Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
as he moved through the building. James Page, crossing the
corridor from one room to another, spotted him.
‘I’m looking for Siobhan,’ Fox said, pre-empting any
question Page might have.
‘She’s out at Howden Hall, I think.’
‘Okay if I leave her a note?’
Page nodded distractedly and moved off. The room he’d just
been in was now home to the Minton team, including Christine
Esson and Ronnie Ogilvie. Fox nodded a greeting.
‘Just trying to catch Siobhan,’ he explained. ‘DCI Page told
me to wait. Is this her desk?’
Fox sat down in the empty chair. He waited a full half-
minute, then mumbled something about doing a check and got
busy at the computer. Siobhan had confided to him one night
that despite hating the nickname, she used ‘Shiv’ as her
password. Once in, Fox started checking names. He had four –
Simpson, Andrews, Dyson, and Rae – and he wanted to know
what Police Scotland had on them.
After ten minutes, Esson asked him if he wanted tea or
coffee, but he shook his head.
‘Should I phone her and see how long she’ll be?’
Fox shook his head again. ‘Just sending her an email.’
‘Using telepathy?’ When Fox looked puzzled, Esson
explained. ‘Not very many keystrokes, DI Fox.’
For want of any lie she would be likely to accept, he just
smiled and got back to work.
Rob Simpson had been part of the Stark ‘family’ for almost
a decade, so scratch him. Callum Andrews had a criminal
record stretching back to juvenile days, so Fox reckoned he
couldn’t be the mole. That left Jackie Dyson and Tommy Rae.
Both men had seen the inside of a courtroom in the past three
years, but for minor misdemeanours. As far as he could tell,
both had grown up in Glasgow, leaving school at sixteen and
drifting into lawlessness from there. Looked as though neither
had joined the gang until a year or so ago. Fox remembered
them from the beating outside the storage facility. Dyson
scrawny, shaven-headed, whey-faced. Rae maybe a year or two
older, with more heft to him and a scar down one cheek. A cop
with scars? Well, it happened, but not often, and rarely the
visible kind. A scar on your cheek came from a knife, razor or
bottle. It was as if the street had given you a tattoo. No, Fox’s
money was on Jackie Dyson.
Alec Bell had said the mole had been working undercover
for more than three years. Some of that would have been spent
getting known, establishing a reputation, moving closer to the
seat of power. Two years of graft before acceptance into the
fold. Having worked surveillance himself, he was intrigued by
the type of officer who could immerse himself so thoroughly.
Friends and family would have to be discarded for the duration,
the new identity learned by rote, old haunts shunned for fear of
recognition. Fox thought back to the beating, Dyson hauling
Chick Carpenter back to his feet for a headbutt, then pissing on
the man’s car. Meantime Tommy Rae had been content to hold
Carpenter’s companion at bay – so did that tip the scales back
towards him? Rae content to remain on the periphery, unwilling
to cause harm . . . Rae with his facial disfigurement . . . Call it
seventy–thirty – seventy per cent Jackie Dyson against thirty
for Rae. Fox closed down the various windows and made sure
to delete his search history. His phone was buzzing, so he
answered.
‘Fox?’ a female voice asked.
‘Hello, Hastie. Do I call you Hastie or Beth?’
‘If you’re not already there, just to say you’ll find the office
empty.’ All businesslike. ‘Don’t know when we’ll be back,
okay?’
‘Surveillance again? A return trip to the Gimlet?’
‘Bright boy. Later.’ The phone went dead, and Fox got to his
feet, nearly bumping into a man in a suit who was toting a box
file. The man was ruddy-faced, his breathing ragged. Fox
muttered an apology.
‘No problem,’ the man said, making his exit.
‘You’re honoured,’ Christine Esson drawled. ‘That’s a rare
sighting of the Charlie Sykes in its native environment.’
‘He seemed busy.’
‘He does a good impression. Carries that box around all day
without ever feeling the need to open it.’ She paused, tapping a
pen against her chin. ‘Do you do any impressions yourself, DI
Fox?’
‘Such as?’
‘Man sending email.’
Fox gave a sheepish smile. ‘Busted,’ he said, heading for the
door.
He drove to the Gimlet, unsure why. He wasn’t going to get in
the way, wasn’t going to get close enough to be spotted by
Compston’s team. But maybe if there was violence, he would
phone it in anonymously. Rebus had been right to castigate him,
but would Rebus himself have acted differently? Fox doubted
it.
The street the Gimlet sat on, an unlovely passageway
between Slateford Road and Calder Road, was lined with
parked cars, putting paid to his idea of finding a kerbside spot.
He had a choice: reverse, or keep going? Keeping going meant
passing the surveillance vehicle and maybe being spotted. But
reversing would look suspicious. Biting down hard on his
bottom lip, he pressed the accelerator.
He was almost level with the bar when its door burst open,
men spilling out. Dennis was first, then his gang. There was
blood on Rob Simpson’s white shirt, and he was holding a hand
over his nose. And here came the reason – a hulk of a man in a
stained T-shirt two sizes too small, his biceps bulging, arms
tattooed. He was shouting the odds and swinging a baseball bat.
But it was one against five, and the Stark gang were beginning
to circle their prey. Fox noted that up close, Tommy Rae’s scar
was almost as red and angry as the tattooed man’s face.
Dyson’s hand was going into his pocket, presumably for a
knife. Fox gritted his teeth and pulled on the handbrake.
Undoing his seat belt, he sounded his horn, got out and strode
towards the melee.
‘Hey!’ he yelled. ‘What’s going on here?’
‘Stay out of this, pal!’ Dyson spat, the blade concealed in his
fist.
‘Not a fair fight,’ Fox persisted. ‘I’m calling the—’
Dyson pounced, his fist proving the perfect fit for Fox’s
unprepared jaw. Another swipe connected with the side of his
face, and he could feel his knees buckling, the world spinning.
As his vision started to blur, his last sight was of Alec Bell,
hands glued to the surveillance car’s steering wheel, mouth
making the shapes of words that would probably not be
welcome in church.
There was an angel peering down at him. Shrouded in white,
cheeks rose-tinged.
‘You’re awake,’ the angel said, turning into a nurse.
‘Where am I?’ Fox looked around. He was lying on a trolley
in a white booth with a curtain draped across. He was still in his
clothes. His face hurt and he had a blinding headache, which
the strip lighting was doing its best to exacerbate.
‘Royal Infirmary – A and E, to be precise. How are you
feeling?’
Fox tried to sit up. It only took him ten or so seconds. His
vision was still a bit blurry and his face felt swollen.
‘How did I get here?’
‘Your friend drove you.’
‘Did he?’
‘He did.’
Fox remembered Alec Bell’s face. Oh, but they’d be furious
with him for this. ‘Just dumped me here?’
‘Not a bit of it. He’s in the waiting area. Doctor will want to
take a look at you.’
‘Why?’
‘To check for concussion.’
‘I’m fine.’ He thought for a moment. ‘Did you have a guy in
here yesterday from CC Self Storage? Name of Chick
Carpenter?’
‘Rings a bell. He said some packing cases fell on him. What
about you?’
‘Believe it or not, the self-same thing.’
‘Get away. And these packing cases wore a ring of some
kind?’ She nodded towards his face. ‘It’s left an indentation.
Yesterday, it was a size nine boot.’
Fox pressed a finger to the area indicated and wished he
hadn’t. ‘Fancy that.’ He winced, struggling to get to his feet,
then patted his pockets to ensure nothing had been removed.
‘Am I right in thinking you can’t stop me leaving?’
‘Only an idiot would walk out of here in your state.’
‘That may well be true.’ Fox smiled and gave a little bow.
‘Men your age shouldn’t be fighting.’
‘I was trying to referee,’ he told her.
‘Will you take one bit of advice at least?’ He paused,
waiting. ‘A bag of frozen peas will bring down the swelling.’
Nodding, he shuffled out of the cubicle and into the waiting
area.
He had expected to see Alec Bell or another of the team, but
it was the man from the bar, the one with the bat.
‘What did they say?’ the man asked.
‘That fools rush in.’
‘I don’t know about that, mate. I’d say you were bloody
brave.’
‘What happened? After I conked out, I mean.’
‘Seemed to quieten them a bit – there you were, sparked out
in the road, and with traffic coming from both directions. Got to
tell you, you’re on free drinks for life in my place.’
‘I don’t drink.’
‘Thank God for that – saves me a few bob. I’m Davie Dunn,
by the way. I drove you here in your car. Need to get that clutch
seen to.’
‘Thanks for the tip.’
‘I know a guy. I’ll fix you up with him.’
‘So they just left, did they?’
‘There’d have been a few cracked skulls in here if they
hadn’t.’
‘I thought one of them was pulling a knife.’
Dunn nodded. ‘One of those thin blades from the DIY
stores. But Stark gave the word and that was that.’
‘Stark?’ Fox asked, fishing.
‘Don’t be fooled, Davie – he knows fine well who Stark is.’
The voice had come from behind Fox. He turned too
quickly, almost losing his balance as the world spun. Darryl
Christie had emerged from the toilet and was wiping his hands
dry with a handkerchief. ‘This is Detective Inspector Fox,
Davie. And suddenly it all makes sense. There’s a surveillance
operation on the Starks, yes? After the stunt they pulled
yesterday with Chick Carpenter?’
‘Is there?’ Fox countered, dry-mouthed.
‘You know one another?’ Dunn was asking.
‘DI Fox came to see me a couple of days back. He’s been to
the Gimlet, too, back in the days when I owned it.’ Christie
focused his attention on Fox. ‘Davie here is a good friend of
mine. That’s why I sold him my pride and joy. The Gimlet
taught me a lot of lessons – hard knocks, you might call them.
So when Davie tells me the Starks have been threatening him,
well . . . I listen. And that’s what brought me running.’ He had
folded the handkerchief back into his pocket. ‘Now, here’s the
message I want you to take back to Rebus or whoever else is
involved in this surveillance of yours – the Starks are going
down, end of. You can save us all a lot of grief by walking
away and letting me get on with it.’
‘What if I’d walked away today, though?’ Fox gestured
towards Davie Dunn. ‘What then?’
‘I’m just saying, best if your lot steer clear.’ Christie looked
around the waiting area. ‘Where are your buddies anyway? I
know Police Scotland are stretched, but a one-man
surveillance?’ He shook his head in disbelief. ‘They let you
take that beating, didn’t they? Is that because they didn’t want
the surveillance compromised? Or maybe they just liked seeing
someone who used to be in Professional Standards get a doing?’
Christie smiled, watching Fox try to formulate an answer. Then
he patted Fox’s forearm. ‘Don’t go straining yourself. Got all
your stuff? Davie here will take you home.’
And Fox did want to go home. It didn’t even bother him that
both Christie and Dunn would then know where he lived.
Chances were, Christie either already knew, or could find out in
five minutes. So Dunn drove, while Fox sat in the passenger
seat, still in pain. Christie was behind them all the way in a
Range Rover Evoque.
‘You’ve known Darryl a while, then?’ Fox asked.
‘Probably best we don’t talk about any of that – now I know
you’re police.’
‘Does the drinks-for-life offer still stand?’
‘Of course. Thing is, once my regulars get a whiff of you,
you’re not going to want to linger.’
‘Which might temper the enjoyment.’
‘It might.’ Dunn glanced at him. ‘No offence, but you don’t
look like the kind of cop who’d do surveillance.’
‘Oh?’
‘You seem more of a pen-pusher.’
‘Sorry to disappoint you.’ Fox paused. ‘Will they come
back, do you think?’
‘Stark and his posse? I suppose they might.’
‘You used to drive lorries, didn’t you?’
‘Europe, Ireland, all over.’ Dunn paused. ‘How do you know
that?’
‘Secret of a good surveillance – know everything. You drove
for Hamish Wright?’
‘Haven’t seen him in years.’
‘I’m guessing the Starks think otherwise.’
‘The Starks haven’t got the brains they were born with.’
‘Doesn’t seem to have held them back.’
‘It’ll be their downfall, though. This is 2015. Stanley knives
and fifty-quid drug deals? Reckon they’ve ever heard of Bitcoin