Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
‘If it’s food you’re after . . .’
‘Text me,’ Clarke demanded, ending the call.
Rebus was halfway between Perth and Edinburgh when he got a
message from Christine Esson:
Long day in the salt mines – you owe me a whole
bakery. Didn’t find much & drew a blank w/
Holroyd. Internet search etc. and it’s like he never
existed. Did get a hit on one name – David Dunn.
Surprised you don’t know him. Ran the Gimlet till
it burned down.
Cursing under his breath, Rebus called her back.
‘It’s late,’ she told him.
‘Tell me about Davie Dunn.’
‘He was in Acorn House for only a few weeks, not long
before it was shut down. Shoplifting, drugs, a bit of gang
activity. Cleaned up his act, though. Got a job as a van driver,
passed his HGV, started on long distance. Worked for Hamish
Wright Highland Haulage for a while.’
‘Anything else?’
‘I’ve got plenty of scrawls and scribbles. I’ll type them up in
the morning.’
‘You’re a star, Christine.’
‘The brightest in any constellation.’
He ended the call and made another. Darryl Christie seemed
to be driving when he picked up. Rebus could hear a stereo
being muted.
‘What do you want?’ Christie asked with minimum
politeness.
‘I need to talk to Davie Dunn.’
‘I’m not stopping you.’
‘He’s hardly likely to be at the Gimlet, though.’
‘Rub it in, why don’t you.’
‘We both know you had the place torched, Darryl – easier
that way to flog the land to a supermarket.’
‘I really didn’t.’
‘Tell you what, then – give me a number for Davie and I’ll
believe you.’
‘Why do you need to speak to him?’
‘That’s between me and him.’
‘He’ll tell me if I ask.’
‘And you’ll be denied that treat unless I speak to him first.’
‘You’ve got a good line in patter, I can’t deny it.’ Then, after
a pause: ‘Try Brogan’s.’
Rebus glanced at the time. ‘Will it still be open?’
‘Probably not, but there’s an after-hours card game. When
they unlock the door, just mention my name . . .’
Late night meant no queue at the Forth Road Bridge and a quick
drive into town. Brogan’s was a pub in Leith. Rebus felt like
death as he parked the Saab and got out. He dreaded to think
how many miles he had covered. His neck felt like it was in a
vice and his knees were throbbing. What was the name of that
film Siobhan had wanted to take him to?
No Country for Old
Men
? No denying he was old, and he doubted he would ever
drive as much of the country again. From the outside, Brogan’s
looked deserted, but Rebus tried the thick wooden door and
then banged on it with a fist.
‘We’re shut,’ a voice barked.
‘Darryl Christie said it would be fine.’
Immediately he could hear bolts being drawn back. The door
was pulled open and Rebus stepped inside. The man on guard
duty looked like a regular who’d been slipped a couple of free
drinks as payment. He was big without being threatening.
Rebus nodded a greeting.
‘Back room,’ the man said, sliding the bolts across once
more.
Rebus headed past the shuttered bar and down a narrow
passageway, with pungent toilets off to one side. He could hear
low voices, soft laughter. The back room was twelve feet
square. One of its circular tables had been placed in a central
position, and five men sat in a tight fit around it. Four more
were perched on stools at the still operational bar. There was no
barman, and they seemed to be helping themselves. Rebus
knew a couple of the faces, and held up his palms to show he
wasn’t about to cause a fuss.
‘Join the queue,’ one of the men at the table said, as chips
were counted and readied for the next hand.
‘Just need a quick word with Davie,’ Rebus announced.
Davie Dunn turned round and saw the new arrival for the
first time. ‘Who are you?’
‘His name’s Rebus,’ one of the others said. ‘CID.’
Dunn considered for a moment, then pushed back his chair
and got up. Rebus gestured towards the jacket draped over the
chair.
‘Might need that. And your chips as well.’
‘A quick word, you said?’
‘No way of telling,’ Rebus admitted with a shrug.
They headed for the street, the sentry looking aggrieved at
being disturbed again so soon. On the pavement, Rebus got a
cigarette lit and offered one to Dunn. The man shook his head.
‘Mind if we walk?’ Rebus said. ‘I could do with stretching
my legs.’
‘Hell is this all about?’
But Rebus moved off without talking. After a few moments,
Dunn caught him up, the two men walking in silence for a few
yards, Rebus feeling his joints loosen, glad of the exercise.
‘It’s about Acorn House,’ he eventually admitted.
‘And what’s that when it’s at home?’
‘It’s the assessment centre you were in for a few weeks in
the mid eighties.’
‘Ancient history.’
‘It seems to have become current.’
‘How do you mean?’
‘Did you ever come across a lad called Bryan Holroyd?’
‘No.’
‘Sure about that?’
‘I really don’t remember much from those days.’
‘Is that because you don’t want to? I’ve heard some of the
stories, and I know what went on there.’
‘Oh aye?’
‘Boys used by older men – men who should have known
better.’
‘I must have been too ugly then.’
‘It never happened to you?’
Dunn was shaking his head. ‘But I did hear the rumours.
Mind, every place like that I ever stayed, there were always
rumours – it was a way of putting the fear of God into you so
you didn’t step out of line.’
‘Bad stuff definitely did happen at Acorn House, Davie.’
‘And I’m saying I never saw anything – I was only there a
month or six weeks.’
‘Your name turned up in dispatches – ever meet a reporter
called Patrick Spiers?’
‘I remember the name.’
‘He talked to you?’
‘Not so much talk as pester – I told him the same thing I’ve
just told you, but that wasn’t what he wanted to hear.’
‘He was trying to make a case against some very prominent
men. I’m assuming he told you their names?’
‘You can also assume I didn’t listen.’
‘How about Michael Tolland – you must remember him?’
Dunn nodded. ‘He was okay. Used to dole out cigarettes and
the occasional bottle of cider.’
‘And he never asked for favours in return?’
They were approaching the Shore. A few stragglers from the
local bars and restaurants were wending their way home, or
waiting to flag down non-existent taxis. Rebus paused on the
bridge, waiting for Dunn to answer, the Water of Leith dark and
still below them.
‘I got my life back on track, Rebus,’ Dunn eventually stated.
‘Got married, had a couple of kids – that’s the only thing that
matters to me.’
‘Nobody ever threatened you? Or paid you to keep quiet?’
‘No.’
‘So you ended up driving HGVs.’
‘That’s right.’
‘For Hamish Wright.’
‘Yes.’
‘Who’s now gone AWOL, leaving behind some very irate
Glasgow gangsters.’
‘The same ones who tried beating me up and then torched
my pub. How come you’re not going out of your way to catch
them
?’
‘Because right now I’m interested in Acorn House. On the
other hand, if there’s anything you want to tell me about
Hamish Wright . . .’
‘Haven’t had anything to do with him in years.’
‘You’ll have told Darryl that, I dare say?’
‘Yes.’
‘Not the sort of person you’d want to lie to.’
‘I don’t see what this has to do with Acorn House.’
Rebus turned to face him. ‘Darryl Christie told me where to
find you. He’s going to want to know what we talked about.’
‘So?’
‘So I’m about to tell you something – it’s up to you how
much of it you pass on to him.’
Dunn cocked his head. ‘I’m listening,’ he said.
‘What if I were to say that someone seems intent on
punishing the men who took part in the abuse at Acorn House?’
It took Dunn a few moments to digest Rebus’s words. ‘Is it
true?’ he asked.
‘Might well be.’
‘I heard that Tolland died when someone broke into his
house.’
‘Same thing happened to David Minton. He was a pal of
Howard Champ MP. You never met Champ?’
‘Champ used to drop by,’ Dunn stated coldly, leaning over
the bridge and spitting into the water.
‘I know this can’t be easy, Davie, but I need to ask if there’s
anything you can tell me . . .’
‘To catch a kid from Acorn House who’s decided at last that
it’s Judgement Day?’ Dunn’s mouth twisted in a grim smile.
‘Know what I say to that?’
‘What?’ Rebus asked, already knowing the answer.
‘I’d say fucking good luck to them.’
Dunn turned and began retracing his steps, shoulders
slumped, hands in pockets.
Rebus considered trying to stop him, but instead stayed
where he was, the filter of his cigarette pressed between two
fingers long after the cigarette itself had died. He couldn’t help
feeling that the man had a point, and Rebus was no longer a
cop. What did it matter if Bryan Holroyd was out there, picking
off his abusers and their abettors?
Yet somehow it did – it did matter. Always had, always
would. Not because of any of the victims or perpetrators, but
for Rebus himself. Because if none of it mattered, then neither
did he. A couple of drunks walked past, their gait unsteady but
smiles on their faces.
‘Don’t jump!’ one of them called out.
‘Not today,’ Rebus assured the man, taking out his phone to
check who was calling him at this godforsaken hour.
The answer: Cafferty, naturally.
DAY NINE
Thirty Six
Mid morning, Rebus met Cafferty in a café on George IV
Bridge.
‘Are we still keeping up the pretence that you’re staying at
the G and V?’ he asked.
Cafferty just stirred his coffee. He had secured a large table
by a window looking out across Candlemaker Row to
Greyfriars Kirkyard. Rebus, arriving late, hadn’t bothered
joining the long queue at the counter.
‘I should have got you one,’ Cafferty said by way of
apology, lifting the cup to his lips. ‘I take it you’ve news?’
‘The kid who died – Bryan Holroyd – didn’t really die.’
Cafferty choked the mouthful of coffee down and lowered
the cup back on to its saucer.
‘That’s why I wanted us to meet somewhere nice and
public,’ Rebus went on. ‘Less chance of you throwing a fit.’
‘What the hell do you mean, he didn’t die?’
‘Miraculous recovery in the boot of the car. When Dave
Ritter opened it, Holroyd leapt out and ran into the woods.
Ritter and Jeffries went after him but had to give up eventually.
They reckoned he would freeze to death.’
‘Bastards, the pair of them.’
‘They were bricking it for weeks in case you found out.’
‘You got this from Ritter? Where’s he holed up? I want a
nice long word with him.’
Rebus was shaking his head. ‘Not going to happen.’
‘So this Holroyd kid’s coming after us? After all these
years?’ Cafferty didn’t sound convinced.
‘Unless you’ve got a better theory.’
Cafferty was gripping the edge of the table with both hands,
as though he might tip it over at any moment. His eyes flitted
around the room as his thoughts tumbled, his breathing growing
hoarse.
‘No coronaries, please,’ Rebus advised him.
‘There’s got to be a reckoning, John. No way I can let those
two shits get away with it.’
‘At least now we have a line on the person we’re looking
for. Only problem is, Holroyd seems to have gone off-grid – no
sign of a conviction, or a National Insurance number, or taxes
being paid.’
‘You sure of that?’
‘Christine Esson did the digging – she’s thorough as any
gold miner.’
‘He fled the country then, and has only just come back?’
‘No passport in his name.’
‘Then he’s changed it.’
‘Which makes our job all the harder. Doesn’t help that I’ve
only the vaguest physical description, and he’ll have changed a
bit in thirty years. There
is
one thing, though – we’ve got a live one right here in Edinburgh. Or Portobello, if you want to be
precise.’
‘Who?’
‘Todd Dalrymple – Ritter told me he was there that night.’
‘But Todd always had an eye for the ladies – the man’s been
married three decades or more.’
‘Chief Constable was married too,’ Rebus said.
‘Do we go talk to Dalrymple?’
‘
I
certainly do, and you’re invited if you think you can
refrain from doing any major structural damage.’ Rebus’s
phone was ringing: Siobhan. He got up from the table. ‘Got to
take this,’ he said, making for the door. He pressed the phone to
his ear as he passed the queue at the counter, a queue that now
stretched the length of the café. ‘Yes?’ he said, pulling open the
door and emerging on to George IV Bridge.
‘We missed you last night.’
‘That was always a probability. How was the grub?’