Black And Blue (38 page)

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Authors: Ian Rankin

BOOK: Black And Blue
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‘Have you been reading
Cosmopolitan
or something?’

‘Only the problem page.’

They had a laugh at that, though it didn’t really merit one. Brian stretched in his chair. ‘I need a sleep,’ he said.

‘Get an early night, write the letter first thing tomorrow.’

‘Maybe I will, aye.’

Rebus started to get to his feet. Brian watched him rise.

‘Don’t you want to hear about Mick Hine?’

‘Who he?’

‘Ex-con, the last man to speak to Lenny Spaven.’

Rebus sat down again.

‘I had a job tracking him down. Turns out he was here in town all the time, sleeping rough.’

‘And?’

‘And I had a word with him.’ Brian paused. ‘And I think you should, too. You’ll get a very different picture of Lenny Spaven, believe me.’

Rebus believed him, whatever he meant. He didn’t want to, but he did.

Jack was utterly opposed to the idea.

‘Look, John, my boss is going to want to talk to this guy Hine, right?’

‘Right.’

‘How’s it going to look when he finds out not just that your pal Brian’s been there first, but that
you’ve
followed up?’

‘It’s going to look bad, but he hasn’t told me not to.’

Jack growled his frustration. They’d dropped his car back at the flat, and were now walking down on to Melville Drive. One side of the road was Bruntsfield Links, the other the Meadows, a flat grassy stretch which could be wonderful on a hot summer’s afternoon – a place to relax, to play football or cricket – but scary at night. The paths were lamp-lit, but it
was like the wattage had been turned down. Some nights, the walk was positively Victorian. But this was summer, the sky still pink. There were squares of light shining from the Royal Infirmary and a couple of the tall university buildings huddled around George Square. Female students crossed the Meadows in packs, a lesson learned from the animal world. Maybe there were no predators out there tonight, but the fear was just as real. The government had pledged to combat ‘the fear of crime’. It was reported on the TV news just before the latest Hollywood shoot-’em-up.

Rebus turned to Jack. ‘You going to grass me up?’

‘I should.’

‘Yes, you should. But will you?’

‘I don’t know, John.’

‘Well, don’t let our friendship stand in your way.’

‘That helps me a lot.’

‘Look, Jack, the water I’m in is so deep, I’d probably die of the bends coming back up. So I might just as well stay down here.’

‘Ever heard of the Marianas Trench? Ancram probably has one just like it waiting for you.’

‘You’re slipping.’

‘What?’

‘He was Chick before, now he’s “Ancram”. You better watch yourself.’

‘You’re sober, aren’t you?’

‘As a judge.’

‘Can’t be Dutch courage then, which means it’s plain insanity.’

‘Welcome to my world, Jack.’

They were headed for the back of the Infirmary. There were benches provided just this side of the perimeter wall. Dossers, travellers, down-and-outs … whatever you wanted to call them … they used these benches as beds in the summer. There used to be one old guy, Frank, Rebus saw him every summer, and at the end of every summer he disappeared like a
migrating bird, only to reappear the next year. But this year … this year Frank hadn’t appeared. The homeless people Rebus saw were a lot younger than Frank, his spiritual children, if not grandchildren; only they were different – tougher and more frightened, wired and tired. Different game, different rules. Edinburgh’s ‘gentlemen of the road’: twenty years ago you could have measured them in mere dozens. But not these days. Not these days …

They woke up a couple of sleepers, who denied being Mick Hine and said they didn’t know who he was, and then hit lucky with the third bench. He was sitting upright, a pile of newspapers beside him. He had a tiny transistor radio, which he held hard to his ear.

‘Are you deaf or does it just need new batteries?’ Rebus asked.

‘Not deaf, not dumb, not blind. He said another copper might want to talk to me. Do you want a seat?’

Rebus sat down on the bench. Jack Morton rested against the wall behind it, like he’d rather be somewhere out of earshot. Rebus drew out a fiver.

‘Here, get some batteries.’

Mick Hine took the money. ‘So you’re Rebus?’ He gave Rebus a long look. Hine was early forties, balding, with a slight squint. He wore a decent enough suit, only it had holes in both knees. Beneath the jacket was a baggy red T-shirt. Two supermarket carrier bags sat on the ground beside him, bulging with worldly goods. ‘Lenny talked about you. I thought you’d be different.’

‘Different?’

‘Younger.’

‘I was younger when Lenny knew me.’

‘Aye, that’s true. Only film stars get younger, have you noticed that? The rest of us get wrinkled and grey.’ Not that Hine was either. His face was lightly tanned, like polished brass, and what hair he had was jet black and worn long. He
had grazes on his cheeks and chin, forehead, knuckles. Either a stumble or a beating.

‘Did you fall over, Mick?’

‘I get dizzy sometimes.’

‘What does the doctor say?’

‘Eh?’

No doctor consulted. ‘You know there are hostels, you don’t need to be out here.’

‘Full up. I hate queueing, so I’m always at the back. Your concern has been noted by Michael Edward Hine. Now, do you want to hear the story?’

‘In your own time.’

‘I knew Lenny in prison, we shared a cell for maybe four months. He was the quiet type, thoughtful. I know he’d been in trouble before, and yet he didn’t fit with prison life. He taught me how to do crosswords, sort out all the jumbled letters. He was patient with me.’ Hine seemed to be drifting off, but pulled himself back. ‘The man he wrote about is the man he was. He told me himself, he’d done wickedness and never been punished for it. But that didn’t make it any easier on his soul, being punished for a crime he didn’t commit. Time and again he told me, “I didn’t do it, Mick, I swear to God and anybody else who’s up there.” It was an obsession with him. I think if he hadn’t had his writing, he might have done away with himself sooner.’

‘You don’t think he was got at?’

Hine thought it over before shaking his head firmly. ‘I believe he took his own life. That last day, it was like he’d come to a decision, made peace with himself. He was calmer, almost serene. But his eyes … he wouldn’t look at me. It was like he couldn’t deal with people any more. He talked, but he was conversing with himself. I liked him such a lot. And his writing was beautiful …’

‘The last day?’ Rebus prompted. Jack was peering through the railings at the hospital.

‘The last day,’ Hine repeated. ‘That last day was the most spiritual of my life. I really felt touched by … grace.’

‘Lovely girl,’ Jack muttered. Hine didn’t hear him.

‘You know what his last words were?’ Hine closed his eyes, remembering. ‘ “God knows I’m innocent, Mick, but I’m so tired of saying it over and over.”’

Rebus was fidgeting. He wanted to be flippant, ironic, his usual self – but now he found he could identify all too easily with Spaven’s epitaph; even perhaps – just a little – with the man himself. Had Lawson Geddes really blinded him? Rebus hardly knew Spaven at all, yet had helped put him in jail for murder, breaching rules and regulations in the process, aiding a man who was feverish with hatred, spellbound by revenge.

But revenge for what?

‘When I heard he’d cut his throat, it didn’t surprise me. He’d been stroking his neck all day.’ Hine leaned forward suddenly, his voice rising. ‘And to his dying day he insisted
you
set him up! You and your friend!’

Jack turned towards the bench, ready for trouble. But Rebus wasn’t worried.

‘Look at me and tell me you didn’t!’ Hine spat. ‘He was the best friend I ever had, the kindest, gentlest man. All gone now, all gone …’ Hine held his head in his hands and wept.

Of all the options open to him, Rebus knew which he favoured – flight. And that’s exactly the option he took, Jack working hard to keep up with him as he fled across the grass, back towards Melville Drive.

‘Wait up!’ Jack called. ‘Hold on there!’ They were halfway across the playing-field, in the twilit centre of a triangle bordered by footpaths. Jack tugged at Rebus’s arm, tried to slow him. Rebus turned and threw the arm off, then swung a punch. It caught Jack on the cheek, spinning him. There was shock on his face, but he was ready for the second blow, blocked it with a forearm, then threw a right of his own – no southpaw. He feinted, made Rebus think he was aiming for the head, then landed one hard into yielding gut. Rebus
grunted, felt the pain but rode with it, took two steps back before launching himself. The two men hit the ground in a roll, their blows lacking force, wrestling for supremacy. Rebus could hear Jack saying his name, over and over. He pushed him off, and came up into a crouch. A couple of cyclists had stopped on one of the paths and were watching.

‘John, what the fuck are you doing?’

Teeth bared, Rebus swung again, even more wildly, giving his friend plenty of time to dodge and launch a punch of his own. Rebus almost defended himself, but thought better of it. Instead, he waited for the impact. Jack hit him low, the sort of blow that could wind a man without doing damage. Rebus doubled over, fell to hands and knees, and spewed on to the ground, spitting out mostly liquid. He went on trying to cough everything out, even when there was nothing left to expel. And then he started crying. Crying for himself and for Lawson Geddes, and maybe even for Lenny Spaven. And most of all for Elsie Rhind and all her sisters, all the victims he couldn’t help and would never ever be able to help.

Jack was sitting a yard or so away, forearms resting on his knees. He was breathing hard and sweating, pulling off his jacket. The crying seemed to take for ever, bubbles of snot escaping from Rebus’s nose, fine lines of saliva from his mouth. Then he felt the shuddering lessen, stop altogether. He rolled on to his back, his chest rising and falling, an arm across his brow.

‘Christ,’ he said, ‘I needed that.’

‘I haven’t had a fight like that since I was a teenager,’ Jack said. ‘Feel better?’

‘Much.’ Rebus got a handkerchief out, wiped eyes and mouth, then blew his nose. ‘Sorry it had to be you.’

‘Rather me than some innocent bystander.’

‘That’s pretty accurate.’

‘Is that why you drink? To stop this happening?’

‘Christ, Jack, I don’t know. I drink because I’ve always
done it. I like it; I like the taste and the sensation, I like standing in pubs.’

‘And you like sleep without dreams?’

Rebus nodded. ‘That most of all.’

‘There are other ways, John.’

‘Is this where you try to sell me the Juice Church?’

‘You’re a big boy, make up your own mind.’ Jack got to his feet, pulled Rebus to his.

‘I bet we look like a couple of dossers.’

‘Well, you do. I don’t know about me.’

‘Elegant, Jack, you look cool and elegant.’

Jack touched a hand to Rebus’s shoulder. ‘OK now?’

Rebus nodded. ‘It’s daft, but I feel better than for ages. Come on, let’s go for a walk.’

They turned and headed back towards the Infirmary. Jack didn’t ask where they were going. But Rebus had a destination in mind: the university library in George Square. It was just closing as they walked in, the departing students, folders huddled to chests, giving them plenty of room as they walked up to the main desk.

‘Can I help you?’ a man asked, looking them up and down. But Rebus was walking around the desk to where a young woman was bowed over a pile of books.

‘Hello, Nell.’

She looked up, couldn’t place him at first. Then the blood left her face.

‘What’s happened?’

Rebus held up a hand. ‘Brian’s fine. Jack here and me … well, we …’

‘Tripped and fell,’ Jack said.

‘You shouldn’t drink in pubs with stairs.’ Now she knew Brian was all right, she was regaining her composure fast, and with it her wariness. ‘What do you want?’

‘A word,’ Rebus said. ‘Maybe outside?’

‘I’ll be finished here in five minutes.’

Rebus nodded. ‘We’ll wait.’

They went outside. Rebus went to light a cigarette but found the packet crushed, its contents useless.

‘Christ, just when I could do with one.’

‘Now you know how it feels to give up.’

They sat on the steps and stared at George Square Gardens and the buildings surrounding it, a mishmash of old and new.

‘You can almost feel all that brain power in the air,’ Jack commented.

‘Half the force has been to university these days.’

‘And I bet they don’t go swinging punches at their friends.’

‘I’ve said I’m sorry.’

‘Did Sammy ever go to uni?’

‘College. I think she did something secretarial. She works for a charity now.’

‘Which one?’

‘SWEEP.’

‘Working with ex-cons?’

‘That’s it’

‘Did she do it to have a dig at you?’

Rebus had asked himself the same question many times. He shrugged.

‘Fathers and daughters, eh?’

The door swung open behind them. It was Nell Stapleton. She was tall, with short dark hair and a defiant face. No earrings or jewellery.

‘You can walk me to the bus stop,’ she told them.

‘Look, Nell,’ Rebus started, realising that he should have thought this through, should have rehearsed, ‘all I want to say is, I’m sorry about you and Brian.’

‘Thanks.’ She was walking quickly. Rebus’s knee hurt as he kept up.

‘I know I’m unlikely material as marriage guidance, but there’s something you have to know: Brian’s a born copper. He doesn’t want to lose you – it’s killing him – but leaving the force would be a slow death in itself. He can’t
make
himself
leave, so instead he’s trying to get into trouble, so the high hiedyins will have no alternative but to boot him out. That’s no way to sort a problem.’

Nell didn’t say anything for a while. They headed for Potterrow, crossed the road at the lights. They were headed for Greyfriars, plenty of bus stops there.

‘I know what you’re saying,’ she said at last. ‘You’re saying it’s a no-win situation.’

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