Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
‘How long did Paul Jeffries drive for you?’
‘Two, three years.’
‘Then what?’
Dalrymple shrugged. ‘He still came by. Bit of a rough
diamond, our Paul. He never divulged how he was making a
crust.’
‘He left or you fired him?’
‘I think the job just wasn’t as exciting as he’d hoped for.’
Rebus looked Dalrymple up and down. ‘You’re well-
educated, I can tell, and you come from money. No disrespect,
sir, but I’d say you wouldn’t have had much in your arsenal if
Cafferty had really wanted to put the moves on you.’
Dalrymple offered the thinnest of smiles. ‘I had friends,
officer. Quite a lot of friends. They gambled, ended up owing
money. I’m talking about people of influence, politicians and
the like. Maybe even a Chief Constable or two . . .’
‘Making you untouchable?’
‘I was able to persuade Big Ger that it would be more
trouble than it was worth, should he attempt to unseat me.’
Rebus nodded his understanding. ‘I don’t suppose David
Minton was one of your punters?’
‘He came in a couple of times – always with a gorgeous
young woman on his arm, as if that would stop us noticing that
the fairer sex weren’t his primary interest.’ John B was in the
water now, but unable to persuade the other dogs to follow. ‘I
think we might need to make an intervention,’ Dalrymple said
with a sigh. He led Rebus through a gap in the wall on to the
sand, tugging a dog lead from the pocket of his coat.
‘Can you give me the name of the care home?’ Rebus was
asking. ‘The one Mr Jeffries is in?’
‘Absolutely. But I’d be grateful for some sort of thread
through the labyrinth.’
‘Meaning?’
‘Meaning what the hell is this all about?’
‘I’m unable to say at present.’
‘You almost sound as if you don’t know.’
Rebus didn’t like to admit that this wasn’t exactly wide of
the mark. John B meantime had decided to welcome his
owner’s new friend by shaking himself free of seawater in
Rebus’s vicinity.
‘Probably should have warned you about that,’ Dalrymple
said as Rebus glared at the dog.
‘Compston refused point blank,’ Clarke told Fox. ‘You can
imagine how that went down. Give James Page his due, he got
straight on to the Chief Constable.’
‘And?’
‘Told him it wouldn’t look good if it got out to the media –
police surveillance on Dennis Stark and the officers involved
are refusing to cooperate with the murder inquiry.’
‘Not that the news would ever leak.’
‘Perish the thought,’ Clarke said.
‘I’m sure DCI Page said as much.’
She nodded slowly. ‘So now Compston and the others are on
their way here.’
‘No more mayhem to report in the interim?’
‘Not that I’ve heard.’
‘What do you think Joe Stark is doing?’
‘Seething.’ She thought for a moment. ‘And plotting. He’s
already given an interview to a tame Glasgow journalist.
Accuses us of sitting on our hands.’
‘I’ve not seen much evidence of that.’
They were at the bottom of the staircase now, on the ground
floor of Fettes. They emerged from behind the reception desk
into the waiting area. Glass walls gave a view on to Fettes
Avenue. Clarke checked the time on her phone.
‘By the way,’ she said, ‘James isn’t happy about you taking
part in the interviews.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because until this morning you were attached to
Compston’s team. You’re just too close to it all.’
‘That’s precisely why I should be in the room!’
‘You can listen to the recordings. Anyone tells me
something you know to be a lie, you let me know.’
‘That’s hardly the same thing.’
‘I know, Malcolm, but James is right.’ She stared him out.
He exhaled and slumped on to one of the seats. Clarke touched
her hand to the back of his neck. ‘You know he’s right,’ she
went on.
‘Don’t tell me John bloody Rebus is invited, though?’ Fox
folded his arms, defying her to give him bad news.
‘He’ll be backstage, same as you. In fact I should let him
know they’re on their way.’
But when she called, Rebus didn’t pick up.
‘Here they come,’ Fox warned her, as two cars he
recognised roared into the driveway. ‘And while I’m no
expert in automotive technique, I’d say they’re not at their
sunniest . . .’
Rebus had phoned Cafferty with the news, mostly because he
felt smug. It had taken him only a couple of hours of old-
fashioned detective work. The online world could stuff that in
its pipe and vape it. But when Cafferty had asked for the
address, Rebus had backed off a little.
‘I need to be there when you see him,’ he had demanded.
‘No you don’t,’ Cafferty had countered. ‘You know I’ll
track him down by myself if I have to. It’ll take time, though,
time that could see the mortuary filling up . . .’
Rebus dismissed the threat. ‘I go with you, or I end this call
right now.’
He waited, letting the silence build. He imagined Milligan’s
at the height of its popularity, a poker game in progress,
everything in and just two players left. Fine clothes, laughter
and swirling smoke, all rendered meaningless in the moment.
The phone went dead. Rebus stared at it and gave a rueful
smile. His Saab was on one of the side streets off the
Promenade. He smoked a cigarette as he walked in that
direction, keeping the phone in his other hand. With the
cigarette clamped in his mouth, stinging his eyes, he dug out his
car key and unlocked the doors. Got in and slid the key into the
ignition. Sat there with the door open until he had finished the
cigarette. He stubbed it into the ashtray and closed the door,
starting the engine.
His phone started ringing. He checked who was calling.
Siobhan Clarke. He let it ring. The road was a dead end, so he
did a three-point turn and headed away from the beach, towards
Portobello High Street, thinking maybe he should have treated
himself to a fish supper. His phone rang again as he was turning
right, entering the stream of traffic heading towards the city.
Bingo.
‘Yes?’ he said, answering.
‘Fine,’ Big Ger Cafferty spat. ‘Let’s do it your way. Give me
the address and I’ll meet you there.’
Rebus calculated that it would take him twenty or thirty
minutes to get to the care home. ‘I’ll phone you back in ten with
the details,’ he advised. ‘Make sure you’re ready.’
‘I’ve already got my coat on.’
Rebus ended the call.
He was actually only five minutes away from his destination
when he sent Cafferty the text. Meadowlea was a modern
single-storey building in the Grange, within tottering distance
of Astley Ainsley hospital. A phone call had confirmed that
Paul Jeffries was both a resident and in a bad way.
‘Early-onset dementia with a host of complications – we’re
more what you might call a hospice than a regular residence,’
Rebus was informed.
He waited in the car park for almost fifteen minutes before
the black taxi chugged through the gateway, depositing a
scowling Cafferty.
‘You waiting for a proficiency badge or something?’
Cafferty said.
‘A word of thanks might be in order. But I’ll settle for an
explanation.’
‘Here’s what you get instead – you get to stand outside the
room while I have a word.’
But Rebus shook his head. Cafferty made an exasperated
sound and stepped past him. He tried yanking the glass door
open, but it was locked tight. Rebus pressed the buzzer and
waited.
‘Yes?’
He leaned in towards the intercom. ‘I phoned earlier. We’re
here to see Mr Paul Jeffries.’
‘In you come, then.’
This time the door opened for Cafferty. He stood with hands
clasped behind his back, looking to left and right. There were
long corridors, protected by further doors. Rebus could smell
disinfectant. The antechamber they were in held two chairs and
one oversized pot plant. It looked to Rebus like a palm tree of
some kind, its thick leaves dark green and shiny.
One of the doors opened and a staff member dressed in
white gestured for them to follow her.
‘This is nice,’ she said. ‘Paul doesn’t get many visitors.’ She
took one look at Cafferty’s face and became less certain. ‘You
are
friends of his?’
‘I’m just a sherpa,’ Rebus explained. ‘But Mr Cafferty here
knew Paul some years back.’
They stopped outside a door with the name ‘Paul’ on it. The
attendant knocked and turned the handle. It was a self-contained
space with a bathroom off. A hospital-style bed against one
wall, but also a fireplace with two chairs and a TV/DVD. A
man was seated in one of the chairs, staring at a darts match but
with the sound turned off.
‘You were told he might not say anything?’
Rebus nodded and thanked the woman, ushering her out and
closing the door on her offer to bring some tea. Cafferty stood
in front of Paul Jeffries, then bent down so his face was at eye
level.
‘All right, Paul?’ he said.
The room was stifling. Rebus removed his coat and took a
look around. No mementoes from the resident’s life. Just a few
films and TV shows on DVD, and some fake flowers in a vase.
There were no paintings or photos on the walls. A radio sat on a
bedside cabinet, along with a jug of water and a glass.
Cafferty was waving a hand in front of the man’s face. The
eyes blinked without evident recognition. Cafferty clicked his
fingers a few times, then clapped his hands together. The seated
man flinched, but tried seeing past the blockage to where the
darts match was still being played. Cafferty straightened up,
picked up the remote and killed the picture.
‘Paul, you prick, it’s me,’ he rasped.
But the blank screen was now enjoying the seated figure’s
attention. The man was dressed in jogging pants and top, maybe
with a T-shirt beneath. Disposable clothes – cheap; easy to get
on and off. There were food stains down the front, and one of
Jeffries’ hands cupped his groin. Facially, the man was as
Cafferty had described him, but older, almost drained of vigour,
and his shrunken cheeks indicated that he had lost his teeth at
some point and was not currently bothering with dentures.
Cafferty looked at Rebus.
‘Early-onset dementia,’ Rebus explained.
‘Maybe a slap would jolt him out of it.’
‘I doubt it’s a recognised medical technique.’
Cafferty too was feeling the heat. He kept his coat on, but
mopped his brow with the sleeve.
‘It’s about Acorn House, Paul,’ he told the seated figure.
‘Remember Acorn House? Remember what happened? Don’t
think you can just sit there, you bastard!’ He grabbed Jeffries by
the shoulders and shook him. There was no resistance, and
Rebus feared the man’s neck might snap. He stepped forward
and pulled Cafferty away.
‘Christ’s sake,’ he said.
Cafferty looked as if someone had hooked him up to the
mains. ‘There’s no way he doesn’t know we’re here or what
this is about,’ he spat. ‘Fucker’s just putting on a show!’
He wrestled free of Rebus and was hauling Jeffries to his
feet when the door opened.
‘Brought some tea anyway,’ the attendant was saying. She
dropped the tray when she took in the scene, her mouth opening
in a silent gasp.
‘It’s not what you think,’ Rebus said, knowing how
ridiculous he sounded. The woman had fled back into the
corridor, presumably to fetch the cavalry. ‘We’ve got to go,’ he
told Cafferty.
‘Not yet.’
‘Look at him, for God’s sake. That’s an empty shell you’re
holding.’
Cafferty relented and dropped Jeffries back into his chair.
But he had the man’s slack-jawed attention now. Cafferty got in
so close they were almost touching noses. ‘Don’t think you’ve
seen the last of me, Paul. I’ll be dropping by one of these
nights, and we’ll have our little chat then. Just the two of us.’
Rebus, coat tucked under one arm, led Cafferty out of the
room and back down the corridor. They had reached the
vestibule by the time the attendant hove into view from the
opposite direction, bringing a good-sized male colleague with
her. Rebus pulled open the front door and shoved Cafferty out,
then closed it again so that the lock clicked, leaving him still
inside.
By the time it dawned on Cafferty, it was too late. Rebus
turned to face the two attendants, hands held up in
appeasement.
‘Sorry about that,’ he said. ‘Just a bit of rough and tumble to
try and shake him out of whatever torpor he’s in.’
‘We have CCTV,’ the male said, pointing towards the
cameras on the ceiling. ‘We’ll be reporting this.’
‘As is right and proper,’ Rebus said. Cafferty started shaking
the door, trying to force it open. ‘But if you want me to calm
that beast out there, just tell me if Mr Jeffries gets any other
visitors.’
The man and woman shared a look, flinching when
Cafferty’s foot connected with the door.
‘Mr Dalrymple’s not been in for a few weeks,’ the male