him anything.â
12
Perlman and Scullion met Detective-Sergeant Terry Bogan at Cottiers pub, formerly a Presbyterian church. It was a big untidy room, usually noisy, clientele young. This was why Bogan favoured the place: he could check out young women to his heartâs desire. An unlikely gigolo, Perlman thought. He looked more farmer than cop â beery red face, frizzled side-whiskers, brown tweed suit.
Perlman said to Scullion, âTake a gander at this man, Inspector. Heâs a Highlander. A teuchter . Even does farmyard impersonations. Cows. Ducks.â
âOnly when Iâm smashed,â Bogan said. âAnybody want a wee drink?â
âA lemonade,â Sandy said.
âHalf a pint of lager for me,â Perlman said.
âStill the hard-living Jewish playboy, eh?â
âI boogie from dusk to dawn,â Perlman said.
Bogan went to the bar and ordered drinks. Perlman checked out the room. Dear Christ, did he need to be confronted with so much ripe youth? So many fecund girls, with rich lustrous hair and slender bodies? A couple danced in a corner, although there was no audible music: Perlman wasnât altogether sure it was dancing as he remembered it, more a voracious form of sexual prelude.
âBogan comes here because he considers himself a ladiesâ man,â he said.
âIs he successful?â Scullion asked.
Perlman shrugged. âLives with his mother. What does that tell you?â
âHeâs saving on rent?â
Bogan came back with drinks, which he set down on a table. The three men sat, tapped glasses together.
âLife treating you kindly?â Lou asked.
âSmashing. See that redhead near the door? Donât all look. Sheâd raise anybodyâs spirits more than a notch.â
âYou know her?â Perlman asked. He squinted at the woman through his murky glasses; a tall beauty, legs to the moon.
âAdvances have been made.â
âAnd rebuffed?â
âRebuffed, my arse. See these whiskers? Like Velcro to women.â Bogan stroked his steely fuzz. âSheâs called Cynthia, sheâs a nurse, and nurses donât play tiddlywinks.â
âIâm impressed,â Perlman said.
Scullion looked at his watch. âThis is all very jolly, but letâs get to the point ⦠About your jumper, Terry.â
âThe jumper, right, okay. That boy had everything to live for, according to what weâve learned. Wealthy. Export business flying full speed. Top-of-the-line BMW. Expensive flat in Kelvin Court. Why end it all?â Bogan sipped his dark stout.
âYou have any reason to think he didnât jump of his own free will?â Scullion asked.
Bogan shrugged. âMy best guess is he had a bit of a daft moment and climbed on the ledge and slipped. He had a high alcohol level in his blood. Plus heâd been smoking reefer. Maybe he thought he could fly. One other thing. Heâd had sex shortly before his death. But there was no woman at the scene and nobody saw one coming or going.â
Perlman said, âMaybe she saw him fall, didnât want to get her name involved, so she shot the craw.â
âCould be.â
âOr she shoved him.â
âYour imaginationâs dark as ever, Lou.â
âBut a push is possible,â Perlman said.
âAye. Itâs also possible I could get my leg over Nicole Kidman.â
âYouâre talking in the realm of a miracle now, Terry. You need to find this woman who was with young Gupta.â
A white froth of stout adhered to Boganâs upper lip. He wiped it away with the back of his hand and gazed in the direction of the redhead. He winked at her. He managed to make it suggestive, Perlman noticed. How had Bogan cultivated that trick? I wink, it looks like an eye infection.
âWhy does this kid interest you anyway, Lou?â
âYouâre not listening to the tom-toms of the city, Terry. Heâs
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