Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
loudspeaker in the ceiling, allowing her to hear what was being
said. The atmosphere was calm and professional, Quant
recording her findings as the examination continued. The
attendant on duty, dressed in scrubs and short green rubber
boots, face masked, was not Jordan Foyle. He was a good
decade older and had been with the mortuary as long as Clarke
could remember. But then the door swung open and Foyle
himself entered, carrying a tray of implements and a stack of
disposable containers. He laid these out, his back to Clarke.
When he turned again, he asked Quant if there was anything
else she needed.
‘That’s fine, Jordan. But DI Clarke would like a word.’
She gestured towards the viewing room, and Foyle’s eyes
met Clarke’s. He nodded slowly and made to leave. Clarke
headed out to meet him. He was walking down the corridor
away from her, pulling off his protective gloves.
‘Jordan?’ she called.
Rather than stop, he broke into a run. Clarke took a second
to realise what was happening, then set off after him. He was
down the stairs by now, and she lost sight of him. As she
emerged into the car park, he was rounding a corner of the
building, shrugging off his scrubs. He began to run up High
School Wynd, while Clarke faltered. On foot or in her car?
‘Shit,’ she said, making up her mind. She set off in pursuit
but he was already at the top of the hill and heading for the
Infirmary Lane steps. Clarke took out her phone and got
through to the area control room, identifying herself and asking
for assistance.
The steps almost defeated her and she ended up using the
handrail as she heaved her way to the top, where she had a
decision to make: left or right along Drummond Street?
Towards the Pleasance or Nicolson Street? No sign of Foyle
and no one she could ask for guidance. She swore under her
breath and placed a hand to her chest, feeling her heart
pounding. Her phone was ringing – a patrol car was two
minutes away, its occupants wanting to know who they were
looking for. Clarke started to give them a description, focusing
on the tattoos and the rubber boots. Then she headed back down
the steps, retracing her route to the mortuary. Quant was still in
the autopsy suite. Clarke thumped on the glass and gestured that
she needed a word. Quant met her in the corridor as Clarke was
wiping sweat from her face.
‘Foyle did a runner,’ she explained between breaths.
‘Really?’ Quant still wore her face mask and was holding
her viscera-stained gloved hands out in front of her, unwilling
to touch anything.
‘I need his address.’
‘He lives with his parents,’ Quant said. ‘His mother, I should
say. His father passed away a month or two back.’
‘The address,’ Clarke repeated.
‘It’ll be with his personnel file. You’ll need to phone the
admin office.’
‘Do you know their number?’ Clarke had her phone out. She
tapped it in as Quant recited it.
‘You might want to sit down and catch your breath,’ Quant
cautioned. But Clarke was already walking away, waiting for
someone to pick up at the other end.
By the time she reached her car, she had the address: Upper
Gray Street in Newington. She called the officers in the patrol
car.
‘We’re still on the lookout,’ one of them said. Clarke gave
them the address and said she would meet them there. Once on
the road, she phoned Rebus. He sounded rightly groggy.
‘I might have something,’ she told him, explaining about
Foyle.
‘Can’t be Holroyd.’
‘I know that.’
‘So what are you saying?’
‘Foyle’s father died a couple of months back. Interesting
timing, don’t you think?’
‘I’ve had barely three hours’ sleep – thinking isn’t top of my
list of priorities.’
‘He did a runner, John.’
‘Could be any number of reasons for that. Bit of dope in his
pocket, parking fines he’s been ignoring . . .’
‘Can you meet me at his house anyway? I’m nearly there.’
She gave him the address. ‘It’s hardly any distance from yours.’
‘Fine,’ he said. ‘You think that’s where he’ll be headed?’
‘It’s the direction he was going. And he’s on foot. Have to
admit, for someone in galoshes, he had a turn of speed.’
‘If you’ve ever tried running from enemy gunfire in army-
issue boots, I’d think a pair of green wellies would feel like kit
from the Olympics.’
‘I bow to your superior knowledge.’
‘If it
is
him, you’re going to have to be careful.’
‘I know.’ Clarke signalled off Newington Road into
Salisbury Place and took a left into Upper Gray Street. She
could see two uniformed officers standing in the middle of the
road ahead of her. One was busy making a call, while the other
looked ready to explode. They moved out of the way as Clarke
squealed to a stop. She wound down her window, her phone
held in her free hand.
‘Bugger’s got a gun,’ the ruddy-faced officer said.
‘You let him take your car?’
‘He was running out of the house as we got here. Changed
his shoes and with a backpack over one shoulder. Then the gun
came out, could have been fake but impossible to tell.’
‘You hearing this?’ Clarke said into her phone.
‘I’m on my way,’ Rebus replied.
Denise Foyle sat at the kitchen table with a mug of sweetened
tea. There was a laptop on the table, with a printer on the floor
beneath. She made a bit of money as an eBay trader, as she had
explained to Siobhan Clarke.
‘But I just don’t understand,’ she was repeating for the sixth
or seventh time. ‘I can’t get my head round what you’re telling
me.’
She was in her late forties, with dyed ash-blonde hair. She
wore jewellery round her neck and on her wrists, plus a pair of
large earrings that resembled peacock feathers. Though she
worked from home, her make-up was immaculate, as were her
painted and manicured nails.
Clarke was perched on the edge of a chair opposite while
Rebus stood with his back to the sink. He hadn’t shaved and
was in the same clothes as the previous day.
‘Where did he get a gun?’ Denise Foyle was asking.
‘We have a theory,’ Clarke told her. ‘But right now, our
main concern is to bring Jordan in safely.’
‘Safely?’
‘He’s carrying a firearm, Mrs Foyle. And he brandished it at
two unarmed officers. That means we have to take this very
seriously. Our own armed response team has been put on alert.’
She paused meaningfully. ‘We don’t want anything to happen
to him, so it would be helpful if you could answer a few
questions. Do you have any idea where he might go?’
‘He has friends.’
‘Details would be good.’
‘I’ve probably got a few phone numbers.’
Clarke nodded her satisfaction. ‘Also, a recent photo of
Jordan. We’ve got one, but it’s not the greatest quality.’
‘There’ll be some on here from Christmas.’ Foyle pointed to
her laptop. ‘Not that it was very festive . . .’
‘Your husband passed away?’ Rebus asked. She turned her
head towards him.
‘At the beginning of December,’ she explained. ‘We’d
driven out to Chesser Avenue. We always get a tree from the
same charity, Bethany Trust. They have a site there. Mark had
just stopped the engine when he slumped forward.’ Her eyes
were filling with tears. ‘There’d been a few warning signs –
he’d been to the doctor with chest pains, apparently. Again, I
only found out after . . .’
‘Would you have a photo somewhere?’
‘On the mantelpiece.’
‘Do you mind if I . . .?’
She shook her head and Rebus exited the kitchen, turning
right into the living room. There were half a dozen condolence
cards still displayed on the mantelpiece, along with a selection
of photos of the deceased. The most recent showed a man in his
mid forties with salt-and-pepper hair and a smile that didn’t
quite reach his eyes, not even in a much earlier photo taken on
his wedding day. Rebus focused on this picture, since it was the
one that showed Mark Foyle at his youngest. He lifted it up and
studied the face, though he was not sure what he was seeking.
He photographed it with his own camera. When he’d left
Ullapool, he had taken Dave Ritter’s mobile number with him.
Now he added the photo to a text –
Long shot, but could this be
the same kid? –
and sent it.
On a corner unit sat further framed family photos, mostly of
Jordan Foyle – at primary and secondary schools, then as a
teenage army recruit. He had his arms folded and was grinning
fit to burst. A later snap had been taken by one of his comrades
and showed him in the desert somewhere, his convoy having
come to a halt, a fellow soldier holding him in a playful
headlock. Rebus wandered back through to the kitchen. Denise
Foyle was blowing her nose into a square of kitchen towel,
Clarke handing her another so she could dab her eyes.
‘Jordan and his dad had a difficult relationship,’ Clarke
explained to Rebus. ‘Mark wasn’t exactly touchy-feely modern
father material.’
‘How did you meet your husband, Mrs Foyle?’ Rebus asked.
‘At a nightclub, like you do.’
‘Here in Edinburgh?’
She shook her head. ‘Glasgow – he was living there at the
time.’
‘Doing what?’
‘Car mechanic.’
‘But he was from Edinburgh?’
She shook her head. ‘He grew up in Glasgow.’
‘So he had family there?’
‘I got the feeling there’d been a falling-out. He never spoke
about them.’
‘Never?’
She shook her head again. ‘Not one of them came to the
wedding.’
‘You never met them?’
‘His parents were already dead, I think.’
‘He had school friends though?’
‘Not by the time I met him.’ She paused. ‘What are you
getting at? What does this have to do with Jordan?’
‘Why did you move through here?’
‘I lived here. Worked as a secretary. Mark wasn’t keen, but I
talked him round.’ She broke off again. ‘Maybe I shouldn’t
have. I don’t think he ever really settled.’
‘Would you mind if I took a look at Jordan’s room?’ Rebus
asked.
She shook her head slowly as she dabbed at her eyes.
Rebus headed upstairs. Jordan Foyle’s bedroom bore a
poster of a supermodel from yesteryear on its door. Inside, the
bed was messy, clothes spewing from a chest of drawers and a
narrow wardrobe. Photos from his army days stuck to the walls,
plus more pictures of large-breasted women. There probably
should have been a laptop of some kind, but it was missing. In
amongst the clothes spilling from the wardrobe, Rebus spotted a
rectangle of muslin, stained with oil. And beneath the bed, a
small pile of menus from Newington Spice. Back downstairs,
Denise Foyle was telling Clarke why her son had left the army.
‘Afghanistan destroyed him. I’ll probably never know what
he saw there, but he came back looking like a ghost. Used to
wake up screaming in the night, or I’d hear him sobbing in the
bathroom at three in the morning. I don’t know if they offered
him counselling, but he certainly never got any, and if I tried
suggesting it, he would jump down my throat. But he looked
like he was coming out the other side. He’d got himself a job,
and even an on-off girlfriend—’
‘We’ll need her number too,’ Clarke interrupted.
‘But then when Mark died . . . I mean, they’d never been
close. Quite the opposite. But something happened. Don’t ask
me what.’
The front doorbell sounded. Rebus went to answer, and
found the two officers from the patrol car standing there.
‘He dumped it,’ one of them stated.
‘Where?’
‘Cameron Toll car park. Took the bloody keys with him,
though.’
‘It’s going to be fun writing up your report, isn’t it?’ Rebus
allowed a smile to flit across his face. ‘We’ll have a recent
photo of him in a few minutes. Need to get it distributed along
with his description. You better get busy with that, since you
two are the only ones who know how he’s dressed.’
‘Shouldn’t we be getting checked over?’ the other uniform
enquired.
Rebus narrowed his eyes. ‘For what?’
‘Post-traumatic stress – we had a gun pulled on us.’
‘By a lad who served at least one tour of duty in a war zone,’
Rebus retorted. ‘Anyone should be getting looked at, it’s him.’
And he slammed the door shut on the pair of them.
Forty
‘You look like hell,’ Jude said when Fox found her sucking on
a cigarette in the hospital grounds.
‘Well, if we’re being frank with one another . . .’
She looked down at her unwashed clothes. ‘Okay, it was a
low blow. I’m sorry.’ She tried not to shiver.
‘Want my coat?’ Fox was already shrugging out of it.
‘Very noble of you.’ She allowed him to place it over her
shoulders.
‘Just don’t get ash on it.’
This almost merited a smile, until she remembered why they
were there. ‘So do we sign the death warrant or not?’
‘It’s a Do Not Resuscitate agreement . . .’