Doors Open (27 page)

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Authors: Ian Rankin

BOOK: Doors Open
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Transgression.
Heinous.
Mike’s stomach did a little flip and he decided he’d had enough whisky. Gissing still hadn’t called. But then they’d sort of agreed - contact was to be kept to a minimum. Let the dust settle. Mike placed the Monboddo back on the sofa and reached for his mobile anyway - couldn’t do any harm to send the prof a text. Keep it short and offhand, just the sort of casual enquiry any friend might send - How are you? Let’s have a drink soon. Any news your end? He turned the phone over in his hand, and almost dropped it when it buzzed. Incoming message. It was from Gissing. Mike felt his hand starting to shake as he pressed the tiny button to accept the text.
Subject of photo is probing. Let’s give him nothing to work with
.
It was nicely vague - even though Mike knew what it meant, few others would. Calloway had put a name to the cop in the photo. DI Ransome. Ransome was working the heist, and there was a history between Calloway and him. It was far from perfect, but they could ride it. Of course they could.
What the hell else could they do?
Mike found that he had refilled his tumbler without meaning to. He went into the kitchen and poured it down the sink. Last thing he needed was a hangover. Well . . . actually there were a lot of things he needed less than a hangover. In fact, right now, it wouldn’t even make his top five. Having rinsed the glass and left it to drain, he walked back into the living area and flopped on to the sofa, so that he sat flanked by his two paintings. He hadn’t given the other one much thought. It was an early Cadell, a beach scene. Westie had been dismissive: plenty of impasto and sharp angles.
Could do it in my sleep
. Mike wanted to call Gissing, wanted to hear him say reassuring things. Wanted to share with him the story of Calloway’s ‘collateral’. A text message wasn’t going to cover any of it. He turned the phone over and over again in his hand. Took a deep breath. Punched in the professor’s number and listened to the ring tone. Gissing would have caller ID - had to know who was calling. But nobody was answering. It went to the messaging service, a pleasantly robotic female voice, but Mike decided to ring off instead.
Tomorrow: it could wait till tomorrow. He’d go surf the net one final time for news, then call it a night.
He carried Beatrice with him under his arm . . .
23
‘How did you get this address?’
Monday morning. Mike hadn’t eaten breakfast yet, and here he was opening his door to Chib Calloway. The gangster brushed past him, not even waiting for an invite.
‘Nice place,’ he was saying as he walked into the open-plan living area. ‘Great outlook, too. Always fancied living somewhere with a view of the Castle . . .’
‘You didn’t answer my question,’ Mike said sternly.
Chib turned towards him. ‘No secrets between us, Mikey. Any time you want to see my place, you only have to ask. Is that coffee I can smell?’
‘I was just brewing some.’
‘Milk and one sugar,’ Chib told him. Mike hesitated, then headed for the kitchen.
‘What did you make of Mr Hate?’ Chib called out to him.
Mike was still half asleep, but adrenalin was making itself felt. What the hell was Calloway doing here?
‘Have you heard from him?’ he called back over his shoulder. He had a view of half the living area, but Calloway was out of sight.
‘Not yet. Lot of art on your walls, Mike. I’ve been doing a bit more digging on you - from what I can tell, you’re absolutely minted. Makes me wonder . . .’
‘What?’
‘Why nick paintings when you can afford to buy them?’
‘Sometimes the ones you want never come on the open market.’ Mike carried through two rushed mugs of coffee and saw that Chib had been busy snooping. The gangster was smiling as he gestured behind one of the room’s cream leather sofas.
‘Not much of a hiding place, Michael. Anyone would think you want to get caught.’
‘I didn’t have much time,’ Mike said by way of excuse. ‘They were on the sofa when you rang the bell.’
‘Mind if I take a peek?’ Chib didn’t wait for assent. He was already easing out the paintings. ‘Four?’ he said.
‘Two belong to Allan - I’m keeping them for him.’
‘Mind if I ask why?’
‘He’s got a girlfriend,’ Mike answered, hiding his mouth behind the coffee mug. ‘Knows a bit about art, so he doesn’t want her seeing them.’ He was hoping Chib would accept the lie.
‘So which two are yours?’
‘The portrait and the landscape.’
‘Glad to hear it - Allan’s two look like something from playschool.’ Chib studied the Monboddo and the Cadell. ‘Nice,’ he decided. ‘Are they worth the same as mine?’
‘Roughly - probably a little less, actually.’
‘But then I only got the one, and here you are with four of the little beauties.’
‘One was all you wanted.’
Chib kept nodding, still appearing to be making an appraisal of the paintings. ‘The portrait looks a bit like that bird from the auctioneer’s.’
‘I hadn’t noticed,’ Mike stated. Eventually, Calloway accepted the proffered mug with a grunt of thanks.
‘Definitely a resemblance,’ he mused, his eyes on Beatrice, concentrating on the swell of her cleavage. ‘Think she’d like me any better if she knew I own an Utterson?’
‘Laura Stanton, you mean? More likely she’d turn you in.’
‘True . . .’ Calloway gave a dismissive sniff, then took a slurp of the coffee. ‘The reason I’m here is, I’ve been thinking about that bawbag of a copper.’
‘Ransome?’
‘That’s the one - you heard any more from the prof?’
‘Just a text to say everything’s fine.’ Again, Mike hid behind the mug he was holding. ‘The media say it’s someone called Hendricks who’s in charge of the investigation . . .’
‘Gav Hendricks is a featherweight; it’s Ransome we need to keep an eye on.’ Chib had taken a step towards Mike. ‘Say he takes your friend Allan in for questioning . . .’
‘Allan’s fine.’
‘He better be.’
Mike didn’t want Calloway coming any closer, so made a show of wandering over towards the window, realising too late that it might make him appear nervous: hadn’t Allan done the selfsame thing? He found himself staring out of the window anyway, and could make out the roof of Chib’s black BMW 5-Series. Two men were resting against the car, one of them smoking a cigarette, the other checking his phone for messages.
‘You brought your boys,’ Mike commented.
‘Don’t fret - they don’t know it’s you I’m visiting.’
‘Why not?’
Chib gave a shrug. ‘Not sure who to trust these days . . . and it’s nice to keep a few secrets, isn’t it?’
‘I suppose so, though it didn’t stop you telling Hate my name.’
‘You leave Hate to me, Mike.’ Chib was wagging a finger. He decided that he’d spent enough time admiring the paintings, and had started on another circuit of the room. ‘It’s all right for some, eh? I mean, look at you - you’ve got your money in the bank, art on your penthouse walls . . .
and
behind the sofa. You’re living high on the hog, Mr Michael Mackenzie.’ Calloway gave a humourless chuckle. ‘Some of us still have to go out there and graft for a living. This coffee’s champion, by the way. Any more of it going?’
Mike took the empty mug and headed for the kitchen. He didn’t like it that Chib knew where he lived; liked it even less that his goons were stationed outside, and that Chib now knew there were four masterpieces in the apartment - not forgetting the lesser pieces exhibited on the walls. He heard a bleep from the living area and figured Chib was making a call or sending a text. He hoped it wasn’t an invitation for the goons to join the party - maybe they were coffee-lovers, too . . .
When he returned with the replenished mug, however, Chib was pointing towards the coffee table, on top of which sat Mike’s own mobile.
‘Sounds like you’ve got a message waiting,’ the gangster explained.
‘Thanks,’ Mike replied, handing Calloway the coffee. He walked over to the table, but then hesitated. Hadn’t his phone been sitting in the inside pocket of his jacket? The jacket that was still draped over the back of one of the chairs? He glanced towards Chib, who was studying Allan’s two Coultons again, slowly shaking his head. Mike picked up the phone and glanced at its screen. Two text messages. The first was from Laura:
Need to see you
was all it said. Under normal circumstances, this would have gladdened Mike’s heart, but these were far from normal circumstances, as the second text demonstrated.
Westie short-changed. Another picture or 20K cash, you choose. Alice.
‘Nothing urgent, I hope?’ Chib was asking.
‘Not really.’ Mike pretended to be punching a reply into the keypad, aware of Chib’s eyes drilling into him.
‘So you’re pretty confident about your pal Allan?’
The question caught Mike off guard. ‘Of course,’ he spluttered. ‘Why shouldn’t I be?’
‘Well, because of his taste in art for one thing.’
Mike barked out something that he hoped might be construed as a laugh, Chib obliged by smiling back. He straightened his back and clasped his hands behind his head, studying the room again as if he were considering its purchase.
‘Very nice,’ he commented. ‘Bet it cost a few bob.’
‘A few,’ Mike conceded.
‘Owe any money on it?’
‘No.’
‘Didn’t expect you would, man of your talents. What’s that word they use about businessmen when they know what they’re doing . . . ? Ecumen?’
‘Acumen,’ Mike corrected him.
‘That’s it.’ Chib nodded slowly. ‘Now do us all a favour, Mike . . .’ He was bearing down on Mike, for all the world as though he was going to back him against the wall. ‘Use some of that famed
acumen
of yours to make sure nothing goes wrong, starting with your good friend Mr Allan Cruikshank. A chain’s only as strong as its weakest link, isn’t that what they say?’ The two men stood only inches apart, so that Mike could feel the gangster’s breath on his face. He took a moment to steady himself.
‘From where I’m looking,’ he said eventually, ‘the weakest link is that headcase Hate. If he wants to take you down, all he has to do is send the cops an anonymous tip-off.’
‘But then his clients wouldn’t stand a cat in hell’s chance of getting what’s owed them. When it comes down to it, they’re business people, same as you. So don’t you go worrying about that, and don’t give
me
cause to worry about anything at your end.’
‘A chain doesn’t have an end,’ Mike said quietly.
‘A chain’s nothing
but
ends!’ Calloway snapped back. They locked eyes for a moment, and then the gangster turned away. It looked to Mike as if he was readying to leave. The replenished mug, still three quarters full, was placed on the coffee table. Chib exited into the long hallway, Mike following.
‘Maybe next time I’ll get the full tour, eh?’ Calloway was gesturing towards the art that lined the walls. ‘And like I say, there’s an open invite to mine. Not half as snazzy as yours, of course, but then it’s been through the wars - a bit like its owner.’
The thing is
, Mike thought to himself,
I don’t know your address, while you now know mine
. The front door was open, Chib striding out on to the landing with a backwards wave of the hand. Mike pressed the door closed after him and leaned against it, as if to repel further intruders. He listened out for the sound of the lift arriving, and hazarded an eye to the spy hole. The lift doors were sliding closed. He turned and walked back to the living area, scooping his phone up and making for the window. As yet there was no sign of Calloway. Mike didn’t want the gangster seeing him making a call - no telling
who
he’d think Mike was talking to - so he retreated a few steps into the room before punching Gissing’s number into the keypad.
Laura wants to see me . . .
Westie’s girlfriend is getting greedy . . .
But it was Gissing he wanted; maybe the professor could offer solace, or at least the vague reassurance that, as bad as things might seem, Mike’s life was not yet ready to implode.
The call was answered. ‘My boy, this is unexpected . . .’ The line was terrible, Gissing’s voice breaking up.
‘Where are you?’ Mike asked.
‘Keeping my head down, just as we agreed. At least, I thought that’s what we’d agreed . . .’
‘How much does Ransome know?’
‘He seems to know that
I
know Charles Calloway.’
‘How is that even possible?’
‘Your guess is as good as mine.’
‘Things are starting to unravel.’ Mike heard the BMW’s engine starting.
‘I’m sure you’re exaggerating, Michael.’ Gissing sounded so calm that Mike felt it a shame to spoil things. So he came to a sudden decision: he would keep the news of Allan’s paintings, Hate’s collateral and Chib’s visit to himself.

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