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Hostage to Murder




  Table of Contents

  Praise

  Title Page

  Acknowledgments

  Dedication

  PART ONE

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  PART TWO

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Epilogue

  V. L. McDermid

  Copyright Page

  Praise for V. L. McDermid

  “One of my favorite authors, Val McDermid is an important writer—witty, never sentimental, taking us through mean streets with the dexterity of a Chandler.”

  Sara Paretsky

  “If you haven’t discovered this award-winning trailblazer in lesbian detective fiction you’re missing out on a good one.”

  Katherine V. Forrest

  “There is no one in contemporary crime fiction who has managed to combined the visceral and the humane as well as Val McDermid . . . . She’s the best we’ve got.”

  The New York Times Book Review

  “Val McDermid is one of the bright lights of the mystery field.”

  The Washington Post

  “McDermid’s a skillful writer—comparisons with such American novelists as Sara Paretsky and Sue Grafton are appropriate.”

  Chicago Tribune

  “Lindsay Gordon has got a heart of gold and a nose for trouble.”

  Randye Lordon

  “Lindsay Gordon is smart, tenacious, daring, lusty, loyal, and classconscious to the bone.”

  Barabra Neely

  Also by Val McDermid

  The Distant Echo

  Killing the Shadows

  A Place of Execution

  Lindsay Gordon novels

  Report for Murder

  Common Murder

  Deadline for Murder

  Conferences are Murder

  Booked for Murder

  Kate Brannigan novels

  Star Struck

  Blue Genes

  Clean Break

  Crack Down

  Kick Back

  Dead Beat

  Tony Hill and Carol Jordon novels

  The Mermaids Singing

  The Wire in the Blood

  The Last Temptation

  The Torment of Others

  Non-fiction

  A Suitable Job for a Woman

  Acknowledgements

  I had no plans to write another Lindsay Gordon novel until the British Council invited me to Russia. But I fell in love, and wanted to share my delight. Among those who contributed to the Russian end of this book are Kate Griffin, my minder, who showed me the ropes; Volodya Volovik, who shared his affection for his adopted city of St Petersburg; Seamus Murphy, whose enthusiasm took me places I’d never otherwise have seen; Irina Savelieva, who interpreted the dark and dangerous for me; Varya Gornestaeva, without whom none of it would ever have happened; Sasha Gavrilov for the encouragement and the good company; Marna Gowan, who exploited her contacts shamelessly; Maxim Shvedov, for all the St Petersburg sailing info; and Stephen Dewar who explained the intricacies of Russian customs and immigration. To all of you, thanks for being such generous companions.

  Leslie Hills, who has forgotten more than I know about story structure, helped me hone the plot. Thanks for seeing me through the dark night of the soul and for always travelling off limits with me.

  Thanks too to Brigid and Lisanne, who always believed in Lindsay.

  In memory of Gina Weissand (1946-2001)

  who was everything a friend should be.

  You blessed us all, babe, and we miss you.

  He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune.

  “Of Marriage and the Single Life”

  Francis Bacon

  PART ONE

  Chapter 1

  A murder of crows swore at each other in the trees that lined the banks of the River Kelvin. A freezing drizzle from a low sky bleached the landscape to grey. Nothing, Lindsay thought, could be further from California. The only thing in common with the home she’d left three months before was the rhythm of her feet as she ran her daily two miles.

  On mornings like this, Lindsay found it hard to remember that she’d once loved this city. When she’d come back to Scotland after university and journalism training, she’d thought Glasgow was paradise. She had money in her pocket, she was young, free and single and the city had just begun the process of reinvigoration that had, by the millennium, made it one of the most exciting cities in Britain. Now, fifteen years later, there was no denying it was a good place to live. The cultural life was vibrant. The restaurants were cosmopolitan and covered the whole range from cheap and cheerful to glamorous and gourmet. There were plenty of beautiful places to live, and more green spaces than most cities could boast. Some of the finest countryside in the world was within an hour’s drive.

  And all she could think of was how much she wanted to be somewhere else. Seven happy and successful years in California had left her feeling that this long narrow land was no longer full of possibilities for her. Partly, it was the weather, she thought, wiping the cold mixture of sweat and rain from her face. Who wouldn’t long for sunshine and the Pacific surf on a morning like this?

  Partly, it was that she missed her dog. Mutton had always accompanied her on her runs, his black tail wagging eagerly whenever she walked downstairs in her jogging clothes. But she couldn’t contemplate putting him in quarantine kennels for six months, so he’d been handed over to some friends in the Bay Area who guaranteed him a happy life. He’d probably forgotten her already.

  But mostly, it was not having anything meaningful to do with her days. Lindsay would never have described herself as someone who was defined by her job, but now that she had none, she had come to realise how much of her identity had been bound up in what she did for a living. Without some sort of employment, she felt cast adrift. When people asked, “And what do you do?” she had no answer. There were few things she hated more than the sense of powerlessness that provoked in her.

  In California, Lindsay had had a response, one she felt proud of, one she knew carried a degree of respect. She’d reluctantly abandoned her post lecturing in journalism at Santa Cruz to come back to Scotland because her lover Sophie had been offered the chair of obstetrics at Glasgow University. Lindsay had protested that she didn’t have anything to go back for, but Sophie had managed to convince her she was mistaken. “You’ll walk into a teaching job in Scotland,” she’d said. “And if it takes a while, you can always go back to freelance journalism. You know you were one of the best.”

  And so she had stifled her doubts for Sophie’s sake. After all, it wasn’t her lover’s fault that Lindsay had reached the age of thirtynine without a clearly defined career plan. But now she was confronted by the cold reality of unemployment, she wished she’d done more to persuade Sophie to stay in California. She’d looked around for teaching work, but vocational journalism training wasn’t nearly as widespread in Scotland as it was in the US. She’d managed to secure some part-time lecturing at Strathclyde University, filling in for someone on maternity leave, but it was dead-end work with no prospects. And the idea of going back to the overcrowded world of freelance journalism with a
contacts book that was years out of date held no appeal.

  So her days had shrunk to this. Pounding the walkway by the river. Reading the papers. Shopping for dinner. Arranging to meet old acquaintances for drinks and discovering how much distance there was between them. Waiting for Sophie to come home and bring her despatches from the world of work. Lindsay knew she couldn’t go on like this indefinitely. It was poisoning her soul, and it wasn’t doing her relationship with Sophie much good either.

  She reached the point where she had to turn off the walkway and head up the steep hill to the Botanic Gardens, the halfway point on her circuit. Head down, she powered up the slope, too wrapped up in her thoughts to pay heed to her surroundings. As she rounded a blind bend, she realised she was about to cannon into someone walking down the hill. She swerved, but simultaneously, the other woman side-stepped in the same direction. They crashed into each other and Lindsay stumbled, smacking into a tree and falling to one knee, her ankle twisting under her. “Shit,” she gasped.

  “Oh God, I’m sorry,” the other woman said.

  “My own fault,” Lindsay growled, pushing herself upright, then wincing as she tried to take her weight on the damaged ankle. “Jesus,” she hissed, leaning forward to probe the joint with her fingers.

  “You’ve not broken it or anything?” The woman frowned solicitously.

  “Sprained, I think.” She drew in her breath sharply when she touched the tender heart of the injury.

  “Have you far to go? Only, I live just the other side of the river. My car’s there. I could drive you?”

  It was a tempting offer. Lindsay didn’t fancy hiking a mile on a damaged ankle. She looked up, taking in her nemesis turned Good Samaritan. She saw a woman in her late twenties with an angular face and short blonde hair cut to fashionable effect. Her eyes were slate blue, her eyebrows a pair of dark circumflex accents above them. She was dressed out of Gap and carried a leather knapsack over one shoulder. She didn’t look like an axe murderer. “OK,” Lindsay said. “Thanks.”

  The response wasn’t what she expected. Instead of the offer of an arm to help her down the hill and across the bridge, the woman looked taken aback, her eyes widening and her lips parting. “You’re Lindsay Gordon,” she said, bemused.

  “Do I know you?” Lindsay leaned against the tree, wondering if she’d taken a blow to the head she hadn’t registered at the time.

  The blonde grinned. “We met about ten years ago. You came to the university GaySoc to talk about gays and the media. A bunch of us went out for a drink afterwards.”

  Lindsay strained at the locked gates of memory. “Edinburgh University?” she hazarded.

  “That’s right. You remember?”

  “I remember doing the talk.”

  The blonde gave a rueful pout. “But you don’t remember me. Well, that’s hardly surprising. I was just a gawky wee fresher who was too overawed to open her mouth. But hey, this is terrible. Me standing here reminiscing while you’re suffering like this.” Now she extended her arm. “Lean on me. I’m Rory, by the way. Rory McLaren.”

  Lindsay took the proffered arm and began to limp gingerly down the slope. “I’m amazed you recognised me all these years later,” she said. The least she could do was make conversation, even though she felt more like swearing with every step.

  Rory chuckled. “Oh, you were pretty impressive. You’re part of the reason I ended up doing what I do.”

  “Which is?”

  “I’m a journo.”

  “Oh well, never mind,” Lindsay said, attempting a levity she didn’t feel. The last thing she needed right now was some bright and bouncy kid still jam-packed with idealism making her feel even more old and decrepit than she already did.

  “No, I love it,” Rory assured her.

  “How do you manage that?” They had reached the bottom of the hill and were making their way across the bridge. Moving on the flat was easier, but Lindsay was glad she’d taken up Rory’s offer, even if the conversation was depressing her.

  “It’s a long story.”

  Lindsay looked up at the climb that would take them back to street level. “It’s a big hill.”

  “Right enough,” Rory said. “Well, I started off on the local paper in Paisley, which wasn’t exactly a barrel of laughs, but at least they trained me. I got a couple of lucky breaks with big stories that I sold on to the nationals, and I ended up with a staff job on the Reporter.”

  Lindsay snorted. “Working on the Reporter makes you happy? God, things must have changed since my day.”

  “No, no, I’m not there any more.”

  “So where are you now?” Even in her state of discomfort, Lindsay noticed that Rory seemed faintly embarrassed.

  “Well, see, that’s the long story bit.”

  “Take my mind off the pain and cut to the chase.”

  “I came up on the lottery.”

  “Jammy,” Lindsay said.

  “Aye. But not totally jammy. I didn’t get the whole six numbers, just the five plus the bonus ball. But that was enough. I figured that if I invested the lot, it would earn enough in interest to just about keep a roof over my head. So I jacked the job in and now I’m freelance.”

  “And that’s your idea of fun? Out there in the dog-eat-dog world?” Lindsay tried not to sound as sceptical as she felt. She’d been a freelance herself and knew only too well how tough it was to stay ahead of the pack.

  “I figured what I needed was an angle. And I remembered something you said back at that talk at the GaySoc.”

  “This is surreal,” Lindsay said. The word felt entirely inadequate to encompass the situation.

  “I know. Wild, isn’t it? I can’t believe this is really you.”

  “Me neither. So what did I say that was so significant it came back to you all those years later?”

  “You were talking about the ghetto mentality. How people think gays are completely different, completely separate from them. But we’re not. We’ve got more in common with the straight universe than we have dividing us. And I thought, gays and lesbians don’t just have gay and lesbian lives. They’ve got jobs. They’ve got families. They’ve got stories to tell. But most folk in our world have no reason to trust journalists. So I thought, what if I set myself up as the journalist that the gay community can trust? What a great way to get stories to come to me.” Rory’s voice was passionate now, her excitement obvious.

  “And that’s what you did?”

  “Right. I’ve been at it just over a year now, and I’ve had some fabulous exclusives. I mostly do investigative stuff, but I’ll turn my hand to anything. And I’m making a good living.”

  They were almost out of the woods and on to the street. But although she desperately wanted to get the weight off her ankle, Lindsay didn’t want this conversation to end. For the first time since she’d got back from California, she was hearing someone talk about her field with something other than apathy or cynicism. “So how did you get started?”

  Rory pulled open the gate that led out from the river bank on to the quiet backwater of Botanic Crescent. “That’s my flat, just on the corner there. I could fill you in over a coffee.”

  “Are you sure I’m not keeping you from anything?”

  “God, no. Have you any idea how amazing it is for me to be talking to you like this? It’d have to be a bloody good story to make me miss a chance like this.”

  They crossed the road. Rory keyed a number into the security door of a red sandstone tenement and ushered Lindsay into a spotless tiled close. They made their way up one flight of worn stone stairs, then Rory unlocked the tall double doors that led into her first-floor flat. “Excuse the mess,” she said, leading the way into the big dining kitchen at the back of the flat.

  There was no false modesty behind Rory’s words. It was, as she had said, a mess. A cat sprawled on a kitchen worktop by the window, while another lay curled on one of several piles of newspapers and magazines stacked on the floor. The tinfoil containers from the
previous night’s curry sat on another worktop alongside three empty bottles of Becks, while the sink was piled with dirty plates and mugs. Lindsay grinned. “Live alone, do you?”

  “That obvious, is it?” Rory picked a dressing gown off one of the chairs. “Grab a seat. Do you want some ice for that ankle? I’ve got a gel pack in the freezer.”

  “That’d be good.” Lindsay lowered herself into the chair. In front of her was that morning’s Herald, the cryptic crossword already completed with only a couple of jottings in the margin.

  Rory rummaged in a freezer that looked like the Arctic winter, but emerged triumphant with a virulent turquoise oblong. “There we go.” She handed it to Lindsay and crossed to the kettle. “Coffee, right?”

  “Is it instant?”

  Rory turned, her eyebrows raised in a teasing question. “What if it is?”

  “I’ll have tea.”

  “I was only bothering you. It’s proper coffee. I get it from an Italian café in town.”

  She busied herself with beans and grinder. When the noise subsided, Lindsay said, “You were going to tell me how you got started.”

  “So I was.” Rory poured the just-boiled water on the grounds she’d spooned into a cafetiere. “I decided I needed to be visible. So I had a word with the guy who owns Café Virginia. You know Café Virginia? In the Merchant City, down by the Italian Quarter?”

  Lindsay nodded. It hadn’t been a gay venue when she’d lived in the city. It had been a bad pub that sold worse food, called something stupidly suggestive like Pussy Galore. But she was aware that it had been reincarnated as the city’s premiere gay and lesbian café bar, although she hadn’t paid it a visit yet. Sophie hadn’t had much time for hitting the night life; she’d been too busy getting her feet under the operating table. Most of the socialising they’d done had been at dinner parties or in restaurants. Another sign of ageing, Lindsay had already decided. “I know where you mean,” she said.