Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
slatted blinds needed replacing. From what he could see of the
upstairs dwelling, the owner was a tad more house proud: the
curtains looked new, as did the front door with its fan-shaped
frosted window and brass fittings. Fox, knowing that Anthony
wasn’t yet home from work, peered through the letter box,
discovering little – a flight of red-carpeted stairs filled his field
of vision. Framed prints on the walls of motorbikes and their
leather-clad riders.
He returned to his car and waited, the radio playing at low
volume. It was a quiet street, though far from gentrification. He
got the feeling that if he sat there much longer, an inquisitive
local would emerge to check him out. One thing he had noted:
no bikes on the roadway outside the maisonette, or in the
flagstoned front garden. How many had Anthony said? Five?
He got out of the car again and did a little circuit, establishing
that the maisonette backed on to an enclosed drying green,
which boasted no enclosure larger than a garden shed. There
was a park beyond, really just a stretch of well-trodden grass
that could accommodate a makeshift game of football, plus a
graffiti-covered set of concrete ramps, presumably for use by
skateboarders. On the other side of the park sat three high-rise
blocks, and next to those, two rows of lock-up garages.
Buttoning up his coat, Fox started walking, sticking to the
paved route so as to save his shoes getting muddied. A cheap
souped-up saloon car passed him, its occupants barely out of
their teens. Both front windows were down so the world outside
could share their taste in what they presumably thought was
music. They paid Fox no heed though. He wasn’t like Rebus –
he didn’t
look
like a cop. A detective he’d once investigated when in Complaints had described him as resembling ‘a
soulless, spunkless middle manager from the most boring
company on the planet’. Which was fine – he’d been called
worse. It usually meant he was closing in on a result. And the
fact that he didn’t stand out from the crowd could be useful. As
far as the kids in the car were concerned, he barely existed – if
they’d thought him a threat, the car would have stopped and a
scene of sorts would have ensued. Instead of which, he arrived
at the lock-ups without incident.
There were a dozen of them, all but one with its doors
locked tight. A car was jutting out from the twelfth, jacked up
while a wheel was changed. The lock-up had power, and a radio
had been plugged in, Radio 2 providing the soundtrack while a
man in presentable blue overalls did his chores.
‘Nice car,’ Fox commented. The man had wiry silver hair
and a stubbled face, a cigarette hanging from his mouth. ‘Ford
Capri, right? Don’t see many these days.’
‘Because they’re rustbuckets. Dodgy engines, too.’
The bonnet was up, so Fox took a look. He had scant
knowledge of cars, and to his eyes the engine looked much like
any other.
‘You in the market?’ the man asked. ‘Only I know there are
collectors out there – I’ve had offers.’
‘Motorbikes are more my thing,’ Fox said. ‘Friend of mine
lives near here. He’s got a nice collection.’
‘Anthony?’ The man nodded towards the lock-up opposite.
‘That’s where he keeps them.’ Fox turned his head towards the
graffiti-covered rollover door. There was the usual turn-handle
with its central lock, but heavy-duty bolts and padlocks had also
been added to either edge of the door.
‘He was supposed to be showing me them,’ Fox explained,
‘but he’s not home.’
‘He’s often here – takes one out for a run, brings it back,
swaps to another. What’s your favourite?’
‘I like Moto Guzzis,’ Fox said, remembering the brand from
one of the prints on the staircase.
‘About as reliable as my Capri,’ the man snorted, flicking
away the stub of his cigarette. ‘The older ones, at any rate.’
‘I’m surprised he doesn’t keep them at that self-storage
place where he works.’ Fox was studying the surroundings. ‘Bit
more security than here.’
‘This is handier, though, and he’s careful – never leaves the
doors open long enough for anyone to get a good look.’
Fox nodded his understanding. ‘Ever meet his uncle?’ he
asked casually.
‘Uncle?’
‘Uncle Hamish – he was down here a few weeks ago from
Inverness. I just thought Anthony might want to show off his
collection.’
‘Chubby? Fiftyish? Red hair and freckles?’
Fox thought of the photographs he’d seen. ‘Sounds about
right,’ he said.
‘Anthony didn’t introduce us, but aye, he was here.’ The
man was wiping his hands on a rag. ‘I’ve got to say, you don’t
look like one of Anthony’s mates.’
‘What do they look like?’
‘Younger than you, for a start.’
‘We drink together at the Gifford.’
The man’s suspicions eased. ‘He’s mentioned the place –
seems to like it there.’
‘It’s all right.’
The man gave a lopsided smile. ‘I thought maybe you were a
cop or something – sorry about that.’
‘No problem,’ Fox assured him.
‘Not that you look like one, mind.’
Fox nodded slowly. ‘My name’s Malcolm,’ he said.’
‘George Jones. I’d offer a handshake, but . . .’ He showed
Fox his oil-stained fingers.
‘No problem – I better get back and see if he’s turned up.
Good luck getting your Capri back on the road.’
‘No chance of that,’ Jones said, patting its roof. ‘This isn’t
so much a garage as a hospice – I’m just keeping the patient
comfortable until the end.’
Fox’s face tightened. He offered a half-hearted wave as he
turned and started to walk, pulling out his phone to call Jude.
He would take over from her for an hour or two, but he knew he
might well be back here later. He imagined himself calling
Ricky Compston with the news –
I’ve got Hamish Wright and
his booty. Both are here when you want them . . .
He was almost smiling to himself as Jude answered his call.
‘About bloody time you checked in,’ she announced.
‘Doctors want a word with us.’
‘What about?’
‘If you want my best guess, they’re readying to pull the
plug.’
‘What?’
But Jude was too busy sobbing to say any more.
Thirty Eight
Esson and Ogilvie stood in front of Siobhan Clarke’s desk as
they delivered their report, the conclusion of which was that
they had found nothing much of interest.
‘Nothing?’ Clarke felt it necessary to check.
Ogilvie stood with his hands behind his back, happy to let
his partner do the talking.
‘We’ve got a list of everyone who works for the two
companies, and we’ll run it to see if anyone rings alarm bells,
but I’m not hugely hopeful.’
‘The company that does the flyering . . .’
‘Higher Flyer,’ Esson reminded Clarke.
‘Higher Flyer, yes – do they do any work in and around
Linlithgow?’
‘Strictly Edinburgh and Glasgow. They actually don’t have
many restaurants on their books. Mostly they do comedy shows
and that sort of thing – stocking pubs and clubs with flyers.
They would certainly cover the areas where Minton and
Cafferty live, but it would depend on the client. Newington
Spice specified the local neighbourhood.’
‘Most of the people doing the flyering are students,’ Ogilvie
chipped in.
‘Our guy would be in his forties,’ Clarke commented. Her
eyes drifted towards the closed door of James Page’s office.
‘Always supposing John’s theory is correct.’
‘What’s he doing in there?’ Esson asked, nodding towards
the door.
‘Trying to persuade DCI Page that a retired detective, now a
civilian, should become bait for an armed serial killer.’
‘Not going to happen, is it?’
Clarke stared at Esson. ‘John can be quite persuasive.’
‘As I’ve found to my cost. It would be nice now and again to
go on a wild goose chase that actually had a goose at the end of
it.’
‘Wild or otherwise,’ Ogilvie added.
Clarke pinched the bridge of her nose. ‘What about
VampPrint?’ she asked.
‘They do have a storage facility for everything they print,’
Esson answered, ‘but in the case of Newington Spice, all their
stock went either to Higher Flyer or to the restaurant itself.
That’s not to say someone on the staff couldn’t have helped
themselves, and again we’ll run all the employee names through
the system.’
‘One thing we do know is that no one with the surname
Holroyd works for either firm,’ Ogilvie stated. Esson was about
to add something, but broke off as the door to Page’s office
opened. Rebus marched past Clarke’s desk without saying
anything or making eye contact. The door remained open, and a
few moments later Page was standing there, indicating that
Clarke should join him. She headed in, closing the door again
after her. Page was back behind his desk, twisting a pen in both
hands.
‘At least there were no raised voices,’ she commented. ‘John
must be disappointed, though . . .’ She saw the look on Page’s
face. ‘You gave him the okay?’
‘With the proviso that members of our team will be nearby,
as well as two firearms officers. As John says, he’s been on top
of this throughout, putting our own efforts to shame in certain
respects.’
Clarke bristled. ‘I’m not sure that’s entirely fair.’
‘Me neither. On the other hand, we’d have known nothing
about Acorn House if John hadn’t told us.’
‘How much
did
he tell you, sir?’
‘Men in positions of authority abusing kids, the whole thing
covered up, one young lad thought to be dead after some sex
game or other . . .’ Page gave a pained look. ‘Bloody horrible to
contemplate, every single bit of it.’
‘I agree.’
‘And after this is over, we need to make sure something’s
done – the Chief has to be amenable to an inquiry of some
kind.’
‘An inquiry flagging up one of our own as a paedophile?’
Page gave another grimace. ‘What’s the alternative?’
‘I’m fairly sure the Chief will present you with some.’
‘Sweep everything back under the carpet, you mean? The
world’s changed, Siobhan. This’ll get out there one way or
another.’
‘Well, if we need a friendly crime reporter . . .’
‘Your chum Laura Smith? Maybe it’ll come to that. Not that
the media seemed to do much of anything last time round.’
‘One or two tried.’ Clarke shrugged.
Page was thoughtful, eyes on his pen as he played with it. ‘I
need to authorise the firearms.’
‘Yes, sir. I’ll let you get on with it.’ She turned to leave.
‘You’ll be there too, of course – John more or less
insisted.’
Clarke paused in the doorway, turned and nodded her
acceptance, then headed back into the main office.
Rebus was there, talking with Esson and Ogilvie. His eyes
met Clarke’s, and he gave a wink as he grinned.
Rebus had stocked up on supplies – a couple of sandwiches,
newspaper, several CDs to pass the time. But it turned out he
couldn’t work the hi-fi – it didn’t have a CD slot, for one thing.
There was a remote, and when he pressed it, music emerged
from speakers in the corners of the ceiling, but it was nothing
he wanted to listen to. Even the dog looked unimpressed. The
terrier had been wary at first, especially after picking up the
scent of another canine. The Dalrymples had taken basket and
John B both, along with food and water bowls. But Rebus had
found some dry stuff in a cupboard and tipped a helping into a
soup bowl, placing it on the kitchen floor for the terrier. It had
been quite the reunion when he had arrived at the cat and dog
home.
‘We’ve been calling him Brillo,’ one of the staff had
explained, bringing the dog into the reception area. Recognising
Rebus, Brillo had strained at the leash. ‘You sure you only need
him for a day or two?’
‘That’s right,’ Rebus had said, avoiding the staff member’s
eyes.
He got up every ten minutes or so and looked out of the
window. It was just before ten, and he’d been there almost four
hours. The unmarked car was not quite directly outside – they
didn’t want to scare Holroyd away. Two officers in the car,
though they hadn’t been especially keen when told they might
be pulling an all-nighter. Rebus took out his mobile and
checked it. The officers had his number and he had theirs. First
sign of anything, either they would call or he would. Esson and
Ogilvie were out there somewhere too, traipsing the
neighbouring streets in the guise of lovers on their way home.
Esson had already sent one text to complain of impending
blisters, to which Rebus had responded that she should get a
piggyback from her colleague.
With no bed, Brillo had settled on the sofa, but every time
Rebus moved, he looked interested, in case a walk was in the
offing.
‘Sorry, pal,’ Rebus said, not for the first time.
He climbed the stairs and used the loo, then walked into the
spare bedroom. Siobhan Clarke lay stretched out on the narrow