size of a house and no doubt thick as shit. Same as all the rest.
āWhat floor is this now?ā he asked.
The big bastard wasnāt even breathing heavily, just standing there looking at him, raindrops shining on his woollen uniform.
āTenth, sir. Four more to go.ā
āChrist. Youāre joking, arenāt you? Iām half dead already.ā
They were making their way up a temporary stairway. Just rope handrails strung between scaffolding poles, stairway itself a series of rough concrete slabs leading up and up to the top of the half-built office block.
āReady, sir?ā
McCoy nodded reluctantly and they started off again. Maybe heād be doing better if he hadnāt just finished two cans of Pale Ale and half a joint when the big bastard had come to get him. Him and Susan were laughing, dancing about like loonies, Rolling Stones on the radio, when the knock on the door came. Big shadow of the uniform behind the frosted glass. Panic stations. Susan trying to open the windows and fan the dope smell away with a dishtowel while he kept the uniform talking at the door for as long as he could. Just as well theyād decided against splitting the tab heād found in his wallet.
They climbed a few more storeys, turned a corner, and at last McCoy could see the night sky above them. It was grey and heavy, moon appearing every so often through the clouds and the falling rain. He stood for a minute, taking in the view, getting his breath back. Glasgow was laid out beneath him, dirty black buildings, wet streets. He walked to the side and looked out, didnāt want to get too close, no walls up here, just more rope handrails. Worked out he must be facing west, the dome of the Mitchell Library was right in front of him, university tower behind it in the distance. Below them the new motorway they were building cut through what was left of Charing Cross, a wide river of brown mud and concrete pilings. He heard footsteps behind him and turned.
Chief Inspector Murray held out his hand. āSorry itās a day early but Thomsonās away until Monday. Need someone working this soon as.ā
For some reason Murray was wearing a dinner suit under his usual sheepskin car coat. Full shebang: dickie bow, cummerbund, silk stripe on the trousers. Only thing spoiling the dapper effect was the pair of black wellies heād tucked the trousers into.
āLord Provostās Dinner,ā Murray said, noticing him looking. āNorth British Hotel. Food was bloody swill. Never been happier to be called away to a murder in my life.ā
āStill trying to get you to take that Central job?ā asked McCoy.
āStill trying, still not getting anywhere. No matter how many fancy dinners they invite me to.ā He took the unlit pipe out his mouth, pointed into the darkness. āFollow me, good pilgrim, for I am not lost.ā
A path of damp stamped-down cardboard boxes led towards the far corner of the roof. There must have been ten or so people up here already, uniforms milling about, two technicians carrying the tent, even Wee Andy the photographer, almost lost in his duffle coat and a big woolly scarf. He could hear distant sirens; saw two ambulances crossing the river over to their side, blue lights spinning. Meant it wouldnāt be long until the press boys were here. Was hard enough to keep a murder quiet, never mind this one. A body found at the top of an unfinished office tower only a couple of minutesā walk from the Record office? No chance.
āQuite a view from up here,ā said Murray pointing. āCan see the cathedral. If it wasnāt pissing with rain youād even be able to see the Peopleās Palace.ā
āGreat,ā said McCoy. āWell worth climbing up fourteen bloody storeys for.ā
Murray shook his head. āAnd here was me thinking leave might have changed you, but no, still the usual moaning-faced bastard that you are. Howād it go anyway? You go and see him?ā
He had. Three two-hour sessions in a draughty back room in Pitt Street. Question after question.
How did you feel when you pushed him off the roof?
How did you feel when you saw the dead body?
How did you feel, really feel, inside at that point? Did you feel guilty?
What heād really felt was an overwhelming desire to lean over the desk and punch the bastard in the face but he knew if he did heād never get signed off so he sat there saying as little as possible, watching the clock. It was only when he got home heād started thinking about the last thing the bloke had said to him.
Do you still feel happy being a policeman? Is it what you really want?
McCoy nodded. āStatutory three appointments all attended. Signed off. Psychologically fit for duty.ā
Murray grunted. āHow much did you have to bribe him?ā āSo what have I missed?ā McCoy asked. āWhatās the big news fromāā
āThereās the boy!ā
They turned and Wattie was walking towards them, anorak, bobble hat and a pair of Arran wool mittens. He looked more like an enthusiastic toddler than a trainee detective.
He took a mitten off and pumped McCoyās hand up and down. āThought you werenāt due back until tomorrow?ā
āIām not. Couldnāt keep away. Well, not when thereās some big bastard at your door telling you Murray needs you now.ā
Wattie grinned. āDid you miss me? Because fuck me, I didnāt missāā
āWatson!ā Murray had had enough. āGet this crime scene secured now! Stop acting like a bloody schoolboy!ā
Wattie saluted and walked back through the rain towards the lights being set up on the far corner of the roof.
āHowās he getting on?ā asked McCoy, trying to fasten the top button of his coat, not easy with numb fingers.
Murray shook his head. āBright enough, but he treats everything like a bloody game. Need you to knock some sense into him.ā
āWhatās the story then?ā McCoy asked, looking round. āHow come weāre freezing our balls off on the top of this building?ā
āYouāll see soon enough. Cāmon,ā said Murray.
McCoy followed him along the cardboard path leading towards the other side of the roof. Three steps behind Murray again, just like always. Was like heād never been away. Cardboard beneath his feet already starting to dissolve with the rain and the amount of people walking on it. Two uniforms were huddled over in the corner, big umbrellas being held over them not doing much to keep the water off. Both of them were fiddling with the battery packs, trying to connect them.
āFucking bastarding thing,ā said one, then noticed Murray. āSorry, sir, just give us a minute.ā He grunted and finally managed to push a plug into the socket in the side. āShould be all right now,ā he said, putting his fingers into his mouth, trying to suck some feeling back into them.
āWell then,ā said Murray. āWhat are you waiting for?ā
The uniform nodded and clicked the switches down. Bright white light bounced back up off the wet roof. McCoy held his arm over his face, peered out through half-closed eyes. Heād never been good with the sight of blood, any blood, never mind this much. He took an involuntary step back. Edge of his vision was starting to blur, he felt dizzy. He shut his eyes, took deep breaths, tried to count to ten. He opened them again, saw the red everywhere, and turned his head away as fast as he could.
āChrist! You could have warned me, Murray.ā
āCould have but I didnāt,ā said Murray. āNeed to get over it. Told you a million bloody times.ā He looked over at the illuminated corner of the roof and grimaced. āMind you, this is bloody hellish.ā
It was. The blood was everywhere. Splattered up the half-finished walls, dripping from a flapping tarpaulin. Some of it had started to freeze already, red ice crystals glinting in the light from the big lamps. But most of it was still sticky and wet, giving off the familiar smell of copper pennies and butcher shops.
McCoy pulled his scarf across his mouth, told himself he was going to be okay and tried to concentrate. There wasnāt any way round it. To get any closer to the body he was going to have to step into the big puddle of blood. There was more cardboard laid down in it but it had half soaked up the blood, wasnāt going to make much of a difference. He put his foot down gingerly, felt the congealing blood tacky against the sole of his shoe. A tarpaulin snapped in the wind and he jumped, heartbeat going back to normal as he watched it break free and float off over the side of the building into the darkness.
He took a few deep breaths and stepped in, folded the edges of his coat over his knees and squatted. Tried to block out the cold and the rain, the sheer amount of blood, and tried to think about what he was looking at. It was a young man, late teens, early twenties. Heād been sat up against a pile of metal scaffolding poles, legs pointing out in front of him, arms hanging down by his sides. His left leg ending in a mess of tangled blood and bone, foot just attached.
Whatever he had been wearing had gone. All he was left with was a pair of underpants, pale skin of his legs and torso bluish in the bright lights. The words āBYE BYEā had been cut into his chest, blood running down his torso.
McCoy counted down another ten like the doctor had told him and looked up into the manās face. Despite everything, his hair was still combed into a neat side shed, raindrops on it glistening in the big lights. Below it, one of his eyes was completely gone, socket empty, some sort of vein emerging out of it, dried blood sticking it onto his cheek. His jaw was hanging slack, broken it looked like. There was something stuffed into his mouth. McCoy knew what it was going to be before he looked. He looked. Wasnāt wrong.
He stood up, ran for the side, feet sliding as he went, just made it to the edge before he was sick. When heād finished he spat a few times, trying to clear his mouth of the taste of stomach acid and flat lager, watched it spiral down.
A tap on his shoulder and Murray handed him a hip flask. He took a deep pull, swirled the burning whisky round his mouth and swallowed it. Murray was shaking his head at him, looking at him like he was a uniform on his first day. He handed the flask back and Murray looked at him disapprovingly.
āGive us a break, Murray. That your idea of fun, eh? Switch the big fucking lights on when I turn up? Christ, theyāve even stuck his cock in his mouth.ā
āAye, thatās right, McCoy. This whole murder sceneās been arranged just to give you a fright.ā
McCoy nodded over at the body. āHow did we know he was here?ā
āAnonymous phone call into Central,ā said Murray.
āFrom whoever did it?ā
Murray nodded. āWho else? No other bugger would know he was up here.ā
āSir?ā
They turned. Wattie was standing there with a clear evidence bag. āOne of the uniform boys found these.ā He handed the bag to Murray.
Murray took out his torch, swit...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- 1st January 1973
- 2nd January 1973
- 3rd January 1973
- 4th January 1973
- 5th January 1973
- 6th January 1973
- 7th January 1973
- 8th January 1973
- 9th January 1973
- 10th January 1973
- 11th January 1973
- 20th January 1973
- Acknowledgements
- Promo page for other Canongate titles
- 10th February 1973
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