by Ian Rankin
‘God,’ Jake Harley said, ‘I’ve got too much food here as it is.’
He didn’t look surprised to see Rebus. ‘I thought she’d crack under pressure,’ he said.
‘No pressure necessary, Mr Harley. She’s worried about you, that’s all. I was worried too for a while there – thought you might have had an accident.’
Harley managed a smile. ‘By which you don’t really mean “accident”?’ Rebus nodded. He was staring at Harley, trying to see him as ‘Mr H.’, the person who had ordered Allan Mitchison’s execution. But that seemed way off the mark.
‘I don’t blame you for going into hiding,’ Rebus said. ‘Probably the safest thing you could have done.’
‘Poor Mitch.’ Harley looked down at the ground. He was tall, well built, with short, thinning black hair and metal-rimmed glasses. His face had retained a touch of the schoolboy, but he was badly needing a shave and to wash his hair. The tent’s flaps were open, showing ground-mat, sleeping bag, a radio and some books. Leaning against the interior wall of the broch was a red rucksack, and nearby a camping-stove and carrier bag filled with rubbish.
‘Can we talk about it?’ Rebus asked.
Jake Harley nodded. He saw that Jack Morton was more interested in the broch itself than in their conversation. ‘Isn’t it incredible?’
‘Bloody right,’ Jack said. ‘Did it ever have a roof?’
Harley shrugged. ‘They built lean-tos in here, so maybe they didn’t need a roof up there. The walls are hollow, double-thick. One of the galleries still leads to the top.’ He looked around. ‘There’s a lot we don’t know.’ Then he looked at Rebus. ‘It’s been here two thousand years. It’ll be here long after the oil’s gone.’
‘I don’t doubt that.’
‘Some people can’t see it. Money’s made them short-sighted.’
‘You think this is all about money, Jake?’
‘Not all of it, no. Come on, I’ll show you the Haa.’
So they walked back out into the wind, crossing the grazing land and coming to the low wall around what had been a good-sized stone-built house, only the shell of which remained. They circuited the boundary, Briony walking with them, Jack further back, reluctant to leave the broch.
‘Mousa Broch has always been lucky for the hunted. There’s a story in the Orkneyinga Saga, an eloping couple took shelter here …’ He smiled at Briony.
‘You found out Mitch was dead?’ Rebus asked.
‘Yes.’
‘How?’
‘I phoned Jo.’
‘Jo?’
‘Joanna Bruce. Mitch and her had been seeing one another.’ So at last Braid-Hair had a name.
‘How did she know?’
‘It was in the Edinburgh paper. Jo’s a media checker – she reads all the papers first thing every morning to see if there’s anything the various pressure groups should know.’
‘You didn’t tell Briony?’
Jake took his girlfriend’s hand and kissed it. ‘You’d only have worried,’ he told her.
‘Two questions, Mr Harley: why do you think Mitch was killed, and who was responsible?’
Harley shrugged. ‘As to who did it … I’d never be able to prove anything. But I know why he was killed – it was my fault.’
‘Your fault?’
‘I told him what I suspected about the Negrita.’
The ship Sheepskin had mentioned on the flight to Sullom Voe; afterwards clamming up.
‘What happened?’
‘It was a few months back. You know Sullom Voe has some of the strictest procedures going? I mean, time was tankers would swill out their dirty bilges as they approached the coast – it saved pumping them ashore at the terminal … saved time, which meant money. We used to lose black guillemots, great northern divers, shags, eider ducks, even the otters. That doesn’t happen now – they tightened up. But mistakes still happen. That’s all the Negrita was, a mistake.’
‘An oil spill?’
Harley nodded. ‘Not a big one, not by the standards we’ve managed to set with Braer and Sea Empress. The first mate, who should have been in charge, was in the sick bay – bad hangover apparently. A crew member who hadn’t done the job before hit the wrong sequence of levers. The thing was, the crew member didn’t have any English. That’s not unusual these days: the officers might be British, but the hired help is the cheapest the company can get, which usually means Portuguese, Filipino, a hundred other nationalities. My guess is, the poor sod just didn’t understand the instructions.’
‘It was hushed up?’
Harley shrugged. ‘Never really news in the first place, not a big enough spill.’
Rebus frowned. ‘So what’s the problem?’
‘Like I say, I told Mitch the story …’
‘How did you know?’
‘The crew landed at the terminal. They were in the canteen. I got talking to one of them, he looked awful – I can speak a bit of Spanish. He told me he did it.’
Rebus nodded. ‘And Mitch?’
‘Well, Mitch found out something that had been covered up. Namely the tanker’s real owners. It’s not easy with these boats – they’re registered here, there and everywhere, leaving a real paper trail in their wake. Not always easy to get details from some of the registration ports. And sometimes the name on the papers doesn’t mean much – companies own other companies, more countries are involved …’
‘A real maze.’
‘Purposely so: a lot of the tankers out there are in shocking condition. But maritime law is international – even if we wanted to stop them landing, we couldn’t, not without the say-so of all the other signatories.’
‘Mitch found out that T-Bird Oil owned the tanker?’
‘How did you know?’
‘An educated guess.’
‘Well, that’s what he told me.’
‘And you think someone at T-Bird had him killed? But why? Like you say, it wasn’t a newsworthy spill.’
‘It would be with T-Bird in the frame. They’re going all out to persuade the government to let them dump their platforms at sea. They’re talking up the environment and their record in that area. We’re Mr Clean, so let us do what we want.’ Harley showed bright white teeth as he spoke, the words almost a sneer. ‘So tell me, Inspector, am I being paranoid? Just because Mitch gets thrown out of a window doesn’t mean he was assassinated, right?’
‘Oh, he was assassinated all right. But I’m not sure the Negrita had much to do with it.’ Harley stopped walking and looked at him. ‘I think you’d be quite safe going back home, Jake,’ Rebus said. ‘In fact, I’m sure of it. But first, there’s something I need.’
‘What?’
‘An address for Joanna Bruce.’
30
The trip back was a real follicle transplant – hairier even than the trip out. They’d taken Jake and Briony back to Brae, then dropped the car off at Lerwick and begged a lift to Sumburgh. Forres was still in the huff, but relented eventually and checked the flights back, one of which gave them enough time for a Cup-a-Soup at the station.
At Dyce, they climbed back into Jack’s car and sat there for a couple of minutes, adjusting to being back on the ground. Then they headed south on the A92, using the directions Jake Harley had given them. It was the same road Rebus had been taken on the night Tony El had been killed. They had Stanley for that – no matter what. Rebus wondered what else the young psychopath might spill, especially now he’d lost Eve. He’d know she’d flown; he’d know she wouldn’t have left the loot behind. Maybe Gill would have twisted more stories out of him.
It could be the making of her.
They saw signposts to Cove Bay, followed Harley’s instructions and came to a lay-by, behind which were parked a dozen vans, caravans, buses and campers. Bumping over ineffectual earth mounds, they came into a clearing in front of a forest. Dogs were barking, kids out playing with a punctured football. Clothes-lines hung between branches, and someone had lit a bonfire. A few adults h
ad parked themselves around the fire, passing joints, one woman strumming a guitar. Rebus had been to travellers’ camps before. They came in two designs. There was the old-style gypsy camp, with smart caravans and builders’ lorries, the inhabitants – Romanies – olive-skinned and lapsing into a tongue Rebus couldn’t understand. Then there were the ‘New Age travellers’: usually with buses which had passed their last MOT on a wing and a prayer. They were young and savvy, cut dead wood for fuel, and worked the social security system, despite government attempts to render it unworkable. They gave their kids names the kids would kill them for when they grew up.
Nobody paid Rebus and Jack any heed as they walked towards the camp-fire. Rebus kept his hands in his pockets, and tried not to make fists of them.
‘Looking for Jo,’ he said. He recognised the guitar chords: ‘Time of the Preacher’. He tried again. ‘Joanna Bruce.’
‘Bummer,’ someone said.
‘That could be arranged,’ Jack cautioned.
The joint went from hand to hand. ‘Decade from now,’ someone else said, ‘this won’t be illegal. It might even be on prescription.’
Smoke billowed from grinning mouths.
‘Joanna,’ Rebus reminded them.
‘Warrant?’ the guitarist asked.
‘You know better than that,’ Rebus told her. ‘I only need a warrant if I want to bust this place. Want me to fetch one?’
‘Macho Man!’ someone sang.
‘What do you want?’
There was a small white caravan hooked up to an antiquated Land Rover. She’d opened the caravan door – just the top half – and was leaning out.
‘Can you smell the bacon, Jo?’ the guitarist asked.
‘Need to talk to you, Joanna,’ Rebus said, walking towards the caravan, ‘about Mitch.’
‘What about him?’
‘Why he died.’
Joanna Bruce looked at her fellow travellers, saw that Rebus had their attention, and unlocked the bottom half of her door. ‘Better come in,’ she said.
The caravan was cramped and unheated. There was no TV, but untidy stacks of magazines and newspapers, some of them with articles clipped out, and on the small folding table – benches either side, the whole thing convertible into a bed – a laptop computer. Standing, Rebus’s head touched the caravan roof. Joanna shut down the computer, then gestured for Rebus and Jack to take the bench seats, while she balanced atop a pile of magazines.
‘So,’ she said, folding her arms, ‘what’s the story?’
‘My question exactly,’ Rebus replied. He nodded towards the wall behind her, where some photos had been pinned for decoration. ‘Snap.’ She looked round at the pictures. ‘I’ve just had another lot of those developed,’ Rebus explained: they were the originals missing from Mitch’s envelope. She sat there with a face like stone, giving nothing away. There was kohl around her eyes and her hair was white fire in the glow from the gas lighting. For a full half-minute, the soft roar of igniting gas was the only sound in the caravan. Rebus was giving her time to change her mind, but she was using that time to erect further barricades, her eyes closing to slits, mouth pressed shut.
‘Joanna Bruce,’ Rebus mused. ‘Interesting choice of name.’ She half-opened her mouth, closed it again.
‘Is Joanna your real first name, or did you change that too?’
‘What do you mean?’
Rebus looked at Jack, who was sitting back, trying to look the part of the relaxed visitor, telling her it wasn’t two against one, that she’d no need to be afraid. When Rebus spoke, he spoke to Jack’s face.
‘Your real surname’s Weir.’
‘How … who told you that?’ Trying to laugh it off.
‘Nobody needed to. Major Weir had a daughter; they fell out; he disowned her.’ And changed her sex to a son, maybe to muddy the water. Mairie’s source had said as much.
‘He didn’t disown her! She disowned him!’
Rebus turned to her. Her face and body were animated now, clay come to life. Her fists gouged at her knees.
‘Two things put me on track,’ he said quietly. ‘One, that surname: Bruce, as in Robert the … as any student of Scottish history would know. Major Weir is daft on Scots history, he even named his oilfield after Bannockburn, which as we know was won by Robert the Bruce. Bruce and Bannock. I’m guessing you picked the name because you thought it would rile him?’
‘It riles him all right.’ Half a smile.
‘The second thing was Mitch himself, once I knew you two were friends. Jake Harley tells me Mitch had gleaned some gen on Negrita, top-secret stuff. Well, Mitch might have been resourceful in some areas, but I couldn’t see how he’d manage to work his way back through a paper trail. He travelled light, no sign of any notes or anything like that, either in his flat or in his cabin. I’m assuming he got the gen from you?’ She nodded. ‘And you’d have to seriously have it in for T-Bird Oil to bother with that sort of labyrinth in the first place. But we already know you’ve got something against T-Bird – the demo outside their HQ; chaining yourself to Bannock in full view of the TV cameras. I thought maybe it was something personal …’
‘It is.’
‘Major Weir’s your father?’
Her face turned sour and strangely childlike. ‘Only in the biological sense. Even then, if you could get a gene transplant I’d be at the front of the queue.’ Her voice sounded more American than ever. ‘Did he kill Mitch?’
‘Do you think he did?’
‘I’d like to think so.’ She stared at Rebus. ‘I mean, I’d like to think he’d sink that low.’
‘But?’
‘But nothing. Maybe he did, maybe he didn’t.’
‘You reckon he had the motive?’
‘Sure.’ Not aware she was doing it, she picked at a nail and then bit it, before starting on another. ‘I mean, Negrita and the way T-Bird’s culpability was hushed up … and now the dumping. He had plenty of economic reasons.’
‘Was Mitch threatening to go to the media with the story?’
She removed a sliver of nail from her tongue. ‘No, I think he was trying blackmail first. Keep quiet about everything, so long as T-Bird went for ecological scrapping of Bannock.’
‘Everything?’
‘What?’
‘You said “everything”, like there was more.’
She shook her head. ‘No.’ But she wasn’t looking at him.
‘Joanna, let me ask you something: why didn’t you go to the media, or try blackmail on your father? Why did it have to be Mitch?’
She shrugged. ‘He had the chutzpah.’
‘Did he?’
Another shrug. ‘What else?’
‘See, the way it looks to me … you don’t mind tormenting your father – as publicly as possible. You’re at the front of every demo, you make sure your picture’s on TV … but if you actually came forward and let the world know who you are, that would be even more effective. Why the secrecy?’
Her face turned childlike again, her mouth busy with fingers, knees together. The single braid fell between her eyes, like she wanted to hide from the world but be caught at the same time – a child’s game.
‘Why the secrecy?’ Rebus repeated. ‘Seems to me it’s precisely because this is so personal between you and your father, like some sort of private game. You like the idea of torturing him, letting him wonder when you’ll go public with any of this.’ He paused. ‘Seems to me maybe you were using Mitch.’
‘No!’
‘Using him to get at your father.’
‘No!’
‘Which means he had something you found useful. What could that be?’
She got up. ‘Get out!’
‘Something that drew the two of you together.’
She clamped her hands over her ears, shaking her head.
‘Something from your past … your childhoods. Something like blood between you. How far back does it go, Jo? Between you and your father – how far into the past does it stretc
h?’
She swung around and slapped his face. Hard. Rebus rode it, but it still stung.
‘So much for non-violent protest,’ he said, rubbing the spot.
She slumped down on the magazines again, ran a hand over her head. It came to rest on one of her braids, which she twirled nervously. ‘You’re right,’ she said, so quietly Rebus almost didn’t hear.
‘Mitch?’
‘Mitch,’ she said, remembering him at last. Allowing herself that pain. Behind her, lighting flickered over the photographs. ‘He was so uptight when we met. Nobody could believe it when we started seeing one another – chalk and cheese they said. They were wrong. It took a while, but one night he opened up to me.’ She looked up. ‘You know his background?’
‘Orphaned,’ Rebus said.
She nodded. ‘Then institutionalised.’ She paused. ‘Then abused. He said there were times he’d thought of coming forward, telling people, but after all this time … he wondered what good it would do.’ She shook her head, tears forming. ‘He was the most unselfish person I’ve ever met. But inside, it was like he was eaten away, and Jesus, I know that feeling.’
Rebus got it. ‘Your father?’
She sniffed. ‘They call him “an institution” in the oil world. Me, I was institutionalised …’ A deep breath, nothing theatrical about it: a necessity. ‘And then abused.’
‘Christ,’ Jack said quietly. Rebus’s heart was racing; he had to fight to keep his voice level.
‘For how long, Jo?’
She looked up angrily. ‘You think I’d let the prick get away with it twice? I ran as soon as I could. Kept running for years, then thought: fuck it, I’m not to blame. I’m not the one who should be doing this.’
Rebus nodded understanding. ‘So you saw a bond between Mitch and you?’
‘That’s right.’
‘And you told him your own story?’
‘Quid pro quo.’
‘Including your father’s identity?’ She started to nod, but stopped, swallowed instead. ‘That’s what he was blackmailing your father with – the incest story?’