16

Siobhan Clarke lived in a high-ceilinged first-floor flat that was part of a Georgian terrace just off Broughton Street. A five-minute walk took her to work each morning, and she liked the area’s mix of bars and restaurants. There was a cinema complex at the top of the hill, a concert venue nearby, and every kind of shop you could ever wish for on Leith Walk. The flat shared a drying green at the back of the building and she’d got to meet most of her neighbours down the years. Edinburgh had a reputation for being cold and distant, but she’d never found that. Some residents were shy or quiet, just wanting to get on with their lives without fuss or incident. Her neighbours knew her as a police officer, but had yet to ask for help or a favour. When one of the ground-floor flats had been broken into, everyone had gone out of their way to let Clarke know they didn’t blame her for the eventual lack of a result.

She had been thinking about an evening visit to her gym, and had even changed in readiness before slumping on the sofa and checking the TV schedules instead. When her phone let her know she had a message, she decided to ignore it. Then her door buzzer sounded. She went into the hall and pushed the button next to the intercom.

‘Yes?’ she asked.

‘DI Clarke? It’s Malcolm Fox.’

Clarke sucked air in between her teeth. ‘How do you know where I live, or is that a stupid question?’

‘Can I come in?’

‘No, you can’t.’

‘Any particular reason?’

‘I’m expecting someone.’

‘DCI Page, perhaps?’

Christ, the Complaints really did know everything. .

‘Something to hide, DI Clarke?’ Fox was asking.

‘I just like my privacy.’

‘Yes, me too. And that time we happened to bump into one another — I was trusting that you’d have understood our little chat was meant to be kept private.’

‘Then you should have said.’

‘Still, I can appreciate that John Rebus is an old and dear friend. You probably feel no qualms about sharing information with him.’ Though two doors, seventeen stone steps and a passageway separated them, it felt as if his mouth was only an inch or so from her face. She could hear each of his individual breaths.

‘John Rebus is proving invaluable to the McKie inquiry,’ she stated.

‘You mean he’s not gone out on one of his famous limbs yet — not as far as you’re aware.’

‘Why can’t you just leave him alone?’

‘Why can’t you see that he’s the same liability he’s always been? Don’t tell me life wasn’t simpler before he managed to inveigle his way on to the McKie case. .’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Why do you think he’s there? What titbits might he be passing back to his good friend Cafferty? Working cold cases is one thing, but now he has access to an entire floor of CID offices in Gayfield Square.’

‘You don’t know what you’re talking about.’

‘I know a cop gone bad when I see one. Rebus has spent so many years crossing the line, he’s managed to rub it out altogether. As far as he’s concerned, his way’s the right way, no matter how wrong the rest of us might know it to be.’

‘You don’t know him,’ Clarke persisted.

‘Then help me get to know him — talk me through some of the cases the pair of you worked.’

‘So you can twist it all around? I’m not that stupid.’

‘I know you’re not — far from it — and this is your chance to prove it to the people at the top, the people I talk to each and every day.’

‘I grass up my friend and you put in a word come promotion time?’

‘John Rebus should be extinct, Clarke. Somehow the Ice Age came and went and left him still swimming around while the rest of us evolved.’

‘I’d rather bludgeon Darwin with a claw hammer than evolve into you.’

She heard him give a sigh. ‘We’re not so different,’ he said quietly, sounding weary. ‘We’re both conscientious and hard-working. I can even see you joining the Complaints — maybe not this year or next, but sometime.’

‘I don’t think so.’

‘My instinct’s usually right.’

‘And yet you couldn’t be more wrong about John Rebus.’

‘That remains to be seen. Meantime, take care around him — I mean that. And feel free to call me any time you think he’s floundering — floundering or diving to the bottom. .’

She released the intercom button and walked back into her living room, crossing to the window and peering down on to the street, craning her neck left and right.

‘Where the hell did he go?’ she said to herself, failing to see Malcolm Fox anywhere. Then she looked at the message on her phone: I’m 5 minutes away and hope we can discuss your friend some more — Fox.

They had her home address and her mobile number.

And they knew about Page.

She sat back down in front of the TV, but her head was swimming.

‘Gym,’ she said, rising again and looking around for her holdall.

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