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330 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
330 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
He was down and out of sight in a natural niche surrounded by the big yellow polyurethane tanks that would eventually be sunk with the drains on the building site. The sun was high overhead and Tam's overalls were stripped off his shoulders as he sat slumped against the side, soaking up the rays, eyes closed. A tattered Knave magazine had flopped to the side, opened at the centrefold and displaying a dark haired girl with impossible gravity-defying breasts, her spine contorted into a pouting position that would have made a gynaecologist's job a dawdle. <em></em></p>
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<p>Jack thudded his hand hard against the side of the tank, making it boom like a deep bass drum and Tam came awake with a start. </p>
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<p>"Whah?"</p>
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<p>"Lazy shirking skiver. Haven't you got work to do?" </p>
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<p>"Lazy nothing." He rubbed his eyes. "I've been grafting all day, not like you, finished by twelve o'clock, half-day merchant."</p>
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<p>"P-forty five by twelve," Jack said without rancour but deliberately embarrassing Tam. "I just got my jotters. Give us a job."</p>
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<p>"Oh, hell man, did you get the bullet today?"</p>
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<p>"It's worse than that," Jack said. "We're in a spot of trouble." He picked up the Knave and thumbed through it, holding a centrefold wide. "I thought you got a <EM>D</EM> in biology."</p>
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<p>"I've studied it a lot since then. What's the problem?"</p>
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<p>"We might have to go early. At least start early. Andy Kerr's getting rid of the trucks at the end of the month. They're coming to take them away."</p>
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<p>"So?"</p>
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<p>"So we haven't got a date for the decant. I'm going to have to get some inside knowledge. If we don't get a date we're slaughtered before this thing gets off the ground."</p>
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<p>He sat down in the sun, feeling the heat reflect of the big plastic tanks. </p>
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<p>"What are these things?"</p>
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<p>"Drain sumps. This place is too near the river and if there's a lot of rain, you have to hold it somewhere when the tide's in. Then it drains away later."</p>
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<p>"Big, aren't they?"</p>
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<p>"This whole site needs ten of them, just to be on the safe side. They take a hell of a lot of rain."</p>
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<p>"Do you fit them?"</p>
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<p>"Come on man, I'm a plumber, not a navvy. They just dig a big hole and slot them in. I do the delicate work. I'm a <em>craftsman</em>."</p>
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<p>"Well get yourself along to Neil's place tonight. We've got to work out just what you <em>can</em> do."</p>
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<p><hr />__</p>
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<p>Neil Cleary had searched the old cellars at the back of the tenement gardens and found the biggest jam pan any of them had ever seen. It sat on the hot gas ring while he poured a stack of corn kernels into it. </p>
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<p>"What the hell's that?" Jed wanted to know. </p>
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<p>"Bird feed."</p>
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<p>Ed Kane looked up, eyebrows raised, face all questions. </p>
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<p>"It's a long story," Jack said. He bent to the plans that were spread out over the table. </p>
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<p>"How long have we got?"</p>
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<p>"At least a fortnight," Neil said.</p>
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<p>"No, I mean tonight."</p>
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<p>"A couple of hours, my mother won't be back until after ten when the bingo comes out, but we have to disappear by then."</p>
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<p>"Doesn't she like you having your mates in?" Ed asked. Neil, like Jack, still stayed at home. </p>
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<p>"No, she doesn't give a toss. But she'll be bringing my aunts with her and they'll all have a wee Carlsberg and a vodka. That's their Friday night treat. Then they all start talking at once, non stop, total marathon earache. You can stay for that if you want, but I'm telling you man, it's like Chinese water torture. It would drive you demented."</p>
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<p>Neil turned to the pan. "How much of this stuff do you put in?"</p>
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<p>"Who knows?" Jack said. "My Grandad feeds it to the pigeons and they don't care. Just make sure you've got plenty. We've got two hours, so let's get down to it." Jack flattened out the blueprint creases and Ed and Tam leant over. </p>
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<p>"That's the bottling hall," Ed said. Jack recognised the plan from his visit. His eye traced the white lines of the filling rack where the bottles shunted round on a circular gantry to have the whisky force-injected down their necks. "Which part do you want?"</p>
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<p>"You tell me. I'm guessing here, but it's that big steel tank that holds all the whisky, isn't it?"</p>
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<p>Ed agreed. "That's where it's going to be, sure. But it takes three days to get it from the barrels in there. I know, because I'll be the one rolling them up the ramp and hooking the bungs out. You're talking five hundred barrels, give or take. Less if they use butts or hogsheads, but it's all got to come out the bunghole."</p>
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<p>"Tam should know. He's good at biology."</p>
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<p>"Go take a flying f. . . ."</p>
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<p>"Anyway, you'll never get it out of there, not if it takes three days to put it in."</p>
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<p>"How long does it take to bottle all that lot?"</p>
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<p>"Another three. You can only go as fast as they can stick the labels on, but it's all automatic. They've got pressure pumps, the lot."</p>
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<p>Jack sat still for a minute, head in his hands, thinking hard. He turned the blueprint over, closing his eyes to recall the scene in the decant hall. The next level down from the metal platform they'd stood on was on the next sheet. He unfurled it and flattened it out, keeping the first one at the side, so they could have a ready reference. </p>
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<p>"This is the important part. That's where Tam comes in."</p>
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<p>The tracery of pipes showed up white against the blue. </p>
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<p>"You're the expert, you can tell us what's what"</p>
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<p>Tam angled his head so he could read the blueprint. </p>
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<p>"You got to be joking. I'm a plumber, not a rocket scientist."</p>
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<p>Jack sat back, brows down. "Come on, man. You put in central heating, I've seen it. This is just the same thing, isn't it?"</p>
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<p>"Yeah, right." Two positives made a flat negative. "Central heating is ten radiators and a circuit of ten mil copper. What the hell is this?"</p>
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<p>Ed broke in. "You got coolers, drains, blend feeds, washers."</p>
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<p>"So which ones are which?"</p>
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<p>"Don't you know?"</p>
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<p>"How the hell should I know? They're just a lot of squiggly lines."</p>
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<p>Jack put his face in his hands. "Get with the program, Tam! What's the point in being a plumber if you don't know what pipes are for?"</p>
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<p>"Where does it say what these bloody pipes are for?" Tam demanded. </p>
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<p>Jack patiently tapped the bottom of the blueprint, where a schematic of varying lines matched up with a list. He looked at Tam: <em>"</em>Great achievements involve the co-operation of many minds -Alexander Graham Bell. First ensure mind is clear. Then put it in gear. Release the clutch slowly. Proceed with caution."</p>
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<p>"Sarcastic prick," Tam said sheepishly. "Right. What have we got?"</p>
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<p>"Donny, that last lot of whisky that went down the drain. It came out the south side, right?"</p>
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<p>Donny screwed his eyes up, made a left and right signal while he worked out east and west. </p>
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<p>"Sure. It came right down the pipe and into the golf course drain, remember? Billy Butler was as mad as a wet blanket."</p>
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<p>"Here, look at these." Jack handed him a set of colour prints that zoomed in to the base of the distillery wall about fifty yards inside the perimeter fence. </p>
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<p>"You never got these done in Boots, did you?"</p>
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<p>"It's digital.. Take a look and tell me where the stuff came out."</p>
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<p>Donny held the prints up, scanning them one by one. The fourth showed three low down entrances on the wall, each protected by a small metal grate that was fixed with a padlock. In front of the three little gates was a wide concrete depression which fed into a drainage grille. </p>
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<p>"One of them, but I don't know which one. Does it matter?"</p>
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<p>"Sure it matters, and we have to find out. That's not too far from the cooperage, you reckon you could take a swing past and sniff around."</p>
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<p>"Better I do it," Ed said emphatically. "I'll be moving the barrels that way anyway."</p>
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<p>"We need those doors off, so it'll take a pair of cutters. We can replace the padlocks. I'm guessing they never get opened one month to the next."</p>
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<p>Ed shrugged and they turned back. </p>
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<p>"Does this stuff need sugar or salt?" Neil was getting the kernels ready. </p>
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<p>Tam traced the lines with his finger, leaning close to the print. </p>
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<p>"That's the big wash drain," Ed said. But you got the floor system as well. Everything gets hosed and then chlorinated. There's a third one for the washroom."</p>
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<p>"How do they get the whisky out for bottling?"</p>
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<p>Tam sat up. "There. That's a big pipe. Is it copper or brass?"</p>
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<p>Ed shrugged again. "Beats me. I can try and check."</p>
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<p>"Good man," said Jack. "We need the specs and then we have to do a divert. That's a whole mess of pipes down there, so we have to get something in there so they won't notice. We need to get the stuff out of the tank and through that wall."</p>
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<p>"And how are you going to manage that," Tam asked. "It's not just a matter of turning a tap. You'd have to connect this," he jabbed a finger straight down, "to this. Not easy."</p>
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<p>"But you'll manage it, right?"</p>
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<p>"How do you mean <em>I'll</em> manage it?"</p>
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<p>"You're the technician. We're going to get you in there."</p>
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<p>Tam sat up straight, jaw agape. </p>
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<p>"You have to be jokin'. "</p>
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<p>Ed laughed. "Hey, you know him better than me, and <EM>I </EM>know he's not joking."</p>
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<p>"You trying to get me the jail?"</p>
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<p>This time they all laughed, even Neil.</p>
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<p>"Tam, if we screw up in this, we'll all end up in jail. I told you, you could lose your shirt. But there's nearly two million in high tension hooch there, just waiting for somebody smart enough. We can't get it out if we can't get you in, <em>kapeesh</em>? You know pipes, so you're the man. <em>Plumbermeister</em>."</p>
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<p>"Jesus. The last central heating job I did I flooded a woman out. That's nothing compared to this. And where are you going to be?"</p>
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<p>"I'm the man with the plan. I know bugger all about pipes and drains."</p>
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<p>"You're bloody cold-hearted crazy Keyser Soze. And just how the hell are you going to get me in there?"</p>
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<p>"That's the interesting part," Jack said. "You're really going to love it."</p>
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<p><hr />_</p>
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<p>Gus Ferguson was up in the far corner of the bar in the Capstan, down near the river quay, well away from the front door. The Capstan had been an old riverman's bar in the old days, when the barges and puffers brought in coal and steel for the shipbuilding and herring from Loch Fyne way back before the war, and it still has that kind of atmosphere; rough and ready, sometimes as rough, as they say hereabouts, as a badger's arse. The wood around the gantry was blackened by more than a century of plug tobacco smoke. A back door led onto Barley Cobble and any number of old narrow alleys, so if trouble came in the front, that was the exit for the wanted, the wary, and a variety of stolen goods.</p>
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<p> "What sort of gun was it?"</p>
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<p>"How should I know? It went off right next to my ear. What you think? I'm going to ask the make and model?"</p>
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<p>"Don't get smart. What did it look like, a revolver? A rifle? Was it a fuckin' shotgun?"</p>
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<p>"No. It was one of those James Bond things. Shit, man, I don't know."</p>
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<p>"And the shooter, what was he like?"</p>
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<p>"He was done up like the bloody IRA, man. Had a fucking balaclava and big biker goggles and he sounded Irish as well. </p>
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<p>"Irish American," Foley chipped in. "a right hard nut an all. You could tell."</p>
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<p>"Brilliant. You two tossers were supposed to slap that ginger prick around, give him a sore face and swollen balls and what happens? You get tanked. Twice. <em>Jesu</em>s."</p>
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<p>He lifted his whisky. </p>
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<p>"That milkman. Jake Lorne. Where's he getting IRA men to fight his battles? Is he connected? I never even knew he was a Tim."</p>
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<p>Cullen shrugged. "We were doin' him. No contest."</p>
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<p>"Aye, right, so you were. You got another one in the eye. You don't look like you were getting first prize. What a pair of tits."</p>
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<p>"No, honest. He was down and taking it. We were getting tore in, and then this nutter comes in and pulls out a shooter and nearly takes my head off with it. He had that barrel jammed in my neck. If he'd have fired it my brains would have been all over the place"</p>
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<p>"What brains? He'd have to be a fucking sharpshooter to hit your fucking brain at point blank."</p>
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<p>"Swear to Christ Gus, he wasn't kidding. Then the two of them fuck off on a bike. That's definitely IRA style, innit? That's how they topped that Irish bird from the paper. You don't mess with these loonies."</p>
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<p>"Could have been UDA," Foley observed. "I think Lorne's a proddy."</p>
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<p>"He's a fuckin' <em>milkman</em>, for |