Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
junction. Fox sat back and admired the view, wondering how
long it would take Hughes to work out they were headed in the
wrong direction.
*
Clarke had reported to James Page in person, delivering both
note and bullet. Afterwards, he had folded his arms and,
transfixed by the two items on his desk, told her to give him ten
minutes, which was why she was back in the body of the kirk
with Esson, Ogilvie and the rest of the team. There was no sign
of DS Charlie Sykes, and Clarke said as much.
‘The Invisible Man,’ Esson commented.
‘He had something he needed to do in Leith,’ Ogilvie added.
He had pulled his chair over to Esson’s desk so she could give
him the news, having been briefed by Clarke on the drive back
from Cafferty’s house.
‘Boss is deciding next steps,’ Clarke told them now.
‘Changes things a bit, doesn’t it?’ Ogilvie offered.
‘Maybe – John Rebus isn’t sure there’s a solid connection. I
mean, the notes, yes, but not the murder and the shooting.’
‘What’s Rebus got to do with it?’ Ogilvie queried with a
frown.
‘Nothing,’ Clarke conceded. ‘He’s just the one who
persuaded Cafferty to come to us rather than start enquiries of
his own.’ Clarke rubbed at her eyes. ‘Did Christine mention
Linlithgow?’
Ogilvie nodded. ‘Though again . . .’
‘I know: barely any connection worth the name.’
‘Tea would cheer us up,’ Esson declared. ‘And I’m buying.’
‘That would be great,’ Clarke said.
Esson grabbed her purse and headed off to the canteen,
Clarke taking her seat next to Ogilvie. She asked him what he’d
been working on.
‘Not much. Collating various reports and interviews, looking
at the crime scene stuff.’
‘Anything I need to know?’
‘Well . . .’
‘No matter how fanciful or thin it’s going to sound,’ Clarke
assured him.
‘I was reading through the scene of crime report, plus the
two interviews conducted with Lord Minton’s housekeeper.’
‘Jean Marischal? More of a cleaner, wasn’t she?’
‘If you like. But here’s the thing.’ Ogilvie pulled out photos
from the crime scene. ‘First officers to arrive state that the desk
drawer was open a couple of inches.’
‘Yes, Deborah Quant said the same,’ Clarke remembered.
‘You can see it here.’ Ogilvie slid a photo towards her.
‘Then later, the SOCOs pulled the drawer all the way open to
get shots of the contents. Mrs Marischal tells us she cleaned in
the den but that the desk drawer was seldom unlocked. Lord
Minton kept the key on him – and it was found in his pocket
after his death. What does a locked drawer suggest to you?’
‘That there was something he didn’t want her to see.’
‘And you’d guess that to be . . .?’
‘Well, he was seated at the desk paying bills, so maybe his
chequebook?’
‘That’s what I thought too. But look at the contents of the
drawer again.’
Clarke saw stationery, a second chequebook,
correspondence, various paper clips and bulldog clips and even
a bottle of Tippex.
‘What is it I’m not seeing?’
‘Something that isn’t there. I’m guessing he was the tidy
sort, and that the chequebook he’d taken out of the drawer
usually sat on top of the other one.’ Ogilvie traced a finger over
an empty section of the drawer. ‘But what was it that used to be
in this space here?’
‘Stuff could have shifted around when the SOCOs pulled it
open.’
‘Except they tell me they used extreme care.’
‘You’re saying the intruder took something?’
‘Desk drawer was open a couple of inches. I doubt that
would have been comfortable for anyone sitting there trying to
do some work.’
‘True,’ Clarke said.
‘So either the intruder took it, or Lord Minton had opened it
himself and was taking something out when he heard a noise.’
Clarke was peering more closely at the photo. ‘Couldn’t just
have been the other chequebook?’
‘No way of telling for sure.’
‘Did Jean Marischal ever see the drawer when it was open?
Never so much as a glimpse?’
‘Worth talking to her again?’
‘Maybe.’
Page was standing in the doorway. He signalled for Clarke
to join him. She patted Ogilvie on the shoulder as she got up.
‘Close the door,’ he told her once she was inside his office.
‘Sit down if you like.’
Clarke remained standing.
‘I’ve already had enough grief since we went public with the
Minton note,’ he began. ‘Only effect it seems to have produced
is more noise from upstairs. Everyone wants this thing cleared
up and no one wants it getting messy.’
‘So we keep the Cafferty note to ourselves?’
‘For the time being. Anything that seems to link a prominent
member of the legal establishment to a local thug is hardly
going to please the powers above.’
‘You’ll talk to Shona MacBryer?’
‘Fiscal’s office need to know. I’ll make Shona see that a
quiet interview with Cafferty at his home is preferable to
bringing him in.’
‘How about the team here?’
‘I assume word’s already gone around.’
‘Only Esson and Ogilvie so far. But when we interview
Cafferty . . .’
‘I’ll brief the troops.’
‘And then pray for no leaks.’
‘Indeed.’ He leaned back in his chair and pressed his hands
together, the tips of his fingers touching his lips. ‘What’s your
gut feeling here, Siobhan?’
‘The attacks themselves are very different, but the notes look
identical.’
‘So we should be seeking a connection between Cafferty and
Minton?’
‘Cafferty says there isn’t one.’
‘Some sort of vigilante?’
Clarke shrugged and watched as Page pressed the palms of
his hands flat on his desk.
‘What about Rebus?’ he asked.
‘What about him?’
‘He’s close to Cafferty, isn’t he?’
‘In a manner of speaking. You think we should attach him to
the case?’
‘In a consultative capacity. What’s the old saying about
pissing out of the tent rather than in?’
‘Should I talk to him then?’
‘I don’t suppose it can do any harm, can it?’
Clarke didn’t know how to answer that, so ran her tongue
across her lips instead and shifted her feet slightly, eyes on the
floor.
‘Very well then,’ Page decided, pressing his hands together
once more as if in prayer. ‘Talk to the man.’
Clarke nodded and made her exit. Christine Esson was
waiting with her tea. Clarke took it and moved into the corridor,
taking out her phone and making the call.
‘Yes, Siobhan?’ Rebus said by way of answer.
‘Page wants you inside the tent rather than out.’
‘Is that even possible?’
‘You’d be acting in a consultative capacity.’
‘Like Sherlock Holmes? Would I need invoices and stuff?
And a housekeeper and a sidekick?’
‘Are you interested or not?’
‘He really wants me because I’m a conduit to Cafferty?’
‘Yes.’
‘Is Cafferty’s note going to be kept out of the public
domain?’
‘For now.’
‘Formal interview with him at his house?’
‘Page thinks he can clear it with Shona MacBryer.’
‘Then what’s left for me to do?’
‘I’m guessing you’ll think of something.’
‘Do I detect a lack of enthusiasm, DI Clarke?’
‘Only because I know what you’re like – put you in a tent,
you start trying to knock the poles down.’
‘Better than peeing on you from outside, though, eh?’
‘Let me think about that for a moment.’ She could almost
hear Rebus break into a smile.
‘Consultative capacity,’ he echoed. ‘I quite like that.’
‘I thought you might. Just remember – you’re still not a cop.
No warrant card, no real powers.’
‘Well, tell Page I’m considering his proposal, but I don’t
come cheap.’
‘You’d do this for no pay at all, John – we both know it.’
‘Maybe we should meet later to compare notes.’
‘The Oxford Bar?’
‘Around nine?’
‘Okay.’
‘And why not bring Malcolm along?’
‘Malcolm’s not part of this case.’
‘I know that, but I’d like him there anyway. The two of you
have gotten so busy, it’ll be nice for you to catch up.’
‘See you at nine, then.’
Clarke ended the call and took a slurp from the cardboard
cup as she walked back into the incident room. Ogilvie seemed
to have been sharing his theory with Esson. Esson was holding
a close-up photo of the desk drawer, peering at it.
‘What do you think?’ Clarke asked her.
‘It’s interesting.’
‘I think so too.’ Clarke looked at Ogilvie. ‘Christine’s
already had a bit of an away day – you ready for yours?’
‘Absolutely,’ Ronnie Ogilvie said.
Twelve
There was no longer anyone keeping guard outside David
Minton’s house on St Bernard’s Crescent. A set of keys was
being held at HQ, so Clarke had brought those, along with a
note of the number for the alarm system. Having unlocked the
door, she punched the code in while Ogilvie stooped to pick up
waiting mail.
‘Anything?’ she asked.
‘Mostly flyers.’ He added the collection to a pile on the
nearby table.
The house was beginning to smell musty, and with the
heating turned off there was a pronounced chill.
‘Hope the pipes don’t freeze,’ Ogilvie commented.
‘Minton’s study is this way,’ Clarke said, leading him past
the foot of the imposing staircase. The curtains had been drawn
closed, so she yanked them open. The window gave a view
down on to the small back garden. The laundry room was
directly below. Would Minton have heard the glass breaking?
There was a venerable transistor radio on the desk, but no
evidence that he’d had it switched on that evening. Clarke
settled herself in the chair and slid the drawer open a couple of
inches.
‘More or less right?’ she asked.
‘But remember, the deceased had a bit more girth to
him . . .’
‘A bit?’ she chided him. ‘So the chair would have been
further out from the desk?’ She pushed it back. ‘About here?’
Ogilvie nodded. ‘From where it’s hellish uncomfortable to
write cheques.’
They studied the photos they’d brought with them. The
chequebook and pen sat eight inches from the edge of the desk.
It would have been almost impossible for Minton to reach either
with the drawer open the way it had been.
‘So we’re back where we started,’ Clarke said. ‘Either the
victim opened the drawer, or his attacker did.’
The drawer itself had been emptied, everything bagged as
evidence and taken away to be examined. Clarke slid it out
completely and held it up to the light, then placed it on top of
the desk.
‘This is where the gap was?’ she checked with Ogilvie.
‘Where you reckon something might have been removed?’
Ogilvie looked at the area she was circling with her finger.
‘Yes.’
‘Something measuring – what? Nine inches by six? A book
of some kind?’
‘Not quite a rectangle, though, is it?’ he qualified, showing
Clarke the photo again.
‘Not quite,’ she conceded. ‘And the mark on the base of the
drawer?’ Again she pointed to the spot where the putative item
had once sat.
‘Grease? Ink, maybe?’
‘Worth getting forensics to take a look?’
‘Maybe, yes.’
Clarke made the call to the lab at Howden Hall. Then, to
Ogilvie: ‘They’re asking if we can drop it in, save them the
trek.’
Ogilvie shrugged his acquiescence.
‘Fine,’ Clarke said into the phone. Then, again to Ogilvie:
‘Go see if you can find a bin bag for us to carry it in.’ He was
heading out of the room as Clarke told the lab they’d be there in
half an hour or so. But then she remembered something.
‘Actually, maybe closer to an hour. I need to go back to Fettes
first. Got something else I want you to take a look at – bullet,
probably nine mil.’
‘You go months and months without seeing a bullet,’ the
voice on the other end of the phone told her. ‘And then you get
two in one week.’
Clarke blinked twice before finding her voice. ‘Say again?’
‘Another bullet came in a couple of days back.’
‘Came in from where?’
‘Extracted from a tree in the Hermitage.’
‘What happened exactly?’
‘No idea.’
‘So who can I talk to?’
‘I can let you know that when you come in.’
‘Fine. An hour then.’
‘Any later and we’ll have shut up shop for the day.’
‘Justice never sleeps.’
‘Maybe not. But it does
have a darts match and a late supper
with the girlfriend.’
The phone went dead in her hand just as Ogilvie returned
from the kitchen with a large white bin bag.
‘Brabantia,’ he said. ‘Only the best for his lordship.’ Then
he saw the look on Clarke’s face.
‘Same day someone took a potshot at Cafferty, a bullet was
fired into a tree in The Hermitage. That’s not a million miles
from Cafferty’s neighbourhood, is it?’
‘Not a million miles, no. Actually, probably less than two.’
‘That’s what I thought,’ Clarke said, helping Ogilvie
manoeuvre the drawer into the bag.
Cafferty was in the back seat, the two bodyguards in front of