'Oh.' No relief now; rather, sheer terror. Which didn't stop Rebus. No, it pushed him on. So that before she knew it, he was walking up to the hutches and sties, looking in, moving on. On past the chickens and the roused ducks, into the barn. Straw underfoot and a strong smell of cattle. Concrete cubicles, coiled hosepipes, and a leaking tap. There were pools of water underfoot. One sick-looking cow blinked slowly at him from its enclosure. But the livestock wasn't his concern. The tarpaulin in the corner was.
'What's under here, Mrs Corbie?'
'That's Alec's property' she shrieked. 'Don't touch it! It's nothing, to do with -'
But he'd already yanked the tarpaulin off. What was he expecting to find? Something… nothing. What he did find was a black BMW 3-series bearing Elizabeth Jack's registration. It was Rebus's turn to tut-tut, but only after he'd sucked in his breath and held back a whoop of delight.
'Dear me, Mrs Corbie,' he said. 'This is just the very car I've been looking for.'
But Mrs Corbie wasn't listening. 'He's a good laddie, he doesn't mean any harm. I don't know what I'd do without him.' And so on. While Rebus circled the car, looking but not touching. Lucky the forensics team was on its way. They'd be kept busy…
Wait, what was that? On the back seat. A huddled shape. He peered in through the tinted glass.
'Expect the unexpected, John,' he muttered to himself.
It was a microwave.
7 Duthil
Rebus telephoned Edinburgh to make his report and request an extra day's stay up north. Lauderdale sounded so impressed that the car had been found that Rebus forgot to tell him about the break-in at the lodge. Then, once Alec Corbie had arrived home (drunk and in charge of a vehicle -but let that pass), he'd been arrested and taken to Dufftown. Rebus seemed to be stretching the local police like they'd never been stretched before, so that Detective Sergeant Knox had to be diverted from the lodge and brought to the farm instead. He looked like an older brother of Constable Moffat, or perhaps a close cousin.
'I want forensics to go over that car,' Rebus told him. 'Priority, the lodge can wait.'
Knox rubbed his chin. 'It'll take a tow-truck.'
'A trailer would be better.'
I'll see what I can do. Where will you want it taken?'
'Anywhere secure and with a roof.'
'The police garage?'
'It'll do.'
'What exactly are we looking for?'
'Christ knows.'
Rebus went back into the kitchen, where Mrs Corbie was sitting at the table studying an array of burnt cakes. He opened his mouth to speak, but kept his silence. She was an accessory, of course. She'd lied to him to protect her son. Well, they had the son now, and he was the one that mattered. As quietly as he could, Rebus left the farmhouse and started his car, staring through the windscreen at his bonnet, where one of the chickens had left him a little gift…
He was able to avail himself of Dufftown police station for the interview with Alec Corbie.
'You're in keech up to your chin, son. Start at the beginning and leave nothing out.'
Rebus and Corbie, seated across the table from one another, were smoking, DS Knox, resting against the wall behind Rebus, was not. Corbie had prepared an extremely thin veneer of macho indifference, which Rebus was quick to wipe off.
'This is a murder investigation. The victim's car has been found in your barn. It'll be dusted for prints, and if we find yours I'm going to have to charge you with murder. Anything you think you know that might help your case, you'd better talk.'
Then, seeing the effect of these words: 'You're in keech up to your chin, son. Start at the beginning and leave nothing out.'
Corbie sang like his namesake: it didn't make for edifying listening, but it had an honest sound. First, though, he asked for some paracetamol.
'I've got a hell of a headache.'
'That's what daytime drinking does to you,' said Rebus, knowing it wasn't the drinking that was to blame – it was the stopping. The tablets were brought and swallowed, washed down with water. Corbie coughed a little, then lit another cigarette. Rebus had stubbed his out. He just couldn't deal with them any more.
'The car was in the lay-by,' Corbie began. 'It was there for hours, so I went and took a look. The keys were still in the ignition. I started her up and brought her back to the farm.'
'Why?'
He shrugged. 'Never refuse a gift horse.' He grinned. 'Or gift horse-power, eh?' The two detectives were not impressed. 'No, well, it was, you know, like with treasure. Finders keepers.'
'You didn't think the owner was coming back?'
He shrugged again. 'Never really thought about it. All I knew was that there were going to be some gey jealous looks if I turned up in town driving a BMW.'
'You planned to race it?' The question came from DS Knox.
'Sure.'
Knox explained to Rebus. 'They take cars out on to the back roads and race them one against one.'
Rebus remembered the phrase Moffat had used: boy racer. 'You didn't see the owner then?' he asked.
Corbie shrugged.
'What does that mean?'