Read Variations on a Theme Page 17


  ~-o0O0o-~

  When I woke it was morning, and I was sitting on a bench in Buchanan Street Bus Station. My mouth felt like somebody had shat in it. I took a taxi back to the office and climbed the stairs as wearily as Duncan had managed the day before.

  George at the Twa Dugs had been as good as his word. There was no dead body on the floor, and the window was fixed. The room smelled of putty. I sent some cigarette smoke to join it before showering and shaving.

  After two cups of coffee I started to feel almost human. The weight of Duncan’s money started once again to prey on my conscience. I lit up a new Camel, pulled the phone towards me and went back to work.

  Clarke and Ellison weren’t hard to find in the book, but Clarke wasn’t answering the phone, and I got the answering machine at Ellison’s place. I wasn’t doing anyone any good by sitting in the office, so I left a message for Ellison telling him I was on the way and headed for Milngavie.

  It had just started to rain so I hailed a cab. He wasn’t keen on going so far out of the city, but the sight of my money shut him up fast. We headed along Great Western Road past Anniesland, and the traffic lessened as we left the city behind.

  This far out Glasgow becomes suburbia. Neat houses with neat cars outside and neat little people inside, living neat, tidy lives of clockwork regularity.

  For people out here, the Glasgow I knew was a foreign country. They visited it during their working hours, but they only saw what was on the surface, what the city let them see. They didn’t remember that all around them was a dark, old lady, brooding and cold. She mostly let herself show at nights, in the bars, around the docklands, and in the vast cemeteries which marked where all her children lay sleeping.

  Some of them might occasionally catch a glimpse of her, in the face of a drunk, in the hands of a beggar. But they’d soon forget her once safely home and locked into their havens with their soap operas and reality shows and their TV dinners and boxes of Australian wine.

  I was never allowed to forget her.

  And I don’t want to.

  The cab dropped me off in a cul-de-sac of houses that all looked the same… perfectly groomed, perfectly dull. Curtains twitched as I walked up the drive to Ellison’s place. A trim woman in a nurse’s uniform answered the door.

  “I knew the suburbs were kinky,” I said. “But isn’t this taking it a bit far?”

  I didn’t even get a smile.

  “If you’re here to see Mr. Ellison, he’s resting, and can’t be disturbed.”

  “He’s expecting me.”

  She looked me up and down.

  “He’s expecting a private detective, not somebody who smells like a brewery and looks like he’s slept in one.

  “I left a message…” I said.

  She sighed loudly and rolled her eyes. She looked kind of cute, but not enough for me to cut her any slack. I stared at her until she relented.

  “He got it,” she finally said. “He said I was to show you in.”

  She stood aside, but only just, and the look she gave me told me just what she thought of the idea. She motioned me through to a front room that had been turned into a room to care for a very sick man.

  Ellison lay on a bed that looked far too big for him. He reminded me of the children you see in pictures of African famines; distended belly pushing through hospital whites, arms like thin sticks, lips pale, drawn back from gray gums showing yellowed, tombstone teeth.

  “He wont let me put in a drip,” she said. “Won’t let me feed him. All he has is water.”

  “How long has he got?”

  She shrugged. She looked like she was past caring.

  “By rights he should be dead already.”

  One of the stick-like arms rose and waved me forward. I had to lean over close to hear him, and even then his voice barely rose above a whisper.

  “Tell Clarke I don’t forgive him,” he said.

  “For what?”

  He coughed and spluttered, thin spots of blood splattering the white of his covers.

  “It was Clarke’s idea in the first place,” he said. “Him and that fucking binding agreement he made us sign.”

  The man laughed bitterly, and I realized that he was hardly more than thirty years old. He looked at least eighty.

  “It was binding all right. And now there’s just the two of us left. Well you can tell Clarke that I might be dying… but I’ll see him go to hell first.”

  He started to laugh and cackle and I realized something else… the poor bugger was mad as a bag of rabid monkeys. More blood spattered, The nurse ushered me aside as the coughing fit got worse and some of the machines he was wired to started to beep faster.

  At the back of the room French doors opened out into the garden. I went out and lit up a smoke.

  The case was getting to me. I hadn’t learned anything I liked, and little that would lead me to the root of what was going on. Meanwhile everybody involved was heading south fast.

  The nurse came out five minutes later and bummed a cigarette from me.

  “How’s the patient?” I asked as I lit her up.

  She sucked a lung-full before replying.

  “He coughed himself unconscious,” she said. “He won’t last but a few more days. Maybe a wee bit more now that I’ve put a drip in… he cannae complain when he’s out for the count.”

  And just like that everything came together… Duncan drinking my whisky, Wee Annie eating a curry, the two men wolfing down fish suppers. Somebody… or something, didn’t want any breaking of the diet.

  Binding agreement.

  That’s what Ellison had said. It looked like it had been more binding than any of them had anticipated.

  I turned back into the room.

  “You have to take the drip out,” I said.

  “I don’t have to do anything.”

  We weren’t given time to get into an argument. The front window blew in with a crash and something that looked like a shaved albino chimpanzee bounded inside. I was halfway to the bed already, but I was too late. It latched its mouth on Ellison’s face and sucked.

  The sound of Ellison’s life draining away made my guts roil. I stepped forward and punched at the hunched figure sat on the man’s chest. My hand seemed to sink into it. It felt like hitting a slab of warm butter.

  The moist sucking stopped. The beast raised its mouth from the dry husk that had once been David Ellison. It turned towards me.

  There was no face.

  But it saw me, just the same.

  A wet, oily mouth opened, no more than a slit in that formless visage. I aimed another punch, but met only air as the beast leaped out of the broken window. I had a last glimpse of white as it jumped through the shrubbery then it was gone.