10 Great Rebus Novels (John Rebus)

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10 Great Rebus Novels (John Rebus) Page 222

by Ian Rankin


  ‘Didn’t Tony give you any idea why he was after Allan Mitchison?’ Shankley shook his head. ‘And when did he first approach you?’

  ‘Couple of days before.’

  Therefore premeditated. Well, of course it was premeditated, but more than that it meant Tony El had been in Edinburgh, preparing the scheme, while Allan Mitchison had still been in Aberdeen. The night of his death had been his first day of leave. So Tony El hadn’t followed him south from Aberdeen . . . yet he knew what Allan Mitchison looked like, knew where he lived – there was a telephone in the flat, but unlisted.

  Allan Mitchison had been set up by someone who’d known him.

  It was Jack Morton’s turn. ‘Hank, think carefully now, didn’t Tony say anything about the job, about who was paying him?’

  Shankley thought, then nodded slowly. He looked pleased with himself: he’d remembered something.

  ‘Mr H.,’ he said. ‘Tony said something about Mr H. He clammed up afterwards, like he hadn’t meant to.’ Shankley almost danced in his seat. He wanted Rebus and Morton to like him. Their smiles told him they did. But Rebus was thinking furiously; the only Mr H. he came up with was Jake Harley. It didn’t fit.

  ‘Good man,’ Jack cajoled. ‘Now think again, tell us something else.’

  But Rebus had a question. ‘Did you see Tony El jacking up?’

  ‘No, but I knew he was doing it. When we were following the kid, first bar we went in, Tony went to the bog. He came out, and I knew he was on something. Living where I do, it gets so you can tell.’

  Tony El a shooter. It didn’t mean he wasn’t killed. All it meant was, maybe he’d made Stanley’s job easier. Tony El sky-high easier to murder than Tony El with defences up. Drugs to Aberdeen . . . Burke’s Club a magnet for them . . . Tony El using – and selling? He wished he’d asked Erik Stemmons about Tony El.

  ‘I need the toilet,’ Shankley said.

  ‘We’ll get a uniform to take you. Stay here.’ Rebus and Morton left the room.

  ‘Jack, I want you to trust me.’

  ‘How far?’

  ‘I want you to stay here and take Shankley’s statement.’

  ‘While you do what?’

  ‘Take someone to lunch.’ Rebus checked his watch. ‘I’ll be back here by three.’

  ‘Look, John . . .’

  ‘Call it parole. I go to lunch, I come back. Two hours.’ Rebus held up two fingers. ‘Two hours, Jack.’

  ‘Which restaurant?’

  ‘What?’

  ‘Tell me where you’re going. I’ll phone every quarter of an hour, you better be there.’ Rebus looked disgusted. ‘And I want to know who your guest is.’

  ‘It’s a woman.’

  ‘Name?’

  Rebus sighed. ‘I’ve heard of driving a hard bargain, but you’ve got your HGV.’

  ‘Name?’ Jack was smiling.

  ‘Gill Templer. Chief Inspector Gill Templer. OK?’

  ‘OK. Now the restaurant.’

  ‘I don’t know. I’ll tell you when I get there.’

  ‘Phone me. If you don’t, Chick gets to know, OK?’

  ‘It’s back to “Chick”, is it?’

  ‘He gets to know.’

  ‘All right, I’ll phone.’

  ‘With the restaurant’s number?’

  ‘With the number. Know what, Jack? You’ve put me right off eating.’

  ‘Order plenty and bring me a doggie bag.’

  Rebus went in search of Gill, found her in her office. She told him she’d already eaten.

  ‘So come and watch me.’

  ‘An offer I can’t refuse.’

  There was an Italian restaurant on Clerk Street. Rebus ordered a pizza: he could take anything he couldn’t eat back to Jack. Then he phoned St Leonard’s and left the pizzeria’s number, told them to pass it on.

  ‘So,’ Gill said when he was seated again, ‘been busy?’

  ‘Plenty busy. I went to Aberdeen.’

  ‘What for?’

  ‘That phone number on Feardie Fergie’s pad. Plus a few other things.’

  ‘What other things?’

  ‘Not necessarily connected.’

  ‘Tell me, did the trip pass without incident?’ She picked up a piece of the garlic bread which had just arrived.

  ‘Not exactly.’

  ‘You surprise me.’

  ‘They say it keeps a relationship on its toes.’

  Gill took a bite of bread. ‘So what did you find out?’

  ‘Burke’s Club is dirty. It’s also where Johnny Bible’s first victim was last seen alive. The place is run by two Yanks; I only spoke with one of them. I think probably his partner’s the grubbier of the two.’

  ‘And?’

  ‘And, also in Burke’s I saw a couple of members of a Glaswegian crime family. You know Uncle Joe Toal?’

  ‘I’ve heard of him.’

  ‘I think he’s delivering dope to Aberdeen. From there, I’d guess some of it goes to the rigs – a captive market; a lot of boredom on a rig.’

  ‘You’d know, of course?’ she joked. Then she saw the look on his face, and her eyes narrowed. ‘You went on a rig?’

  ‘Most terrifying experience of my life, but cathartic with it.’

  ‘Cathartic?’

  ‘An old girlfriend used to use words like that; they rub off on you after a while. The club’s owner, Erik Stemmons, denied knowing Fergie McLure. I almost believe him.’

  ‘Which puts his partner in the frame?’

  ‘To my mind.’

  ‘And that’s as far as it’s got – your mind? I mean, there’s no evidence?’

  ‘Not a shred.’

  His pizza arrived. Chorizo, mushroom and anchovy. Gill had to look away. The pizza was pre-cut into six fat slices. Rebus lifted one on to his plate.

  ‘I don’t know how you can face that.’

  ‘Me neither,’ said Rebus, sniffing the surface. ‘But it’ll make a hell of a doggie bag.’

  There was a cigarette machine. If he looked over Gill’s right shoulder he could see it there on the wall. Five brands, any of which would suffice. There was a book of matches waiting in the ashtray. He’d ordered a glass of house white, Gill spring water. The wine – ‘delicately bouqueted’ as the menu put it – arrived, and he gave it the nose test before sipping. It was chilled and sour.

  ‘How’s the bouquet?’ Gill asked.

  ‘Any more delicate and it’d need Prozac.’ The drinks card was in front of him, standing erect in its little holder, listing aperitifs and cocktails and digestifs, plus wines, beers, lagers, spirits. It was the most reading Rebus had done in a couple of days. As soon as he’d finished, he read it again. He wanted to shake the author’s hand.

  One segment of pizza was enough.

  ‘Not hungry?’ Gill asked.

  ‘I’m dieting.’

  ‘You?’

  ‘I want to be fit for my walks along the beach.’

  She wasn’t following him, shook her head clear of seeming non-sequiturs.

  ‘The thing is, Gill,’ he said after another sip of wine, ‘I think you were on to something big. And I think it can be salvaged. I just want to be sure it’s your collar.’

  She looked at him. ‘Why?’

  ‘Because of all the Christmas presents I’ve never given you. Because you deserve it. Because it’ll be your first.’

  ‘It doesn’t count if you’ve done all the work.’

  ‘It’ll count all right, all I’m doing is reconnaissance.’

  ‘You mean you’re not finished?’

  Rebus shook his head, asked the waiter to put the rest of the pizza in a box. He lifted the last piece of garlic bread.

  ‘I’m not nearly finished,’ he told her. ‘But I might need your help.’

  ‘Oh-oh. Here it comes.’

  Rebus spoke quickly. ‘Chick Ancram’s got me set up for a series of grillings. I’ve already had one, and between ourselves he didn’t cook me more than medium rare. But they take up time, a
nd I might want to head north again.’

  ‘John . . .’

  ‘All I need you to do . . . might need you to do, is telephone Ancram some day and tell him I’m working for you on something urgent, so we’ll have to reschedule the interview. Just charm the socks off him and give me some time. That’s all I need. I’ll try to keep you out of it if I can.’

  ‘So, to recap, all you need is for me to lie to a fellow officer who is carrying out an internal investigation? And meantime, lacking any physical or verbal evidence, you’ll be solving the drug-running case?’

  ‘Nicely summarised. I can see why you’re the CI instead of me.’ He shot to his feet, ran to the payphone. He’d heard it ringing before anyone in the restaurant. It was Jack, checking on him. He reminded Rebus about the doggie bag.

  ‘Being brought to the table as I speak.’

  When he got to the table, Gill was checking the bill.

  ‘This is on me,’ Rebus said.

  ‘At least let me leave the tip. I ate most of the bread. And besides, my water cost more than your wine.’

  ‘You got the better deal. What’s it to be, Gill?’

  She nodded. ‘I’ll tell him anything you like.’

  25

  Jack still had the power to surprise his old friend: wolfed the pizza. His only comment: ‘You didn’t eat much.’

  ‘Bit bland for me, Jack.’

  Rebus was itching now: for a cigarette and Aberdeen both. There was something up there he wanted; he just didn’t know quite what it was.

  The truth maybe.

  He should have been itching for a drink too, but the wine had put him off. It slopped in his stomach, liquid heartburn. He sat at a desk and read through Shankley’s statement. The big man was in a cell downstairs. Jack had worked fast; Rebus couldn’t see anything missing.

  ‘So,’ he said, ‘I’m back from parole. How did I do?’

  ‘Let’s not make it a regular date, my heart couldn’t take it.’

  Rebus smiled, picked up a phone. He wanted to check his machine at home, see if Ancram had plans for him. He did: nine tomorrow morning. There was another message. It was from Kayleigh Burgess. She needed to talk with him.

  ‘I’m seeing someone in Morningside at three, so how about four at that big hotel in Bruntsfield? We can have afternoon tea.’ She said it was important. Rebus decided to go out there and wait. He’d have preferred to leave Jack behind . . .

  ‘Know what, Jack? You’re severely cramping my style.’

  ‘How do you mean?’

  ‘With women. There’s one I want to see, but I bet you’re going to tag along, aren’t you?’

  Jack shrugged. ‘I’ll wait outside the door if you like.’

  ‘It’ll be a comfort to know you’re there.’

  ‘It could be worse,’ stuffing his face with the last of the pizza, ‘just think, how do Siamese twins arrange their love lives?’

  ‘Some questions are best left unanswered,’ Rebus said.

  He thought: Good question though.

  It was a nice hotel, quietly upmarket. Rebus worked out a possible dialogue in his head. Ancram knew about the clippings in his kitchen, and Kayleigh was the only possible source. He’d been furious at the time, less angry now. It was her job after all: information, and using that information to elicit other information. It still rankled. Then there was the Spaven-McLure connection: Ancram had picked up on it; Kayleigh knew about it. And finally, above all, there was the break-in.

  They waited for her in the lounge. Jack flicked through Scottish Field and kept reading out descriptions of estates for sale: ‘seven thousand acres in Caithness, with hunting lodge, stabling, and working farm’. He looked up at Rebus.

  ‘Some country this, eh? Where else could you lay your hands on seven thousand acres at knockdown prices?’

  ‘There’s a theatre group called 7:84 – know what it means?’

  ‘What?’

  ‘Seven per cent of the population controls eighty-four per cent of the wealth.’

  ‘Are we in the seven?’

  Rebus snorted. ‘Not even close, Jack.’

  ‘I wouldn’t mind a taste of the high life, though.’

  ‘At what cost?’

  ‘Eh?’

  ‘What would you be willing to trade?’

  ‘No, I mean like winning the lottery or something.’

  ‘So you wouldn’t take back-handers to drop a charge?’

  Jack’s eyes narrowed. ‘What are you getting at?’

  ‘Come on, Jack. I was in Glasgow, remember? I saw good suits and jewellery, I saw something approaching the smug.’

  ‘They just like to dress nice, makes them feel important.’

  ‘Uncle Joe’s not doling out freebies?’

  ‘I wouldn’t know if he was.’ Jack lifted the magazine to shield his face: matter closed. And then Kayleigh Burgess walked in through the door.

  She saw Rebus immediately, and a blush started creeping up her neck. By the time she’d walked over to where he was rising from his chair, it had climbed as far as her cheeks.

  ‘Inspector, you got my message.’ Rebus nodded, eyes unblinking. ‘Well, thanks for coming.’ She turned to Jack Morton.

  ‘DI Morton,’ Jack said, shaking her hand.

  ‘Do you want some tea?’

  Rebus shook his head, gestured towards the free chair. She sat down.

  ‘So?’ he said, determined to make nothing easy for her, not ever again.

  She sat with her shoulder-bag in her lap, twisting the strap. ‘Look,’ she said, ‘I owe you an apology.’ She glanced up at him, then away, took a deep breath. ‘I didn’t tell CI Ancram about those cuttings. Or about Fergus McLure knowing Spaven, come to that.’

  ‘But you know he knows?’

  She nodded. ‘Eamonn told him.’

  ‘And who told Eamonn?’

  ‘I did. I didn’t know what to make of it . . . I wanted to bounce it off someone. We’re a team, so I told Eamonn. I made him promise it’d go no further.’

  ‘But it did.’

  She nodded. ‘He was straight on the phone to Ancram. See, Eamonn . . . he’s got a thing about police brass. If we’re investigating someone at Inspector level, Eamonn always wants to go over their heads, talk to their superiors, see what gets stirred up. Besides, you haven’t exactly made a favourable impression with my presenter.’

  ‘It was an accident,’ Rebus said. ‘I tripped.’

  ‘If that’s your story.’

  ‘What does the footage say?’

  She thought about it. ‘We were shooting from behind Eamonn. Mostly, what we’ve got is his back.’

  ‘I’m off the hook then?’

  ‘I didn’t say that. Just stick to your story.’

  Rebus nodded, getting her drift. ‘Thanks. But why did Breen go to Ancram? Why not my boss?’

  ‘Because Eamonn knew Ancram was to lead the inquiry.’

  ‘And how did he know that?’

  ‘The grapevine.’

  A grapevine with few grapes attached. He saw Jim Stevens again, staring up at the window of his flat . . . Stirring it . . .

  Rebus sighed. ‘One last thing. Do you know anything about a break-in at my flat?’

  Her eyebrows rose. ‘Should I?’

  ‘Remember the Bible John stuff in the cupboard? Someone took a crowbar to my front door, and all they wanted was to rifle through it.’

  She was shaking her head. ‘Not us.’

  ‘No?’

  ‘Housebreaking? We’re journalists, for Christ’s sake.’

  Rebus had his hands up in a gesture of appeasement, but he wanted to push it a little further. ‘Any chance Breen would go out on a limb?’

  Now she laughed. ‘Not even for a story the size of Watergate. Eamonn fronts the programme, he doesn’t do any digging.’

  ‘You and your researchers do?’

  ‘Yes, and neither of them seems the crowbar type. Does that leave me in the frame?’

  As she cr
ossed one leg over the other, Jack studied them. His eyes had been running all over her like a kid’s over a Scalextric set.

  ‘Consider the matter closed,’ Rebus said.

  ‘But it’s true? Your flat was broken into?’

  ‘Matter closed,’ he repeated.

  She almost pouted. ‘How’s the inquiry going anyway?’ She held up a hand. ‘I’m not snooping, call it personal interest.’

  ‘Depends which inquiry you mean,’ Rebus said.

  ‘The Spaven case.’

  ‘Oh, that.’ Rebus sniffed, considering his response. ‘Well, CI Ancram is the trusting sort. He has real faith in his officers. If you plead innocent, he’ll take it at face value. It’s a comfort to have superiors like that. For instance, he trusts me so much he’s got a minder on me like a limpet on a rock.’ He nodded towards Jack. ‘Inspector Morton here is supposed to not let me out of his sight. He even sleeps at my flat.’ He held Kayleigh’s gaze. ‘How’s that sound?’

  She could hardly form the words. ‘It’s scandalous.’

  Rebus shrugged, but she was reaching into her bag, bringing out notebook and pen. Jack glowered at Rebus, who winked back. Kayleigh had to flick through a lot of pages to find a fresh sheet.

  ‘When did this start?’ she said.

  ‘Let’s see . . .’ Rebus pretended to be thinking. ‘Sunday afternoon, I think. After I’d been interrogated in Aberdeen and dragged back here.’

  She looked up. ‘Interrogated?’

  ‘John . . .’ Jack Morton warned.

  ‘Didn’t you know?’ Rebus’s eyes widened. ‘I’m a suspect in the Johnny Bible case.’

  On the drive back to the flat, Jack was furious.

  ‘What did you think you were up to?’

  ‘Keeping her mind off Spaven.’

  ‘I don’t get it.’

  ‘She’s trying to make a programme about Spaven, Jack. She’s not doing one on policemen being nasty to other policemen, and she’s not doing one on Johnny Bible.’

  ‘So?’

  ‘So now her head’s swimming with everything I told her – and not a jot of it has to do with Spaven. It’ll keep her . . . what’s the word?’

  ‘Preoccupied?’

  ‘Good enough.’ Rebus nodded, looked at his watch. Five-twenty. ‘Shit,’ he said. ‘Those pictures!’

 

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