Knots And Crosses tirs-1
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‘Maybe not,’ said Rebus, smiling, ‘but I would have come along anyway.’
Michael laughed. It was the laughter of birthdays, of money found in an old pocket.
‘Another whisky, sir?’ he said.
‘I thought you were never going to ask.’
Rebus returned to his study of the room while Michael went to the cabinet.
‘How’s the act going?’ he asked. ‘And I really am interested.’
‘It’s going fine,’ said Michael. ‘In fact, it’s going very well indeed. There’s talk of a television spot, but I’ll believe that when I see it.’
‘Great.’
Another drink reached Rebus’s willing hand.
‘Yes, and I’m working on a new slot. It’s a bit scary though.’ An inch of gold flashed on Michael’s wrist as he tipped the glass to his lips. The watch was expensive: it had no numbers on its face. It seemed to Rebus that the more expensive something was, the less of it there always seemed to be: tiny little hi-fi systems, watches without numbers, the translucent Dior ankle-socks on Michael’s feet.
‘Tell me about it,’ he said, taking his brother’s bait.
‘Well,’ said Michael, sitting forward in his chair, ‘I take members of the audience back into their past lives.’
‘Past lives?’
Rebus was staring at the floor as if admiring the design of the dark and light green carpet.
‘Yes,’ Michael continued, ‘Reincarnation, born again, that sort of thing. Well, I shouldn’t have to spell it out to you, John. After all, you’re the Christian.’
‘Christians don’t believe in past lives, Mickey. Only future ones.’
Michael stared at Rebus, demanding silence.
‘Sorry,’ said Rebus.
‘As I was saying, I tried the act out in public for the first time last week, though I’ve been practising it for a while with my private consultees.’
‘Private consultees?’
‘Yes. They pay me money for private hypnotherapy. I stop them smoking, or make them more confident, or stop them from wetting the bed. Some are convinced that they have past lives, and they ask me to put them under so that they can prove it. Don’t worry though. Financially, it’s all above board. The tax-man gets his cut.’
‘And do you prove it? Do they have past lives?’
Michael rubbed a finger around the rim of his glass, now empty.
‘You’d be surprised,’ he said.
‘Give me an example.’
Rebus was following the lines of the carpet with his eyes. Past lives, he thought to himself. Now there was a thing. There was plenty of life in his past.
‘Well,’ said Michael, ‘remember I told you about my show in Edinburgh last week? Well,’ he leaned further forward in his chair, ‘I got this woman up from the audience. She was a small woman, middle-aged. She’d come in with an office-party. She went under pretty easily, probably because she hadn’t been drinking as heavily as her friends. Once she was under, I told her that we were going to take a trip into her past, way, way back before she was born. I told her to think back to the earliest memory she had …’
Michael’s voice had taken on a professional but easy mellifluence. He spread his hands before him as if playing to an audience. Rebus, nursing his glass, felt himself relax a little. He thought back to a childhood episode, a game of football, one brother pitted against the other. The warm mud of a July shower, and their mother, her sleeves rolled up, stripping them both and putting them, giggling knots of arms and legs, into the bath …
‘… well,’ Michael was saying, ‘she started to speak, and in a voice not quite her own. It was weird, John. I wish you had been there to see it. The audience were silent, and I was feeling all cold and then hot and then cold again, and it had nothing to do with the hotel’s heating-system by the way. I’d done it, you see. I’d taken that woman into a past life. She was a nun. Do you believe that? A nun. And she said that she was alone in her cell. She described the convent and everything, and then she started to recite something in Latin, and some people in the audience actually crossed themselves. I was bloody well petrified. My hair was probably standing on end. I brought her out of it as quickly as I could, and there was a long pause before the crowd started to applaud. Then, maybe out of sheer relief, her friends started to cheer and laugh, and that broke the ice. At the end of the show, I found out that this woman was a staunch Protestant, a Rangers supporter no less, and she swore blind that she knew no Latin at all. Well, somebody inside her did. I’ll tell you that.’
Rebus was smiling.
‘It’s a nice story, Mickey,’ he said.
‘It’s the truth.’ Michael opened his arms wide in supplication. ‘Don’t you believe me?’
‘Maybe.’
Michael shook his head.
‘You must make a pretty bad copper, John. I had around a hundred and fifty witnesses. Iron-clad.’
Rebus could not pull his attention away from the design in the carpet.
‘Plenty of people believe in past lives, John.’
Past lives … Yes, he believed in some things … In God, certainly … But past lives … Without warning, a face screamed up at him from the carpet, trapped in its cell.
He dropped his glass.
‘John? Is anything wrong? Christ, you look as if you’ve seen …’
‘No, no, nothing’s the matter.’ Rebus retrieved the glass and stood up. ‘I just … I’m fine. It’s just that,’ he checked his watch, a watch with numbers, ‘well, I’d better be going. I’m on duty this evening.’
Michael was smiling weakly, glad that his brother was not going to stay, but embarrassed at his relief.
‘We’ll have to meet again soon,’ he said, ‘on neutral territory.’
‘Yes,’ said Rebus, tasting once again the tang of toffee-apples. He felt a little pale, a little shaky, as though he were too far out of his territory. ‘Let’s do that.’
Once or twice or three times a year, at weddings, funerals, or over the telephone at Christmas, they promised themselves this get-together. The mere promise now was a ritual in itself, and so could be safely proffered and just as safely ignored.
‘Let’s do that.’
Rebus shook hands with Michael at the door. Escaping past the BMW to his own car, he wondered how alike they were, his brother and him. Uncles and aunts in their funeral-cold rooms occasionally commented, ‘Ah, you’re both the spitting image of your mother.’ That was as far as it went. John Rebus knew that his own hair was a shade of brown lighter than Michael’s, and that his eyes were a shade of green darker. He knew also, however, that the differences between them were such that any similarities were made to look unutterably superficial. They were brothers without any sense of brotherhood. Brotherhood belonged to the past.
He waved once from the car and was gone. He would be back in Edinburgh within the hour, and on duty another half-hour after that. He knew that the reason he could never feel comfortable in Michael’s house was Chrissie’s hatred of him, her unshakeable belief that he alone had been responsible for the break-up of his marriage. Maybe she was right at that. He tried ticking off in his mind the definite chores of the next seven or eight hours. He had to tidy up a case of burglary and serious assault. A nasty one that. The CID was undermanned as it was, and now these abductions would stretch them even more. Those two young girls, girls his own daughter’s age. It was best not to think about it. By now they would be dead, or would wish that they were dead. God have mercy on them. In Edinburgh of all places, in his own dear city.
A maniac was on the loose.
People were staying in their homes.
And a screaming in his memory.
Rebus shrugged, feeling a slight sensation of attrition in one of his shoulders. It was not his business after all. Not yet.
Back in his living-room, Michael Rebus poured himself another whisky. He went to the stereo and turned it all the way up, then reached underneath his chair and, after a little
fumbling, pulled out an ashtray that was hidden there.
Part One ‘THERE ARE CLUES EVERYWHERE’
1
On the steps of the Great London Road police station in Edinburgh, John Rebus lit his last legitimate cigarette of the day before pushing open the imposing door and stepping inside.
The station was old, its floor dark and marbled. It had about it the fading grandeur of a dead aristocracy. It had character.
Rebus waved to the duty sergeant, who was tearing old pictures from the notice-board and pinning up new ones in their place. He climbed the great curving staircase to his office. Campbell was just leaving.
‘Hello, John.’
McGregor Campbell, a Detective Sergeant like Rebus, was donning coat and hat.
‘What’s the word, Mac? Is it going to be a busy night?’ Rebus began checking the messages on his desk.
‘I don’t know about that, John, but I can tell you that it’s been pandemonium in here today. There’s a letter there for you from the man himself.’
‘Oh yes?’ Rebus seemed preoccupied with another letter which he had just opened.
‘Yes, John. Brace yourself. I think you’re going to be transferred to that abduction case. Good luck to you. Well, I’m off to the pub. I want to catch the boxing on the BBC. I should be in time.’ Campbell checked his watch. ‘Yes, plenty of time. Is anything wrong, John?’
Rebus waved the now empty envelope at him.
‘Who brought this in, Mac?’
‘I haven’t the faintest, John. What is it?’
‘Another crank letter.’
‘Oh yes?’ Campbell sidled over to Rebus’s shoulder. He examined the typed note. ‘Looks like the same bloke, doesn’t it?’
‘Clever of you to notice that, Mac, seeing as it’s the exact same message.’
‘What about the string?’
‘Oh, it’s here too.’ Rebus lifted a small piece of string from his desk. There was a simple knot tied in its middle.
‘Queer bloody business.’ Campbell walked to the doorway. ‘See you tomorrow, John.’
‘Yes, yes, see you, Mac.’ Rebus paused until his friend had made his exit. ‘Oh, Mac!’ Campbell came back into the doorway.
‘Yes?’
‘Maxwell won the big fight,’ said Rebus, smiling.
‘God, you’re a bastard, Rebus.’ Gritting his teeth, Campbell stalked out of the station.
‘One of the old school,’ Rebus said to himself. ‘Now, what possible enemies could I have?’
He studied the letter again, then checked the envelope. It was blank, save for his own name, unevenly typed. The note had been handed in, just like the other one. It was a queer bloody business right enough.
He walked back downstairs and headed for the desk.
‘Jimmy?’
‘Yes, John.’
‘Have you seen this?’ He showed the envelope to the desk sergeant.
‘That?’ The sergeant wrinkled not only his brow but, it seemed to Rebus, his whole face. Only forty years in the force could do that to a man, forty years of questions and puzzles and crosses to bear. ‘It must have been put through the door, John. I found it myself on the floor just there.’ He pointed vaguely in the direction of the station’s front door. ‘Is anything up?’
‘Oh no, it’s nothing really. Thanks, Jimmy.’
But Rebus knew that he would be niggled all night by the arrival of this note, only days after he had received the first anonymous message. He studied the two letters at his desk. The work of an old typewriter, probably portable. The letter S about a millimetre higher than the other letters. The paper cheap, no water-mark. The piece of string, tied in the middle, cut with a sharp knife or scissors. The message. The same typewritten message:
THERE ARE CLUES EVERYWHERE.
Fair enough; perhaps there were. It was the work of a crank, a kind of practical joke. But why him? It made no sense. Then the phone rang.
‘Detective Sergeant Rebus?’
‘Speaking.’
‘Rebus, it’s Chief Inspector Anderson here. Have you received my note?’
Anderson. Bloody Anderson. That was all he needed. From one crank to another.
‘Yes, sir,’ said Rebus, holding the receiver under his chin and tearing open the letter on his desk.
‘Good. Can you be here in twenty minutes? The briefing will be in the Waverley Road Incident Room.’
‘I’ll be there, sir.’
The phone went dead on Rebus as he read. It was true then, it was official. He was being transferred to the abduction case. God, what a life. He pushed the messages, envelopes and string into his jacket pocket, looking around the office in frustration. Who was kidding who? It would take an act of God to get him to Waverley Road inside of half an hour. And when was he supposed to get round to finishing all his work? He had three cases coming to court and another dozen or so crying out for some paperwork before his memory of them faded entirely. That would be nice, actually, nice to just erase the lot of them. Wipe-out. He closed his eyes. He opened them again. The paperwork was still there, large as life. Useless. Always incomplete. No sooner had he finished with a case than another two or three appeared in its place. What was the name of that creature? The Hydra, was it? That was what he was fighting. Every time he cut off a head, more popped into his in-tray. Coming back from a holiday was a nightmare.
And now they were giving him rocks to push up hills as well.
He looked to the ceiling.
‘With God’s grace,’ he whispered. Then he headed out to his car.
2
The Sutherland Bar was a popular watering-hole. It contained no jukebox, no video machines, no bandits. The decor was spartan, and the TV usually flickered and jumped. Ladies had not been welcome until well into the 1960s. There had, it seemed, been something to hide: the best pint of draught beer in Edinburgh. McGregor Campbell supped from his heavy glass, his eyes intent on the television set above the bar.
‘Who wins?’ asked a voice beside him.
‘I don’t know,’ he said, turning to the voice. ‘Oh, hello, Jim.’
A stocky man was sitting beside him, money in hand, waiting to be served. His eyes, too, were on the TV.
‘Looks like a cracker of a fight,’ he said. ‘I fancy Mailer to win.’
Mac Campbell had an idea.
‘No, I reckon Maxwell will walk it, win by a mile. Fancy a bet?’
The stocky man fished into his pocket for his cigarettes, eyeing the policeman.
‘How much?’ he asked.
‘A fiver?’ said Campbell.
‘You’re on. Tom, give me a pint over here, please. Do you want one yourself, Mac?’
‘Same again, thanks.’
They sat in silence for a while, supping the beer and watching the fight. A few muffled roars went up occasionally from behind them as a punch landed or was dodged.
‘It’s looking good for your man if it goes the distance,’ said Campbell, ordering more drinks.
‘Aye. But let’s wait and see, eh? How’s work, by the way?’
‘Fine, how’s yours?’
‘A pure bloody slog at the moment, if you must ask.’ Some ash dropped onto his tie as he talked, the cigarette never leaving his mouth, though it wobbled precariously from time to time. ‘A pure slog.’
‘Are you still chasing up that drugs story?’
‘Not really. I’ve landed on this kidnapping thing.’
‘Oh? So has Rebus. You’d better not get into his hair.’
‘Newspapermen get in everybody’s hair, Mac. It goes with the etcetera.’
Mac Campbell, though wary of Jim Stevens, was grateful for a friendship, however tenuous and strained it had sometimes been, which had given him some information useful to his career. Stevens kept much of the juiciest tidbits to himself, of course. That’s what ‘exclusives’ were made of. But he was always willing to trade, and it seemed to Campbell that the most innocuous pieces of gossip and information often seemed adequate fo
r Stevens’ needs. He was a kind of magpie, collecting everything without prejudice, storing much more of it than, surely, he would ever use. But with reporters you never could tell. Certainly, Campbell was happier with Stevens as a friend than as an enemy.
‘So what’s happening about your drugs dossier?’
Jim Stevens shrugged his creased shoulders.
‘There’s nothing in there just now that could be of much use to you boys anyway. I’m not about to let the whole thing drop though, if that’s what you mean. No, that’s too big a nest of vipers to be allowed to go free. I’ll still be keeping my eyes open.’
A bell rang for the last round of the fight. Two sweating, dog-tired bodies converged on one another, becoming a single knot of limbs.
‘Still looks good for Mailer,’ said Campbell, an uneasy feeling coming over him. It couldn’t be true. Rebus wouldn’t have done that to him. Suddenly, Maxwell, the heavier and slower-moving of the two fighters, was hit by a blow to the face and staggered back. The bar erupted, sensing blood and victory. Campbell stared into his glass. Maxwell was taking a standing count. It was all over. A sensation in the final seconds of the contest, according to the commentator.
Jim Stevens held out his hand.
I’ll kill bloody Rebus, thought Campbell. So help me, I’ll kill him.
Later, over drinks bought with Campbell’s money, Jim Stevens asked about Rebus.
‘So it looks as if I’ll be meeting him at last?’
‘Maybe, maybe not. He’s not exactly friendly with Anderson, so he may well get the shitty end of the stick, sitting at a desk all day. But then John Rebus isn’t exactly friendly with anybody.’
‘Oh?’
‘Ach, he’s not that bad, I suppose, but he’s not the easiest of men to like.’ Campbell, ducking from his friend’s interrogative eyes, studied the reporter’s tie. The recent layer of cigarette-ash had merely formed a veil over much older stains. Egg, perhaps, fat, alcohol. The scruffiest reporters were always the sharp ones, and Stevens was sharp, as sharp as ten years on the local newspaper could make a man. It was said that he had turned down jobs with London papers, just because he liked to live in Edinburgh. And what he liked best about his job was the opportunity it gave him to uncover the city’s murkier depths, the crime, the corruption, the gangs and the drugs. He was a better detective than anyone Campbell knew, and, because of that very fact perhaps, the high-ups in the police both disliked and distrusted him. That seemed proof enough that he was doing his job well. Campbell watched as a little beer escaped from Stevens’ glass and dripped onto his trousers.