by Val McDermid
The phone was answered on the fourth ring. “Greetings, earthling,” a deep bass voice rumbled in her ear.
“Hello, Charlie. It’s Fiona Cameron.”
“Good Lord. Shouldn’t you be a pumpkin at this time of night? Or are you in fact speaking from the fruit and veg department of Tesco’s?”
Fiona gritted her teeth and tried not to shout at him. “I’m sorry to bother you, Charlie, but Kit’s out of town and I need Lee Gustafson’s number.”
“Fiona, darling, if you want a man to whisper sweet nothings in your ear when Kit’s away, you don’t have to pay international call charges. I’d be happy to oblige.” He chuckled.
“I’ll bear that in mind, Charlie. Do you have Lee’s number?”
“Spurned again, eh? Hang on, Fiona, it’s in the other room.” She listened to the sound of furniture groaning, a cat protesting, then heavy footsteps fading off. Charlie, the only man she knew who wore biker’s boots round the house. A long minute passed, then the footsteps thudded again. “You still there? Got a pen?”
“Yes to both.”
He read out Gusta’fson’s number, repeating it to make sure she had it down. “Enjoy yourself with Lee,” he added. “But not so much that you forget my heart still burns for you.”
“I could never forget that, Charlie,” she said, forcing herself into the standard flirtatious banter that went with their friendship. “Thanks again.”
“No problem. And tell that man of yours he owes me an e — mail.”
“Will do. Good night.”
“I’ll do my best.” The line went dead and Fiona immediately rang the number Charlie had given her.
The single tone of the American phone system purred in her ear. Once, twice, three times. Then the click of an answering machine. “Hi. You’ve reached Lee and Dorothy. And you’ve missed us. We’re out of town till Monday morning. So leave a message and we’ll get back to you when we get home.”
Fiona couldn’t believe her ears. It was beginning to feel like the universe was in a massive conspiracy against her and Kit. She had been so convinced that Lee Gustafson was the answer.
In frustration, she dialled into her e — mail program, clutching the last fragile hope that Galloway had been right and Kit had sent an e — mail that had somehow been trapped in cyberspace. Maybe his e — mail provider’s server had been down and all the mail had been held up as a result. But of course, there was nothing.
On an impulse, since she was using Kit’s laptop and it was set up for his e — mail account, she checked his mailbox. He might possibly have sent her mail to his own box by mistake. She couldn’t imagine how that might happen, but she was prepared to clutch at any straw, however frail.
There were a dozen messages waiting for him. Most seemed to be from fellow crime writers, and most seemed to be about Georgia. There was nothing there that could conceivably have come from Kit himself.
More worryingly, judging by the timing of the messages in the mailbox, he hadn’t picked up his own mail since early that afternoon. And that was as much out of character as his failure to contact Fiona. Instead of consolation, she’d found even more reason to fret.
She broke the connection and carried on staring at the screen. Suddenly, something flickered at the corner of her memory. Just before Lee had visited the bothy, she and Kit had been on holiday in Spain. Kit, as usual, had taken his laptop. He could no more stay out of touch with his e — mail than he could stop breathing. And while they’d been away, he and Lee had been communicating about the bothy.
Eagerly, she opened up the electronic filing cabinet that kept a record of all Kit’s e — mail, sent and received. She clicked on the Copy of Sent Messages tab. 2539 messages arranged by date. The program offered her the chance to arrange the messages in alphabetical order of the recipient, so she selected that option. She drummed her fingers on the tabletop as she waited for it to complete the task. Then she scrolled down to Lee Gustafson’s name and began to check through the mail by date. She knew the month she was looking for, and she soon came to it. Kit had sent Lee nine messages that month. She began at the beginning and worked her way through.
And there it was. Take the A839 out of Lairg. About a mile out of the town, you’ll see a track on the right signed Sallachy. Carry on up the track (it’s pretty rough going, you’ll appreciate why I’m lending you the Land Rover) for about five and a half miles. You cross a river gorge, the Allt a’ Claon. There’s a left turn up ahead, which you take. About half a mile up this track, there’s another left turn. The track takes you back across the river ravine on a rope bridge. It’s a lot stronger than it looks, but better not go faster than five miles an hour. You cross the river into some trees and the bothy’s about a mile ahead of you. I’d say you can’t miss it, but you’d probably shoot me.
Relief coursed through Fiona. She knew where the killer was taking Kit. And now she knew how to get there. Sod Sarah Duvall and her blinkered certainties. Sod Sandy Galloway and his soothing platitudes. And sod Steve, who wasn’t there when she really needed him. She’d find Kit, with or without their help.
FIFTY
Edinburgh might claim to be a twenty-four-hour city during the Festival, but as Fiona soon found out, when it came to hiring a car it was strictly eight till eight. Even at the airport, open round the clock, the car-hire firms went home when the flights stopped arriving.
All professional options exhausted, she was forced back on to the personal. Wearily, Fiona picked up the phone and dialled again. She heard half a dozen distant rings. Then an indistinct mumble. “Yeah?” “Caroline?”
“No, it’s not. Who is this?” The voice sounded seriously pissed off. “Ah. Julia. Sorry. It’s Fiona Cameron. Can I speak to Caroline?” “Do you know what time it is?” The hostility level had risen. Fiona knew it was nothing to do with the lateness of the hour.
“Yes. And I’m sorry about that. But I do need to speak to Caroline.” The phone clattered down. Fiona could hear, as she knew she was meant to, Julia’s bad-tempered muttering. “It’s Fiona Cameron. Two o’clock in the fucking morning, I don’t know—”
Then Caroline’s voice, sleepy but alive with concern. “Fiona? What’s the matter?”
“I’m sorry to wake you, but it’s really important.” “Of course it is. So how can I help? What’s the problem?” Fiona took a deep breath. In the background, she could hear an exasperated Julia sighing. Unlike Caroline, Julia did not take the unpredictable in her stride. “I’m in Edinburgh and I need to be in Inverness. If I wait till the trains start running, it’ll be too late.” “So you want me to drive you there?” “That won’t be necessary, I just need to borrow your car.” Fiona heard the sounds of movement as Caroline shifted her position. “Fine. Let me see…five minutes to get dressed…Probably an hour to get to you. Where are you in Edinburgh?”
“I’m staying at a hotel called Channings. But the thing is, Caroline, time’s really vital. Is there somewhere we could meet halfway? Somewhere I could get a taxi to take me to?”
There was a pause. Fiona could hear Caroline moving around now, as if she was assembling her clothes. “There’s some services on the Mpo,” Caroline said. “A few miles over the bridge. Halbeath, I think, something like that. It’s the turnoff for Dunfermline and Kirkcaldy, just after the big Hyundai plant. Get the taxi to take you there. I’ll be there in about…thirty-five, forty minutes. OK?”
“Thank you, Caroline. Believe me, I appreciate this.”
“No bother. Fill me in when we meet.” Then the line went dead. Fiona smiled for the first time in hours. At last, she was dealing with somebody who took her on trust, who didn’t assume she was overreacting. Steve would have done the same. But Steve was out of reach. And she didn’t have time to wait to be proved right.
While she waited for the taxi, she scribbled a quick fax to Galloway, telling him where she’d gone and when she’d left. She gave the night porter instructions to transmit it to the number Galloway had given her for his personal
fax at St. Leonard’s. At least if she needed back-up, they would know where to find her.
Twenty-five minutes later, the taxi dropped her off at Halbeath services, just off the M90 heading north. The drizzle that had turned Edinburgh gloomy all day had grown into full-scale rain, gusting across the parking area. Fiona took shelter in the doorway of the restaurant and stared through the rain at the bright neon of the petrol station while she planned out what she had to do.
Ten minutes later, headlights cut through the darkness on the approach road and she stepped forward expectantly. The service area lights revealed a Honda saloon that splashed to a halt yards from her. The driver’s door opened and Caroline jumped out, dashing across to her and enveloping her in a hug. “Here comes the cavalry,” Caroline said.
“I’ve never been more glad to see you.”
“What’s going on? Why the urgency?” Caroline let her go and stepped back into the shelter of the doorway.
“Have you seen the news?” Fiona asked.
“Is this to do with that murdered crime writer?” Caroline had never been slow to grasp connections. “I thought they’d got someone for that?”
“Yes. But I think there’s a possibility that the person in custody is a fake confessor. An attention-seeker. If I’m right, there’s still a serial killer out there. And I’m afraid he’s got Kit.”
“Oh my God! And they’re heading for Inverness?” For the first time, Caroline sounded shaken.
“Kit owns a bothy out in Sutherland. I think that’s where the killer is planning to take him. Kit keeps a Land Rover at a garage in Inverness. I need to get there and pick up the Land Rover and try to head them off before they get to the bothy.”
Caroline frowned. “Forgive me if I’m being naive here, but isn’t this one of those things the police should be dealing with?”
“Yes. But they think the man in custody is the killer. They’re not even halfway convinced that Kit’s actually missing. They think he’s gone off on the razzle with his mates, drowning his sorrows over Georgia.”
“But you know different?”
Fiona spread her hands. “I know Kit.”
Caroline nodded, as if satisfied. “Fine. Jump in. I’ll drive you.”
“Honestly, there’s no need. I can drive myself. I just needed to borrow the car.”
Caroline reached out and grasped Fiona’s wrist gently. It was a curiously intimate gesture. “I said, I’ll drive you. Besides, how am I going to get back to St. Andrews at this time of night?”
“No, Caro, it’s not your fight. Call a taxi. I’ll pay for it. Just give me the car keys, Caro, please?”
Caroline shook her head. “No way. You’ve always been there for me. I’m not leaving you.” She turned on her heel and marched back to her car, pulling the driver’s door open and getting in. She started the engine and wound down the window. “I thought you were in a hurry, Fiona?”
As they shot up the motorway towards Perth, Caroline broke the silence. “Tell me what’s going on with Kit.”
So Fiona outlined the whole story, from Drew Shand’s murder onwards. “It could be that I’m being paranoid,” she admitted. “But that’s my risk, and it’s one I’m prepared to take. Looking stupid on the shores of Loch Shin would be, in my opinion, the best possible outcome of tonight.”
“But you know in your heart that’s not what’s happening here,” Caroline said heavily.
Fiona nodded. “He wouldn’t stay out of touch. He’s in a state about Georgia, and I’m the only one he opens up to. Of all the times he might ignore me, this is the least likely.” They fell silent then, each lost in her own thoughts as the windscreen wipers slapped the rain away and they drove deeper into the Highlands, the looming bulk of mountains rising around them as Caroline hammered up the road towards Inverness to the late-night sound of the Cowboy Junkies. At that time of night, there was little traffic to vary the endless ribbon of the Ap spooling out ahead of them.
Somewhere near Kingussie, Fiona closed her eyes and leaned her elbow on the window ledge. With no need for Caroline to stop for petrol (and nowhere to make a stop, even if she’d needed it), Fiona drifted in an edgy doze until they made it to the outskirts of Inverness just after half past six.
Fiona was already two and a half hours later than she would have needed to be to hit the wilderness ahead of Kit.
Joanne Gibb drove cautiously down the street where Gerard Coyne lived. Thankfully, nobody seemed to be stirring. But then, that’s pretty much what she’d have expected in this part of North London so early on a Saturday morning. She hoped it would stay like that for a little bit longer. She needed to identify the house then find a parking space somewhere she could keep an eye on the place. It wouldn’t do to lose him because she couldn’t find somewhere to sit unobtrusively. It helped having a VW Golf with black-tinted windows. Impossible for passers-by to see inside, and with the added bonus that any local likely lads would probably leave it alone on the general principle that anybody who owned such a mean-looking machine would probably be considerably more well hard than they were.
On her first pass, she identified the house. She couldn’t immediately see a place to park, so she drove to the corner, turned round and cruised slowly back. About a dozen yards past Coyne’s house, a set of headlights flashed at her. Her first reaction was that someone had noticed her predicament and was indicating they were about to move out of their space. Then she recognized Neil’s Ford, a car almost as scruffy as its owner. She drew level and they dropped their windows simultaneously. Joanne’s nose twitched as the stale aroma of unwashed male rolled out towards her.
“What are you doing here?” she asked. “You were supposed to go off at midnight and leave chummy to his own devices.”
Neil yawned. “I couldn’t do it. I tried to clear it with the boss but I haven’t been able to raise him. I can’t get through on the mobile, his home phone’s on the answering machine and he’s not responding to his pager. I can’t believe it. He’s never out of touch. And last night, of all nights, when he knew we were starting a fresh surveillance. It just doesn’t make sense. So I decided to stay till you got here, just in case.”
Joanne gave a sly smile. “I bet I know where he is.”
“Where?”
“He’s birding it,” she said.
“Bollocks,” Neil scoffed. “He’s like a monk, the guvnor. He’s forgotten what it’s for.”
“You lot never forget what it’s for,” Joanne said. “He came back from seeing that lecturer the other day with a real spring in his step. And he asked me for a restaurant recommendation.”
“God, he must have been desperate.”
“Thank you, Neil. Anyway, I reckon he’s gone off to her place and decided that for once he’s going to forget about the sodding job and have a good time.”
Neil shook his head. “He’d never turn his pager off.”
“That’s what you think. So, what are you going to do now?”
Neil reached down and turned the key in his ignition. “I’m going to piss off back to the Yard and get my head down for a couple of hours until he gets in. Wherever he is, he’ll be in this morning to see what’s what, I bet you any money.”
“That would be a mug’s bet. Hang on till I turn round again and I’ll slot into your space, OK?” Joanne drove off. By the time she’d swung round, Neil was edging out, leaving room for her to pick up the surveillance. She waved him off and settled down. She only hoped Gerard Coyne wasn’t planning on a bike ride this morning.
FIFTY-ONE
Caroline pulled up at a roundabout on the edge of Inverness and killed the stereo. “Where to now?” she asked.
Fiona yawned and scrubbed her eyes with the edge of her fists. She had that empty nauseous feeling that comes with too little sleep and too much adrenaline. The rain had stopped and there was a thin grey mist hanging in the air, leaving Inverness looking even more like a ghost town than the hour itself. “I don’t know,” she admitted. “All I know is that
the guy who owns the garage where Kit keeps the Land Rover is called Lachlan Fraser.”
Caroline snorted. “Like that really narrows it down.”
“I take it Fraser’s a pretty common name hereabouts, then?”
“You could say that. The ancestral seat of the clan chief is about half a dozen miles up the road. Fraser is about as common a name round Inverness as Smith would be in London.” She put the car in gear and cruised towards the centre.
“Where are you going?” Fiona asked.
“When in doubt, ask a policeman.” Caroline headed on down the main road. “We’ll either find the police station, or we’ll find some night-shift woolly suits in a patrol car sneaking a fly bacon butty at the all-night snack bar.”
“You think Inverness runs to an all-night snack bar?” Fiona said, the professional sceptic.
Caroline flashed her a dark grin. “Don’t make the mistake of falling for the tourist board propaganda. Inverness is a lot more Morvern Callar than it is Local Hero.”
“Does that mean you know where to score me a wrap of speed?”
Caroline’s eyebrows rose. “I suspect you’re either too early in the morning or too late at night for any action like that round here. I take it that was a joke?”
Fiona’s grin was savage. “Only technically. Jokes are supposed to be funny, and the way I’m feeling right now is anything but. Better make do with the all-night snack bar and a shot of caffeine. If I do end up in the arms of the law, the last thing I need is for them to discover I’m pumped full of amphetamines.”
“Hang on, there we go.” Caroline was off on a tangent, waving over to her left where a DIY super store occupied most of the horizon. Its vast car park contained a fish and chip van, a police car and the business end of an articulated lorry. She veered into the slip road and cruised across to the police car.