
Rebus shrugged, his eyes on the cat. It had leapt silently on to the desk and was now rubbing itself against the books. The girl held her pencil out towards it, and the cat brushed the tip with its jaw.
'Inspector Rebus,' said Rebus. I'm interested in some stolen books. I was wondering if anyone had been in trying to sell them.'
'Do you have a list?'
Rebus did. He drew it out of his pocket and handed it over. 'You can keep it,' he said. 'Just in case.'
She glanced down the typed list of titles and editions, her lips pursed.
'I don't think Ronald could afford them, even if he was tempted.'
'Ronald being the manager?'
'That's right. Where were they stolen from?'
'Round the corner in Buccleuch Place.'
'Round the corner? They'd hardly be likely to bring them here then, would they?'
Rebus smiled. 'True,' he said, 'but we have to check.'
'Well, I'll hang on to this anyway,' she said, folding the list. As she pushed it into a desk drawer, Rebus reached out a hand and stroked the cat. Like lightning, a paw flicked up and caught his wrist. He drew back his hand with a sharp intake of breath.
'Oh dear,' said the girl. 'Rasputin's not very good with strangers.'
'So I see.' Rebus studied his wrist. There were inch-long claw marks there, three of them. Whitened scratches, they were already rising, the skin swelling and breaking. Beads of blood appeared. 'Jesus,' he said, sucking on the damaged wrist. He glared at the cat. It glared back, then dropped from the desk and was gone.
'Are you all right?'
'Just about. You should keep that thing on a chain.'
She smiled. 'Do you know anything about that raid last night?'
Rebus blinked, still sucking.' What raid?'
'I heard the police raided a brothel.'
'Oh?'
'I heard they caught an MP, Gregor Jack.'
'Oh?'
She smiled again. 'Word gets about.' Rebus thought, not for the first time, I don't live in a city, I live in a bloody village…
