Hidden River (Five Star Paperback) Read Online Free Page A

Hidden River (Five Star Paperback)
Book: Hidden River (Five Star Paperback) Read Online Free
Author: Adrian McKinty
Tags: Scotland
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was heavy, pale, squat, with squashed features. Tight eyes on that face made him look like a constipated sumo wrestler.
    “You look like a constipated sumo wrestler,” I said.
    “You look like someone who nearly cost us a hundred and twenty quid. Nearly dropped a point or a couple even,” he said.
    “And did you drop a point? Did you get any questions wrong?” I asked him.
    “No, we didn’t but we could have.”
    “But you didn’t.”
    “But we could have.”
    “But you didn’t.”
    John interposed to stop this regression continuing to infinity and asked if things had gone ok with the girl we had met on Sunday night.
    “Actually, John, things did not go well, she was underage,” I said.
    “Really? Heard they try to castrate statutory rapists in prison,” John said, grinning.
    “Thank you, John, reassuring as always.”
    “I thought I had a chance with her, she was very interested in hearing about how I was repairing the Triumph. I told her my You-Must-Become-the-Motorcycle theory,” John said.
    “She mentioned that. Seventeen-year-olds are very impressed by Plato, Zen, and greasy mechanics. You gave her pot as well, didn’t you?”
    “I suppose you told her your interesting theory about Batman villains and American presidents,” John mocked.
    “It is a legitimate theory,” I said, but before I could elaborate Facey finally took the hint that we were ignoring him and figured out that he should be getting us some drinks.
    “Two Guinnesses,” John said.
    Facey went off and came back with three pints of Guinness before the next round started. The Pigs had only one serious opponent, the Army Brats. We were coppers or ex-coppers and they were part-time soldiers, so we all had a lot of time on our hands to bone up on trivia. The pub quiz had six rounds of team questions and then a rapid-fire round of five minutes dictated by a buzzer. Tonight’s jackpot would be fifty pounds but with the rollover from last week it would be a hundred and twenty, which was forty quid each.
    “Round Two,” Marty, the wiry quizmaster, said over his microphone.
    “How much do the Brats have?” I asked Facey.
    “Sshhhh,” he said, getting his pencil ready.
    “‘Tainted Love’ was a hit for what band?”
    “Soft C—” I began.
    “Already have it,” Facey whispered.
    “Which country has more coastline, Japan or the Soviet Union?” Marty asked.
    “Russia,” John, Facey, and I whispered together.
    And on the questions went. We finished the round, Facey handed up our answers. They were marked. We got ten out of ten. The Brats got ten out of ten. Everyone else now hopelessly out of contention. At the end of six rounds we had fifty-eight points, the Brats fifty-nine, the next team thirty-five.
    John and I went for a piss. I always went with John in case there were cute girls on the way to the bathroom. John, you could be seen with. Facey, too squat and violent. John had the hengie thing going. Vain, longish blond hair, earring, pretty good-looking chap, frilly shirt. Big shoulders—he looked like Fabio’s younger, tackier, even stupider brother. But still it attracted a better class of impressionable seventeen-year-old skank. And no one looked less like a cop than John, good for getting girls, but probably why the police seldom gave him work.
    We scoped the bar and the back bar but there was no one around. We went in the bathroom for a pee.
    “So tell me, how are you feeling, Alex?” John asked me from a little farther down the trough.
    “Ok.”
    “No, but really, how’s life treating you?”
    “John, I don’t want to be rude but in general one does not speak at the urinal trough,” I said.
    “Is that right?” John said diffidently.
    “It’s these little taboos that keep society together. We are trying to build a civilization here and you speaking at the urinal trough does not help matters.”
    “Bombs are going off in Belfast every day. People are being shot. Heroin is flooding the country. Riots in
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