The Beat Goes On: The Complete Rebus Stories (Rebus Collection) (45 page)

Read The Beat Goes On: The Complete Rebus Stories (Rebus Collection) Online

Authors: Ian Rankin

Tags: #Crime and Mystery Fiction

BOOK: The Beat Goes On: The Complete Rebus Stories (Rebus Collection)
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‘I wouldn’t dare.’ Rebus leaned against a workbench as Duff made the call, identified himself, and reeled off the mobile phone number. He placed his hand over the mouthpiece.

‘It’ll take a minute,’ he told Rebus.

‘Can anyone get this sort of information?’ Rebus asked. ‘I mean, what’s to stop Joe Public calling up and saying they’re a cop?’

Duff smiled. ‘Caller recognition. They’ve got a screen their end. IDs the caller number as Lothian and Borders Police Forensic Branch.’

‘Clever,’ Rebus admitted. Duff just shrugged. ‘So how about the other number? The one belonging to whoever sent that message.’

Duff held up a finger, indicating that he was listening to the person at the other end of the line. He looked around him, finding a scrap of paper. Rebus provided the pen, and he started writing.

‘That’s great, thanks,’ he said finally. Then: ‘Mind if I try you with something else? It’s a mobile number …’ He proceeded to reel off the number on the message screen, then, with his hand again muffling the mouthpiece, he handed the scrap of paper to Rebus.

‘Name and address of the phone’s owner.’

Rebus looked. The owner’s name was William Smith, the address a street in the New Town. ‘What about the text sender?’ he asked.

‘She’s checking.’ Duff removed his hand from the mouthpiece, listening intently. Then he started shaking his head. ‘Not one of yours, eh? Don’t suppose you can tell from the number just who is the service provider?’ He listened again. ‘Well, thanks anyway.’ He put down the receiver.

‘No luck?’ Rebus guessed. Duff shrugged.

‘Just means we have to do it the hard way’ He picked up the sheet of telephone numbers. ‘Maybe nine or ten calls at the most.’

‘Can I leave it with you, Ray?’

Duff stretched his arms wide. ‘What else was I going to be doing at half past six of a Saturday?’

Rebus smiled. ‘You and me both, Ray.’

‘What do you reckon we’re dealing with? A hit man?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘But if it is ... then Mr Smith would be his employer, making him someone you might not want to mess about with.’

‘I’m touched by your concern, Ray.’

Duff smiled. ‘Can I take it you’re headed over to that address anyway?’

‘Not too many gangsters living in the New Town, Ray.’

‘Not that we know of,’ Duff corrected him. ‘Maybe after this, we’ll know better …’

 

 

The streets were full of maroon-scarved Hearts fans, celebrating a rare victory. Bouncers had appeared at the doors of most of the city-centre watering holes: an unnecessary expense in daylight, but indispensable by night. There were queues outside the fast-food restaurants, diners tossing their empty cartons on to the pavement. Rebus kept eyes front as he drove. He was in his own car now, having stopped home long enough for a mug of coffee and two paracetamol. He guessed that a breath test might just about catch him, but felt OK to drive nonetheless.

The New Town, when he reached it, was quiet. Few bars here, and the area was a dead end of sorts, unlikely to be soiled by the city-centre drinkers. As usual, parking was a problem. Rebus did one circuit, then left his car on a double yellow line, right next to a set of traffic lights. Doubled back on himself until he reached the tenement. There was an entryphone, a list of residents printed beside it. But no mention of anyone called Smith. He ran a finger down the column of names. One space was blank. It belonged to Flat 3. He pushed the button and waited. Nothing. Pushed it again, then started pressing various bells, waiting for someone to respond. Eventually the tiny loudspeaker grille crackled into life.

‘Hello?’

‘I’m a police officer. Any chance of speaking to you for a minute?’

‘What’s the problem?’

‘No problem. It’s just a couple of questions concerning one of your neighbours …’

There was silence, then a buzzing sound as the door unlocked itself. Rebus pushed it open and stepped into the stairwell. A door on the ground floor was open, a man standing there. Rebus had his ID open. The man was in his twenties, with cropped hair and Buddy Holly spectacles. A dishtowel was draped over one shoulder.

‘Do you know anyone called William Smith?’ Rebus asked.

‘Smith?’ The man narrowed his eyes, shook his head slowly.

‘I think he lives here.’

‘What does he look like?’

‘I’m not sure.’

The man stared at him, then shrugged. ‘People come and go. Sometimes they move on before you get to know their names.’

‘But you’ve been here a while?’

‘Almost a year. Some of the neighbours I know to say hello to, but I don’t always know their names.’ He smiled apologetically. Yes, that was Edinburgh for you: people kept themselves to themselves, didn’t want anyone getting too close. A mixture of shyness and mistrust.

‘Flat 3 doesn’t seem to have a name beside it,’ Rebus said, nodding back towards the main door.

The man shrugged again.

‘I’m just going to go up and take a look,’ Rebus said.

‘Be my guest. You know where I am if you need me.’

‘Thanks for your help.’ Rebus started climbing the stairs. The shared space was well maintained, the steps clean, smelling of disinfectant mixed with something else, a perfume of sorts. There were ornate tiles on the walls. Flats 2 and 3 were on the first floor. There was a buzzer to the right of Flat 3, a typed label attached to it. Rebus bent down for a closer look. The words had faded but were readable:
LT Lettings
. While he was down there, he decided he might as well take a look through the letter box. All he could see was an unlit hallway. He straightened up and pressed the bell for Flat 2. Nobody was home. He took out one of his business cards and a ballpoint pen, scribbled the words
Please call me
on the back, and pushed the card through the door of Flat 2. He thought for a moment, but decided against doing the same for Flat 3.

Back downstairs again, he knocked on the door of the young man with the dishtowel. Smiled as it was opened.

‘Sorry to bother you again, but do you think I could take a look at your phone book …?’

 

 

Rebus went back to his car and made the call from there. An answering machine played its message, informing him that LT Lettings was closed until ten o’clock on Monday morning, but that any tenant with an emergency should call another number. He jotted it down and called. The person who answered sounded like he was stuck in traffic. Rebus explained who he was.

‘I need to ask about one of your properties.’

‘I’m not the person you need to speak to. I just mend things.’

‘What sorts of things?’

‘Some tenants aren’t too fussy, know what I mean? Place isn’t their own, they treat it like shit.’

‘Until you turn up and sort them out?’

The man laughed. ‘I put things right, if that’s what you mean.’

‘And that’s all you do?’

‘Look, I’m not sure where you’re going with this … It’s my boss you need to speak to. Lennox Tripp.’

‘OK, give me his number.’

‘Office is shut till Monday.’

‘His home number, I meant.’

‘I’m not sure he’d thank me for that.’

‘This is a police matter. And it’s urgent.’

Rebus waited for the man to speak, then jotted down the eventual reply. ‘And your name is …?’

‘Frank Empson.’

Rebus jotted this down too. ‘Well, thanks for your help, Mr Empson. You heading for a night out?’

‘Absolutely, Inspector. Just as soon as I’ve fixed the heating in one flat and unblocked the toilet in another.’

Rebus thought for a moment. ‘Ever had cause to visit Gilby Street?’

‘In the New Town?’

‘Number 26, Flat 3.’

‘I moved some furniture in, but that was months back.’

‘Never seen the person who lives there?’

‘Nope.’

‘Well, thanks again …’ Rebus cut the call, punched in the number for Lennox Tripp. The phone was answered on the fifth ring. Rebus asked if he was speaking to Lennox Tripp.

‘Yes.’ The voice hesitant.

‘My name’s John Rebus. I’m a detective inspector with Lothian and Borders Police.’

‘What seems to be the problem?’ The voice more confident now, an educated drawl.

‘One of your tenants, Mr Tripp, 26 Gilby Street.’

‘Yes?’

‘I need to know what you know …’

 

 

Rebus was smoking his second cigarette when Tripp arrived, driving a silver Mercedes. He double-parked outside number 26, using a remote to set the locks and alarm.

‘Won’t be long, will we?’ he asked, turning to glance at his car as he shook Rebus’s hand. Rebus flicked the half-smoked cigarette on to the road.

‘Wouldn’t imagine so,’ he said.

Lennox Tripp was about Rebus’s age – mid fifties – but had worn considerably better. His face was tanned, hair groomed, clothes casual but classy. He stepped up to the door and let them in with a key. As they climbed the stairs, he said his piece.

‘Only reason William Smith sticks in my head is that he pays cash for the let. A wad of twenties in an envelope, delivered to the office on time each month. This is his seventh month.’

‘You must have met him, though.’

Tripp nodded. ‘Showed him the place myself.’

‘Can you describe him?’

Tripp shrugged. ‘White, tallish … nothing much to distinguish him.’

‘Hair?’

Tripp smiled. ‘Almost certainly.’ Then, as if to apologise for the glib comeback: ‘It was six months ago, Inspector.’

‘And that’s the only time you’ve seen him?’

Tripp nodded. ‘I’d have called him a model tenant …’

‘A model tenant who pays cash? You don’t find that a mite suspicious?’

Tripp shrugged again. ‘I try not to pry, Inspector.’ They were at the door to Flat 3. Tripp unlocked it and motioned for Rebus to precede him inside.

‘Was it rented furnished?’ Rebus asked, walking into the living room.

‘Yes.’ Tripp took a look around. ‘Doesn’t look like he’s added much.’

‘Not even a TV,’ Rebus commented, walking into the kitchen. He opened the fridge. There was a bottle of white wine inside, open and with the cork pushed back into its neck. Nothing else: no butter, milk … nothing. Two tumblers drying on the draining board the only signs that anyone had been here in recent memory.

There was just the one bedroom. The bedclothes were mostly on the floor. Tripp bent to pick them up, draping them over the mattress. Rebus opened the wardrobe, exposing a dark blue suit hanging there. Nothing in any of the pockets. In one drawer: underpants, socks, a single black T-shirt. The other drawers were empty.

‘Looks like he’s moved on,’ Tripp commented.

‘Or has something against possessions,’ Rebus added. He looked around. ‘No phone?’

Tripp shook his head. ‘There’s a wall socket. If a tenant wants to sign up with BT or whoever, they’re welcome to.’

‘Too much trouble for Mr Smith, apparently.’

‘Well, a lot of people use mobiles these days, don’t they?’

‘They do indeed, Mr Tripp.’ Rebus rubbed a thumb and forefinger over his temples. ‘I’m assuming Smith provided you with some references?’

‘I’d assume he did.’

‘You don’t remember?’

‘Not offhand.’

‘Would you have any records?’

‘Yes, but it’s by no means certain …’

Rebus stared at the man. ‘You’d rent one of your flats to someone who couldn’t prove who they were?’

Tripp raised an eyebrow by way of apology.

‘Cash upfront, I’m guessing,’ Rebus hissed.

‘Cash does have its merits.’

‘I hope your tax returns are in good order.’

Tripp was brought up short. ‘Is that some kind of threat, Inspector?’

Rebus feigned a look that was between surprise and disappointment. ‘Why would I do a thing like that, Mr Tripp?’

‘I wasn’t meaning to suggest …’

‘I would hope not. But I’ll tell you what.’ Rebus laid a hand on the man’s shoulder. ‘We’ll call it quits once we’ve been to your office and checked those files …’

 

 

There was precious little in the file relating to Flat 3, 26 Gilby Street – just a signed copy of the lease agreement. No references of any kind. Smith had put his occupation down as ‘market analyst’ and his date of birth as 13 January 1970.

‘Did you ask him what a market analyst does?’

Tripp nodded. ‘I think he said he worked for one of the insurance companies, something to do with making sure their portfolios didn’t lose money.’

‘You don’t recall which company?’

Tripp said he didn’t.

In the end, Rebus managed a grudging ‘thank you’, headed out to his car, and drove home. Ray Duff hadn’t called, which meant he hadn’t made any progress, and Rebus doubted he would be working Sunday. He poured himself a whisky, stuck John Martyn on the hi-fi, and slumped into his chair. A couple of tracks passed without him really hearing them. He slid his hand into his pocket and came out with both phones, the silver and the black. For the first time, he checked the silver flip-top, finding messages from Frances Guthrie to her husband. There was an address book, probably listing clients and friends. He laid this phone aside and concentrated on the black one. There was nothing in its memory: no phone numbers stored, no messages. Just that one text:
TELL ME WHO TO KIL
L
. And the number of the caller.

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