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Contents
ONE
TWO
THREE
FOUR
FIVE
SIX
SEVEN
EIGHT
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
SEVENTEEN
EIGHTEEN
NINETEEN
TWENTY
TWENTY-ONE
TWENTY-TWO
TWENTY-THREE
TWENTY-FOUR
TWENTY-FIVE
TWENTY-SIX
TWENTY-SEVEN
TWENTY-EIGHT
TWENTY-NINE
THIRTY
THIRTY-ONE
THIRTY-TWO
THIRTY-THREE
THIRTY-FOUR
THIRTY-FIVE
THIRTY-SIX
THIRTY-SEVEN
THIRTY-EIGHT
THIRTY-NINE
FORTY
FORTY-ONE
FORTY-TWO
FORTY-THREE
FORTY-FOUR
FORTY-FIVE
FORTY-SIX
FORTY-SEVEN
FORTY-EIGHT
FORTY-NINE
FIFTY
FIFTY-ONE
FIFTY-TWO
FIFTY-THREE
FIFTY-FOUR
FIFTY-FIVE
FIFTY-SIX
FIFTY-SEVEN
FIFTY-EIGHT
FIFTY-NINE
SIXTY
SIXTY-ONE
SIXTY-TWO
SIXTY-THREE
SIXTY-FOUR
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ONE
Thereās no good time to die. Thereās no good place. Not even in a loverās arms at the peak of passion. Itās still the end. Your story goes no further. But if I had the choice it wouldnāt be in a snowdrift, in a public park, ten minutes from my own warm fireside, with a two-foot icicle rammed in my ear. This man wasnāt given the option. His body lay splayed in cold crucifixion on Glasgow Green, his eyes gazing blindly into the face of his jealous god.
I looked around me at the bare trees made skeletal with whitened limbs. High above, the black lid of the sky had been lifted off, and all the warmth in the world was escaping. In this bleak new year, Glasgow had been gathered up, spirited aloft, and dropped back down in Siberia. So cold. So cold.
I tugged my scarf tight round my throat to block the bitter wind from knifing my chest and stopping my heart. I looked down on his body, and saw in the terrorised face my great failure. The snow was trampled round about him, as though his killers had done a war dance afterwards. Around his head a dark stain seeped into the pristine white.
A man stood a few feet away, clasping a shivering woman to his thick coat. Under his hat-brim his eyes held mine in a mix of horror and accusation. I needed no prompting. Not for this manās death. I was being paid to stop this happening. I hadnāt. This was the fifth murder since I took on the job four months ago. But in fairness, back then, back in November, I was only hired to catch a thief . . .
āIād be a gun for hire.ā
āNo guns, Brodie. Not this time.ā
āA mercenary then.ā
āWhatās the difference between a policemanās wages and a private income? Youād be doing the same thing.ā
āNo warrant card. No authority. No back-up.ā I ticked off the list on my fingers.
She countered: āNo hierarchy. No boss to fight.ā
I studied Samantha Campbell. She knew me too well. It was a disturbing talent of hers. Of women. She was nursing a cup of tea in her downstairs kitchen, her first since getting home from the courts. Her cap of blonde hair was still flattened by a day sporting the scratchy wig. The bridge of her nose carried the dents of her specs. Iād barely got in before her and was nursing my own temperance brew, both of us putting off as long as appeared seemly the first proper drink of the evening. Neither of us wanting to be the first to break.
āHow much?ā I asked as idly as itās possible for a man whoās overdrawn at his bank.
āTheyāre offering twenty pounds a week until you solve the crimes. Bonus of twenty if you clean it up by Christmas.ā
āIāve got a day job.ā
āPaying peanuts. Besides, I thought you were fed up with it?ā
She was right. It was no secret between us. Iād barely put in four months as a reporter on the Glasgow Gazette but already it was palling. It was the compromises I found hardest. I didnāt mind having my elegant prose flattened and eviscerated. Much. But I struggled to pander to the whims of the newspaper bosses who in turn were pandering to their scandal-fixated readership. With hindsight my naivety shocked me. Iād confused writing with reporting. I wanted to be Hemingway not Fleet Street Frankie.
āThey gave me a rise of two quid a week.ā
āThe least they could do. Youāre doing two menās jobs.ā
She meant I was currently the sole reporter on the crime desk at the Gazette. My erstwhile boss, Wullie McAllister, was still nursing a split skull in the Erskine convalescent home.
āWhich means I donāt have time for a third.ā
āThis would be spare time. Twenty quid a week for a few hoursā detective work? A man of your experience and talent?ā
āāNeāer was flattery lost on poetās ear.ā Why are you so keen for me to do this? Am I behind with the rent? Not paying my whisky bills?ā
She coloured. My comparative poverty was one of the unspoken barriers between us, preventing real progress in our relationship. How could a reporter keep this high-flying advocate in the manner sheād got accustomed to? My wages barely kept me; they wouldnāt stretch to two. Far less ā in some inconceivable medley of events ā three.
āThe Gazetteās just not you, is it? An observer, taking notes? Serving up gore on toast to the circus crowds. Youāre a doer, not a watcher. Youāre the sort that joins the Foreign Legion just for the thrill of it.ā
āNot a broken heart?ā
āDonāt bring me into this. What shall I tell Isaac Feldmann?ā
Ah. Playing the ace. āWhy didnāt Isaac just call me?ā
āHe wanted to. But heās from the South Portland Street gang. This initiativeās being led by Garnethill.ā
In ranking terms, Garnethill was the first and senior synagogue in Glasgow. It served the Jewish community concentrated in the West End and centre. Iād only ever seen it from the outside: apart from the Hebrew script round the portal, more a pretty church faƧade than how I imagined a temple. Isaacās place of worship was built about twenty years after Garnethill, at the turn of the century. It looked after the burgeoning Gorbalsā enclave. Jewish one-upmanship dictated that they called the Johnny-come-lately the Great Synagogue.
Sam was continuing, āIāve worked for them before.ā
āThey?ā
āA group of prominent Jewish businessmen. I defended them against charges of operating a cartel.ā
āSuccessfully?ā
āI proved they were just being business savvy. The local boys were claiming the Jews were taking the bread from their mouths, driving their kids to the poor house and generally living up to their reputation as Shylocks. But all the locals managed to prove was their own over-charging.ā
āI suppose I should talk to them.ā
āOh, good. Iād hate to put them off.ā
They came in a pack later that evening, four of them, shedding their coats and scarves in the hall in a shuffle of handshakes and shaloms. They brought with them an aroma of tobacco and the exotic. Depending on their generational distance from refugee status, they carried the range of accents from Gorbals to Georgia, Bearsden to Bavaria, sometimes both in the same sentence. As a Homburg was doffed, a yarmulke was slipped on. I recognised two of the four: a bearded shopkeeper from Candleriggs; and my good friend Isaac Feldmann, debonair in one of his own three-piece tweed suits.
āGood evening, Douglas.ā He grinned and shook my hand like a long-lost brother.
āGood to see you, Isaac. Howās the family?ā
āAch, trouble. But thatās families, yes?ā
I guessed he meant his boy, Amos. Father and son werenāt seeing eye to eye on life. A familiar story. I envied such trouble.
āBut business is good?ā
āBetter. Everyone wants a warm coat. Come visit. I can do you a good price.ā
āI donāt have the coupons, Isaac. Maybe next year.ā
I grew conscious that the other three men were inspecting me. I turned to them.
āGentlemen, if Miss Campbell will permit, shall we discuss your business in the dining room?ā
Sam led us through the hall and into the room at the back. We played silent musical chairs until all were seated round the polished wood slab, Sam at one end, me at the other, then two facing two. I placed my notebook and a pencil down in front of me. I looked round at their serious faces. With the hints of the Slav and the Middle East, the beards and the lustrous dark eyes, it felt like a Bolshevik plot. None of your peely-wally Scottish colouring for these smoky characters. Sam nodded to her right, to the big man stroking his great brown beard.
āMr Belsinger, the floor is yours.ā She looked up at me. āMr Belsinger is the leader of the business community.ā
āI know him. Good evening, Shimon. Itās been a while.ā
āToo long, Douglas. Iāve been reading about your adventures in the Gazette.ā His voice rumbled round the room in the soft cadences of Glasgow. Shimon was born here from parents whoād pushed a cart two thousand miles from Estonia to Scotland seeking shelter from the Tsarās murderous hordes.
āNever believe the papers, Shimon. How have you been?ā
Iād last seen him just before the war in the wreckage of his small furniture store in Bell Street. Some cretins had paid their own small act of homage to Kristallnacht. All his windows were in smithereens and his stock smashed. But the perpetrators hadnāt been paying real attention; the legs of the daubed swastikas faced left, the wrong way for a Nazi tribute. Unless of course they really meant to hansel the building with the gracious Sanskrit symbol. We caught the culprits, a wayward unit of the Brigton Billy Boys led personally by Billy Fullerton, who wanted to show solidarity with his Blackshirt brethren in the East End of London.
āGetting by, Douglas, getting by. But we need your services.ā
āYou want me to write an article?ā
He looked at me through his beard. A rueful smile showed.
āWe could do with some good publicity.ā
āYou need more than a Gazette column.ā
No one had to mention the headlines in these first two weeks of November: āStern Gang terrorist arrested in Glasgowā; ā800 Polish Jews held in South of Scotlandā; āMI5 searching for Jewish terroristsā; āIrgun Zvai Leumi agents at largeā.
The factions fighting to establish a Jewish state in Palestine were exporting their seething anger and violence to Britain. Poor thanks for trying to midwife the birth of a new nation already disowned by every other country in the Middle East.
Shimon nodded. āNot even Steinbeck could improve our standing. But thatās not why weāre here. We are being robbed.ā
āDial 999.ā
He shook his head. āThey donāt come, Douglas. Your former colleagues are too busy to bother with a bunch of old Jews.ā
Isaac interjected from the other side of the table: āThey came the first few times, but lost interest.ā
Tomas Meras leaned forward, his bottle glasses glinting from the light above the table. Tomas had been introduced as Dr Tomas, a lecturer in physics at Glasgow University.
āMr Brodie, we pay our taxes. We work in the community. We are Glaswegians. We expect an equal share of the services of the community.ā His vowels were long and carefully shaped, as though he polished them every night.
I knew what they were saying. It wasnāt that the police were anti-Semites. Or not just. They were even-handed with their casual bigotry: anyone who wasnāt a Mason or card-carrying Protestant got third-rate attention. Jews were at the bottom of the pecking order when it came to diligent community law enforcement, alongside Irish Catholics. On the other hand crime was rare in the Jewish community. Self-enforcing morality. Glasgowās finest were used to leaving them to their own devices until whatever small dust storm had been kicked up had settled.
āFirst few times, Isaac? How many are we talking about and what sort of thefts? I mean, are these street robberies or burglaries? Shops or...