The Impossible Dead (19 page)

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Authors: Ian Rankin

BOOK: The Impossible Dead
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‘What would
you
do with the place?’ Carter asked.

‘Same thing your uncle presumably did when he got hold of it – rip it up and start again.’

‘When he first bought it, my dad dragged me along a few times. Dad found it hilarious, the way Uncle Alan thought he was tarting the place up, when he was actually making it worse …’ Carter seemed caught for a moment in the memory, but shook it away. ‘Maybe I should torch the place and collect on any insurance.’

‘Are you sure you should be telling me that?’

Carter managed a smile. He looked washed-out – the interviews had taken their toll; maybe the whispers and stares around town had too.

‘Thing is, I liked him when I was a kid – and I thought he liked me.’

‘I forget, what was his wife called?’

‘Aunt Jessica – you always had to get it right. If you tried “Jess” or “Jessie”, she’d be quick to correct you. Turned out she’d been seeing someone behind Uncle Alan’s back, and that was the end of that.’

‘Did you really make your parents’ lives a misery?’

‘Plenty of nippers do.’

‘But after you’d stopped being a nipper?’

Carter shrugged and moved from the bathroom to the small spare bedroom. This was used for storage, boxes and suitcases piled high.

‘Bonfire,’ he muttered again, before turning towards Fox. ‘I wasn’t so different from anyone else. If he told you I was some sort of monster, he was lying.’

‘He grassed you up,’ Fox stated quietly.

‘Then maybe
he’s
the monster – you ever considered that?’

‘I have, actually.’

Paul Carter had not expected this. He studied Fox, eyes unblinking. Fox noted a slight nervous tremor just below one eye. Carter, conscious of it, pressed a finger to the flesh, as if this would cure it.

‘Know what they do to cops in jail?’ he asked quietly, before answering his own question. ‘Course you do – you put cops away all the time.’

‘Just the ones that deserve it.’

‘You think
I
deserve it?’ Carter’s voice was rising. ‘For asking one sad wee slut for half an hour of her oh-so-precious time?’

‘Why did the other two women come forward?’

Carter banged the heel of one hand against the wall. The whole building seemed to shudder. ‘I don’t know!’ he cried out. ‘She must have told them to!’

‘She didn’t know them.’

‘I never did anything to those two – never even tried!’ This time he took a swipe at the wall with his foot, cracking the plaster.

‘Remember, this is your place now,’ Fox cautioned.

‘I don’t
want
it!’ Carter ran his hand across his head again. ‘I’m sick of all this. I want my life back. Any minute now, that judge could make his mind up, or Cash could charge me with murder. Some choices, eh?’ He looked at Fox. ‘But what’s the point of telling you? You don’t give a damn.’

He shouldered Fox aside and descended the stairs two steps at a time. Fox waited a moment before following. By the time he reached the hallway, Carter had started the Astra’s engine and was making an awkward three-point turn. From the doorway, Fox watched the car head down the hill. The padlock hung loose. It wouldn’t lock without the key. Paul Carter hadn’t been bothered about that – the cottage was just another weight dragging him down. Fox closed the door as best he could, got into his own car and started the long journey home to Edinburgh.

The day’s post, waiting for him inside his front door, included the copy of
No Mere Parcel of Rogues
. It was scuffed, and the section of photos had come loose, but it was still serviceable. Fox skimmed it for an hour or so. Professor Martin was sparing with names. Fox jotted a few down anyway. Then, just before the index, he saw a note stating that the names were fictitious – ‘changed to protect the subjects’.

‘Thanks a bunch,’ Fox said.

He went back to the paperwork Charles Mangold had given him. There were trial reports from the early eighties, and this time the names would be real. There were photographs, too – taken at police stations after the suspects had been arrested. A few bruised faces, cuts on lips and noses, swollen eyes.

Donald MacIver merited a few mentions, along with John Elliot. Wikipedia had a whole page on the broadcaster. When Fox saw his photograph, he realised that he had seen him present the Scottish news a few times. His Wikipedia entry stated that he had been involved in ‘fringe politics’ as a student, and had faced trial for plotting the hijacking of a government minister’s car. Fox compared photos – yes, the newscaster and the radical student were one and the same. The hair had been longer back then, the clothes scruffier and the skin sallower. Fox wouldn’t have called the twenty-year-old Elliot handsome, but promotional shots of him these days showed a chiselled chin, gleaming eyes, and a healthy glow, the hair immaculate, the teeth pearly and the shirt crisp. Elliot employed a management company, and could be hired for ‘corporate and charity functions’. Fox noted the phone number, got up to stretch his spine, and went to make some tea.

When six o’clock came, he turned on the TV, but it was someone else presenting the day’s headlines. He went back to his desk for an hour, phoned his sister to tell her he’d visited Lauder Lodge, got into the usual argument with her, then ate a tin of tuna mashed with mayonnaise and mustard.

At half past eight, his phone rang. It was Tony Kaye.

‘Tell me,’ Fox said.

‘They clocked him,’ Kaye growled, meaning Joe Naysmith had not been able to blend in at the Wheatsheaf.

Fox exhaled slowly and noisily. ‘Did he get
any
thing?’

‘Place wasn’t exactly mobbed, but they were at a table and he had to stick by the bar – a good eight or ten feet away.’

‘So what happened?’

‘He says it was Haldane. Kept staring, then said something to the others. Scholes comes storming over and tells Joe to sod off. After that, there’s silence in the bar – everybody knows who Joe is, and Joe knows he’s going to get hee-haw …’

‘It was a long shot,’ Fox conceded.

‘I blame Joe, though.’

‘Can I assume he’s listening in?’

‘We’re in the Mondeo, fifty yards downhill from the pub.’

‘Any point tailing them?’

‘Not if we can’t hear anything they’re saying,’ Tony Kaye suggested.

‘Okay, then. Might as well get yourselves home – and thank Joe for trying.’

‘Foxy says thanks for nothing,’ Fox heard Kaye tell the hapless Naysmith.

‘You’re a cruel man, Tony Kaye.’

‘Cruel but fair, I think you’ll find.’

Fox wished his colleague good night.

28

John Elliot was filming a piece for later in the day. The up side was, Fox didn’t need to drive into the centre of Glasgow. The downside: he was on a trading estate on the outskirts. For some reason, a modern black slab of a hotel had been placed there, and Elliot’s crew had taken over the restaurant. Bemused guests were eating breakfast in the bar area while lights were repositioned, cameras slotted into place on their tripods.

‘It’s guerrilla stuff,’ the segment’s director told Fox. Fox had been provided with a little cafetière and a couple of miniature
pains au chocolat
. Elliot was being attended by a make-up woman in a corner of the restaurant. There was a large illuminated mirror, and something resembling a toolbox, but filled with cosmetic products rather than wrenches.

‘Mad business,’ Elliot commented to Fox, meeting his eyes in the mirror. His hair was being combed into place, his nose and forehead checked for sheen, a paper towel protecting his shirt collar from smudges. His eyes glittered, and Fox wondered if drops had been applied. He was dressed in an open-necked shirt, black cotton jacket, and faded denims, frayed at the bottom.

‘I appreciate you seeing me at short notice.’

‘When I’m done here, we’ll have about fifteen minutes. After that, I have to be back in the studio.’

The director had arrived at Elliot’s side. He was holding a script and looking stressed.

‘Chef says the lobster’s claws are taped shut, so there’s no danger,’ he was explaining.

‘The glamour of television,’ Elliot said, meeting Fox’s eyes again and sand-blasting him with a smile.

There was a rehearsal, after which it took three takes to get the piece right. Then there were cutaways and changes of angle and lighting and other stuff Fox didn’t quite understand. An hour and a half after starting, they had their three minutes of screen time. Elliot was rubbing a wet-wipe across his face as he crossed the room towards Fox. The gear was being packed away, tables and chairs returned to their original positions. One guest, a middle-aged woman, intercepted Elliot and asked him to sign her copy of the breakfast menu.

‘A pleasure,’ he said. A small tremor seemed to pass through her as she watched him write.

‘Get a lot of that?’ Fox asked when he was eventually able to shake the presenter’s hand.

‘Better a fan than the abuse I’d get on Sauchiehall Street after closing time. Let’s sit here.’ Elliot nodded towards a banquette in the open-plan bar. ‘So,’ he said, slapping his palms against his knees, ‘my nefarious past catches up with me …’

‘It’s no secret, is it?’

‘My whole life is public property, Inspector.’

A waiter came over to ask if they needed anything. Elliot ordered mint tea, then changed his mind to sparkling water. Fox was nursing half a cup of lukewarm coffee.

‘Are you still interested in politics?’ he asked when the waiter had retreated.

‘The question is: was I ever?’

‘You nearly went to prison …’

Elliot nodded slowly. ‘But even so. How much of it was posture? I mean, students back then … we didn’t always think too clearly about the reasoning.’

‘What was it, then – a way to pick up the opposite sex?’

Elliot gave a lopsided smile. ‘Maybe.’ He wriggled in his seat, making himself more comfortable. ‘That court case … it was ridiculous really. We were made to look like the mujahideen, but we were just kids playing games.’ His eyes widened slightly, perhaps hoping Fox would share his incredulity. ‘Hijack a government car? Hold the minister to ransom?’ He shook his head. ‘The ransom, incidentally, consisting of a referendum on Scottish self-government – how hare-brained is that?’

‘You doubt it would have worked?’

‘Of course it wouldn’t have worked! People were
laughing
at us during the trial – they’d sit in the public gallery and their shoulders would be heaving as we explained the tactics. The prosecution went on about “planning”, but as we pointed out, this amounted to a couple of nights in the pub and a few doodles on the back of a napkin.’

‘Might explain why none of you went to jail.’

‘Our university didn’t even bother kicking us out –
that’s
how seriously everyone took it.’

‘Might be different today,’ Fox commented.

‘Almost certainly.’

‘Stirling was your university?’ Elliot nodded, then thanked the waiter as his water arrived. There was a bill with it, but the presenter pointed the waiter in the direction of one of the crew.

‘Ever see any of your old gang?’ Fox asked.

‘Hardly ever.’

‘None of them still active?’


Active?
You mean plotting the overthrow of the state? No, none of them are still “active”.’ He sipped the water, stifling a belch. ‘We were young and foolish, Inspector.’

‘Is that what you really think?’

‘You’ve got me pegged as some sort of sleeper agent?’

Fox returned Elliot’s smile. ‘Not at all. But you’re a public figure – it’s good PR to play down a militant past, maybe make light of it, turn it into an after-dinner routine …’

‘That’s probably true.’

‘And they were very different times.’

‘They were.’

‘Plus, as far as I can tell, the Dark Harvest Commando had a seriousness of purpose. If you’d just been along for a laugh, I doubt they’d have tolerated you.’

Elliot’s face darkened a little. ‘The DHC was too much for me,’ he confided.

‘You went to a few of their meetings, though?’

‘A few.’

‘So you knew Donald MacIver?’

‘Poor Donald. They got him eventually, even managed to have him certified after he attacked another prisoner. He’s in Carstairs now.’

‘Ever thought of visiting him?’

‘No.’ Elliot seemed surprised by the question.

‘He must have been close to Francis Vernal, though …’

‘I can’t believe anyone’s finally paying attention to that,’ Elliot said.

‘In what way?’

‘We all knew Francis had been assassinated – MI5 had him on their hit list. When he died, nobody seemed bothered – no police investigation, almost nothing in the papers …’ He took another sip of water. ‘But it did the job all right.’

‘How do you mean?’

‘A lot of the groups got the message and disbanded. They didn’t want to end up like Francis.’

‘How well did you know him?’

‘I didn’t.’

‘You never met him at meetings?’

‘I was in the same room as him a few times, but I was a foot soldier. He was at the top table.’

‘He was the money man, wasn’t he?’

‘Another reason the groups fell apart – when Francis went, the cash went with him. It wasn’t as though anyone used bank accounts. We didn’t have a chequebook with Dark Harvest Commando on it.’

‘I suppose not.’

Elliot remembered something. ‘There was one meeting where things got a bit heated. Hawkeye needed money for something. Francis went outside and came back in with a wedge of fivers and tenners.’

‘Where was this?’

‘A pub in Glasgow – we used the back room sometimes. Spit and sawdust and patriot songs …’

‘The money must have been in Vernal’s car, then?’

‘I suppose so.’

The car saved from the scrapyard by Gavin Willis. Had he taken it back to his garage to strip it? If so, how had he known about the money? And if there was money to be found, what did he do with it?

And why hang on to the car …?

‘Who’s Hawkeye?’ Fox thought to ask.

Elliot offered a shrug. ‘Never knew his real name. He wasn’t normally the type to attend meetings – everyone was a bit scared of Hawkeye.’

‘Oh?’

‘He definitely wasn’t just playing at radicalism. Two or three armed robberies, I’m pretty sure he was responsible. The members liked to talk about Hawkeye when he wasn’t there – he was our Robin Hood. Liked his explosives, too.’

‘The bombs sent to Downing Street and Parliament?’

‘More than likely.’

‘Why the name Hawkeye?’

‘No idea.’ Elliot had finished his water. The equipment had been packed away, the crew heading for their vans. ‘I need to go,’ he apologised. ‘You really think you can get to the truth after all this time?’

‘I’m not sure.’

‘Reckon anyone out there really wants to hear it, Inspector?’

Fox didn’t bother answering this. He reached into his pocket instead and produced Professor Martin’s book. ‘Ever seen this?’ he asked.

‘I’ve heard of it,’ Elliot stated, taking it from Fox and flipping through its pages.

‘You’ve never wanted to read it?’

‘Archaeology doesn’t interest me.’

Fox took the book back from him, found the photo of Vernal and Alice Watts outside the police station and held it open for Elliot to see.

‘Do you remember her?’ he asked.

‘No.’

‘You don’t recognise her from the meetings?’

Elliot shook his head. ‘Is it important?’

‘She seems to have had some sort of relationship with Mr Vernal – I’d like to talk to her about it.’

‘I wish I could help.’

‘Her name back then was Alice Watts …’

Elliot tried to place it but failed. ‘Back then?’ he prompted.

Fox didn’t say anything, but when he went to close the book, Elliot took it from, him, still open at the photograph. ‘Seventh of April 1985 …’

‘Were you there that day?’

‘In a manner of speaking: I was one of the ones they arrested. But we were out again by late evening.’

‘But you don’t recall seeing Alice Watts?’

Elliot shook his head again. ‘Nice to see Hawkeye again, though.’ He turned the book towards Fox. ‘That’s him there, arm in arm with the young lady.’ Fox took the book back and studied the photo again. The man Professor Martin hadn’t known, the one with long hair, beard and sunglasses.

‘You’re sure?’

‘Fairly sure.’ One of the production runners was standing in front of them, hugging her clipboard to her chest and tapping at an imaginary watch on her wrist.

‘I really have to go,’ Elliot apologised to Fox.

‘Can you give me anything else on Hawkeye?’

‘Afraid not.’

‘A first name? His accent?’ Fox was trying not to sound desperate.

‘Scottish,’ was all Elliot said, rising to his feet. And there was that smile again, the one that told the world John Elliot had moved on, that he lived for the present and not the past.

‘Can we talk again?’ Fox proposed.

‘I really don’t have anything more to say.’

‘I might have more questions.’

Elliot stretched out his arms, underlining that he’d told Fox as much as he could.

‘You’re the first terrorist I’ve ever met,’ Fox told him.

‘I hope I’ve lived up to expectations.’ Elliot’s voice had hardened.

‘We’re out hunting bombers right now – wonder if they’ll be hosting TV shows in a few years.’

‘You’ll excuse me.’ He turned away and started to follow the assistant. Fox was only a step or two behind him.

‘Did your side win?’ he asked.

Elliot paused and seemed to give the question some consideration. The assistant started to say something, but he silenced her with a gesture.

‘We’re closer than ever to an independent Scotland,’ he told Fox. ‘Maybe that process started when the government in London
had
to acknowledge our existence.’

‘Sounds to me like you’ve still got a few political bones left in your body, Mr Elliot.’

‘I’m not allowed to take sides, Inspector.’

‘Bad for the public image?’

The assistant was actually tugging at Elliot’s arm. With a slight bow of the head in Fox’s direction, he allowed himself to be led away to the waiting van.

Fox’s phone rang. He was staring at the photograph as he answered.

‘Paul Carter’s dead,’ Tony Kaye’s voice informed him.

‘What?’

‘Happened some time last night. They pulled him from the harbour early this morning.’

‘Drowned?’

‘Body’s gone for autopsy.’

‘Christ on a bike, Tony …’

‘Quite so.’

‘Do we know anything else?’

‘Not much.’

Fox was remembering his last meeting with Carter. Remembering, too, that Joe Naysmith had seen him even more recently.

‘The Wheatsheaf,’ Fox commented.

‘Suppose I better let someone know we were there.’

‘When I saw him at the cottage, he seemed pretty wrung out.’

‘Suicidal, though? I wouldn’t have said he was the type.’

‘Me neither.’

‘You know, Malcolm, just for once I’d like a nice clear-cut death.’

‘Are you in Kirkcaldy?’

‘Station’s a bit subdued.’

‘Does the incident room know?’

‘Yep.’

‘What about Scholes?’

‘Haven’t seen any of that lot yet.’

‘You better talk to DI Cash. Let him know about last night.’

‘Okay.’

‘Will the autopsy be at the hospital?’

‘Far as I know.’

‘Then I’ll see you there.’

‘Cash might not like it.’

‘Mood I’m in, that’ll suit me fine.’

‘Just so long as I can have a seat ringside,’ Tony Kaye said.

‘Bring a pair of white gloves and I’ll make you referee.’ Fox ended the call and headed out to his car.

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