- Home
- Paul Johnston
Quint Dalrymple 03 - Water of Death
Quint Dalrymple 03 - Water of Death Read online
Table of Contents
Cover
The Quint Dalrymple Mystery Series
Title Page
Copyright
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
The Quint Dalrymple Mystery Series
BODY POLITIC
THE BONE YARD
WATER OF DEATH
THE BLOOD TREE
THE HOUSE OF DUST
WATER OF DEATH
A Quint Dalrymple Mystery
Paul Johnston
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain in 1999
by Hodder and Stoughton, A Division of Hodder Headline PLC
338 Euston Road, London NW1 3BH,
eBook edition first published in 2011 by Severn Select an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Copyright © 1999 by Paul Johnston.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
A CIP catalogue record for this title
is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4483-0045-7 (epub)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
Edinburgh, July 2025. Sweat City.
When I was a kid before independence, summer was a joke that got about as many laughs as a hospital waiting list. There was the occasional sunny day, but you spent most of the time running from showers of acid rain and the lash of rabid winds. To make things worse, for three weeks the place was overrun by armies of culture victims chasing the hot festival ticket. Now the festival is a year-round event – though a lot of the tourists are only interested in the officially sanctioned marijuana clubs – and “hot” doesn’t even begin to describe the state of the weather. Over the last couple of years temperatures have risen by three to four degrees, causing tropical diseases to migrate northwards and bacteria to embark on a major expansion programme. Scientists in the late twentieth century would have got closer to the full horror of the phenomenon if they’d called it “global stewing” – except we haven’t got enough fresh water to stew anything properly.
What we do have is a cracker of a name for the season between spring and autumn. To everyone’s surprise the new-look, user-friendly Council of City Guardians didn’t saddle us with an updated designation for the period (think French Revolution, think Thermidor). Our masters were probably too busy discussing initiatives to relieve the tourists of even more cash. As the blazing days and stifling nights dragged by, ordinary citizens gave up distinguishing between the months of June, July and August. And even though the classic noir movie hasn’t been seen in Edinburgh since the cinemas were closed and television banned by the original Council, people have taken to calling this season the Big Heat. That kills me.
Still, in Sweat City we’re really civilised. Unlike most states, we’ve done away with capital punishment and the nuclear switch has been flicked off permanently – the reactors at Torness were recently buried in enough concrete to give a 1990s town planner the ultimate hard on. On the other hand, the Council set up a compulsory lottery last year, turning greed into a virtue and most citizens into deluded fortune-hunters. Deluded, very thirsty fortune-hunters given the water restrictions.
Then some Grade A headbangers came along and raised the temperature even higher than it had been during Big Heat 2024. Giving me a pretty near terminal case of the “Summertime Blues”.
Chapter One
I was lying in the Meadows with a book and a heat-induced headache, making the most of the shade provided by one of the few trees with any leaves left on it. It was five in the afternoon but the sun still had plenty of fire in its belly. The rays glinted off a big hoarding in the middle of the park. It was advertising the lottery. Some poor sod who’d won it was dressed up like John Knox, a bottle of malt whisky poking out of his false beard. “Play Edlott, the Ultimate Lottery, and Anything Goes”, the legend said. If you ask me, what goes, what’s already gone, is the last of the Council’s credibility. There’s an elaborate system of prizes ranging from half-decent clothes, to bottles of better-than-average whisky like the one Johnnie the Fox had secreted, to labour exemptions and pensions for life – but only for a few lucky sods. Edinburgh citizens were so starved of material possessions in the first twenty years of the Council that they now reckon Edlott is the knees of a very large Queen Bee. They even willingly accept the value of a ticket being docked from their wage vouchers every week. I think the whole thing sucks but I’m biased. I’ve never won so much as a tube of extra-strength sun-protection cream.
All round me Edinburgh citizens were lying motionless, their cheeks resting against parched soil that hadn’t produced much grass since the Big Heat arrived. I was one of the lucky ones. At least I was wearing a pair of Supply Directorate shades that hadn’t fallen to pieces. Yet.
I rolled over and peered at Arthur’s Seat through the haze. People say the hill looks like a lion at rest. These days it’s certainly the right shade of sandy brown, though the desiccated vegetation on its flanks gives the impression of an erstwhile king of the beasts who’s been mauled by a pride of rabid republicans. As it happens, that isn’t a bad description of the Enlightenment Party that led Edinburgh into independence in 2004. But things have changed a hell of a lot since then. For a start, like the nerve gas used by demented dictators in the Balkans twenty-plus years ago, you can smell Edinburgh people coming long before you can see or hear them. Water’s almost as precious as the revenue from tourists here.
I glanced round at my fellow citizens. If Arthur’s Seat is a lion, we must be the pack of ragged hyenas that hangs around it. Everyone was in standard-issue maroon shorts (standard-issue meaning too wide, too long and not anything like cool enough) and off-white T-shirts. Those whose sunglasses have self-destructed wear faded sunhats with a Heart of Midlothian badge on the front. Up until the time of the “iron boyscouts” – the hardline lunatics who ran the Council of City Guardians between 2020 and 2022 – only the rank of auxiliaries was entitled to wear the heart insignia, which has nothing to do with the pre-Enlightenment football team. The present Council’s doing its best to make citizens feel they have the same rights as the uniformed class who carry out the guardians’ orders. Except the auxiliaries don’t have to wear clowns’ outfits.
The hard ground was making my arms stiff. I stretched and ma
de the mistake of breathing in through my nose. It wasn’t just that the herd of humanity needed more than the single shower lasting exactly sixty seconds which it gets each week. (One of the lottery prizes is a five-minute shower every week for a month.) The still air over the expanse of flat parkland was infused with the reek from the public shithouses that have been set up at the end of every residential street. Since the onset of the Big Heat, citizens have had no running water in their flats. People get by one way or another and the black marketeers do good business in bottles, jars, chamberpots – anything that will hold liquid. But the City Guard has to patrol the queues outside the communal bogs first thing in the morning. It doesn’t take long for dozens of desperate citizens to lose their grip and turn on each other.
It was too hot to read. I lay back and let an old blues number run through my mind. No surprises what it was – “Dry Spell Blues”. Before I could work out if Son House or Spider Carter was singing, the vocal was blown away by a sudden mechanical roar.
“Turn that rustbucket off, ya shite!” A red-haired kid of about seventeen jumped to his feet and started waving his arms at the driver of a tractor towing a battered water trailer. They come daily to refill the drinking-water tanks at every street corner. It stopped about fifty yards away from us.
“Aye, give us a break or I’ll give you one,” shouted another young guy who obviously fancied himself as a hard man. The pair of them had done everything they could to make their clothes distinctive. They had their T-shirt sleeves folded double and their shorts stained with bleach, pieces of thick rope holding them up. Sweat City chic.
The driver had switched off his engine. Now that he could hear what was being broadcast to him, he didn’t look happy. He was pretty musclebound for someone on the diet we get, and the set of his unshaven face suggested he didn’t think much of the Council’s recent easy-going policies and their effect on the young.
“You wee bastards,” he yelled, waddling towards the kids as quickly as his heavy thighs allowed. “Your heads are going down the pan.”
There was a collective intake of breath as the citizens around me sat up and paid attention, grateful for anything that took their minds off the stifling heat. I watched as a woman sitting with a small child near the loudmouthed guys started gathering up her towels and waterbottles nervously.
Our heroes took one look at the big man coming their way, glanced at each other and turned to run. Then the tough guy spotted the woman’s handbag. She’d left it lying open on the ground as she leaned over her child.
“Tae fuck wi’ the lot o’ ye,” the kid shouted in the local dialect that the Council outlawed years ago. He bent down to scoop up the bag and sprinted after his pal towards the streets on the far side of the park. “Southside Strollers rule!” he yelled over his shoulder.
The woman shrieked. Her kid joined in. The citizens nearest to them crowded round to help but nobody else moved a muscle. Even the tractor driver had turned to marble. It wouldn’t have been the first time they’d seen a bag snatched by the city’s new generation of arseholes. It wasn’t the first time I’d seen it either. Maybe because I’d once been in the Public Order Directorate, maybe because I was theoretically still a member of the Enlightenment, maybe just because I fancied a run – whatever, I got to my feet and gave what in the City Guard we used to call “chase”.
Bad idea.
After fifty yards they were still going away from me, dust rising from their feet and hanging in the air to coat my tongue and eyes. But after a hundred yards, when my lungs were clogging and my legs had decided enough was enough, the little sods had slowed to not much more than a stride: evidence of loading up on illicit ale and black-market grass, I reckoned. Then I cut my speed even more. People who get into those commodities at an early age usually learn how to look after themselves.
They turned to face me and started to laugh in between gasping for breath.
“Hey, look, Tommy, it’s the Good fucking Samaritan,” the redhead said. Obviously he’d learned something in school, though the Education Directorate would have preferred something more in line with the Council’s atheist principles to have stuck.
Tommy was rifling through the woman’s bag, tossing away paper hankies and the Supply Directorate’s version of cosmetics and stuffing food and clothing vouchers into his pocket. When he’d finished, he looked up at me and smiled threateningly. The teeth he revealed were uneven and discoloured.
“Get away, ya wanker,” he hissed, raising his left fist. It had the letters D-E-A-D tattooed amateurishly on the lower finger joints. I was betting the right one had the word “YOU’RE” on it, spelled wrong. “Come on, Col. We’re gone.”
He’d got that right. I took my mobile phone from the back pocket of my shorts and called the guard command centre in the castle. As soon as I started to speak, the two of them turned back towards me, their eyes empty and their fists drawn right back.
Like I said – bad idea.
“Are you all right, Quint?”
“What does it look like, Davie?” I took a break from flexing my right wrist and stood up to face the heavily built guard commander who’d just arrived in a Land-Rover and a dust storm.
“Bloody hell, what did you do to those guys?”
I walked over to the bagsnatchers. The carrot-head was leaning forward on both hands, carrying out a detailed examination of what had been his lunch. Tommy the hard man was still on his arse. Unfortunately he’d turned out to have a jaw that really was hard. I had a handkerchief wrapped round my seeping knuckles.
“Where did you learn to fight like that, ya bastard?” he demanded, trying to get to his feet. Then he ran his eye over Davie’s uniform. “I might have fuckin’ known. You’re an Alsatian like him.” The city’s lowlife refer to the guard as dogs when they’re feeling brave.
Davie grabbed the kid’s arm and pulled him upright. “What was that, sonny?”
Tommy decided bravery was surplus to requirements. “Nothing,” he muttered.
“Nothing what?” Davie shouted into his ear.
“Nothing, Hume 253.” Tommy pronounced Davie’s barracks number with exaggerated respect, his eyes to the ground.
“That’s better, wee man. And for your information, this citizen is not a member of the City Guard.”
“He fuckin’ puts himself about like one,” Tommy said under his breath.
Davie grinned at me. “And there was me thinking you’d forgotten your auxiliary training, Quint.”
“Quint?” the boy said with a groan. “Aw, no. You’re no’ that investigator guy, are you? The one wi’ the stupid name?”
Davie found all this highly amusing. “Quintilian Dalrymple?” he asked.
“Aye, the one who’s in the paper every time you bitches cannae do your job.”
Too much adulation isn’t good for you. “So what are you going to do with this pair of scumbags, Hume 253?” I asked.
Colin the carrot finally managed to get to his feet.
“Cramond Island, I reckon,” Davie replied. “The old prison’ll be a great place to give them a hiding.”
The carrot hit the dust again.
“You cannae do that,” Tommy whined. “We’ve got rights. The Council’s set up special centres for kids like us.”
He was right. In their desperation to be seen as having citizens’ best interests at heart, the latest guardians, or at least a majority of them, haven’t only given citizens more personal freedom – apart from anything involving the use of water – and a lottery, but they’ve organised a social welfare system that treats anyone who steps out of line as an honoured guest. To no one in the guard’s surprise, petty crime has risen even faster than the temperature.
“Who are the Southside Strollers?” I asked.
“What’s it to you?” Tommy said, giving me the eye.
Davie grabbed his arm and stuck his face up close to the boy’s. “Answer the man, sonny.”
“Awright, awright.” Tommy had gone floppy again.
“It’s our gang. We all come from the south side of the city.”
“And you spend your time strolling around nicking whatever you can?” I said.
Tommy shrugged nonchalantly, his eyes lowered.
A couple of auxiliaries from the Welfare Directorate looking desperately eager to please turned up to collect the boys. Colin the carrot was busy holding on to his gut but Tommy flashed a triumphant look at us.
“Just a minute, you,” I said, moving over to him. I stuck my hand into his pocket and relieved him of the vouchers he’d taken, leaving a streak of blood from my knuckles on his shorts as a souvenir. “Oh, aye, what’s this then?”
The pair of them suddenly started examining the ground.
“What do you think, Davie?” I said, opening the scrap of crumpled paper and sniffing the small quantity of dried and shredded leaves.
Davie shook his head. “If it was up to me . . .”
“But it isn’t,” the female auxiliary from the Welfare Directorate’s Youth Development Department said, stepping forward and looking at the twist of grass. “Underage citizens are our responsibility, not the City Guard’s. We’ll see they’re rehabilitated.”
Davie looked at her disbelievingly. Like most of his colleagues, he had serious difficulty in accepting the Council’s recent caring policies. Not that he had any choice.
Tommy smirked then bared his teeth at me again. “You’re dead, pal.”
“Oh, aye, Tommy?” I said. “And what does that make you?”
I handed the grass to Davie. We watched the miscreants get into the Youth Development Department van then I turned back to get my gear.
“The future of the city,” Davie said morosely as he caught up with me. “Giving these headbangers special treatment is only going to make them harder to control later. Anyone caught with black-market drugs should be nailed to the floor like in the old days.”