into the sky with a thunderous roar, not quarter of a mile away. The car park advertised its special long-term rates and twice-an-hour shuttle service. An automatic barrier rose when Rebus took the proffered ticket from the machine. He drove slowly around the ground floor, unsure what he was looking for. Jessica had crashed her car not too far away. She was friends with the niece of the car park’s owner. The owner was less legit than might have been the case. Add to that the brand-new crowbar. . and Rebus still wasn’t sure. There was a cabin staffed by a single uniformed flunkey. The ground floor was half full. The cars looked like they belonged to middle management: Beemers, Audis, a couple of Jags and a Merc. He drove up the ramp to the next floor, which was quieter. One Range Rover had a film of dust over its windscreen. Maybe it belonged to someone who was enjoying protracted winter sun elsewhere. Rebus couldn’t blame them. The next floor was empty, as was the unsheltered roof, though it too had been laid out in marked bays. Rebus doubted the place ever got full. On the other hand, it was easy money — one member of staff, few overheads.
He stopped the Saab on the roof and got out for a cigarette. He could see the airport runway, an orange- liveried EasyJet plane coming in to land. Jessica’s car had crashed somewhere to the west. If she’d started her journey at this car park, she and Forbes had been driving
‘You okay there?’
The voice was amplified, metallic. Rebus looked around and saw a tall metal pole with a loudspeaker and camera attached to it. He gave it a wave and got back into his car. He was approaching the exit barrier when he saw the attendant emerge from his cabin. The man was at the barrier before him, waiting for a word. Rebus wound his window down again.
‘Everything all right?’ the man asked. He had a pockmarked face and irregular teeth, his eyes milky but wary.
‘Forgot something,’ Rebus explained. ‘Need to go back to the office.’
‘You went all the way to the roof.’
‘Is there a law against it?’
‘Maybe.’ The attendant was examining the scuffed interior of the Saab. Rebus meantime had slotted his ticket into the machine.
‘Must be a mistake,’ he said, staring at the display. ‘Six pounds fifty?’
‘That’s the minimum. Gets you four hours.’
‘I’ve hardly been four minutes.’
‘System’s automated — nothing I can do about it.’ The man wasn’t managing to disguise his pleasure at Rebus’s discomfort.
‘You telling me you can’t go back to that wee booth of yours and swing the barrier open?’
‘Company would haul me over the coals.’
‘Six-fifty, though.’
The man offered a shrug.
‘Rory won’t be happy when I tell him about this.’
‘Rory?’
‘Your boss.’ Rebus looked in vain for a flicker of recognition. ‘He owns this place.’
‘I’m just doing my job.’
‘Okay then, tell me this — these cameras of yours, do they film what they see?’
‘Why are you asking?’ Then it dawned. ‘You the police?’
‘In a manner of speaking. So do they record or don’t they?’
‘The machine wipes itself every forty-eight hours.’
‘And is there always a human being on duty?’
‘Always.’
‘So if I gave you a date and an approximate time. .?’
‘For what?’
‘Anything.’
The attendant straightened up and folded his arms. ‘That’s something you’d have to talk to management about.’
‘Meaning Rory Bell?’
‘I told you, I’ve never heard of him.’
‘So who do you deal with?’
‘The office is in Livingston.’
‘There’s a multi-storey there too — you ever do a shift at it?’
‘You need to speak to the management.’
‘Don’t worry, I will. Now are you going to let me out of here?’
‘Soon as you pay what’s due.’ The man turned away and walked back towards his booth. Cursing, Rebus looked for coins in his pocket, then realised the machine only accepted credit cards. So he stuck one in, entered his PIN and pressed the button for a receipt.
Livingston.
Rory Bell’s base.
Plus he had another car park there.
And. .
The driver who had been first at the scene of Jessica’s crash — wasn’t she on her way home from work in Livingston at the time? So instead of taking the road back into the city, Rebus headed further out in the direction of Newbridge, and from there on to the M8. It didn’t take long to reach Livingston, though once there he was faced with a Mensa-level puzzle constructed almost entirely of roundabouts. Livingston was one of Scotland’s ‘new towns’, designed in the 1960s by planners who liked lots of circles in their diagrams. Second only to this passion seemed to be their crush on the word ‘Almondvale’. It cropped up time and again as Rebus sought his destination: Almondvale Boulevard, Way, Avenue and Drive. Not forgetting Parkway and Crescent — plus the football stadium where the local team played. In the end, Rebus conceded defeat and stopped to ask a pedestrian, who gave him directions to
‘Hell do you think you’re playing at?’ The man striding up the ramp wore the same uniform as Mr Bad Teeth from the airport multi-storey, but was a different breed altogether — ex-forces, maybe, and still able to take on a route march. Beefy arms, fists clenched, jaw jutting. The hair had been shaved from the skull and one ear had a chunk missing from it.
‘Early for a meeting,’ Rebus lied. ‘Just killing time.’ He made show of checking his watch.
‘Like fuck you are,’ the man spat.
‘Okay then,’ Rebus bristled. ‘You tell me — what
‘Whatever it is, you’re not staying.’ The man clamped a hand around Rebus’s forearm.
‘That could be classed as assault, pal.’
‘Oh aye? How about this?’ A fist crunched into Rebus’s stomach, and he felt his knees buckle. The same hand was digging in his coat, then his jacket’s inside pocket, tugging free the warrant card and flapping it