Page 14 of The Falls


  6

  On Monday morning, Rebus took Jean’s press cuttings in to work. Waiting for him on his desk were three messages from Steve Holly and a note in Gill Templer’s handwriting, informing him of a doctor’s appointment at eleven o’clock. He went to her office to plead his case, but a sheet of paper on her door stated that she would be spending the day at Gayfield Square. Rebus went back to his chair, grabbed his cigarettes and lighter, and headed for the car park. He’d just got one lit when Siobhan Clarke arrived.

  ‘Any luck?’ he asked her. Siobhan lifted the laptop she was carrying.

  ‘Last night,’ she told him.

  ‘What happened?’

  She looked at his cigarette. ‘Soon as you finish that foul thing, come upstairs and I’ll show you.’

  The door swung shut behind her. Rebus stared at the cigarette, took one last puff, and flicked it on to the ground.

  By the time he got to the CID room, Siobhan had set up the laptop. An officer called over that there was a Steve Holly on the line. Rebus shook his head. He knew damned well what Holly wanted: Bev Dodds had told him about the trip to Falls. He held up a finger, asking Siobhan to wait a second, then got on the phone to the museum.

  ‘Jean Burchill’s office, please,’ he said. Then he waited.

  ‘Hello?’ It was her voice.

  ‘Jean? John Rebus here.’

  ‘John, I was just thinking of calling you.’

  ‘Don’t tell me: you’re being hassled?’

  ‘Well, not exactly hassled …’

  ‘A reporter called Steve Holly, wanting to talk about the dolls?’

  ‘He’s been on to you too, then?’

  ‘Best advice I can give, Jean: don’t say anything. Refuse his calls, and if he does get through, tell him you’ve nothing to say. No matter how hard he pushes …’

  ‘Understood. Did Bev Dodds blab?’

  ‘My fault, I should’ve known she would.’

  ‘I can look after myself, John, don’t worry.’

  They said their goodbyes and he put down the receiver, took the short walk to Siobhan’s desk and read the message on the laptop’s screen.

  This game is not a game. It’s a quest. You’ll need strength and endurance, not to mention intelligence. But your prize will be great. Do you still wish to play?

  ‘I sent back an e-mail saying I was interested, but asking how long the game would take.’ Siobhan was moving her finger across the keypad. ‘He told me it could take a few days, or a few weeks. So then I asked if I could start with Hellbank. He came back straight away, telling me Hellbank was the fourth level, and I’d have to play the whole thing. I said okay. At midnight, this arrived.’

  There was another message on the screen. ‘He’s used a different address,’ Siobhan said. ‘God knows how many he’s got.’

  ‘Making him difficult to track down?’ Rebus guessed. Then he read:

  How can I be sure you are who you say you are?

  ‘He means my e-mail address,’ Siobhan explained. ‘I was using Philippa’s before; now I’m using Grant’s.’

  ‘What did you tell him?’

  ‘I told him he’d have to trust me; either that or we could always meet.’

  ‘And was he keen?’

  She smiled. ‘Not overly. But he did send me this.’ She hit another button.

  Seven fins high is king. This queen dines well before the bust.

  ‘Is that it?’

  Siobhan nodded. ‘I asked if he could give me a clue. All he did was send me the message again.’

  ‘Presumably because it is the clue.’

  She ran a hand through her hair. ‘I was up half the night. I don’t suppose it means anything to you?’

  He shook his head. ‘You need someone who likes puzzles. Doesn’t young Grant do cryptic crosswords?’

  ‘Does he?’ Siobhan looked across the room to where Grant Hood was making a phone call.

  ‘Why don’t you go and ask?’

  When Hood came off the phone, Siobhan was waiting. ‘How’s the laptop?’ he asked.

  ‘Fine.’ She handed him a sheet of paper. ‘I hear you like a puzzle.’

  He took the sheet, but didn’t look at it. ‘Saturday night?’ he asked.

  She nodded. ‘Saturday night was fine.’

  And it had been, too: a couple of drinks and then dinner at a decent, small restaurant in the New Town. They’d talked shop mostly, having not much else in common, but it was good to have a laugh, relive a few stories. He’d been quite the gentleman, walking her home afterwards. She hadn’t asked him up for coffee. He’d said he’d find a cab on Broughton Street.

  Now, Grant nodded back and smiled. ‘Fine’ was good enough for him. Then he looked at the sheet. ‘“Seven fins high is king”,’ he read aloud. ‘What’s it mean?’

  ‘I was hoping maybe you’d tell me.’

  He studied the message again. ‘Could be an anagram. Unlikely though: not enough vowels, it’s all i’s and e’s. “Before the bust” – drugs bust maybe?’ Siobhan just shrugged. ‘Maybe it would help if you told me a bit about it,’ Hood said.

  Siobhan nodded. ‘Over a coffee, if you like,’ she said.

  Back at his desk, Rebus watched them leave the room, then picked up the first of the cuttings. There was a conversation going on nearby, something about another press conference. The consensus was, if DCS Templer wanted you to front it, it meant she had the knives out. Rebus’s eyes narrowed. There was a sentence he must have missed first time round. It was the 1995 clipping: Huntingtower Hotel near Perth, a dog finding the coffin and scrap of cloth. Three-quarters of the way through the story, an anonymous member of the hotel staff was quoted as saying, ‘If we’re not careful, Huntingtower’s going to get itself a reputation.’ Rebus wondered what was meant by that. He picked up the phone, thinking maybe Jean Burchill would know. But he didn’t make the call, didn’t want her to think he was … well, what exactly? He’d enjoyed yesterday, and thought she had too. He’d dropped her at her home in Portobello, but had declined the offer of coffee.

  ‘I’ve taken up too much of your day as it is,’ he’d said. She hadn’t denied it.

  ‘Maybe another time then,’ was all she’d said.

  Driving back to Marchmont, he’d felt that something had been lost between them. He’d almost called her that evening, but had switched on the TV instead, losing himself in a nature programme, unable afterwards to recall anything about it. Until he’d remembered about the reconstruction and headed out to watch it …

  His hand was still resting on the receiver. He picked it up and got a number for the Huntingtower Hotel, asked to speak to the manager.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ the receptionist said. ‘He’s in a meeting at the moment. Can I take a message?’

  Rebus explained who he was. ‘I want to speak to someone who was working at the hotel in nineteen ninety-five.

  ‘What’s their name?’

  He smiled at her mistake. ‘No, I mean, anyone will do.’

  ‘Well, I’ve been here since ninety-three.’

  ‘Then you might remember the little coffin that was found.’

  ‘Vaguely, yes.’

  ‘Only I’ve got a cutting from a newspaper at the time. It says that the hotel might be getting a reputation.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘And why would that have been?’

  ‘I’m not sure. Maybe it was that American tourist.’

  ‘Which one?’

  ‘The one who disappeared.’

  He didn’t say anything for a moment, and when he did it was to ask her to repeat what she’d just said.

  Rebus went to the National Library annexe on Causewayside. It wasn’t much more than a five-minute walk from St Leonard’s. When he’d shown his ID and explained what he needed, he was taken to a desk where a microfilm reader sat. This was a large illuminated screen above two spools. The film was placed on one spool and would be wound on to the empty one. Rebus had used the machine before, back when new
spapers had been stored at the main building on George IV Bridge. He’d told the staff that today’s was ‘a rush job’. Even so, he sat for the best part of twenty minutes before a librarian arrived with the film boxes. The Courier was Dundee’s daily paper. Rebus’s own family had taken it. He remembered that up until recently it had retained the look of a broadsheet from a previous era, with column-wide ads covering its front page. No news, no photos. The story went that when the Titanic sank, the headline in the Courier had been ‘Dundee Man Lost at Sea’. Not that the paper was parochial or anything.

  Rebus had the Huntingtower cutting with him, and wound the tape forward until he was four weeks shy of its appearance. There, on an inside page, was the headline ‘Tourist’s Disappearance a Mystery, Say Police’. The woman’s name was Betty-Anne Jesperson. She was thirty-eight and married. She’d been a member of a tour party from the USA. The tour was called ‘The Mystical Highlands of Scotland’. The photograph of Betty-Anne came from her passport. It showed a heavy-set woman with dark permed hair and thick-rimmed glasses. Her husband, Garry, said she was in the habit of waking early and going for a pre-breakfast walk. No one in the hotel had seen her depart. The countryside was searched, and police went into Perth town centre armed with copies of the photograph. But as Rebus wound the film forward a week, the story was cut down to half a dozen paragraphs. A further week along, and there was just a single paragraph. The story was in the process of vanishing as completely as Betty-Anne had.

  According to the hotel receptionist, Garry Jesperson had made several trips back to the area in that first year, with a further month-long trip the year after. But then the last she’d heard, Garry had met someone else and moved from New Jersey to Baltimore.

  Rebus copied the details into his notebook, then sat tapping at the page he’d just written on until one of the browsers cleared their throat, warning him that he’d started to make too much noise.

  Back at the main desk, he put in a request for more papers: the Dunfermline Press, Glasgow Herald and Inverness Courier. Only the Herald was on microfilm, so he started with that. Nineteen eighty-two, the doll in the churchyard … Van Morrison had released Beautiful Vision early in ’82. Rebus found himself humming ‘Dweller on the Threshold’, then stopped when he remembered where he was. Nineteen eighty-two, he’d been a detective sergeant, working cases with another DS called Jack Morton. They’d been based at Great London Road, back before the station had caught fire. When the Herald film arrived, he spooled it and got to work, the days and weeks a blur across his screen. All the officers above him at Great London Road, they were either dead or retired. He hadn’t kept in touch with any of them. And now the Farmer was gone too. Soon, whether he liked it or not, it would be his turn. He didn’t think he’d go quietly. They’d have to pull him screaming and kicking …

  The churchyard doll had been found in May. He started at the beginning of April. Problem was, Glasgow was a big city, more crime than a place like Perth. He wasn’t sure he’d know if and when he found something. And if it was a missing person, would it even make the paper? Thousands of people disappeared each year. Some of them left without being noticed: the homeless, the ones with no family or friends. This was a country where a corpse could sit in a chair by the fire until the smell alerted the neighbours.

  By the time he’d searched April, he had no reported MisPers, but six deaths, two of them women. One was a stabbing after a party. A man, it was stated, was helping police with their inquiries. Rebus guessed the boyfriend. He was pretty sure that if he read on, he’d find the case coming to court. The second death was a drowning. A stretch of river Rebus had never heard of: White Cart Water, the body found by its banks on the southern border of Rosshall Park. The victim was Hazel Gibbs, aged twenty-two. Her husband had walked out, leaving her with two kids. Friends said she’d been depressed. She’d been seen out drinking the previous day, while the kids fended for themselves.

  Rebus walked outside and got on his mobile, punching in the number for Bobby Hogan at Leith CID.

  ‘Bobby, it’s John. You know a bit about Glasgow, don’t you?’

  ‘A bit.’

  ‘Ever heard of White Cart Water?’

  ‘Can’t say I have.’

  ‘What about Rosshall Park?’

  ‘Sorry.’

  ‘Got any contacts out west?’

  ‘I could make a phone call.’

  ‘Do that, will you?’ Rebus repeated the names and ended the call. He smoked a cigarette, staring across at a new pub on the opposite corner. He knew one drink wouldn’t do him any harm. Then he remembered that he was supposed to be seeing the doctor. Hell, it would have to wait. He could always make another appointment. When, at cigarette’s end, Hogan hadn’t called back, Rebus returned to his desk and started going through the editions for May ’82. When his mobile sounded, the staff and readers gave a look of collective horror. Rebus cursed and put the phone to his ear, getting up from his seat to head outside again.

  ‘It’s me,’ Hogan said.

  ‘Go ahead,’ Rebus whispered, moving towards the exit.

  ‘Rosshall Park’s in Pollok, south-west of the city centre. White Cart Water runs along the top of it.’

  Rebus stopped in his tracks. ‘You sure?’ His voice was no longer a whisper.

  ‘It’s what I’m told.’

  Rebus was back at his desk. The Herald cutting was just below the one from the Courier. He eased it out, just to be sure.

  ‘Thanks, Bobby,’ he said, ending the call. People around him were making exasperated noises, but he didn’t pay them any heed. ‘Church Condemns Sick Joke Find’: the coffin found in the churchyard. The church itself located on Potterhill Road.

  In Pollok.

  ‘I don’t suppose you’d care to explain yourself,’ Gill Templer said.

  Rebus had driven to Gayfield Square and asked her for five minutes. They were back in the same stale office.

  ‘That’s just what I want to do,’ Rebus told her. He placed a hand to his forehead. His face felt like it was burning.

  ‘You were supposed to be attending a doctor’s appointment.’

  ‘Something came up. Christ, you’re not going to believe it.’

  She stabbed a finger at the tabloid newspaper open on her desk. ‘Any idea how Steve Holly got hold of this?’

  Rebus turned the paper so it was facing him. Holly couldn’t have had much time, but he’d patched together a story which managed to mention the Arthur’s Seat coffins, a ‘local expert from the Museum of Scotland’, the Falls coffin, and the ‘persistent rumour that more coffins exist’.

  ‘What does he mean, “more coffins”?’ Gill asked.

  ‘That’s what I’m trying to tell you.’ So he told her, laid the whole thing out before her. In the musty, leatherbound sets of Dunfermline Presses and Inverness Couriers he’d found exactly what he’d known and dreaded he would find. In July 1977, a scant week before the Nairn beach coffin had been found, the body of Paula Gearing had been washed ashore four miles further along the coast. Her death could not be explained, and was put down to ‘misadventure’. In October 1972, three weeks before the finding of the coffin in Dunfermline Glen, a teenage girl had been reported missing. Caroline Farmer was a fourth-year student at Dunfermline High. She’d recently been jilted by a long-term boyfriend, and the best guess was that this had led her to leave home. Her family said they wouldn’t rest until they’d heard from her. Rebus doubted they ever had …

  Gill Templer listened to his story without comment. When he’d finished, she looked at the cuttings and the notes he’d taken in the library. Finally, she looked up at him.

  ‘It’s thin, John.’

  Rebus jumped from his seat. He needed to be moving, but the room didn’t have enough space. ‘Gill, it’s … there’s something there.’

  ‘A killer who leaves coffins near the scene?’ She shook her head slowly. ‘I just can’t see it. You’ve got two bodies, no signs of foul play, and two disappearances. Doesn’t
exactly make a pattern.’

  ‘Three disappearances including Philippa Balfour.’

  ‘And there’s another thing: the Falls coffin turned up less than a week after she went AWOL. No pattern again.’

  ‘You think I’m seeing things?’

  ‘Maybe.’

  ‘Can I at least follow it through?’

  ‘John …’

  ‘Just one, maybe two more officers. Give us a few days to see if we can convince you.’

  ‘We’re stretched as it is.’

  ‘Stretched doing what? We’re whistling in the dark till she comes back, phones home or turns up dead. Give me two people.’

  She shook her head slowly. ‘You can have one. And three or four days, tops. Understood?’

  Rebus nodded.

  ‘And John? Go see the doctor, or I’m reeling you back in. Understood?’

  ‘Understood. Who will I be working with?’

  Templer was thoughtful. ‘Who do you want?’

  ‘Give me Ellen Wylie.’

  She stared at him. ‘Any particular reason why?’

  He shrugged. ‘She’ll never make it as a TV presenter, but she’s a good cop.’

  Templer was still staring. ‘Okay,’ she said at last. ‘Go ahead.’

  ‘And is there any chance you can keep Steve Holly away from us?’

  ‘I can try.’ She tapped the newspaper. ‘I’m assuming the “local expert” is Jean?’ She waited till he’d nodded, then she sighed. ‘I should have known better, bringing the two of you together …’ She started rubbing at her forehead. It was something the Farmer had done, too, whenever he got what he called his ‘Rebus heads’ …

  ‘What exactly are we looking for?’ Ellen Wylie asked. She’d been summoned to St Leonard’s, and didn’t look thrilled at the prospect of working a two-hander with Rebus.

  ‘The first thing,’ he told her, ‘is to cover our backsides, and that means checking that the MisPers never turned up.’