Read Even dogs in the wild Online
Authors: Ian Rankin
Rebus drove into the compound. A Portakabin seemed to be all
the office Hamish Wright needed. The door was closed but its
windows were lit. When the door opened, another driver
emerged, folding a set of documents and making for his cab. He
nodded a greeting at Rebus as Rebus tapped on the Portakabin
door.
‘What now?’ a female voice barked from within. Rebus
opened the door and walked in. The woman behind the desk
was in her mid fifties and stubbing her latest cigarette into a
brimming ashtray. There were half a dozen empty coffee
takeaways in the bin next to her, and she was busy with a laptop
and a stack of paperwork.
‘Mrs Wright?’ Rebus guessed.
‘Who are you?’
‘My name’s Rebus. I’m with Police Scotland.’
The blood drained from her face. ‘Yes?’ she said, in a voice
suddenly just above a whisper.
‘Just wondered if your husband had returned from his
business trip.’
Her face relaxed a little and she pretended to be interested in
the top sheet of paper.
‘Not yet,’ she said.
‘No phone calls? No contact of any kind? Surely you must
have an inkling of his movements?’
‘What is it you want?’ She peered at him above her horn-
rimmed glasses.
‘You look as though you’re struggling,’ Rebus commented.
‘What business is that of yours?’
Rebus offered a shrug. ‘Have you tried asking your nephew?
Maybe he has some ideas.’
‘Nephew?’
‘In Edinburgh.’ He’d been hoping for a reaction, but he was
disappointed. She waved a finger to interrupt him as she took a
phone call.
‘Just left the yard,’ she informed the caller, checking the
clock on the wall. ‘By seven tomorrow, yes.’ She saw that
Rebus wasn’t about to make a move. ‘Hang on a sec, will you?’
she told the caller. Then, to Rebus: ‘Was there anything else?’
Rebus gave another shrug. ‘Nothing illegal in the lorries
tonight, I hope. Not that I suppose you’ll be doing much
business with Joe Stark after the stunt your husband pulled . . .’
She gave him a look that would have felled lesser mortals,
and turned her back on him as she picked up where she’d left
off with the caller.
‘Sorry, Timothy,’ she cooed. ‘Thought all the arseholes had
clocked off for the night, but there’s always one more . . .’
Rebus took in the interior – desk, filing cabinets, wall
planners. Having gleaned precisely nothing, he made his exit,
leaving the door nicely ajar so the night air and diesel could
waft in. The HGV driver was giving his vehicle a final check.
Rebus crossed the tarmac towards him.
‘Long trip?’ he asked.
‘Aberdeen, Dundee, Newcastle.’
‘Could be worse, eh?’
‘I suppose.’
Rebus gestured towards the office. ‘How’s she really
coping with Hamish gone? I mean, I know she puts on a brave
face . . .’
The driver puffed out his cheeks. ‘She’s pedalling pretty
hard.’
‘You think she’s up to it?’
‘Time will tell.’
‘And Hamish? Reckon we’ll see him again?’
‘Are you kidding me?’ He straightened up, facing Rebus.
Then he drew a finger across his throat.
‘Really?’ Rebus’s eyes widened in what he hoped looked
like astonishment. ‘The Starks did him in?’
‘I heard he was driven away from here in a car. Two of them
in the front, Hamish and another in the back. Last anyone saw
of the poor sod.’
‘Does
she
know?’ Rebus was gesturing towards the
Portakabin again.
‘Everybody knows,’ the driver stated. ‘But nobody’s
saying.’
‘You heard what happened to Dennis Stark?’
‘Universe has a way of balancing things out.’ The driver was
hauling himself up into his cab. ‘Don’t suppose you need a lift
to Aberdeen?’
‘Not right now.’
‘Pity – a bit of company passes the time.’
The man closed the door, revving the engine and making a
few more checks. As the lorry began trundling out of the yard,
Rebus headed for his car. Wright’s wife was watching from the
open doorway. He stopped and began walking in her direction,
but she disappeared inside, slamming shut the door.
Chick Carpenter’s home was a modern two-storey detached
near the zoo. Other times Darryl Christie had visited, he’d been
able to hear and even smell the place – screeches and howls and
dung. He remembered being taken on childhood trips, trekking
up the steep slope and then back down again, or staring at glass
tanks in the reptile house, or waiting with an ice-cream cone for
the penguin parade to start. They had a pair of pandas these
days, though he hadn’t been to see them. More pandas than
Tory MPs, that was the joke made in many a pub. Carpenter
and his wife had turned up as pandas at the Halloween party
Christie had thrown at the hotel.
Chrissie was waiting behind the door, opening it as soon as
he pressed the bell. She wrapped him in an embrace, pecking
both cheeks.
‘You’ll catch your death,’ she scolded him, eyeing the black
V-neck T-shirt beneath his suit. ‘In you come, quick. Chick’s in
the den.’
‘When are you going to cut your losses and run away with
me?’ he teased her.
‘I’m old enough to be your mum.’
‘You’re in your prime, Chrissie – even when dressed as a
panda.’
She slapped his shoulder playfully and led him to the den. It
was off the huge living room, a snug space with dark red walls
and oak flooring. Chick Carpenter was stretched out on the
sofa, reading a golf magazine.
‘Come in, Darryl, come in,’ he said. ‘Get the man a drink,
Chrissie.’
‘Just water, thanks.’
‘You sure?’
‘I’m driving.’
‘Not quite yet above the law, eh?’ Carpenter’s smile became
a wince as he swivelled into a seated position. The black eyes
were still swollen.
‘Hear you ended up with a cracked rib.’
‘I’m basically wearing a corset under this shirt. Nearly had
my nose broken too.’
‘Sorry I’ve not visited sooner . . .’
Carpenter waved the apology aside. ‘You’ve got a business
to run.’
‘All the same.’ Darryl accepted the glass of water Chrissie
was holding out to him. When she left, she slid shut the doors.
‘Did they target you to get at me, do you think?’
‘As a message, you mean?’ Carpenter shook his head.
‘They’re looking for stuff Hamish Wright took from them.
They’d been to another two storage places in the city. I’d had
fair warning they might be paying a visit.’
‘Nobody else ended up in A and E, though.’
‘My own fault for getting mouthy. You know what I’m like.
We’d had a day of problems with our computers and I was up
for a shouting match.’
‘Dennis didn’t mention me at all?’
Carpenter shook his head. ‘Hamish Wright is all they were
interested in.’ He broke off, smiling to himself.
‘What’s the joke?’
‘Not a joke really. It’s just that Wright’s nephew works for
me.’
‘Is that so?’
‘Name’s Anthony Wright – he doesn’t know I know.’
‘How
do
you know?’
‘Wright’s haulage firm is based in Inverness. Anthony’s
often mentioned biking there of a weekend – said he had family
up that way.’
‘You put two and two together?’ Christie nodded
thoughtfully. ‘The Starks don’t know this, though?’
‘No.’ With effort, Carpenter lifted a glass from the floor.
Gin and tonic by the look of it. He sipped, his eyes on his
visitor.
‘I’m guessing,’ Christie eventually said, ‘that you’d wonder
if Anthony’s uncle had recently rented one of your units.’
‘You’d be right. But his name’s not in the records.’
‘Clever money would be on an alias.’
‘Which is why I made sure I was thorough. Every unit is
kosher – for once.’
‘Do you think Anthony might know his uncle’s
whereabouts?’
‘He’s a good lad,’ Carpenter cautioned. ‘I wouldn’t like to
see him hurt.’
‘Perish the thought.’ Christie drained the glass of tap water
and wiped his lips with the back of his hand, his eyes fixed on
Carpenter throughout. ‘Here’s what you’re going to do for me,
Chick. You’re going to keep a close watch on Anthony. He
drops any hints – you let me know. He suddenly needs to go off
somewhere – you let me know. Is that understood?’
‘Loud and clear, Darryl.’ Though he had only recently put
his own glass down, Carpenter’s mouth sounded parched.
Christie nodded his satisfaction and rose to his feet.
‘Can I just ask one thing?’ Carpenter said, getting up with
some effort. ‘Who
did
kill Dennis Stark? Do you know?’
Christie handed the man his empty glass. ‘Anyone touches
me or my friends, there’s a price to be paid,’ he said.
As he pulled the sliding doors open and walked back
through the living room, where Chrissie sat watching TV with
the sound kept low, Christie knew he was taking a gamble.
His parting shot would play well with Carpenter and others
like him, but on the other hand, if his words got back to Joe
Stark . . .
‘Night, Chrissie,’ he called.
‘Look after yourself, pet.’
‘I always do.’
Thirty Five
Siobhan Clarke checked her watch again: almost half past ten.
‘He’s not coming,’ Fox told her.
‘I know.’ She tore off a shred of leftover naan and began
chewing it. She and Fox were the last customers left in
Newington Spice. ‘You heading back to the hospital?’
‘I might.’
‘Want some company?’
‘You should really get some sleep.’
‘Said the pot to the kettle.’
‘Another tough day?’
‘Page is getting flak for the inquiry stalling. He’s been
growing grumpier by the hour. I had to tell him, it’s been over a
week now and none of us has managed a day off. Everybody’s
exhausted.’ She paused. ‘Plus I gave a bollocking of my own.’
‘Who to?’
‘Charlie Sykes.’
‘For being a waste of space?’
‘For maybe telling tales to Darryl Christie. Charlie wasn’t
best pleased.’
‘I’ll bet.’
‘I threatened to take it further unless he owned up. Told him
that if I did that, he could kiss his precious pension goodbye.’
‘And?’
‘He’s Christie’s man.’
‘Want me to have a word with Complaints?’
Clarke shook her head. ‘It stays with us, as long as he tells
Christie it’s finished between them.’
A waiter was hovering. ‘Gentleman, madam – was
everything satisfactory?’
‘Delicious,’ Fox said.
‘Desserts? Coffee?’
‘Maybe a coffee – how about you, Siobhan?’
She nodded and started to get up. ‘Back in a sec,’ she said to
Fox, as the waiter pointed her towards the toilets.
While she was washing her hands, she saw that a display of
takeaway menus had been positioned on the window ledge next
to the sink.
Pays to advertise, she said to herself, remembering that
David Minton, over on the other side of town, had been the
recipient of a menu from Newington Spice. As she walked past
the bar, she stopped and said as much to the waiter.
‘Do you really get people trekking across town?’ she asked.
‘We like to think we are worth a detour,’ the waiter said
with a smile. ‘But I doubt we’d pay for someone to flyer quite
that far away. Perhaps the menu was taken home after a meal.’
‘Looked like it had been pushed through the door.’
The waiter just shrugged, smile still in place. By the time
Clarke reached the table, Fox could see that something had
changed.
‘What is it?’ he asked.
‘Probably nothing.’
‘Try me.’
‘There was a menu from here in Minton’s hallway. Waiter
says they only flyer locally.’
‘So?’
‘Like I say, it’s probably nothing.’ But she had taken her
phone out and was standing up again. ‘I just need to make a
call . . .’
She stepped outside, away from the piped music and the
hissing of the espresso machine. Jim Grant’s number was in her
list of contacts. When he picked up, she apologised for calling
so late.
‘I’m in the pub if you fancy joining me.’
‘Another time maybe. Do you remember us talking in
Michael Tolland’s kitchen?’
‘How could I forget?’
‘You said something about him eating out a lot, and using
takeaways . . .’
‘Yes?’
‘And also something about him being rich enough to be able
to order from far afield?’
‘Okay.’ His tone told Clarke he was wondering where she
was going with this.
‘How did you know that? Was it because of the menus in the
kitchen drawer?’
‘Must have been, I suppose.’
‘You don’t remember?’
‘I don’t, to be honest.’
‘Do you think you could go back to his house for me and
check?’
‘In the morning, you mean?’
‘Right now would be better.’
‘I’m probably in no fit state to drive.’
‘But you can get someone to take you?’
‘Can I assume you’re not offering?’
She ignored this. ‘I’m interested in a restaurant called
Newington Spice on the south side of Edinburgh. Just ping me a
text when you’ve checked.’