Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
Esson.
‘I’m all heart,’ he told her. ‘Official confirmation.’
With a sigh and a rolling of the eyes, Esson held the box out
towards him.
It had taken Rebus only a couple of minutes with a map to work
out that the quickest route to Ullapool was the A9 to Inverness,
then the A835 heading west. He filled the Saab with petrol,
offered up a prayer that the old crate would survive the journey,
and piled water, cigarettes and crisps on the passenger seat,
along with a cut-price CD that promised him the best rock
songs of the seventies and eighties.
The A9 was not a road he relished. He had driven up and
down it several times a couple of years back on a previous case.
Some of it was dualled, but long, winding stretches weren’t,
and those were where you tended to get stuck behind a convoy
of lorries or venerable caravans towed by underpowered saloon
cars. Inverness was 150 miles from Edinburgh, but it would
take him three hours, and maybe half that again to reach his
final destination.
Having witnessed Cafferty’s reaction at the nursing home,
he had decided to say nothing about this trip. Not until he was
safely back in Edinburgh. As he crossed the Forth Road Bridge,
he saw its replacement taking shape over to the west. The
project was apparently on time and under budget, unlike the
Edinburgh tram route. He had yet to take a tram anywhere in
the city. At his age, buses were free to use, but he never took
those either.
‘Me and you,’ he told his Saab, giving the steering wheel a
reassuring pat.
North as far as Perth was dual carriageway and relatively
quiet, but once past Perth the road narrowed and new average-
speed cameras didn’t help. He began to wish he had
commandeered a patrol car and driver, with blue lights and
siren. But then he would have had to explain the purpose of the
trip.
A kid was killed and I need to talk to the man who took him
away and buried him . . .
The fact that David Ratner had been in trouble recently
meant that he might at least be available to answer a few
questions. On the other hand, how willing would he be? Rebus
mulled that over as he drove. Cafferty had helped cover up a
crime – possibly a murder. In the scheme of things, he should
already be in custody, but that wouldn’t help solve the mystery.
He would clam up, and his lawyer would have him back on the
street in no time. This way, as Rebus had argued to Siobhan
Clarke, at least there was the possibility of closure – retribution
could come later, if the Fiscal’s office decided it was feasible.
Rebus was a realist if nothing else. Down the years he had seen
the guilty walk free and the (relatively) innocent suffer
punishment. He had watched – as furiously impotent as Albert
Stout or Patrick Spiers – as the rich and powerful played the
system. He had come to appreciate that those with influence
could be more cunning and ruthless than those with none.
‘The overworld and the underworld,’ he muttered to himself,
pulling out to overtake an artic. Having done so, he found
himself stuck behind a Megabus with a smiling cartoon
character waving at him from its rear end, advertising the cheap
fares. Five slow miles later, he was imagining himself beating
his cheery tormentor with a stick. The CD wasn’t helping either
– he didn’t recognise most of the tunes, and power ballads
coupled with big hair had never been his thing. He changed to
the radio, until the reception died as white-capped mountains
began to rise either side of the road. There was snow on the
verges, turned grey from exhaust fumes, but the day was
overcast and a couple of degrees above zero. He hadn’t
entertained the possibility that the route might become difficult
or impassable. How good were his tyres? When had he last
checked them? He glanced towards his passenger-seat supplies.
You’ll be fine, he told himself as a BMW flew past,
squeezing past the bus as an approaching lorry sounded its horn
in annoyance.
There was nowhere to park in Corstorphine, so Fox ended up
behind the McDonald’s at Drum Brae roundabout. Fringing the
car park were a few stores, with a huge Tesco beyond. He
reckoned the Gifford Inn would open at eleven, and it was now
five to. Walking back along St John’s Road, he stopped at a
guitar shop and studied the window display. Jude had always
wanted a guitar, but their father had never allowed it.
‘Soon as I move out, I’m getting one,’ she had yelled, aged
fourteen.
‘Leave the key on the table,’ Mitch had replied.
Fox himself had surprised her a decade later by buying her
one for her birthday – acoustic rather than electric, and with a
teach-yourself book and CD. The guitar had sat in a corner of
her room for a year or two, until he visited one day and noticed
it was no longer there. Nothing had ever been said.
There were no early customers at the Gifford when he
pushed open the door. It looked the sort of place that catered to
a lunchtime trade. Each table boasted a laminated menu, and the
daily specials were on a chalkboard next to the bar. Stripped
wooden floorboards, plenty of mirrors, and gleaming brass bar
taps. A man in his twenties was rearranging the bar stools.
‘I’ll be with you in a second,’ he announced.
‘No real rush – I’m not drinking anything.’
‘If you’re a rep, you need to phone the boss and book a slot.’
‘I’m a detective.’ Fox showed the man his warrant card.
‘Has something happened?’
‘Just checking a couple of things.’
‘Sure you don’t want a drink – on the house?’
‘Maybe an Appletiser then.’
‘No problem.’ The barman checked he was happy with the
stools and went around to the other side of the bar, pulling a
bottle from the chiller cabinet. ‘Ice?’
‘No thanks.’ Fox eased himself on to a stool and took out his
phone, finding the photo of Hamish Wright’s phone bill. He
reeled off the number.
‘That’s us all right,’ the barman agreed.
‘Is it a payphone?’
‘Not really.’ He indicated the landline. It was between the
gantry and the access hatch.
‘It’s for staff use only?’
The barman shrugged. ‘Sometimes a regular will need a taxi
or to place a bet. Usually they have their own phones, but if
not . . .’
‘And do they get calls too?’
‘Wives looking for their husbands, you mean?’ The barman
smiled. ‘It happens.’
‘Three weeks back, a man called Hamish Wright phoned
here. It was a Monday evening. Call lasted a couple of
minutes.’
‘I don’t know anyone called Hamish Wright.’
‘He lives in Inverness, runs a haulage company.’
‘Still doesn’t ring a bell.’
‘Who else might have been on duty that night?’
‘Sandra, maybe. Or Denise. Jeff’s on holiday and Ben was
sick around then – winter flu, also known as skiving.’
‘Could you maybe ask Sandra and Denise?’
The barman nodded.
‘As in – now,’ Fox added.
Fox sipped his drink while the barman made the calls. The
result was another shrug. ‘Sandra remembers your lot phoning
to ask. She told them it was probably a wrong number.’
‘But she doesn’t remember the call?’
‘We do get more than a few phone calls, you know. When
the bar’s busy, you’ve got a lot going on . . .’
‘Hamish Wright has never had a drink in here?’
‘What does he look like?’
Fox took a moment on his phone to find an internet photo of
Wright. It was from an Inverness newspaper and showed him in
front of one of his lorries. The barman narrowed his eyes as he
studied it.
‘I’d have to say he seems familiar,’ he admitted. ‘But that’s
probably because he looks much the same as most of the men
we get in here.’
‘Take another look,’ Fox urged. But the door was opening,
an elderly man shuffling in carrying a folded newspaper.
‘Morning, Arthur,’ the barman called out. The customer
nodded a reply. ‘Cold one again, eh?’
‘Bitter,’ the regular agreed.
The barman was placing a glass under one of the whisky
optics while the customer counted out coins on to the bar. Fox
turned to the new arrival. ‘Does the name Hamish Wright mean
anything to you?’
‘Does he have two legs?’ the old man enquired.
‘I think so – why?’
‘Because if he does, he could probably get a game for
Rangers, the way they’re playing.’
The barman gave a snort of laughter as he handed over the
drink. Fox decided he was wasting his time. He drained his
glass and headed to the Gents, passing a jukebox and a
noticeboard. There was a cutting from the
Evening News
about
money the bar had raised for charity, alongside cards from local
businesses advertising their services. On his way back from the
toilet, Fox paused again at the board and removed one of the
cards. He showed it to the barman.
‘CC Self Storage,’ he commented.
‘What of it?’
‘Named after its owner, Chick Carpenter. Know him?’
‘No.’
‘It’s in Broomhouse, not exactly on your doorstep – so why
the advert?’
The barman offered a non-committal shrug.
‘Does Wee Anthony not work there?’ the whisky drinker
called out as he seated himself at what was presumably his
customary table.
Fox stared at the barman. ‘Did Wee Anthony put this card
up?’
‘Maybe.’
‘He’s a regular, I’m guessing?’
Another shrug.
‘And do people ever phone for him?’
‘I suppose so, on rare occasions.’
‘Including three weeks ago?’
‘That’s something you’d have to ask him yourself.’
‘Then that’s what I’ll do,’ Fox said, tucking the card into his
top pocket. He dug in his trousers for change, placing a couple
of pound coins on the bar.
‘The drink was on the house,’ the barman reminded him.
‘I’m choosy about who I take freebies from,’ Fox retorted,
turning to leave.
He called Siobhan Clarke from the car park and asked her what
she thought.
‘Whose case is it, Malcolm?’ she asked.
‘Somebody gunned down Dennis Stark.’
‘And where’s the connection?’
‘Stark was looking for Hamish Wright – what if Wright or
one of his friends decided to turn the tables?’
‘Okay . . .’
‘Wright phoned the Gifford, a guy who drinks there works
for Chick Carpenter, Carpenter got a doing by Dennis Stark . . .’
‘Any number of people held a grudge against the victim. But
we’re looking for someone who tried to make it appear like part
of a pattern.’
‘To throw us off the scent, yes. Last thing they’d want is Joe
Stark coming after them.’
‘That’s a fair point.’ Clarke thought for a moment. ‘Where
are you now?’
‘Parked outside a pet shop.’
‘Thinking of taking up John’s offer of a free dog?’
‘Perish the thought.’
‘I thought you might be at the hospital.’
‘I popped in first thing. Jude told me to swap with her later
on.’
‘Any news?’
‘No change from last night.’
‘You know, nobody would blame you for taking some time
off . . .’
Fox ignored this. ‘I’m considering dropping in on CC Self
Storage – unless you think I shouldn’t.’
‘There’s not a whole lot you can be doing here,’ she
admitted. ‘Though we’re one down.’
‘Oh?’
‘Christine’s gone off to the archive on an errand for John.’
‘He’s a one-man job-creation scheme.’
‘Want to guess where he is right now?’
‘Enlighten me.’
‘Driving to Ullapool.’
‘What’s in Ullapool?’
‘Last time I went, I remember fish and chips and a ferry.’
‘And which of those is he interested in?’
‘There’s someone he needs to talk to.’
‘You sound like you don’t want to tell me much more.’
‘One day soon, maybe.’
‘But not now?’ Fox was starting the ignition. ‘Should I
report back after the storage place?’
‘Absolutely.’
‘That’s what I’ll do then.’
Thirty Two
Ullapool nestled under thick banks of bruised cloud. Rebus
drove slowly along the waterfront, then uphill from the
harbour. Soon enough he reached a sign thanking him for
having visited, so he did a U-turn. Rows of terraced houses
hid a large Tesco store from general view. A tour bus had
stopped outside a pub that seemed to be serving warming
drinks and hot takeaway food. Rebus pulled into a parking
place and got out, stretching his spine and rolling his shoulders.
He had stopped for petrol at a retail park on the outskirts of
Inverness and topped up his provisions with a microwaved
bridie and a bottle of Irn-Bru. He wished now that he had
waited and eaten in Ullapool. Instead, he lit a cigarette and
headed to the harbour. Gulls were bobbing in the water,
seemingly immune to the biting wind. Rebus buttoned his coat
and finished his cigarette before heading into a shop. Its wares
included shrimping nets and buckets and spades – despite the
season being a way off – plus newspapers and groceries. The