‘He’s going to close the case on me,’ she complained.
‘We’ll persuade him otherwise,’ Rebus promised. ‘Now drink up, the next round’s on me.’
While Rebus went to the bar, Siobhan stepped outside to call home and check her answering machine messages. There were two of them, both from Derek Linford, making apologies and asking to see her.
‘Took you long enough,’ she muttered to herself. He’d left his home phone number, but she was only half listening.
Left alone at the table, Wylie and Hood drank in silence for a few moments. Wylie spoke first.
‘What do you reckon?’
Hood shook his head. ‘The DI has a rep for going out on a limb. Do we want to be out there with him?’
‘I don’t see it, to be honest with you. What’s our case — or Siobhan’s, come to that — got to do with this dead MSP?’
‘What are you thinking?’
‘I think he might be trying to hijack our cases because his own one’s hit a wall.’
Hood shook his head. ‘I’ve told you, he’s not like that.’
Wylie was thoughtful. ‘Mind you, if he’s right then we’ve got a bigger case than we thought.’ Her mouth twisted into a smile. ‘And if he’s wrong, it’s not us who’ll get carpeted, is it?’
Rebus was coming back with the drinks. Gin, lime and soda for Wylie, half of lager for Hood. He went back to the bar and returned with a whisky for himself, Coke for Siobhan.
‘Slainte,’ he said, as Siobhan settled next to him on the narrow banquette.
‘So what’s the plan?’ Wylie asked.
‘You don’t need me to tell you,’ Rebus said. ‘You follow procedure.’
‘Talk to Barry Hutton?’ Hood guessed.
Rebus nodded. ‘You might want to do a little digging, too, just in case there’s something about him we should know.’
‘And Supertramp?’ Siobhan asked.
Rebus turned to her. ‘Well, as it happens, I’ve an idea...’
Someone put their head round the corner, as if checking who was in the bar. Rebus recognised the face: Gordon, one of the regulars. He was still in his work suit; probably been out with the office. He saw Rebus, seemed about to retreat but then decided on another course of action. Approached the table, hands in the pockets of his overcoat. Rebus could tell immediately that he’d been celebrating.
‘You jammy bastard,’ Gordon said. ‘You got off with Lorna that night, didn’t you?’ He was getting ready to make a joke of it: something to embarrass Rebus in front of his friends. ‘Sixties supermodel, and you’re the best she can do.’ He shook his head, missing the look on Rebus’s face.
‘Thanks, Gordon,’ Rebus said. The tone alerted the younger man, who looked at his fellow drinker and slapped his hand to his mouth.
‘Sorry I spoke,’ he mumbled, heading back towards the bar. Rebus looked at the faces around the table. They all suddenly seemed very interested in their drinks.
‘You’ll have to excuse Gordon,’ he told them. ‘Sometimes he gets the wrong end of the stick.’
‘I take it he meant Lorna Grieve?’ Siobhan said. ‘Does she drink in here often?’
Rebus gave her a look; refused to answer.
‘She’s the sister of the murder victim,’ Siobhan went on, her voice low.
‘She came in here one night, that’s all.’ But Rebus knew he was fidgeting too much. He glanced towards Wylie and Hood, remembered that they’d seen her in the Ox that night. He picked up his whisky, found he’d already finished it. ‘Gordon doesn’t know what he’s talking about,’ he muttered. Even to his ears, it sounded limp.
23
There were those who said that Edinburgh was an invisible city, hiding its true feelings and intentions, its citizens outwardly respectable, its streets appearing frozen in time. You could visit the place and come away with little sense of having understood what drove it. This was the city of Deacon Brodie, where bridled passions were given free play only at night. The city of John Knox, his rectitude stern and indomitable. You might need half a million pounds to buy one of the better houses, yet outward show was frowned upon; a city of Saabs and Volvos rather than Bentleys and Ferraris. Glaswegians — who considered themselves more passionate, more Celtic — thought Edinburgh staid and conventional to the point of prissiness.
Hidden city. The historical proof: when invading armies advanced, the populace made themselves scarce in the caves and tunnels below the Old Town. Their homes might be ransacked, but the soldiers would leave eventually — it was hard to enjoy victory without the evidence of the vanquished — and the locals would come back into the light to begin the work of rebuilding.
Out of the darkness and into the light.
The Presbyterian ethos swept idolatry from the churches, but left them strangely empty and echoing, filling them with congregations who’d been told that from birth they were doomed. All of this filtering down through the consciousness of the years. The citizens of Edinburgh made good bankers and lawyers perhaps precisely because they held their emotions in check, and were good at keeping secrets. Slowly, the city gained a reputation as a financial centre. At one time, Charlotte Square, where many of the banking and insurance institutions had made their headquarters, was reckoned to be the richest such street in Europe. But now, with the need for purpose-built offices and car-parking facilities, the banks and insurance companies were regrouping in the area around Morrison Street and the Western Approach Road. This was Edinburgh’s new financial district, a maze of concrete and glass with the arena-like International Convention Centre at its hub.
Everyone seemed to agree that until the arrival of these new buildings, the area had been a waste ground, an eyesore. But opinion was divided over just how user-unfriendly the maze now was. It was as if humans had been dropped from the planning equation, the buildings existing only to serve themselves. Nobody walked around the financial district for the pleasure of the architecture.
Nobody walked around the financial district at all.
Except, this Monday morning, for Ellen Wylie and Grant Hood. They’d made the mistake of parking too early, in a convenient car park on Morrison Street. Hood’s reasoning: the place had to be near by. But the anonymity of the buildings and the fact that walkways were closed due to ongoing construction work meant that they ended up lost somewhere behind the Sheraton on Lothian Road. In the end, Wylie got on her mobile and had a receptionist direct them, until they found themselves entering a twelve-storey building of grey smoked glass and pink facing-stone. The receptionist was smiling as they marched across the floor towards her.
‘And here you are,’ she said, putting down the phone.
‘And here we are,’ Wylie agreed, bristling.
Workmen were still busy in Hutton Tower. Electricians in blue overalls fringed with tool belts; painters in white overalls spotted with greys and yellows, whistling as they rested their tins on the floor, awaiting the lift.
‘It’ll be fine when it’s finished,’ Hood told the receptionist.
‘Top floor,’ she said. ‘Mr Graham’s expecting you.’
They shared their lift with a grey-suited executive, his arms wrestling squid-like with paperwork. He got out three floors below them, almost colliding with a sparky positioning a ladder under some ceiling cables. But when the lift doors opened on the twelfth floor, they entered a calm reception area, with an elegant woman rising from behind her desk to greet them and direct them the eight feet to where two chairs awaited in front of a polished coffee table, arranged with the morning papers.
‘Mr Graham will be with you in a moment. Can I get you anything: tea, coffee?’