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'Yes, I know. Be nice to have something for him to come out to.'
'True.' Bruce thought of the empty coffers. 'Well, while he was inside, Charlie heard about something interesting that might be right up our street. Mickey will get a drink out of it. Absent friends and all that.'
'What sort of thing?'
Bruce leaned in. He hadn't been going to say anything until he learned more, but he felt he should show Roy he was thinking ahead, and of Mickey.
'A train, my son.'
'What kind of train?'
Bruce looked surprised. There was only one sort of train that would interest him. 'The money kind.'
Part Two
CASH & CARRY.
Twenty-five.
Headley, Surrey, May 1992.
My legs wobbled slightly as I opened the gate at the bottom of the path and stepped towards the siege house. Nerves, I guessed. The young copper had turned back; I was on my own. No light shone from within. I wasn't sure what the form was. Did I go up and knock? Wait until the door opened?
In the end I strode up the gravel as if I was just popping round for a chat - which, in a way, I was. Apart from the fact that one of us had a gun and was probably unhinged by recent events. I walked up the three marble steps between the pillars, rang the bell and waited.
An indistinct voice answered. 'It's open.'
I pushed the door and it swung back. The Yale lock had been clicked into the withdrawn position. It was dark inside.
'Come in and close it behind you,' said the disembodied voice.
I did as I was told.
'Release the catch so it locks.' I had him now. He was sitting at the bottom of the stairs in the cold, black hallway. As my eyes adjusted I could see the shape of Roy James, looking shrunken, no bigger than a child I could also make out the faint glint of metal. The gun.
I pulled the b.u.t.ton down and heard the latch snick into place. 'h.e.l.lo, Roy. Long time.'
'Yeah. A very long time.'
I rubbed my hands together. 'Christ, it's cold in here.' 'Is it?'
'Yes, it is. You got any heating?'
'The boiler's broken. There's a gasfire in the kitchen.' He gave a loud, self-pitying sniff. 'They coming to get me, Tony?'
I shivered again, not from the chill in the air this time, but from the odd dispa.s.sion in the words he spoke. They were colder than the house. 'Eventually, Roy.'
He stood. 'Fancy some tea?'
'I do, Roy. I have biscuits.'
'You go and light the fire. I'll put the kettle on. Matches are on the mantelpiece.'
It was a huge kitchen, stone-flagged, with a fireplace large enough to roast an ox in. Much of it had been boarded up, leaving a triple-element gas fire. While he fussed with the kettle I lit it, almost singeing my eyebrows.
The sole illumination was a 100-watt bulb hanging above the table with no lampshade and it made his skin look waxy and accentuated the shadows under his eyes. Once I had unloaded the biscuits onto a plate, I stood near the now- glowing fire, letting it warm my legs. He sat at the table, the pistol - a Browning automatic - in front of him.
'You remember that winter?' Roy asked. 'Sixty-two and three? That was f.u.c.kin' cold.'
It had been beyond cold into absolutely freezing, the sort of temperature that made your very bones ache. Trains shut down, there were power cuts, blizzards. The days and weeks of ice and snow and grim, low skies had been very bad for the car business, and me with a baby on the way. Roy, too, had suffered disappointments as more and more race meets were cancelled. Had he got consistent early practice in, he would have progressed to International Formula Junior more quickly, which would have meant the chance of sponsorship, which meant. . . well, it could have changed everything for him.
'It's all turned to s.h.i.t, hasn't it, Tony? For me, anyway.' He paused. 'f.u.c.k, I've given that speech too many times. But I was good.'
'We all knew it, Roy.'
'I hope he f.u.c.kin' dies.'
'Your father-in-law? No, you don't.'
He took a deep breath. 'No. I don't. But sometimes I think I was happier in nick.'
'Don't say that.'
'Well, you know, in one way it's a lot less aggro. Just do your time. Out here, f.u.c.k, it's a battle, isn't it? Every day a battle. I saw Buster the other week on his flower stall. Says the same. Gets him down.'
'Buster always had a black streak,' I said carefully. 'You know that. Things just look bad now. n.o.body's died. It's a bit of a domestic that got out of hand, that's all. I think we should go outside, Roy.'
'Why?'
'Before they come inside.'
He suddenly looked up at me, his eyes suspicious. 'Why did you say yes?'
'To coming here?'
'No. That day I came to the showroom and asked you to drive for us on the train job. Why did you say yes?'
It had been April, winter easing its terrible, almost malevolent grip at last. n.o.body who lived through those months would ever forget it. Britain was thrust back to the Middle Ages - cold enough for Frost Fairs, almost. I had said yes for the same reason they all had: the money. I had no ready cash, too many cars n.o.body wanted to buy - the only people doing well in the motor business were the makers of anti-freeze and snow chains - and a wife who was pregnant. A wife who suddenly wanted a bigger house and things for the baby. Nice things. Expensive things.
Roy had come asking for two more Jags and I'd said no, not with the Chalk Farm boys looking my way. So he had asked whether, if they sourced the cars from elsewhere, I would take the second wheel. For good money. Buy-you-a- nice-flat kind of cash. Yes, I'd said, even though I knew what had happened to Mickey Ball. Five years.
I told myself I wouldn't ever make that kind of mistake.
Yeah, right.
Twenty-six.
London, May 1963 Billy Naughton thought the girl would pull away as he came, but she kept her mouth clamped over the end of his c.o.c.k until the last spasm had pa.s.sed through it. When he had finished, she stood up and crossed the dingy room to the sink where she spat loudly while the detective b.u.t.toned himself up.
They were in a grey cubicle above the Hat Trick on Berwick Street. It was one of those come-on places with a hawker at the door who promised punters no end of delights but, in the end, sent them to a grim bas.e.m.e.nt in Rupert Court where they were fleeced all over again. Its real business happened in the warren of tawdry rooms above it: a bed with a mattress that didn't bear thinking about, a dresser, a sink and a sharp smell that a gallon of Dettol couldn't hide.
The girl rinsed her mouth and looked at him with a disarmingly direct gaze. Billy felt himself blush. She was barely in her twenties, skinny, with a black Helen Shapiro semi-beehive that was in need of fresh backcombing. She spoke with an accent he couldn't place, apart from it originating north of the Watford Gap. 'You been eating spicy food, have you?' she asked, smacking her lips.
Buckling his belt, he checked the front of his trousers for stains. He recalled that the team had been for a curry at some place off Regent Street the night before. When he admitted he had never had an Indian before, Len had made him order vindaloo. b.a.s.t.a.r.d. 'You can tell that?'
She gave a grin that dimpled her cheeks, softening the hard lines around her mouth. 'Look, love, after two years of this I can tell whether the customers prefer fruit gums or fruit pastilles.'
Two years? He thought briefly of all the c.o.c.ks she had sucked in that time and shuddered. She had offered more, but now he was glad he just went for the oral.
There was a banging on the door and he heard Duke's voice through the thin chipboard and ply. 'You finished, lover boy? Come on, wipe your d.i.c.k on the curtains and let's be havin' you.'
Billy gave a shrug and reached into his pocket, pulling out a crumpled pound note. The girl arched an eyebrow. 'Blimey, a copper who leaves a tip. Is that a pig with wings I can see?'
He threw it onto the lurid shiny bedspread, then felt he had to say something as he put on his jacket. 'Look, Paulette, wasn't it?'
She nodded. 'Well, Pauline as was. But the punters like a French name. Among other things.'
'I don't normally do that. .. you know.'
'Do what?' She was teasing.
'Take advantage.' It wasn't strictly true. Len Haslam had n.o.bbled him out for a similar 'treat' to drown their sorrows at Gordon Goody slipping through their fingers. It was a 'stag do' after a lock-in at a pub in Bermondsey. There had been blue films and a couple of willing girls high on, appropriately enough, blueys.
"Course not,' she sneered as she sat on the bed. Its overworked springs gave a tired groan. He went to continue but she held up a hand to silence him. 'Look, darling, one of your lot comes round for a free gobble every week or so. Happy to oblige. GTP, eh?'
It stood for Good To Police and described anywhere that gave discounts or free samples to the Force. 'But I don't want to listen to any speeches. Some of you coppers, the fresh ones like you, get sucked off and turn into Sir Galahad. Start suggesting I'm special, tell me how they'd like to help. But you are no different from the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds that run this place, sonny. Or the punters. At least they pay decent.' She picked up the note and tossed it back at him. He let it flutter to the floor. 'Go on, f.u.c.k off, there's probably someone with real cash downstairs waiting for a good time. Types like you ruin the business, you do.'
He opened the door. She had folded her arms across her bony chest. He stepped out into the narrow corridor, leaving the pound note where it had fallen onto the greasy carpet.
Despite the occasional visit to the working girls, Soho wasn't their patch, not really. The Flying Squad left it to Vice and West End Central, who had it carved up like a very fat, filling meat pie. But Duke had a few contacts he liked to keep sweet, ones he had known before they had gravitated like bluebottles to the s.h.i.t-heap of Old Compton Street and environs. And besides, as he was fond of saying, a free quickie never did anyone any harm. A perk of the job.
In the division of spoils at the Big House they had caught two cases, one a jewellery lift in Hatton Garden, the other a vicious Post Office raid in Islington, and spent the rest of the day flitting between the two locales, achieving very little that Billy could see, except winding up the local coppers and sinking a few pints.
They finished their shift at the Lamb and Flag, where Billy felt a cloud of gloom descend around him as he lit what would be the first of many f.a.gs. Duke sensed his mood at once. 'You think we've been wasting our f.u.c.kin' time, don't you?'
'Nooo . . .' Billy said, drawing out the word to breaking- point.
'Look, get over the idea that we have to be Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Whatsit,' said Duke, supping his eighth beer of the day. 'Sooner or later it'll fall in our lap, just like that tom of yours earlier.'
Billy smirked along with him, but there was no humour in it. His d.i.c.k had been itching for the last couple of hours, even though he'd washed it in various scabrous Gents' sinks since the encounter. He was beginning to wonder if you could catch the clap from b.l.o.w.j.o.bs.
'The thing you have to remember about villains is they are either stupid or overconfident or both. Some of them have intelligence, or rather rat-like cunning. A few have imagination, but not many. Which is why they stick to their patches. Territorial, see, like any animals. Yet we think of them as some kind of Raffles. You know, gentlemen thieves backed by a criminal mastermind. Now there's a f.u.c.kin' contradiction in terms. Criminal bleedin' masterminds. I tell you, if they were so mastermindy, you think they'd do the same thing over and over again? Do you? Does the team think, eh? I don't f.u.c.kin' think so.'
He was shouting now, and Billy looked around. The pub was almost empty, just a few woozy stragglers, and they weren't paying much attention. A buzzer went for last orders, but it didn't register with Duke. Billy knew that coppers were conditioned to ignore such sounds, like the opposite of Pavlov's dogs. At the sound of the bell, act like f.u.c.k-all has happened and it's got nothing to do with you. Which, with a flash of a warrant card, it rarely did.
'Well, does the team think?' Duke said, savouring the phrase. 'Not much, Y'Honour. Can't teach an old slag new tricks. Can you, Billy?'
A slyness had crept into Duke's voice and Billy realised he wasn't as p.i.s.sed as he was pretending to be. He punched the older man on the shoulder. 'You c.u.n.t.'
Duke took that as a compliment and flashed his nicotine- stained teeth. 'You know this place used to be called the Bucket of Blood? Because of all the bare-knuckle fights outside. Back in . . .'
But Billy wasn't having any of that old flannel. 'Spare me the history lesson, Len. There'll be more blood on the floor if you don't tell me what you picked up.'
Duke reached into his pocket and took out a small square of paper which he unfolded and laid on the bar towel in front of them. There were two registration numbers on it. 'Bingo,' he said. 'All the three point fours, nickety-nick.'
Billy picked up the sc.r.a.p and stared at it. 'What you on about?'
'Last weekend, just gone. Two Jags go missing within half a day of each other. And not any old Jags. Three point fours again. What does that tell you?'
Billy didn't need to think too hard. 'The Comet House boys?'
'Precisely. The City gents. Old f.u.c.kin' habits, see? Jaguar three point fours. The motor of choice for the discerning wheel-man everywhere.' His eyes were suddenly sober, the gla.s.sy stare replaced by something altogether more steely. 'They took the p.i.s.s, didn't they? So now we take a good, long look at Roy James, Buster Edwards and especially Gordon "Big Head" Goody, and this time we catch them doing a bit more than scratching their b.o.l.l.o.c.ks.' He pointed at Billy's empty gla.s.s. 'Fancy another, son?'
Twenty-seven.
London, May 1963 Tony's stomach was burning as he parked the Hillman in a side street lined with tall Edwardian houses, a ten-minute walk from the lock-ups at Lee where Jimmy White had stashed the two Jaguars. The idea was to move them closer to the job, which was scheduled for that night. A train. Robbing a bleeding train. It was like the Wild West, with Bruce Reynolds as Cheyenne Bodie. No, he was a good guy. Paladin, that was the bloke, a gunfighter with a dark streak in him. Have Gun, Will Travel it said on his calling card. Except Bruce said no guns. Using a shooter was like Double Your Money, he had told them, only here it was called Double Your Jolt.
Marie had sensed there was something up. She had never stopped asking questions. Where are you going? What are you doing? Why are you staying the night? Is it a woman?
No, it's not a woman. Well, she believed that. Because it was the truth. If only. No woman would churn his insides like this. His cover story - alibi, he supposed - was that he was going to buy a Ford Zodiac and a Zephyr in Southampton and would be staying over before driving one of them back, with his new pal Jimmy White chauffeuring the second. (Who the h.e.l.l is Jimmy White? she had asked.) He had already ordered them to be delivered by low-loader, so should she check in the showroom over the next few weeks, they would be there. He would probably sell them, too. Z-Cars had just swapped their Ford Consuls for the newer models, and sales had received a boost.
He walked quickly down towards the parade of shops and two pubs - the Old Tiger's Head and the New Tiger's Head - that faced off against each other and formed the heart of Lee, which for most people was little more than a crossroads on the A20 to Lewisham. He glanced at the pubs, suddenly thirsty, but kept his head down and continued across the lights.
Tony lit a cigarette as he went. He'd started smoking again, a pack a day. Marie could smell it on him and complained that he was stinking the flat out, even though he never lit up indoors. It was hormones that made her hysterical, he supposed. Everything for the good of the baby. Well, why did she think he was doing this?