'Pretty good, yes.'
'I'm always on the lookout for a new restaurant.'
'I'm sure you can afford it,' Anderson said, with a smile which suggested the opposite. 'It's called the Pompadour.'
'I'll make sure he's paying.' Clarke nodded towards Rebus.
Tou do that,' Anderson told her with a laugh. He was still chuckling when he closed the door on them.
'No wonder his wife likes the garden,' Rebus muttered. 'Chance for some time away from that pompous prick.' He started down the path, reaching into his pocket for a cigarette.
'If I tell you something interesting,' Clarke teased, 'will you buy me dinner at the Pompadour?'
Rebus busied himself with his lighter, nodding a reply.
'There was a copy of its menu sitting on the concierge's desk.'
Rebus exhaled a plume of smoke into the night sky. 'Why's that then?'
'Because,' Clarke told him, 'the Pompadour is the restaurant at the Caledonian Hotel.'
He stared at her for a moment, then turned back to the door and gave it a couple of thumps with his fist. Roger Anderson looked less than delighted, but Rebus wasn't about to give him the chance to complain.
'Before he was attacked,' he stated, 'Alexander Todorov was drinking in the bar at the Caledonian.'
'So?'
'So you were in the restaurant – you didn't happen to see him?'
'Elizabeth and I didn't go near the bar. It's a big hotel, Inspector…'
Anderson was closing the door again. Rebus thought about wedging a foot in to stop him; probably been years since he'd done anything like that. But he couldn't think of any other questions, so he just kept his gaze on Roger Anderson until the solid wooden door was between them. Even then, he focused on it for a few seconds more, willing the man to open up again. But Anderson was gone. Rebus headed back down the path.
'What do you think?' Clarke asked.
'Let's go talk to the other witness. After that, I'll give you my best guess.'
Nancy Sievewright's flat was on the third storey of a Blair Street tenement. There was an illuminated sign across the street, advertising a basement sauna. Further up the steep incline, smokers were huddled outside a bar and there were a few yips and yells from Hunter Square, where the city's homeless often held court until moved on by the police.
There wasn't much light in the tenement's doorway, so Rebus held his cigarette lighter under the intercom, while Clarke made out the various names. Rented flats and a shifting population, meaning some of the buzzers boasted half a dozen names alongside, with scrawled amendments on peeling bits of gummed paper.
Sievewright's name was just about legible, and when Clarke pressed the button the door clicked open without anyone bothering to check who wanted in. The stairwell was well enough lit, with some bags of rubbish at the bottom and a stack of several years'
worth of unwanted telephone directories.
'Someone's got a cat,' Rebus said, sniffing the air.
'Or an incontinence problem,' Clarke agreed. They climbed the stone steps, Rebus pausing at each level as though studying the various names on the doors, but really just catching his breath.
By the time he reached the third floor, Clarke had already rung the bell. The door was opened by a young man with tousled hair and a week's growth of dark beard. He wore eyeliner and a red bandanna.
You're not Kelly,' he said.
'Sorry to disappoint you.' Clarke was holding up her warrant card. 'We're here to see Nancy.'
'She's not in.' He sounded instantly defensive.
'Did she tell you about finding the body?'
'What?' The young man's mouth fell open and stayed that way.
'You a friend of hers?'
'Flatmate.'
'She didn't tell you?' Clarke waited for a response that didn't come. 'Well, anyway, this is just a back-up call. She's not done anything wrong-'
'So if you'll kindly let us in,' Rebus interrupted, 'we'll try to ignore the smell of Bob Hope wafting into our faces.' He gave what he hoped was an encouraging smile.
'Sure.' The young man held the door open a little wider. Nancy Sievewright's head appeared around her bedroom door.
'Hello, Nancy,' Clarke said, stepping into the hall. There were boxes everywhere – stuff for recycling, stuff to be thrown out, stuff that hadn't made it into the flat's limited cupboard space. 'Just need to check a few things with you.'
Nancy was in the hallway, closing her bedroom door after her.
She wore a short tight skirt with black leggings and a crop top which showed off her midriff and a studded belly button.
'I'm just on my way out,' she said.
Td put another layer on,' Rebus suggested. 'It's perishing.'
'Won't take a moment,' Clarke was reassuring the teenager.
'Where's the best place to talk?'
'Kitchen,' Nancy stated. Yes, because the sweet smell of dope was coming from behind another closed door, probably the living room. There was music, too, something rambling and electronic.
Rebus couldn't place it, but it reminded him a bit of Tangerine Dream.
The kitchen was narrow and cluttered, seemed the flatmates existed on takeaways. The window had been left open a couple of inches, which did little to lessen the smell from the sink.
'Someone's missed their turn to do the washing-up,' Rebus commented.
Nancy ignored him. She had folded her arms and was waiting for a question. Clarke went back into her folder again, bringing out Todd Goodyear's impeccable report and another business card.
'We'd like you to come down to Gayfield Square some time soon,'
Clarke began, 'and give a proper signed statement. Ask for either of these officers.' She handed over the card. 'Meantime, we just want to check a couple of things. You were on your way back here when you found the victim?'
'That's right.'
'You'd been to a friend's in…' Clarke pretended to look at the report. She was expecting Nancy to finish the sentence, but the
teenager seemed to be having trouble remembering. ' Great Stuart Street,' Clarke reminded her. Nancy nodded in agreement. 'What's your friend's name, Nancy?'
'What do you need that for?'
'It's just the way we are, we like as much detail as we can get.'
'Her name's Gill.'
Clarke wrote the name down. 'Surname?' she asked.
'Morgan.'
'And what number does she live at?'
'Sixteen.'
'Great.' Clarke wrote this down, too. 'Thanks for that.'
The living-room door opened and a female face peered out, disappearing again after meeting Rebus's glare.
'Who's your landlord?' Rebus decided to ask Nancy. She gave a shrug.
'I give the rent to Eddie.'
'Is Eddie the one who answered the door?'
She nodded, and Rebus took a couple of steps back into the hall.
On top of one of the cardboard boxes sat a pile of mail. As Clarke asked another question, he sifted through it, stopping at one envelope in particular. In place of a stamp, there was a business frank, and alongside it the name of the company: MGC Lettings. Rebus dropped the letter and listened to Nancy 's answer.
'I don't know if the car park was locked up – what difference does it make?'
'Not much,' Clarke seemed to concede.
'We think the victim was attacked there,' Rebus added. 'He either staggered along to the lane where you found him, or else he was carried there.'
'I didn't see anything!' the teenager wailed. Tears were welling in her eyes, and she had wrapped her arms more tightly around her. The living-room door opened again and Eddie emerged into the hall.
'Stop hassling her,' he said.
'We're not hassling her, Eddie,' Rebus told him. The young man blanched when he realised Rebus now had his name. He held his ground a further moment or two for pride's sake, then retreated.
Why didn't you tell him what had happened?' Rebus asked Nancy.
She was shaking her head slowly, having blinked back the tears.
'Just want to forget all about it.'
'Can't blame you for that,' Clarke sympathised. 'But if you do