wheezing from somewhere beyond the curtainâanother patient jolted into life by a coughing fit. King blinked away whatever memories heâd been replaying.
âYour wife,â Rebus said. âWhen she called us she said there was something you wanted to say.â
âThatâs what Iâm doing,â King retorted, sounding irritated. âIâm telling you the story.â
âAbout your days as a Mod?â
âMy last time in Brighton.â
âYou and your scooter?â
âAnd a hundred others like me. It was a religion to us, something we were going to take to the grave.â He paused. âAnd we hated those Rockers almost as much as they hated us.â
âRockers were bikers?â Rebus checked, receiving a slow nod of agreement from King. âPitched battles on the seafront,â he went on. âI remember it from Quadrophenia .â
âAnything and everything became your weapon. I always hada blade with me, taken from my mumâs cutlery drawer. But there were bottles, planks of wood, bricks . . .â
Rebus knew now what was coming, and leaned in a little closer toward the bed.
âSo what happened?â he prompted.
King was thoughtful for a moment, then took a hit of oxygen before saying what needed to be said. âOne of themâjeans stained with oil, three-inch turn-ups, leather jacket, and T-shirtâhe starts running the wrong way, gets separated from the pack. A few of us peel off and go after him. He knows heâs not going to outrun us, so dives into a hotel just off the esplanade. Far as I remember we were laughing, like it was a game. But it wasnât, not once weâd cornered him in one of the storerooms off the kitchen. Fists and feet to start with, but then heâs got a blade out and so have I, and Iâm faster than him. The knifeâmy mumâs knifeâwas still sticking out of his chest when we ran.â King looked up at Rebus, eyes widening a little. âI left him there to die. Thatâs why I need you to arrest me.â His eyes were filling with liquid. âBecause all the years since, Iâve never gone a day without remembering, waiting for your lotâs knock at the door. And you never came, did you? You never came . . .â
·  ·  ·
Back in his second-floor tenement flat, Rebus smoked a couple of cigarettes and dug out his vinyl copy of The Whoâs Quadrophenia . He flicked through the booklet of photos and the little short story that accompanied them. Then he lifted his phone and called DI Siobhan Clarke.
âWell?â she asked.
âItâs archaeology,â he told her. âSummer of sixty-four. Iâm assuming it landed on my lap because someone mistook me for Old Father Time. Didnât even happen in Edinburgh.â
âWhere, then?â
âBrighton. Mods and Rockers. Blood in the nostrils and amphetamines in the blood.â He exhaled cigarette smoke. âNearly fifty years ago and a confession from a man with days left to liveâalways supposing he did it. Stuff the hospital is giving him, he could be telling us next heâs Keith Moonâs long-lost brother.â
âSo what do you think?â
âI just wish heâd asked for a priest instead.â
âWorth bouncing it south?â
âYou mean to Brighton?â
âWant me to see if I can find a CID contact for you?â
Rebus stubbed out the cigarette. âKing did give me a couple of names, guys who were there when he stabbed the victim.â
âThe victim being?â
âJohnny Greene. The murder was in the papers. Frightened the life out of King and that was the end of his Mod days.â
âAnd the others who were with him?â
âHe never saw them again. Part of the deal he seems to have made with himself.â
âFifty years heâs been living with this . . .â
âLiving