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    Rebus: Long Shadows

    Page 6
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      TECHNICIAN

      That’s just what he was asking.

      SIOBHAN

      Is that so? Well, has it been picked up?

      TECHNICIAN

      (checking) Yup. That went on its way this morning.

      SIOBHAN

      Good. Glad to hear it. No-one else had a look at it before it went did they?

      TECHNICIAN

      No.

      SIOBHAN

      Just checking. Sorry to bother you. Got time for a word John?

      REBUS

      I’m glad you’re here D.I. Clarke. Tell him.

      SIOBHAN

      Tell him what?

      REBUS

      We need to check the evidence for Maggie Towler’s murder.

      SIOBHAN is just staring at him.

      REBUS

      March, 2001. Building site between Granton and Newhaven. Lead detective D.I. Morris. (as no-one moves) Case number 4568/NM/ Morris.

      SIOBHAN

      (to TECHNICIAN) Can you look please?

      TECHNICIAN

      What am I checking?

      REBUS

      That it’s still there, safe, sealed and fit for court.

      The TECHNICIAN moves off.

      REBUS

      And once we’ve done that we need to get the name of the property company that developed those flats . . .

      SIOBHAN

      We’re not doing anything John. I’ve been over this.

      REBUS

      Right. Fine. I’ll get it all together myself. Hand it over to you with a big bow tied round the case . . .

      SIOBHAN

      What case!?

      REBUS

      Maggie Towler. I told you. She’s the unsolved from seventeen years ago? I met her daughter, Heather, night before last. She was on my stair.

      SIOBHAN

      What was she doing there?

      REBUS

      Don’t know. She vanished on me.

      SIOBHAN

      You can have that effect on people.

      REBUS

      But I remembered we let mother her down.

      SIOBHAN

      And that’s why you’re here?

      REBUS

      Of course that’s why I’m here. Why else would I be here?

      SIOBHAN

      So why were you asking about the Mordaunt evidence?

      REBUS

      Just making conversation. It’s on my mind Siobhan. What can I tell you? Why were you here? Just checking no-one had tried tampering with the Mordaunt evidence?

      SIOBHAN

      Yes.

      REBUS

      Well there you go. Nothing to worry about.

      SIOBHAN

      You have to stop John . . .

      REBUS

      Stop what?

      SIOBHAN

      Poking into cold cases.

      REBUS

      Oh so Maggie Towler doesny deserve justice?

      SIOBHAN

      Will she get it if you steam in trampling all over the evidence . . .?

      She’s cut off as the TECHNICIAN is back.

      TECHNICIAN

      Still there. Sealed, safe and ready for court.

      SIOBHAN

      Thank you.

      TECHNICIAN

      No problem. (indicating REBUS) But he shouldn’t be in here.

      SIOBHAN

      I’ll walk him out.

      The TECHNICIAN leaves as SIOBHAN walks REBUS into—

      Stairwell Police H.Q.

      SIOBHAN

      Have you slept?

      REBUS

      Have you?

      He puts something in his mouth.

      SIOBHAN

      What’s that? You trying the nicotine lozenges?

      REBUS

      Had to try something.

      SIOBHAN

      What do they taste like?

      REBUS

      Well I’ve never actually licked an ashtray full of cat’s piss but . . .

      SIOBHAN

      We’ve got a family liason officer visiting Angela’s father. But I promised him I’d keep him informed personally. I took his hand and looked him in the eye and promised him I’d convict the man that destroyed his daughter twenty five years ago . . . Destroyed him too. He’s just a husk of a man, a living container of unbearable grief.

      REBUS

      No mother?

      SIOBHAN

      Cancer. Five years ago. They’d split up by then.

      REBUS

      Sorrow too heavy for two to carry. See it all the time.

      SIOBHAN

      We have to get Mordaunt convicted John. We have to.

      REBUS

      I know.

      SIOBHAN

      And there’s something you’re not telling me.

      REBUS

      Right.

      SIOBHAN

      Isn’t there?

      REBUS

      Mebbe.

      SIOBHAN

      Something to do with the attack on Big Ger. Who are you protecting John?

      REBUS

      You.

      SIOBHAN

      From what?

      REBUS

      A mess. A mess that you don’t need to worry about.

      SIOBHAN

      Oh dear god . . . (she slumps) You rang him didn’t you?

      REBUS

      He came round the flat.

      SIOBHAN

      I know. We’ve got a tail on him.

      REBUS

      (genuine) Smart girl . . .

      SIOBHAN

      Oh don’t even start with that! Don’t you . . . !

      REBUS

      What? It was the right thing to do.

      SIOBHAN

      Yes John, I know, because I’m a really good detective.

      REBUS

      You want to know what we talked about.

      SIOBHAN

      Are you going to tell me?

      REBUS

      He’s got nothing Shiv. It’s all a bluff. He’s just messing with your head. Last night? He just fancied tormenting me.

      SIOBHAN

      Is he going in the witness box?

      REBUS

      Not unless he wants to look like a clown. Big Ger will not mess up your case against Mordaunt. You can keep staring at me Siobhan but you’re either going to trust me on this or you’re not.

      SIOBHAN

      If I couldn’t trust you on something like this I wouldn’t trust this job, I wouldn’t trust myself, I wouldn’t trust any seeming solid thing in the whole world.

      A beat.

      REBUS

      No pressure then.

      SIOBHAN

      Something I’ve always wanted to ask you: why does Cafferty call you ‘Strawman’?

      REBUS

      I was giving evidence against him in a case in Glasgow, the lawyer got me mixed up with another witness called ‘Stroman’. Cafferty loves that.

      SIOBHAN

      He thinks you’re a man of straw.

      REBUS

      He wishes I was.

      SIOBHAN

      And you think you’re a lone wolf. The last gunslinger in High Noon, taking down the bad guys as he goes.

      REBUS

      What do you think I am?

      SIOBHAN

      Retired. And good police work is team work John.

      REBUS

      You think? I think a result’s a result.

      SIOBHAN

      John . . .

      REBUS

      (cutting in) I hear you Siobhan. I do.

      SIOBHAN

      I see her you know. In my head.

      REBUS

      Who?

      SIOBHAN

      Angela. Just watching me. Never had that before on a murder, not even my first. I see her. Staring at me. Asking if I’m going to get her the only thing worth anything to her now. A bit of justice, for that little life snapped short . . .

      MAGGIE and ANGELA are on.

      REBUS

      I know. I see her too. I remember watching Sam going out for a night with her pals at that age.

      SIOBHAN

      How is she?

      REBUS

      Good, pesterin
    g me to come and see the granddaughter before she’s taller than Sam is.

      SIOBHAN

      Well you’ve the time now.

      REBUS

      That’s what she says. In a few years that toddler will be a teenager. Then Sam will understand what it was like, looking at her, so fresh and full of life, beautiful . . . and fragile as a moth. She didn’t understand why I shouted at her for pulling her top down and making up her face like she was something glossy and available. She didn’t see what I saw . . . what the predatory monsters out there would see. Christ. The way young lassies dress themselves up Shiv . . .

      SIOBHAN

      A young woman’s got every right . . .

      REBUS

      (cutting her off) Aye I know I know.

      SIOBHAN

      Attacks like the one on Angela, on Maggie Towler are rare. Still. Women risk more in their own homes. Young women can’t be prisoners of their father’s fears . . .

      REBUS

      It is just a fact that a strong man can grab a woman and do whatever he likes. It’s just a fact that young women will always need protection, as long as that’s true. And we’re the protection, or we should be. We need to get them locked up.

      SIOBHAN

      Maybe the answer is to keep trying to make a world where no man ever would hurt a young woman.

      REBUS is surrendering something, realising he can’t fix this, struggling with that.

      REBUS

      Aye. Alright. Alright.

      SIOBHAN

      What?

      REBUS

      I can’t see a way through . . .

      SIOBHAN

      What is it?

      REBUS

      Shiv . . . There’s maybe is something I do need to talk to you about . . .

      She waits. He can’t find a way to go on.

      SIOBHAN

      Well what is it?

      REBUS

      Nothing. No it’s nothing. I’ll fix it myself. Just . . . Look . . . I might need your help, tonight . . .

      SIOBHAN

      (cutting him off) Oh I can’t tonight.

      REBUS

      (thrown) Oh. Right. Sorry.

      SIOBHAN

      No I’m going out. I have to . . . I mean I want to eh . . . (she’s floundering) It’s just this thing . . .

      REBUS

      (cutting in) Hot date?

      SIOBHAN

      Hardly. Important. Important date.

      REBUS

      Anyone I know?

      SIOBHAN

      It’s work. I can’t shift it so . . .

      REBUS

      No, no, fine. Work on the Mordaunt trial?

      She says nothing.

      REBUS

      ’Course it is. And nothing you can tell me . . .

      SIOBHAN

      Sorry, it’s just . . .

      REBUS

      I’m no even asking. It’s fine. Really.

      SIOBHAN

      I could come and see you after? How late will you be up? Stupid question . . .

      REBUS

      (cutting her off) No, I’ll be out. I thought maybe you could come with but . . .

      SIOBHAN

      How about I buy you breakfast?

      REBUS

      Aye . . . aye that might work.

      SIOBHAN

      You can tell me all about it then.

      REBUS

      Yeah. Alright. I’ll tell you all about it then.

      SIOBHAN

      It’s a date.

      She’s on the move, going back upstairs.

      REBUS

      So you know about the murder on my stair then?

      She pauses.

      REBUS

      If you had eyes on me and Cafferty then you’ll have heard about the murder on my stair? (as she doesn’t reply) Why didn’t you say?

      SIOBHAN

      I was waiting to see when you’d tell me. You fancy Cafferty for that?

      REBUS

      Don’t you?

      SIOBHAN

      So why didn’t you tell that very competent police officer who interviewed you?

      REBUS

      I’ll tell you at breakfast.

      SIOBHAN

      You better.

      SIOBHAN goes back upstairs. REBUS walks slowly down the stairs. ANGELA and MAGGIE are with him.

      MAGGIE

      You couldn’t tell her.

      ANGELA

      Couldn’t face it.

      MAGGIE

      Well that’s just weak!

      REBUS

      Fucking shut it!

      Transition into—

      Rebus’s Arden Street flat

      REBUS is searching through paperwork, not even sure what he’s looking for. MAGGIE and ANGELA are still with him, still talking. REBUS has put music on, we barely hear it, it’s HEATHER and MAGGIE’S song ‘Show Me the Way’.

      ANGELA

      Look at him, did you really think he cared about us? It’s all about her.

      MAGGIE

      Siobhan . . . We’re dead.

      ANGELA

      No sense worrying about the dead.

      MAGGIE

      But if Siobhan Clarke finds out you lied to her . . .

      ANGELA

      Messed with her . . .

      MAGGIE

      Let her down . . .

      REBUS shouts at them, at the world.

      REBUS

      Cafferty’s got nothing!

      MAGGIE

      But you know that’s not true.

      ANGELA

      Better go and find out.

      MAGGIE

      Under the dusk dark cherry trees on Middle Meadow walk, go and climb up the stairs of the old Infirmary, polished new and caged in with des res glass . . .

      REBUS

      (paperwork) Why did no fucker write down the name of the property company that owned the building site? I’m going to get the fucker that killed you Maggie I . . .

      MAGGIE

      (cutting him off) Too late for that John. I’ll still be dead.

      ANGELA

      And what about me?

      MAGGIE

      What about my baby girl, Heather?

      Now we hear the music, MAGGIE’S song. REBUS goes and takes it off.

      ANGELA

      Maggie and Heather, Angela and Siobhan.

      MAGGIE

      And you.

      ANGELA

      And ex–detective John Rebus.

      MAGGIE

      Canny save all of us John.

      REBUS

      (quiet) The fuck I can’t.

      MAGGIE

      It’s too late.

      REBUS

      There’s a way through this . . . There must be . . .

      MAGGIE

      There’s not.

      REBUS

      There is. There’s a way . . .

      ANGELA

      Time you were on your way John.

      Transition into—

      Quartermile penthouse, stairwell/flat

      MAGGIE and ANGELA are gone. Laboriously, REBUS climbs up to CAFFERTY’S penthouse and rings the bell. CAFFERTY lets him in.

      CAFFERTY

      What’s wrong with the lift?

      REBUS

      Someone’s getting a Waitrose delivery.

      CAFFERTY

      They’re supposed to use the service life for that. Come in, come in, take a seat, admire the view. Christ, state of you man. You can have a wee lie down if you like. What are you drinking?

      REBUS has semi collapsed.

      REBUS

      Just give me some water.

      CAFFERTY

      Bit late to crawl back on the wagon isn’t it?

      REBUS

      (weary) Stick some whisky in it then.

      CAFFERTY

      I’ve got something better. Going to expand your mind John, wait till you taste this. (fixing the drink, wine) This is the best move I ever made, never get tired of that view. You can see half of Edinburgh from up here. 360 degrees of lights and life.

      REBUS

      And all the world can see you, up here in your glass tower.

      CAFFERTY


      What does that tell you? I’m at the top of the world John, nothing to hide, no-one to fear now, monarch of all I survey. Is that how it goes? I can see you of an evening John, down there, having a wee wander in the Meadows in the middle of the night. Didny know anyone was watching did you?

     


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