Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
‘I’m in Portobello with a man called Todd Dalrymple.’
Rebus’s tone told her to keep listening. ‘He got one of the flyers
and
a note. Put both in the recycling so he’s just finding out.
Dalrymple’s understandably up to high doh and I think we need
to get him and his wife out of here. Which gives us the
opportunity to bait a trap for our killer.’
Clarke had almost walked under a bus. She retreated to the
edge of the pavement and waited for a gap in the traffic.
‘You might have to start from the beginning,’ she said.
‘Best done face-to-face. How soon can you get here?’
‘Twenty minutes?’
‘I might get them to start packing in the meantime.’
Clarke could hear a woman wailing in the background. ‘Mrs
Dalrymple?’ she guessed.
‘She didn’t take it terribly well. I’m not sure Cafferty would
know subtlety if it stood in front of him holding up its own
dictionary entry.’
‘Cafferty’s there?’
‘Didn’t I just say so?’
‘Twenty minutes,’ Clarke repeated, belting across the
carriageway to her waiting car.
Once she had pulled out into traffic, she called Christine
Esson.
‘Yes, guv?’ Esson said.
‘Promise never to use that phrase again.’
‘I’ll try.’
‘Is Ronnie in the office?’
‘He is.’
‘And are you busy?’
‘I’m still trying to cough the dust out of my lungs after a day
in the archives.’
‘Was the groper on duty?’
‘Fortunately not.’
‘Well I’ve got something that requires your attention.’
‘Fire away.’ Clarke could hear Esson summoning Ogilvie to
her desk while simultaneously readying a pen and notepad. She
took her eyes off the road long enough to reel off the
information Sanjeev Patel had given her.
‘I need you to visit both. Ask about the people who go door-
to-door with leaflets, then the people who print them and look
after their storage.’
‘And this is because . . .?’
‘Flyers from Newington Spice were found in Lord Minton’s
home, plus those of Big Ger Cafferty and the victim of that
attack in Linlithgow.’
‘Got you,’ Esson said. ‘Should we split it between us?’
‘That would be quicker.’
‘Any description to go on?’
‘Absolutely none.’
‘Male? Female?’
‘One or the other, certainly. Get back to me once you’ve
finished.’
‘Yes, guv,’ Esson said, ending the call before Clarke could
respond.
*
Todd and Margaret Dalrymple were upstairs filling a suitcase.
Cafferty was standing by the living room window, his back to
the room. Rebus had brought Clarke indoors and she was now
taking in her surroundings, including the carpet, which was still
strewn with recycling.
‘He won’t come in daylight,’ Rebus reminded Cafferty,
receiving only a grunt in response. ‘But feel free to make
yourself a nice big target in case he does.’
He handed Clarke the note along with the takeaway menu.
‘Like I say, we don’t know for sure when it arrived. They put it
straight in the recycling without even noticing.’
‘And Cafferty got a menu too?’
Rebus nodded slowly. There was a gleam in his eyes Clarke
hadn’t seen in a while – alive to all manner of challenges and
possibilities.
‘So you went to Ullapool,’ she nudged him.
Rebus kept nodding. ‘And spoke to a guy called Dave Ritter.
He was at Acorn House that night and was supposed to dump
the body in a grave in some forest in Fife. Thing is, Bryan
Holroyd wasn’t dead. He’d been putting on an act. He ran for it
and they couldn’t find him.’
‘So Holroyd’s behind this?’ She held up the note.
‘I’d say there’s a good chance.’
‘And how does upstairs fit in?’ She gestured towards the
ceiling.
‘Dalrymple was another of Acorn House’s clients. Ritter
told me as much, which is why Cafferty and I decided to come
visit.’
‘Does his wife know?’
‘Like I said, Big Ger lacks a certain diplomacy . . .’
‘Bit of marriage guidance needed.’
‘Not our problem.’
‘I’m just wondering if we need one place of safety or two.’
‘I see what you mean.’
Clarke thought for a moment. ‘I need to tell Page all this.’
‘Of course. But bear in mind what I said – this is our one
chance at catching him. We’ve no idea where Holroyd is or
what he looks like. All we do know is that he’ll be coming here
very soon.’ Rebus paused. ‘Which is why I’m offering myself
as bait. I’m much the same age and build as Dalrymple. Enough
to fool Holroyd until he gets up close.’
‘And then what? He’s going to have a gun, remember.’
‘Firearms officers stationed outside in an unmarked car.
First sign of trouble, they come running.’
Clarke pointed towards the corner of the room, where John
B was asleep in his basket.
‘Will Holroyd know the Dalrymples have a dog?’
‘He well might. But then
I’ve
got access to one too,
remember.’
‘I don’t think Page will agree to it, John – you’re not a
police officer.’
‘You can fight my corner, though.’
‘I can try – I’m just not sure I want to.’
Fresh wailing had started upstairs, penetrating the ceiling
and causing John B to prick up his ears and look concerned.
‘And what about him?’ Clarke added, gesturing towards
Cafferty.
‘He doesn’t want Holroyd dead, if that’s what you mean.’
Cafferty turned towards them. His face looked solemn rather
than angry.
‘What I want,’ he stated, eyes boring into Clarke’s, ‘is to say
sorry to the man.’
Clarke met his gaze for a moment before turning her
attention back to Rebus.
‘I need you to take me through this one more time,’ she said.
‘As slowly and methodically as you can . . .’
Thirty Seven
Darryl Christie wasn’t a huge fan of Glasgow. It
sprawled
in a way his own city didn’t. And there were still traces of the old
enmity between Catholic and Protestant – of course that existed
in Edinburgh too, but it had never quite defined the place the
way it did Glasgow. The people spoke differently here, and had
a garrulousness to them that spilled over into physical swagger.
They were, as they chanted on the football terraces, ‘the
people’. But they were not Darryl Christie’s people. Edinburgh
could seem tame by comparison, head always below the
parapet, keeping itself to itself. In the independence
referendum, Edinburgh had voted No and Glasgow Yes, the
latter parading its saltired allegiance around George Square
night after night, or else protesting media bias outside the BBC
headquarters. The political debate had melted into a blend of
carnival and stairheid rammy, so that you never knew if people
were joyous or furious.
Darryl Christie had considered all the implications for his
various business interests and come to the conclusion that either
outcome would probably suit him just fine, so in the end he
hadn’t voted at all.
The place he was looking for was a restaurant off Buchanan
Street. The lunchtime rush was ebbing, and as he peered
through the window, he could see empty tables waiting to be
cleared. Joe Stark was seated alone in one corner, his white
cotton napkin tucked into his shirt collar, mopping up sauce
with a hunk of bread. The other diners looked like just that,
which was what had been agreed. Yes, there was a BMW
outside with a couple of lookouts in the front, but that was fine
too. Christie returned to the Range Rover, told his own men to
stay there unless the occupants of the Beemer headed inside.
Then he pushed open the door to the restaurant.
‘Mr Christie?’ the manager said. ‘Such a pleasure. Mr Stark
is waiting. Would you like to see a menu?’
‘I’m fine.’
‘Just a drink, then?’
‘No thanks.’
Christie walked up to Joe Stark’s table, pulled out a chair
and sat down. Then, realising he now had his back to the room,
he got up again and made to settle next to the older man on the
banquette.
‘I don’t even let hoors get that close,’ Stark warned him. ‘Go
sit the fuck down and I swear no one’ll come up behind you
with a cleaver.’
Christie did as he was told, but moved the chair until it was
at a right angle to the table.
‘How’s the food?’ he asked.
‘Not bad. You know they’re not releasing my son’s body
yet? Is that them taking the piss or what?’
‘It’s a murder inquiry – that’s the way it goes.’
‘You ready to give me a name?’ Stark pushed aside his
plate, but continued chewing on the wad of bread.
‘A name?’
‘I assume that’s why you’re here.’
‘I still don’t know who killed Dennis.’
‘Then what possible use are you to me?’ Stark whipped
away the napkin and threw it on to the plate.
‘The last time we met, I told you I respected you – do you
remember that?’
‘I’m getting it tattooed on my bollocks.’
Christie stared at the man. Stark was avoiding eye contact,
finishing his glass of red wine and searching between his teeth
with the tip of his tongue.
‘This is useless,’ Christie said, making to get up. But Stark
reached over, gripping him by the forearm.
‘Sit down, son. You’ve come all the way from Edinburgh.
Might as well say your piece.’
Christie made show of considering his options, then eased
back down on to the chair. He was about to start speaking when
Stark gestured for the manager, who came bounding over.
‘Double espresso for me, Jerry. And whatever my guest is
having.’
‘I’m fine,’ Christie stated.
The manager bowed and scurried away. Another table was
settling up and leaving. Christie realised that the caricatures on
the walls represented Scottish pop stars, though he only
recognised a few.
‘Well?’ Stark said, leaning back and giving the young man
his full attention.
‘You were in Edinburgh looking for Hamish Wright,
because he’d taken something that you felt belonged to you.’
‘Aye?’
‘And as part of that search, you went to CC Self Storage.’
‘Dennis and his boys went to at least three of those places.’
‘But what Dennis didn’t know, I’m guessing, is that
Wright’s nephew works there.’
‘Is that so?’ Stark couldn’t help looking suddenly more
interested.
‘And my thinking is, the nephew might know the
whereabouts of the uncle.’
Stark gave a thin smile. ‘Son, I
know
where the uncle is.’
‘You do?’
‘He’s buried in a field somewhere outside Inverness. Dennis
let Jackie Dyson have his way with him – reckoned nobody was
as good at wringing the truth out of a man as Jackie. Fucker
made Dennis look like Greenpeace.’
‘Wright died?’
‘He did, aye.’ Christie watched the old man nod. He didn’t
look in the least concerned. ‘We didn’t want anyone getting
wind of it – best thing was to make the cops and anyone else
think we were still on the hunt.’
‘So they wouldn’t think you’d killed him?’ It was Christie’s
turn to nod. ‘So why tell
me
?’
Stark fixed him with a look. ‘Because that’s twice now
you’ve come to me. Makes me think we might be able to help
one another – now and in the future. A sort of alliance against
the jackals in Aberdeen and Dundee.’
‘Are they starting to circle?’
‘They smell blood, son. I can offer Dennis’s crew the moon,
but somebody out there’s going to offer one of them Mars or
Venus as a bonus. If they knew I had friends . . . well . . .’ Stark
shrugged.
‘How would it work?’
‘Plenty of time for that later.’ Stark patted Christie’s leg.
‘For now, you’ve got me interested in this nephew.’
‘And you’ve got
me
interested – you really think we could
work together?’
‘Only one way to find out. Dennis was gearing up to push
me aside. Everyone knew it – Len and Walter were always
bending my ear about it. Either his boys will make a move on
me anyway, or they’ll decide they need reinforcements from
outside the city. It’s either you with me, or you with them. But
look at me, son. I’m not going to last much longer – and when I
croak, a good-sized chunk of Glasgow would be yours.
If
you
take my side. On the other hand, team up with them, and you’ll
be surrounded by wild animals – young, hungry and stupid.’
Stark’s coffee had arrived, along with an amaretto biscuit
that he dunked and then held between his lips, sucking the thick
black liquid from it.
‘I’ll have one of those too, actually,’ Christie told the
retreating manager. And he returned Joe Stark’s smile, the two
men readying to get down to business.
Anthony Wright had been in trouble a few times – speeding
offences, one very minor drugs bust and a breach of the peace.
Which was how Fox managed to track down his home address.
It was a maisonette in Murrayburn, not a million miles from his
place of work. Anthony had the upper floor. His downstairs
neighbours hadn’t washed their windows in a while, and the