‘And how was Mr Mackie’s investment portfolio doing?’
The uniform turned a couple of pages, angling the passbook as if he was having trouble focusing.
‘Not bad,’ he said at last. ‘Just over four hundred grand in credit.’
‘Four hundred thousand? Looks like the drinks are on him then.’
But the uniform turned the passbook towards her. She reached out and took it. He hadn’t been joking. The tramp being scraped and hosed off platform 11 was worth four hundred thousand pounds.
9
Tuesday, Rebus was back at St Leonard’s. Chief Superintendent Watson wanted a meeting with him. When he arrived, Derek Linford was already seated, a mug of oily-looking coffee untouched in one hand.
‘Help yourself,’ Watson said.
Rebus raised the beaker he was holding. ‘Already got some, sir.’ Whenever he remembered, he tried to bring half a cup of coffee with him. There was a sign you saw above some bars — ‘Do not ask for credit as a refusal can often offend’. The beaker was Rebus’s way of not giving offence to his senior officer.
When they were all seated, the Chief Super got straight to the point.
‘Everyone’s interested in this case: reporters, public, government...’
‘In that order, sir?’ Rebus asked.
Watson ignored him. ‘. . which means I’m going to be keeping closer tabs on you than usual.’ He turned to Linford. ‘John here can be like a bull in a china shop. I’m looking to you to be on matador duty.’
Linford smiled. ‘As long as the bull’s okay about it.’ He looked to Rebus, who stayed quiet.
‘Reporters are foaming at the mouth. The parliament, the elections... dry as dust. Now at last they’ve got a story.’ Watson held up thumb and forefinger. ‘Two stories actually. Couldn’t be any connection, could there?’
‘Between Grieve and the skeleton?’ Linford seemed to consider it, glanced towards Rebus who was busy checking the crease in his left trouser leg. ‘Shouldn’t think so, sir. Not unless Grieve was killed by a ghost.’
Watson wagged a finger. ‘That’s just the sort of thing the journalists are after. Joking’s fine in here, but not outside, understood?’
‘Yes, sir.’ Linford looked suitably abashed.
‘So what have we got?’
‘We’ve conducted preliminary interviews with the family,’ Rebus answered. ‘Further interviews to follow. Next step is to talk to the deceased’s political agent, then maybe to the local Labour Party.’
‘No known enemies?’
‘Widow didn’t seem to think so, sir,’ Linford said quickly, leaning forward in his chair. He didn’t want Rebus hogging the stage. ‘Still, there are things wives don’t always know.’
The Chief Super nodded. To Rebus, his face looked even more florid than usual. Run-up to the golden cheerio and he gets landed with this.
‘Friends? Business acquaintances?’
Linford nodded back, catching Watson’s rhythm. ‘We’ll speak to them all.’
‘Did the autopsy throw up anything?’
‘Blow to the base of the skull. It caused immediate haemorrhaging. Seems he died pretty much where he fell. Two more blows after that, producing fractures.’
‘These two blows were post-mortem?’
Linford looked to Rebus for confirmation. ‘Pathologist seems to think so,’ Rebus obliged. ‘They were to the top of the skull. Grieve was pretty tall —’
‘Six-one,’ Linford interrupted.
‘— so to render a blow like that, the attacker had to be hellish tall or standing on something.’
‘Or Grieve was already prone when the blows arrived,’ Watson said, mopping his forehead with a handkerchief. ‘Yes, makes sense, I suppose. How the devil did he get in there?’
‘Either he climbed the fence,’ Linford guessed, ‘or else someone had keys. The gates are kept padlocked at night: too much stuff in there worth nicking.’
‘There’s a security guard,’ Rebus continued. ‘He says he was there all night, kept a regular patrol, but didn’t see anything.’
‘What do you think?’
‘I think he was kipping in the office. Nice and warm in there. Radio and kettle, all mod cons. Either that or he’d bunked off home.’
‘He says he checked the summer house?’ Watson asked.
‘He says he thinks he did.’ Linford quoted from memory: ‘“I always shine my torch inside, just in case. No reason I wouldn’t have that night.”’
The Chief Super leaned forward, rested his elbows on the desk. ‘What do you think?’ He had eyes only for Linford.
‘I think we need to concentrate on the motive, sir. Was this a chance encounter? Prospective MSP wants to take a midnight look at his future workplace, happens across someone who decides to bludgeon him to death?’ Linford shook his head persuasively, his eyes dodging Rebus, who was glaring, having said almost exactly the same thing to him about an hour before.
‘I’m not sure,’ Watson said. ‘Say someone was in there stealing tools. Grieve interrupts them, so they whack him.’
‘And after he’s laid out,’ Rebus interrupted, ‘they hit him twice more for luck?’
Watson grunted, acknowledging the point. ‘And the murder weapon?’
‘Not recovered yet, sir,’ Linford said. ‘Lot of building sites around there, places you could conceal something. We’ve got officers out looking.’
‘The contractors are carrying out an inventory,’ Rebus added. ‘Just in case anything’s missing. If your theory about it being a theft is right, maybe the inventory will throw up something.’
‘One more thing, sir. Recent scuff marks on the shoes and traces of dirt and dust on the inside legs of Grieve’s trousers.’
Watson smiled. ‘God bless forensics. What does it mean?’
‘Means he probably did climb the fence or the gate.’
‘All the same, rule nothing out and everything in. Talk to all the keyholders. All of them, understood?’
‘Very good, sir,’ Linford said.
Rebus just nodded, though no one was paying attention.
‘And our friend Skelly?’ the Chief Super asked.
‘Two other members of the PPLC are on it, sir,’ Rebus said.
Watson grunted again, then looked at Linford. ‘Something wrong with your coffee, Derek?’
Linford’s gaze went to the surface of the drink. ‘No, sir, not at all. Just don’t like it too hot.’
‘And how is it now?’
Linford put the mug to his lips, drained it in two swallows. ‘It’s very good, sir. Thank you.’
Rebus suddenly had no doubts: Linford would go far in the force.
When the meeting was over, Rebus told Linford he’d catch him up, and knocked again on Watson’s door.
‘I thought we’d finished?’ The Farmer was busy with paperwork.
‘I’m being sidelined,’ Rebus said, ‘and I don’t like it.’
‘Then do something about it.’
‘Such as?’
The Farmer looked up. ‘Derek’s in charge. Accept the fact.’ He paused. ‘Either that or ask for a transfer.’
‘Wouldn’t want to miss your retirement do, sir.’
The Farmer put down his pen. ‘This is probably the last case I’ll handle, and I can’t think of one with a higher profile.’
‘You saying you don’t trust me with it, sir?’
‘You always think you know better, John. That’s the problem.’
‘All Linford knows are his desk at Fettes and which arses to lick.’
‘The ACC says different.’ The Farmer sat back in his chair. ‘Bit of jealousy there, John? Younger man speeding through the ranks...?’
‘Oh aye, I’ve always been gasping for a promotion.’ Rebus turned to leave.