Forensics spent the rest of the week working through Cauldwood Cottage and the property across the road, as well as the barn and basement warren that the media invariably termed ‘The Meating Room’. In turn, Magner and Purvis were christened ‘The Butchers’.
A CD of scanned images found in the cottage offered early glimpses of the crazed wildness that drove The Butchers to kill time and time again. As a teenager, Purvis had been a keen outdoorsman, excelling in mountaineering, cross-country trekking and, more ominously, hunting. A photograph of a stag’s head – with a magnificent set of antlers – superimposed on an image of a naked Purvis ejaculating appeared to be the defining moment when his sexual preferences and perverted demands took a much darker path.
Magner featured in that collection of photographs, too, attending swinger parties and caught in full penetrative mode with a series of female partners. Strangely, or so it was noted by more than one forensic psychologist, none of the photos ever showed Magner and Purvis together. To Gilchrist’s thinking, the simple answer was that one had always photographed the other. But with neither Magner nor Purvis alive to corroborate that theory, he might as well have been pissing into the wind.
And Jerry McGovern came clean, once he heard that Purvis was dead. His brother, Malky, had been selling hardcore porn on the black market. Although Jerry could not confirm who had supplied the original material to Malky, the presence of a Ford Focus at Malky’s house from time to time had led him to believe that Purvis was the supplier – the same Ford Focus he saw turning into the McCullochs’ driveway after he had stolen Amy’s jewellery that Thursday.
To McGovern’s thinking, the McCullochs had been slaughtered by Purvis, and it was the frightening prospect of retaliation by Purvis which had scared him into silence, believing Purvis had recognised him as he fled the McCullochs’ after his robbery. Of course, he had failed to notice that Magner was driving the Focus that day, and not Purvis.
As Jimmy swore that he made his exit around midday, Gilchrist determined that Magner must have lain in wait in the house until Amy returned with the girls a few hours later.
Although the boot and interior of the Focus had been scrubbed and vacuumed, a couple of fibres were identified as being from an M&S Egyptian cotton bath towel, identical to the set Amy McCulloch had purchased a fortnight earlier. The assumption was that Amy’s body parts were transferred from her home to the Meating Room in the towel. More damning evidence was a hair recovered from the weave of the boot carpet, which matched Amy’s DNA.
A brazier was found in one corner of the barn, with a connection for a propane gas bottle on its underside. Although the bottom grating had been scrubbed with a metal brush, Forensics managed to confirm that traces of ash were fabric remnants. Scrapes on the floor of the first anteroom, along with soot and scorch marks on the walls and ceiling, confirmed that all traceable evidence – bloodied bath towels, clothes, shoes – had been incinerated there.
A search through the cottage’s domestic bins for evidence of ash from the brazier uncovered nothing more, and it was concluded that Purvis had bagged and removed the ash off site. CCTV teams were instructed to review recordings from Thursday morning through Sunday afternoon for activity related to the Ford Focus, to find out where Purvis might have dumped the bags.
The BMW in the barn was positively identified from the position and angle of the tax disc on the front windscreen. A minute stonechip on the paintwork next to the offside headlight further confirmed it was the vehicle captured on CCTV driving through Anstruther on the night of Janice Meechan’s fatal hit-and-run. Finally, traces of Janice’s blood were recovered from the damaged nearside wing, which removed any lingering doubt about the car’s involvement in her murder.
James Watson – the registered owner of Purvis’s Remington 700 bolt-action rifle and the Holland & Holland Royal and Purdey James Field twelve-bore shotguns – proved to be fictitious. The Purdey was traced to a Mr Peter Cuthbertson, a Lancashire sheep farmer, who identified Purvis from a photograph and confirmed he had sold him the gun for cash about seven years earlier. Prior owners of the Remington and the Holland & Holland had not yet been identified, but it was only a matter of time.
Amy McCulloch’s head, heart, lungs, stomach and some seven feet of her intestines were found in a tub of formaldehyde solution in one of eight sarcophagal chambers in the Meating Room. Strips of her skin – including her finger- and toenails – were found on wire-mesh frames in the shapes of arms, legs and torso, like a dismantled tailor’s dummy.
Seven complete female human sculptures were found in the other chambers. One had already been identified as a thirty-one-year-old mother of two who vanished three years earlier while driving from her home in Airth to Falkirk; another as a twenty-year-old shop assistant from Alloa who disappeared while walking her dog the previous March; and three as the Stirling University students who had gone missing during a camping trip in the Cairngorms back at the start of the century. DNA tests on the remaining two flagged up nothing on the Police National Computer, and Fife Constabulary widened their search by requesting the assistance of Scotland Yard and Interpol.
Brenda McAllister, the Procurator Fiscal, insisted on having round-the-clock forensic examination of the Cauldwood Cottage properties, and was granted extended search warrants to include Stratheden Enterprise’s offices, and Magner’s private residences in Edinburgh, London and Marbella.
Chief Constable Ramsay was interviewed by a team from the Scottish Crime Squad, who presented him with photographs of his alleged participation in a number of swinger parties in the 1980s. Through his solicitor, Ramsay stated that, although the person in the pictures bore a slight resemblance to him as a younger man, it was not him, and he had never been in the company of either Magner or Purvis, nor had any dealings with them privately or otherwise. Within two days of the story breaking, he took himself and his wife on a four-week holiday to an unknown destination in the Caribbean.
Ramsay’s story verged on the plausible, frustratingly strengthened by the fact that no photographs of his first wife, Jean, seemed to exist. But Gilchrist suggested they investigate the death of Magner’s first wife, Sheila Ramsay, only to discover that she was Chief Constable Ramsay’s sister. With a personal link to Magner irrefutably confirmed, Ramsay’s lies were exposed. Two detectives from the Scottish Crime Squad tracked him to St Lucia, and flew over to arrest him, only to be informed by the Royal St Lucia Police Force that his wife had filed a missing persons report with Port Castries Police Station that morning. Her husband had left their holiday villa before midnight, claiming that he needed to walk some thoughts through, and had not returned. A few hours later, Chief Constable Ramsay’s fully clothed body washed up on the shores of Rodney Bay.
Martin Craig MEP resigned from his post two days after the story broke and flew to New Zealand with his secretary. It then emerged that they’d been having an affair for the last four years. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism latched on to the story, and by the end of the week had persuaded the European Parliament to initiate an internal audit into Craig’s office.
All computer equipment had been removed from Stratheden Enterprises, and forensic specialists were contracted to search all files. Although early days, one file provided a link to an RBS account in the Channel Islands, from which BACS transfers to a number of personal bank accounts in Scotland and England were exposed, varying in size from £200 to a staggering £420,000.
Jessie had been willing to put a bet on with Gilchrist that they would uncover a payment trail that would lead them straight to Martin Craig. ‘Have you seen the house Craig lives in?’ she said. ‘You couldn’t afford that on a normal salary.’
‘Have you seen the house his family lives in,’ Gilchrist replied, reminding her that Craig had done a runner with his secretary, and was an MEP no longer.
‘Minor detail,’ she said. ‘How about twenty quid, then?’
‘I’m not a betting man. But if I was, I’d be betting with you, not against you.’
‘Coward.’
‘Just canny.’
And the canny Gilchrist verified through Stratheden Enterprises’ records that Magner attended conferences in Edinburgh, Stirling and Glasgow on each of the days the three Stirling University students and the women from Airth and Alloa went missing. In a bid to identify the last two victims, he suggested that they concentrate on searching for women reported missing on days when Magner had attended other conferences. Twenty-three separate conferences over a period of eight years provided key dates, and although no positive IDs had yet been made, Gilchrist felt confident that it was only a matter of time.
Forensic accountants were hired to examine Stratheden’s books, but by the end of the first week a preliminary audit uncovered nothing of interest. The PF’s office terminated the auditors’ contract with immediate effect and initiated a selection process for another firm. Brenda McAllister, it seemed, was determined to bring down the whole empire.
A search of the Land Registry confirmed that the Department of Agriculture had owned both Cauldwood Cottage and the property across the road in the mid-1930s, and that plans for a communal bomb shelter and interconnecting tunnels had been approved during World War Two. Construction had begun under a veil of government secrecy – ‘Department of Agriculture, my arse,’ said Jessie – but was abandoned a year later, amid proposals for a new project that eventually became the Secret Bunker. Rather than demolish the shelters and return the property to its original condition, the land was sold to a Mr John Purvis – Jason Purvis’s grandfather. Purvis inherited the properties when his own parents passed away.
Disturbingly, a number of unmarked graves were discovered on the other side of the road from Cauldwood Cottage, adjacent to the barn where Purvis had taken Mhairi. Cooper was working with CAHID – the University of Dundee’s Centre for Anatomy and Human Identification – to identify the remains. Whether these bodies were related to the Butchers’ killings had yet to be confirmed, but Gilchrist was sure another hit was about to be registered.