The driver now turned in his seat. “What’s the game, pal?”
“No game.”
“It’s a woman’s name on the pickup sheet-and if you’ve got a pussy, you should get on the phone to one of those Extreme Makeover programs.”
“Thanks for the advice.” Rebus tucked himself into the farthest corner of the cab as Cafferty’s door opened and closed. Heels clacking down the footpath, and then the cab’s door was opened, perfume wafting in.
“In you get,” Rebus said, before the woman could complain. “I just need a lift home.”
She hesitated, but climbed in eventually, and settled herself as far from Rebus as was possible. The red button was lit, meaning the driver would be able to listen in. Rebus found the right switch and turned it off.
“You work at the Nook?” he asked quietly. “Didn’t realize Cafferty’d got his mitts on it.”
“What’s it to you?” the woman snapped back.
“Just making conversation. Friend of Molly’s?”
“Never heard of her.”
“I was going to ask how she was. I’m the guy who dragged the diplomat off her the other night.”
The woman studied him. “Molly’s fine,” she said at last. Then: “How did you know you wouldn’t be waiting till dawn?”
“Human psychology,” he offered with a shrug. “Cafferty’s never struck me as the kind who’d let a woman stay the night.”
“Clever you.” There was just the hint of a smile. Hard to make out her features in the taxi’s shadowy interior. Clean hair, the sheen of lipstick, the smell of her perfume. Jewelry and high heels and a three-quarter-length coat, falling open to show a much shorter dress beneath. Plenty of mascara, the eyelashes exaggerated.
He decided on another nudge: “So Molly’s all right?”
“As far as I know.”
“What’s Cafferty like to work for?”
“He’s okay.” She turned to stare out at the passing scene, the street lighting showing him half her face. “He told me about you.”
“I’m CID.”
She nodded. “When he heard your voice downstairs, it was like someone had changed his batteries.”
“I do have that effect on people. Are we headed to the Nook?”
“I live in the Grassmarket.”
“Handy for work,” he commented.
“What is it you want?”
“You mean apart from a lift at Cafferty’s expense?” Rebus gave a shrug. “Maybe I just want to know why anyone would want to get close to him. See, I’m beginning to think he carries a virus-everyone he touches gets hurt in some way.”
“You’ve known him a lot longer than I have,” she replied.
“That’s true.”
“Meaning you must be immune?”
He shook his head. “Not immune, no.”
“He’s not hurt me yet.”
“That’s good…but the damage isn’t always immediate.” They were turning into Lady Lawson Street. The driver signaled to make a right. Another minute and they’d be in Grassmarket.
“Finished your Good Samaritan routine?” she asked, turning to face Rebus.
“It’s your life…”
“That’s right.” She leaned forward toward the driver’s panel. “Pull over next to the lights.”
He did as ordered. Started filling in the contract slip, but Rebus told him there was one last drop-off to make. She was climbing out of the cab. He waited for her to say something, but she slammed the door, crossed the road, and headed down a darkened alley. The driver kept the engine running until a beam of light showed him she’d opened her stairwell door.
“Always like to make sure,” he explained to Rebus. “Can’t be too careful these days. Where to, chief?”
“Quick U-turn,” Rebus answered. “Drop me at the Nook.” It was a two-minute ride, at the end of which Rebus told the driver to add twenty quid to the bill as a tip. Signed his name to it and handed it back.
“Sure about this, chief?” the driver asked.
“Easy when it’s someone else’s cash,” Rebus told him, getting out. The doormen at the Nook recognized him, which didn’t mean they were happy to renew the acquaintance.
“Busy night, lads?” Rebus asked.
“Paydays always are. Been a good week for overtime, too.”
Rebus got the bouncer’s meaning the moment he walked in. A large group of drunken cops seemed to have monopolized three of the lap dancers. Their table groaned with champagne flutes and beer glasses. Not that they looked out of place-a stag party on the far side of the room was enjoying the competition. Rebus didn’t know the cops, but their accents were Scottish-a last night on the town for this motley crew before they headed home to their wives and girlfriends in Glasgow, Inverness, Aberdeen…
Two women were gyrating on the small central stage. Another was parading along the top of the bar for the benefit of the lone drinkers seated there. She squatted to allow a five-pound note to be tucked into her G-string, earning the donor a peck on the pockmarked cheek. There was just the one stool left, and Rebus took it. Two dancers emerged from behind a curtain and started working the room. Hard to say if they’d been giving private dances or taking a cigarette break. One started to approach Rebus, her smile evaporating as he shook his head. The barman asked him what he was drinking.
“I’m not,” he said. “Just need to borrow your lighter.” A pair of high heels had stopped in front of him. Their owner wriggled her way down until she was at eye level with him. Rebus broke off lighting his cigarette long enough to tell her he needed a word.
“I’ve a break coming in five minutes,” Molly Clark said. She turned toward the barman. “Ronnie, give my friend here a drink.”
“Fine,” Ronnie answered, “but it’s coming out of your wages.”
She ignored him, stretching herself upright again and treading gingerly toward the other end of the bar.
“Whiskey, thanks, Ronnie,” Rebus said, pocketing the lighter unnoticed, “and I prefer to add my own water.”
Even so, Rebus could have sworn the stuff poured from the bottle had already seen its share of adulteration. He wagged a finger at the barman.
“You want to tell Trading Standards you’ve been here, that’s your business,” Ronnie shot back.
Rebus pushed the drink aside and turned on his stool as though interested in the dancers when actually he was watching the posse of cops. What was it, he wondered, that marked them out? A few had mustaches; all had neat haircuts. Most still wore ties, though their suit jackets were draped over their chairs. Various ages and builds, yet he couldn’t help feeling there was something uniform about them. They acted like a small, separate tribe, slightly at odds with the rest of the world. Moreover, all week they’d been in charge of the capital-saw themselves as conquerors, invincible, all-powerful.
Look on my works…
Had Gareth Tench really seen himself that way too? Rebus thought it was more complex. Tench had known he would fail, but was determined to give it a try all the same. Rebus had considered the outside chance that the councilman had been their killer, his “works” the little gallery of horror in Auchterarder. Determined to rid the world of its monsters-Cafferty included. Killing Cyril Colliar had put Cafferty briefly in the frame. A lazy investigation might have ended there, with Cafferty the chief suspect. Tench had also known Trevor Guest…helps the guy out then is incensed to come across his details on a Web site. Decides he’s been betrayed.
Leaving only Fast Eddie Isley. Nothing to connect Tench to him, and Isley had been the first victim, the one who set the whole train in motion. And now Tench was dead, and they were going to blame it on Keith Carberry.
Who else have you talked to about Gareth Tench?
You’re supposed to be the detective around here…
Or a poor excuse for one. Rebus reached for his drink again, just to give himself something to do. The dancers on the stage looked bored. They wanted to be down on the floor, where this week’s pay was being emptied into peekaboo bras and minuscule thongs. Rebus didn’t doubt there’d be a rotation-they’d get their chance. More men were coming inside, executive types. One of them was grinding to the room’s pounding sound track. He was fifteen pounds overweight and the moves didn’t suit him. But no one was about to ridicule him: that was the whole point of somewhere like the Nook. It was all about the shedding of inhibitions. Rebus couldn’t help thinking back to the 1970s, when most Edinburgh bars had offered a lunchtime stripper. The drinkers would hide their faces behind their pint glasses whenever the dancer looked in their direction. All that reticence had melted away in the course of the intervening decades. The businessmen were yelping encouragement as one of the lap dancers at the police table started doing her stuff, while her victim sat with legs parted, hands on knees, grinning and sweaty-faced.