Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
2
BULLET 6
A collection of short stories.
Published by:
Bullet Media Ltd
7 Roker Park Road
Sunderland SR6 9PF
UK
www.rocknrollnoir.com
2006
ISBN-10 0-9551497-1-1
ISBN-13 978-0-9551497-1-9
3
WELCOME……
To yet another Bullet, we just keep on a comin’ and we just keep on
getting better.
This our sixth issue we welcome back many old faces plus plenty new
ones.
Keith Jeffrey
Editor
4
Contents
Charlie Williams (England) 4
King Shit
TK Dan (England) 81
Pasty in Love
5
Charlie Williams
Charlie Williams is the author of the "Mangel" trilogy of novels
(Deadfolk, Fags and Lager, and King of the Road), published by Ser-
pent's Tail and due in various foreign editions. He lives near Worces-
ter.
6
KING SHIT
‘Nah, I ain’t shittin’ you. It’s just over there in the House. Honest.’
Tony blew smoke out. The wind had stopped and the smoke hung
around his head. He squinted at Bunt and said: ‘The House?’
‘Yeah, the House.’
‘What was you doin’ in the House?’
‘I dunno. Just lookin’.’
‘You’re fuckin’ mad, you are,’ said Tony, picking his nose. ‘It ain’t safe
in there.’
‘It is. I goes in there all the time and I ain’t got hurt.’ Bunt’s words
were deeper and more nasal than usual, as if his voice and nose had
both recently broken.
‘Yeah, but... It’s fallin’ apart, ennit? Boards is all rotted, and the...’
‘It ain’t that bad. Don’t be a fuckin’ poof, Tone.’
‘I ain’t a poof. I ain’t scared. I just... I don’t do that shit no more,
muckin’ about in derelict houses and that. For kids, it is.’
Bunt frowned, then bent over slightly, put a finger on one nostril, and
blew out a stream of mucus through the other. A passing bluebottle
landed on it and began feeding. ‘You wanna come an’ see it, or what?
Cos I thinks that what it is, right, is that you’re scared.’
‘Fuck off, Bunt.’ Tony looked up and down the street. It was early eve-
ning and no one was around. ‘Alright, I’ll come. But I don’t fuckin’
believe it. I’m only going to prove I ain’t scared, and that you been
seeing things.’
‘Yeah, I have. It’s the strangest fuckin’ thing I ever seen, and you’ll
see it an’ all. Come on.’
With Andy blathering about the usual themes behind him, Gav slipped
the package down the front of his trousers. A feeling had suddenly
taken possession of him, probably inspired by Andy’s incessant dron-
ing on about vengeance and demanding respect. He turned around
and drove the knife into Andy’s stomach, angling it up into his rib
cage. Andy stopped mid-sentence, halfway through the word “fabric”.
There was a brief flicker of surprise on his face, then he raised his
eyes heavenward and tutted, shaking his head, as if to say ‘Kids
these days, eh. What can you do with em?’ Then he collapsed and
died.
Gav kicked the dead body until the feelings inside him gave way a
little. When he had regained possession of his senses, he dragged the
7
body towards the hole and shoved it in, along with the other corpse
and the bags of dismembered body parts, and filled in the hole. When
he finished that, the mound was at least two feet off the ground, even
after he’d jumped around on it for a while in his Doc Marten boots. He
spent a couple of minutes walking around the clearing, picking up
branches and bulky pieces of vegetation, then went back and ar-
ranged them atop the mound. He finished it off with a few armfuls of
dead leaves, and then stood back and tried to imagine how a passing
dog-walker might see it. He found that hard to do, with his brain so
full of other feelings just then. Also it was dark, so he couldn’t see
much anyway. He tidied up and dumped the gear in the red Beemer’s
boot.
Just as his buttocks touched down in the driver seat, Gav realised
that the keys were still with Andy, probably in his jacket pocket. He
thumped the steering wheel several times, then stopped. No time for
rage. He had to think fast and act fast. The time for rage was past.
They picked their way up the stairs, Bunt peering up at the gloomy
landing, Tony following about a foot behind, shaking his head. A huge,
thick-legged spider scrambled halfway down the hall beside him, then
fell the rest of the way and disappeared somewhere near his feet.
‘Aaagghh!’
8
‘What?’
‘There was... There was a fuckin’...’
‘What?’
Tony and Bunt glared at each other. The light was fading fast and they
could only see dark sockets where their eyes should be. ‘Come on,’
said Tony, shoving past.
Gav had been driving for about an hour before he gave some thought
to where he was going. As long as it was out of town, that was all that
mattered. And town was far behind him now, so at least he had
achieved that aim. His breathing was returning to normal and his
thoughts were coming clear. Now that the rage had passed, he could
see that things weren’t so bad. Sure, he had killed a few people back
there, but they were cunts anyway. Plus he had never really been able
to get going in Tuber, so this was his chance to make a new life for
himself. A good life, a life where it was he who spoke of demanding
respect, and ordered cunts around all day while he sat on his arse. A
life where he was King Shit.
He put his foot down and headed for Barkettle. About five miles West
of the town, he found a nice quiet spot on the river. Dawn had broken
and you could see pretty much everything on all sides. No buildings,
fishermen, or even livestock. No one to see what he was up to. He got
the package out of his trousers and looked at it for a while, unsure
why he was doing this. Several minutes later he noticed a large plas-
tic carrier bag shoved into the passenger door pocket, and used it to
wrap up the precious package. For another few minutes he just
looked at the watertight parcel and shook his head in wonder, marvel-
ling at the sheer genius his brain was capable of when under pres-
sure.
He turned the Beemer around and drove about a hundred yards into
the field, then pointed it back at the river, opened the passenger door
slightly, and floored the pedal. With only five yards to go he bailed out,
hitting the ground hard with his right shoulder and rolling down the
bank into the muddy shallows. He tried to get up but landed on his
arse again. The Beemer was tail-up in the riverbed, with most of the
back end above the water. Gav waded towards it, cracking his fingers
and swinging his arms. Nothing was going right today, but he was
9
fucked if he was giving in.
He put his broad back to the underside of the chassis and heaved,
roaring, and within a couple of minutes the Beemer was upside down
in the middle of the river, totally submerged.
Gav reached for his fags, finding them to be soaking wet. This was a
major blow and he could feel his blood beginning to boil again, but he
calmed down a bit (and even smiled slightly) when he thought about
the package wrapped up safe and dry down his trousers. A branch
floated towards him and poked him in the throat, ending the smile. It
was then that he saw the rowing boat floating around the bend up-
stream. Instead of scrambling to the bank and making off, he ducked
behind the branch and waited.
Bunt reached into his ancient harrington jacket and pulled out a
knife. It was quite a nice one, with a half serrated blade and camou-
flage handle. He pulled the blade out and pointed it at Tony’s stom-
ach.
The man took about thirty minutes to drown. That’s what it seemed
like, anyway. Probably it was only about thirty seconds, but each one
of those seconds dragged through Gav’s brain, taunting him and call-
ing him a loser. When the man stopped twitching, Gav looked around
for a place to dump the body. It was a quiet spot but wide open, with
paths lining each bank. In the end he hauled the body into the boat
and let the current pull him downstream, keeping an eye open for a
10
nice dumping spot.
It was good to have some respite after being on the go all day and
night. He stretched out in the wooden boat (kicking the corpse into
the far corner to make more room), clasped his hands behind his
head, and closed his eyes. The sun was bright now and felt good on
his face. After a while he got the drenched fags and laid them out on
the side of the boat. The sun would dry them out in no time.
As Gav swam towards him, the cyclist (a young boy of about ten)
stood motionless, regarding the scene as if from the back of a class-
room, midway through the last lesson of the day (maths). But the
lower half of his body betrayed his true feelings: legs trembling, dark
urine patches spreading from crotch outwards. As Gav stopped swim-
ming and began wading through ever shallower waters, the boy found
his composure. He tried to ride off, but his feet couldn’t seem to work
the pedals properly and he fell sideways, hitting the hard dirt path and
getting a small stone embedded in the palm of his hand. He left the
bike and ran through a gap in a hawthorn hedge, losing himself in a
field of maize.
Gav reached the path and spent a few seconds looking at the maize,
then kicked at the hedge and went to pick the bike up. It was a kid’s
bike - a bmx - but it was possible to ride, if a bit difficult with his sod-
11
den jeans and the extent to which he had to bend his knees. Soon he
forgot about that, and the miles between himself and Barkettle were
quickly eaten up. As he pedalled away, the wind and sun worked on
the black mud that covered his skin and clothes, and baked it hard.
Tony looked at the knife, then over Bunt’s shoulder at the wrecked
hall. ‘Put the fuckin’ blade away,’ he said casually.
Bunt didn’t move, other than to tighten his grip on the camouflage
handle, and smile.
Tony, without realising it, had been slowly backing up the stairs, and
now he was on the landing. It smelled strongly of recent shit and piss.
He could hear cars going by outside, and distant shouts, and a metal-
lic crash like a cage of goods falling off the back of a lorry. All of these
sounds seemed so far away.
‘I won’t have it, Tone. Cunts like you starts gettin’ above emselves,
where’s that leave me, eh? Makes me the cunt on the bottom, dunnit.
Well, Tone, I’m here to tell you that I ain’t that. I ain’t no cunt and I
ain’t on the bottom.’
12
He slashed at Tony’s face, missing by half an inch. Tony scrambled
upstairs to the next floor.
Gav had only been in Barkettle for a couple of minutes before a cop-
per saw him. The copper was coming out of a public lavatory on a
traffic island near the edge of town, doing his flies up, and when he
saw the large, mud-covered man go past on a bmx he paused mid-zip
and stared.
Gav stared back, and thought about stopping and giving him a beat-
ing, but just then a teenage boy came out of the lavatory behind the
copper, spat a few times into the gutter, then also stared. So Gav let
it. It was always hard dealing with two people out in the open, be-
cause one of them always tried to run away. He rode on, slowly realis-
ing that things were not going to work out in Barkettle. He roared
again, pedalling hard down a quiet street in the industrial district,
then noticed the sign up ahead, pointing to the train station.
‘Well...’ said the man, small eyes behind thick lenses going every-
where but Gav’s face. ‘Ultimately it, erm...’
‘Tickets, please.’
The man with the paper stopped spinning his eyes around and fished
for his ticket, taking the opportunity to get up and leave the carriage.
‘Ahem. Sir?’
Gav stared out of the window and watched row upon row of terraced
houses turn into fields of rape and fallow.
‘Sir?’
‘What?’
‘Can I see yer ticket, please?’
‘No.’
‘But sir, I--’
‘Just fuck off. Leave us alone.’
‘If you don’t have a ticket, you’ll have to pay for...’
13
Gav looked at him for the first time. ‘Didn’t you hear us? I said fuck
off.’
‘Look,’ said the guard, placing a hand on the back of Gav’s seat and
leaning over him slightly, ‘I ain’t got time for this. I don’t care if you
are a tramp, if all these other customers can pay up, then so can--’
Gav grabbed him by the tie and yanked his face down onto the table,
then got a handful of grey hair and slammed him until the blood was
pooling. By the time he stopped, the guard rolling limp onto the floor
(crushing the coffee cup), the carriage was empty. Gav tried to think.
Thinking was becoming so hard, what with all the fireworks going off
in his head. He banged his forehead again and again on the window,
but that didn’t help. He got up and lurched along the aisle, staggering
side to side, clutching his head. Passing between carriages he noticed
the door. DO NOT OPEN WHILE TRAIN MOVING, it read, though Gav
could make no sense of it. He opened the door and jumped out.
When he came to, about twenty minutes later, he had an idea that he
was in bed, and that the duvet had bunched up beside him. He
reached out for warmth and grabbed a handful of bramble, then
swore and pushed himself upright on his hard bed of stones. His
jacket was torn and his shoulder was grazed and bleeding beneath it,
but when he stood up he found that he was otherwise OK. And the
package was still rammed firmly down his damp jeans.
He walked away from the tracks, hopping over a low stone wall into a
field of ragged looking sheep. They scattered away from him, then
resumed grazing at a safe distance. Far away, beyond all of those
trees, he saw the spires and rooftops of a town.
The smell was different up here. Still shit and piss, but of an older
vintage. And another smell, something sweet and rotten. Tony remem-
bered why they were there, in the House. Bunt claiming that he had
seen something strange up here. Maybe he had been right after all.
Maybe it was here, in this room, just feet away from where Tony was
now standing. Maybe that’s what the stink was.
Tony saw another doorway and went for it. It was pitch black now and
he had to feel his way.
‘Here piggy piggy...’ Bunt was saying, stepping into the room Tony had
14
just left. ‘Come on, you bastard. Where are yer?’
Tony’s hand landed on some sort of wall-mounted wooden structure.
He started climbing the ladder, praying that each worm-eaten rung
would hold.
At last the trees were starting to thin out a bit. Gav felt like he had
been trapped in an immense network of tunnels for hours on end, so
dense and sprawling was the roof of foliage behind him. Rays were
breaking through up ahead, but the sun was heading for the horizon
and not far off it. Gav looked at his watch, and found that he didn’t
have one. All he had were the clothes on his back, his waterproofed
package, his freedom, and his burning desire to make something of
himself.
He pressed on, making light of the dry, leathery interior of his mouth.
If the cunts in Tuber couldn’t stop him, thirst couldn’t either. Nothing
could. Gav marched, swinging fisted arms, gritting scummy teeth. Up
ahead you could see the first couple of houses. An engine hummed
behind him and he turned around, seeing a small bus come into view.
Gav gave him a scowl and sat down at the back. No cunts were going
to stop him today. Not even clever-clogs ones like this driver here.
He’d proven that. Today they were falling like dominoes, and Gav was
the big fat finger knocking them down.
MANGEL
POP. 21280
‘Tone? Where are yer? I was only joshin’, with the knife an’ that. I
won’t hurt yer, honest. Here, I’m puttin’ me knife away.’
15
Tony watched him through the hole in the floor of the attic. Bunt
flicked the lock knife noisily shut, then opened it again.
‘What I was sayin’ about you bein’ a cunt, I’m only sayin’, like. I don’t
mean it. I just... I just been feeling like everyone wants to get on, leav-
ing poor old Bunt behind. No one wants to know us no more. Not even
Fat San down the arkie. D’you know what she says to us the other
day? “If you don’t start having baths,” she says, “I’ll ban yer.” Ban me,
all the time I spends in that arkie? The fuckin’ cheek of her. I has a
bath every couple of weeks, at least. Fuckin’ cheeky...’
Tony shifted his leg a bit, which was stretched out behind him and
going a bit dead. The boards creaked beneath him.
At Mangel Central Bus Station the driver pulled up and shouted: ‘All
off here.’
But Gav found that he couldn’t move. It was dark outside and his
eyelids hung heavy, and he just wanted to sleep. It felt safe on the
bus, especially being in a strange town. Not that Gav was afraid. If
Mangel was where he had washed up, Mangel was where he would
make that new life for himself. People were the same everywhere.
They were all cunts, and Gav intended to treat them as such. With his
package of goods, and the fists on the ends of his arms, it wouldn’t
take much to show them all who was King Shit.
‘Come on,’ said the driver, now out of his seat and pulling his coat on.
‘Shift, you at the back there. You never even paid, so you ain’t getting
no favours off me.’
‘I can’t move.’
‘You bloody can move. And you will.’
‘No, fuck off,’ he said sleepily. ‘I just wanna rest me eyes a bit.’
The driver leaned back towards the steering wheel and honked the
horn three times, then said: ‘I suggest you opens em and looks out
that window there. See that pub, the one painted black and with the
blinds drawn?’
Gav turned his head lazily. The pub was only a few yards away. One of
the blinds flew up to reveal a fat, bald-headed man in a short-sleeved
16
shirt. Several other heads (either bald or severely shorn) gathered
behind him.
‘Landlord there is my brother, and he’s got a shotgun behind the bar.
He’s also got a lot of lads in, seeing as it’s darts night. They like a bit
of sport, the lads. What they don’t like, though, is strangers. And nor
do I. Specially filthy strangers who leaves a mess all over the seats.
Now get off my fuckin’ bus, before I honks the horn again.’
Gav found himself on his feet, shuffling down the aisle. He didn’t even
make eye contact as he went past the driver. There was a time for all
that, and it wasn’t now. Right now it was time for food, drink, and
sleep. He drifted down one road and up another. No one was about,
which was a good thing. His whole body was numb, and it hurt his
eyes to keep them open. The smell of food hit his nose and he drifted
towards it. A sign seemed to say BUGGER OFF (though in reality it
read BURGER CITY). Gav shrugged and went inside. The aroma of
deep fried objects gave him just enough energy to read some of the
words up on the wall behind the counter.
‘Sir,’ said the girl. She handed over a paper bag of food and asked for
some money, but Gav ignored her and walked away, picking up the
apple pie as he went past. He walked down the road, eating and
drinking, bloodshot eyes darting all over the place. He kept seeing
things in his peripheral vision, people darting around in the shadows,
tracking him. But when he looked there was no one there. He felt a bit
drunk, wandering off the pavement and tripping as he remounted the
kerb, dropping a handful of chips, and he knew it was the fatigue. He
had work to do in this town, a new kingdom to conquer, but he could-
n’t do it unless he was in the right shape.
17
He opened his mouth to roar one more time, then remembered that it
was all about pushing and keeping on going. It was then that he
looked up and saw the abandoned house, set back high from the
road.
Bunt was sat down, picking his nose with the blade of his lock knife.
He’d being doing this for about a minute, and Tony had been praying
for him to slip and slice through a nostril. Anaemic yellow light filtered
through the dirty window from the street outside, turning Bunt’s
brown hair a nasty shade of green.
Tony was starting to wonder if he’d ever get out. People had said
things about Bunt. No one ever believed them, but people said them.
Tony believed them now.
‘I knows yer up there, Tone. I fuckin’ heard you. I’m waitin’ here on
you comin’ down, and I ain’t movin’, right? All I wants is us to have a
chat and set things straight. No blades, no aggro whatsoever. But
don’t make us come up there. If I comes up there, I’ll slit yer. I knows
how to do it and all. Ears first, then yer tongue. Then I’ll pop yer eyes
out an’--’
The monster walked into the room. His eyes were on Bunt and his
arms were half-raised, like a zombie. He looked very much like a zom-
bie, actually, with his rotten skin flaking off and the way he lurched.
Strangely, he brought the aroma of chips with him.
Tony thought about shouting a warning to Bunt, who was still going on
about something and had his back was turned. The monster was al-
most upon him, directly beneath Tony’s spy-hole. But he didn’t shout
a warning to Bunt. Fuck him. Let his monster get him.
Tony flinched. It was a pretty scary sound. The boards creaked under
him and then gave way completely. He fell, landing on top of the mon-
ster, stopping dead its roar.
‘See,’ said Bunt, standing in the corner now, knife out. ‘I fuckin’ telled
yer.’ He walked slowly over and looked down at the slain monster. ‘I
telled you there was a... a...’
18
Tony was still on top of the thing, and couldn’t get off. He pushed
down on something but his shoulder was in agony. Chunks of dried
skin and flesh came off in his hand. ‘Bunt...’ he shouted, ‘I can’t...’
Bunt leaned over and picked something out of the tangled mess. It
looked like a plastic bag, dripping and covered in grime. Then he
reached down to Tony’s face and cut it deep, ear to mouth, and ran.
Tony held his breath for a few moments, tears welling in his eyes,
holding in a scream. Footfalls clattered down the stairs. A siren went
past outside, then faded.
When he was ready to scream, the monster put a hand over his
mouth.
19
Dave Balfe
Dave Balfe had a long and illustrious career in the music biz ranging
from the legendary Teardrop Explodes to Blur, but now he says he's
just another bloody writer fantasising about killing people, nastily.
20
GUYS & GUNS
I don’t believe in hate, but I hate.
I don’t believe in violence, but I was angry.
I don’t believe in kidnapping, torture and murder, but...
Even the bastard psychos amongst us want to be nice. They do. And
most genuinely think they are nice. Cos it’s easy to be nice to nice
people, to people we like. The real test is when you’re feeling right-
eous, when you feel angry, when the person you’re really angry and
righteous about is in front of you, when that person’s in front of you
and nobody else knows where they are. Nobody. When you can do
what you want, and they can’t stop you, and nobody will ever know.
Now that’s a test for your principles, a test for your soul. What are you
really, deep down, just you alone, without all that keeps you in line
keeping you in line?
I took the test, and I found out things. I found out I’m the same as
him. Almost.
That’s what we all like to say - almost. We pretend that that little dif-
ference matters.
You don’t need to know what he did. It was bad enough, okay? Fuck-
ing vile. Sickened me. Really, it did. I felt… There’s no words for what I
felt. I felt…….I felt like I had to do something about it. I had to do
something about it. Okay? I couldn’t not. It was worse than what I’ve
done to him. Far, far worse. I don’t care if you don’t believe me, it
was.
No, I’m not saying what. I don’t even want to think about it, I don’t
want those pictures back in my head. Don’t ask again.
No, I couldn’t have gone the police. It’d be just my word against his,
plus anyone he wanted to get in to lie for him, which he would, with
ease. Then there’s the lawyers he’d buy. They’d persuade you black
was white. Cos there was no other witnesses, no evidence, nothing.
Just me.
Look I’m all for courts, and judges, rule of law, all that stuff. I under-
stand, society’d be a mess without them. If you break the odd rule, if
they catch you, even if you have to pay a price, we all know it’s for the
best. Even the worst of us don’t want our mum’s raped with impunity,
21
our kids fucked over. You don’t have to be Einstein to work that one
out. But…….And it’s a big BUT.
But what do you do when only you know something. I mean really
know something - never mind what can be proved with evidence and
all that - something that nobody else knows. Something that you’ll
never, ever, be able to prove objectively, in a court of law. What do
you do?
Nothing, that’s what you’d do. Fuck all. And you’d think yourself better
than me for not doing it.
Well, I got him as he came out this girl’s house. Lap-dancer. I knew he
went back there most Fridays. I’d been there once with him. Knew
he’d probably be on his own. He was. Waited a couple of hours. Never
stays the night, has to get home to the missus. Sweating, I was,
standing behind the fence, shaking. But, Crack! Smack him on the
head with a hammer and he’s on the floor like anybody. Searched
him, took his keys, took his gun, took his knives, pulled him, lifted
him, hard, into the boot of his own Lexus. Down the A40 - you drive
very carefully with a body in the boot - till I got here. Pulled him out,
still unconscious, careful though, tied his hands, he’s a tough fucker.
Thought he might be dead, but no. Wish he had been, looking back.
Would’ve saved some nastiness.
I dragged him down the steps, into the old cold-storage. The refrigera-
tion doesn’t work any more, but it’s still fucking cold down there this
time of year. Stripped him. Cuffed him. Chained the cuffs to a pipe -
fat, solid one. Pissed on him. Don’t know why. Something psychologi-
cal I suppose. Look, I told you, I was fucked off he’d put me in the
position to have to do this.
I looked hard at him. I’d been mainly worried that half way through my
feelings might change. My commitment, my emotion, might dribble
away. I wouldn’t have enough hate left to finish it off. He’s not the
kind of guy you can leave half-finished, not like this, not without con-
22
siderable personal fucking danger. But now I felt that wasn’t going to
be a problem. I was ready to take this to its conclusion. Which was
certainly a fucking relief.
I left him there. Locked the storage door. They wouldn’t hear him up-
stairs even if there was anyone working there anymore. They certainly
couldn’t hear him in any of the buildings nearby, even if it was day-
time on a weekday and they were occupied. I took his car, drove it
half an hour away, up a country lane, set it on fire, along with his
clothes. Walked a mile to the minicab place I’d marked out, baggy
parka, hood up. Got a cab to Uxbridge, then a completely separate
one back to the shops, then walked the last half mile back here. So,
like I said, my arse was completely covered.
He couldn’t say anything then. He couldn’t compute it. You don’t know
me, y’ see. He does. This isn’t the kind of thing I do. By a long chalk.
But he eventually got it.
23
cold. They still laugh at you. What’s a guy got to do?
I tell you what a guy’s got to do. I pulled out the gun and shot him.
Aimed for his leg, for his ankle, but it jerked in my hand. I’d never shot
someone before. Never shot a gun at all. It him in the groin. He
stopped laughing, stuck his finger down below his tangle of pubic
hair, pulled it out, looked at the blood all over it. He sat down, care-
fully, delicately. Seems I’d done the right thing. He looked at me differ-
ently.
I don’t believe in guns either. Hate them, in fact. But, at that moment,
I knew well why they existed. Why they were so loved, by so many.
Why men say, ‘Out of my dead hands’, with tears of conviction.
Not many of us were the toughest in school. No more than, say, one in
a hundred. Were you? I remember Tony Worsley, toughest in my year.
A bastard. But even he must have had bigger bastards he feared.
Older, nastier, more skilled ones. Who can forget that fear? And far
worse than the fear, the shame. A deep masculine shame, something
that stays with you for years afterwards, for the rest of your life. Suck-
ing something important out of you. You stop worrying about it some-
where in your twenties, but that doesn’t mean it’s gone away. It’s just
become who you are.
Don’t ask me about women. But men. No matter how hard we re-
press, pretend, deny, wipe, re-write our own personal history. There’s
a weak, vulnerable, pathetic, inferior feeling, somewhere dark in the
back of you, still pulling important strings. So ever-present you don’t
even realise it’s still there. But when you’ve a gun in your hand, it
goes away.
IT GOES AWAY!!!
Like a constant sound clicking off, that you only noticed was loud and
irritating when it went. That’s what it felt like to hold that gun and
shoot him. Except it wasn’t just an irritating sound went away, it was
something far greater, large as my whole life.
Better than a big cock, better than big money, better than presidential
power, holding a loaded gun, pointing it at a man, and nobody ever
knowing.
Let somebody from back at school try again, now. Let all those, who
once did, try again. Please.
24
But they’re not here. Only he is. He’ll do.
I’m not stupid. I’m an intelligent, well-educated, self-aware, thought-
ful, reflective person. I am! But I can see that, though his crime was
great, he is not paying the penalty merely for it alone. Inside me flood-
gates have burst open, something pent up is being released. Now that
I have a deserving recipient.
Honest.
I’m lucky in a way. Lucky to have found him. If only all of us could find
that target. And the right set of circumstances. The man who allows
you to really express yourself - anger, punishment, pain, injury, death,
and then washes your conscience clean with their enormous guilt. Not
only with what he’s done, but with what he would go on to do. Cos he
would.
25
be, as you pretend it is. With a gun in your hand you can step up to
the plate and play the real game, like the soldiers, the cowboys, the
gangsters – like heroes. The boys that play the big-boys’ game - life &
death.
That’s why we watch the films, why we read the books, cos under-
neath we know the truth of it. Even as we deny it.
I liked the look in his eyes now. The pain had removed the calculation.
The pain had removed the confidence, the superiority. The pain had
taken his essence, that bully power, his superior masculinity, and
given it to me. A transaction had occurred.
He recovered enough to look into my eyes. He saw that I was not wor-
ried, not scared, not unhappy. He saw that I was stronger now than
when I’d brought him here. He saw that his life would end here, very
soon.
“You fuckin’ cunt. You fuckin’ slimey little ponce. You’re fucked.
You’re so fuckin’ fucked, you’re…….fucked!”
I shot him in the chest. It didn’t kill him. So I shot him in the stomach.
That didn’t either.
“Cunt!”
His last word echoing his first sight. How fucking poetic can you get.
Better kill him now before he spoils it.
In the head, like in the films, worked.
Five shots.
I really enjoyed every one.
A lot.
I think I might try that again.
26
Ray Banks
Ray Banks' first novel The Big Blind was published by PointBlank in
2004. The first novel in the Cal Innes series, Saturday's Child, is out in
May 2006 with the sequel in September. He also enjoys an all-star
line up in the Ken Bruen edited Dublin Noir and his Bullet story "Real
Gone" has been picked for Maxim Jakubowki's annual Best Of collec-
tion. But, y'know, he really doesn't like talking about himself in the
third person, so pop over to www.thesaturdayboy.com for more.
27
THE KING IS DEAD
“Point of nine, centre field nine, mark the nine, pay the field.
Nineninenine, just like mine, German birth control. That’s a Jesse
James, a forty-five, waaaaaarming for the shooter...”
The stickman acts like he’s auditioning for his own sitcom, but he
doesn’t have a laugh track and he’s not going to get one from me.
Save it for the rednecks, kidda, because this lad’s heard it all before.
With the warmth of a double Jim Beam no ice, a climate-controlled
gaming floor and the cold-sweat desperation that comes with a hard-
core wager, I let the dice skitter across the layout. Five-six.
“Yo, Adriaaaaaaan. Yo-eleven, good field, good come, pay the come,
baby, yooooo.”
Fuckin’ get in. Got the box man staring at me now, the pile of chips in
my rack growing larger. Pick and play, up the front line bet and get the
dice back to me, keep the fuckers running. No room in this pit for cold
bones. And nobody thinks anything of a ’68 Comeback Elvis rolling
‘em like they burn his hand. This is Vegas, baby. Elvis fucking city.
The stickman retrieves the dice, pushes them my way. Big grin on his
28
face and patter that’ll get him sporting that stick up his arse in a min-
ute. “Keep ‘em out of the pit if you don’t mind...”
I stop myself lunging for the stickman, use the energy to gather up the
rest of my chips and push away from the table. A fat woman in a pat-
terned dress smiles at me as I squeeze past her.
“Okay, folks, coming out, new selection, new direction... new erection,
use protection, yukkie lung yadie shootin’...”
I glance at the new shooter, a blonde with cleavage a man could quite
happily die in.
If there’s one thing that turns a judge off, it’s a tribute artist who
thinks he’s the real deal.
Jimmy Ellis had the pipes. There was no doubt about that. Good Morn-
29
ing America did a scientific scan of his voice (unidentified at the time)
and the computer pronounced it an exact match of the King. That was
science in action right there. Ellis wasn’t a threat anymore – him and
his wife were killed by robbers in 1998 – so I had to scour his back
catalogue, listened to that voice with my eyes closed, felt the tone
and vibration in the back of my throat.
Then there was Rick Saucedo. The man sounded great and he was a
dead spit. But he was Late King. You looked around the best tribute
artists, most of them were. Sun or Vegas, some with a touch of the GI
Blues, but very few with my expertise. So I had to be careful with my
studies. Check out the difference between Sun and Vegas Elvis and
tell me there’s not a major tonal shift.
No, my body was primed for the black leather. And I had the looks.
So I could check it off on the list. Voice was a given. Looks, body. I had
the moves too. But all that still wasn’t enough to be a winner. The
main guys, blokes like Roy LeBlanc and Fred Wolfe, they weren’t just
about the superficial shite. They possessed something most Elvis
tribute artists had wet dreams about: the package.
And I’m not talking size here. I wasn’t bothered what fucking rumours
there’d been, you stick a pair of socks down your jumpsuit, you’re a
fucking impersonator.
No, I’m talking about the aura. There’s a reason he’s the fucking King,
know what I mean? Not because of the hip swivel or the music. It was
down to the aura. And that was something you can’t quite explain.
Your impersonators’ll deal with the ephemera, the token gestures like
the scarf routine, the “thankyaverramoosh”, the chito ryu and kenpo
30
moves.
But you want the aura, you have to love Elvis. It’s that fucking simple.
LeBlanc and Wolfe loved Elvis. And so did my mam.
I learned all about loving the King from my mam. My mates came
round after school, she’d be pottering around the house with Return
To Sender playing in the background. And they’d be thinking, Christ,
what a fuckin’ lunatic. But she was single-minded. Everything she
could have, she had. Elvis T-shirts, mugs, posters, those nasty com-
memorative plates you saw advertised in the back of the Sunday
magazines, an Elvis lamp, an Elvis tea cosy, badges, buttons, coast-
ers, ashtrays and shot glasses. At Christmas, it was the Presley festive
album on repeat, a gyrating Santa on top of the telly. My dad would be
piss-drunk, sparked out in front of Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise, a
half-empty Elvis decanter by the side of his recliner. What they say
about crack babies, the mother’s an addict and so’s the kid? Bang on
accurate. I didn’t stand a chance. Love of the King was in my blood at
birth. But nobody could’ve beaten my mam. She had all the love in
the world.
****
A few more double Jim Beams no ice and I’m mellow enough not to
think about the cash I just dropped. When I first got to this country, I
had to drink the spirits because the beer was so piss-weak. The taste
stuck with me. Anywhere else, it’d be expensive. Not in Las Vegas,
where alcohol’s nothing more than a gambling lubricant.
I finish my drink, order another one. Look up the bar and there’s the
blonde from the craps table. The pit light had been flattering to her.
Now she looks like a job lot of plastic surgery half-melted.
“Not as ‘yukkie’ as they made you out to be, huh?” I say. Or as “lung”,
I think.
“Excuse me?”
I shake my head. “Ah, forget it.”
She smiles to herself, orders a blue drink that comes with enough
accessories to furnish Barbie’s Malibu pad.
“You’re British.”
“Sometimes.”
“Only sometimes?” She cocks her head.
31
Jim Beam brings the King out: “Other times I’m honest-to-goodness
Tupelo, missy.”
“Tupelo,” she says, her accent lilting all southern, like. “You know
Mississippi?”
“I know Elvis.”
“You’re a tribute artist, am I right?”
I sip my drink. “Thought you were going to say impersonator.”
“I know the difference, honey.”
“Sure you do.”
“What’s your name?” she says.
“Brian.”
“You’re a good-looking guy, Brian.”
“Cheers.”
Her lips make a red bow over the straw. She looks at me with wide
blue eyes. Then she says, “You want to make some money?”
****
This office looks like it belongs to a lawyer. Wood panelling on the
walls, a well-stocked bookcase. The only difference is the scattering of
framed photos behind the desk, each one of them showing off the
kind of escorts the place has to offer.
32
I smile. She doesn’t match it. It’s a serious question.
She raises her hand and gives me a too-white smile, a perfect Parton.
“I’m not going to make you do anything you’re uncomfortable with.
You don’t want to be seen out on the town with a gay guy, that’s cool.
You’re straight, got yourself some little ole macho principles.”
“Wait a second, Frankie, I’m...” I have to take a moment. “I need the
money. And you set me up on a date with a bloke, that’s fine. But
nothing more than that.”
“Believe me, Brian, most of these guys are older’n Moses. They won’t
expect anything.”
I nod. Thinking, this is only going to be for six months, anyway. Get
myself some cash together, hone my act, re-enter the comp in six
months and that’s it, I’m sorted. Hasta la vista Elvis the Escort, bue-
nas dias Elvis the Entertainer.
****
Rob made the choir sing “Are You Lonesome Tonight?” after the
eulogy. They’d sung it with all the heart and soul of people who could
read music but didn’t understand it. The noise was enough to make
the pews bleed. When they reached the spoken word section, Rob
turned around in his seat and looked at me. Like he shared my pain.
33
Like, what fucking pain? The thing about cancer was that when it
finally ate up the vital organs, when it finally reached the brain and
turned the lights out, it was a relief to the family. My dad didn’t notice
it, but I did.
Wig boxes under the bed. That terrible smell on her. And that promise.
After the funeral, I trudged through the slush to the pub. Took four
pints before Rob staggered over to me. He was fat around his gut, the
rest of him spindly.
He put his pint of Guinness on the table, leaned against the back of a
chair. “C’mon, your mam would’ve wanted it. You got that voice and
everything, it’s the least you could do.”
I promised her, right enough. She always said I sounded just like Elvis.
Looked like him. I had the potential to be the son she always wanted.
“You need money to get over,” said Rob. “Get yourself kitted out. You
want to come up and do a song, I can see that happening for you.”
“You bribing me, Rob?”
“We’ll talk about it after you give us a song.”
I finished my pint, got up and pushed past him to the karaoke. Picked
the shortest song I could find.
“Ladies and gentlemen, Brian here’s gonna give us a song,” said Rob
into the mike. “I want you to put your hands together for the King.”
34
straight to the bar.
****
Nothing I’m uncomfortable with, that’s the deal. But it’s amazing how
you can change. At Frankie’s house, she’s throwing a party for all her
employees. Over by the aquarium, Audrey Hepburn’s locked lips with
Marilyn Monroe. James Dean and Marlon Brando are swigging marga-
ritas and talking about their shared clients. Liberace’s in the kitchen
with Whitney Houston, trying to talk his way into her knickers.
“You know I’m leaving once I get that audition,” I say. Frankie stirs her
drink with a straw. “You’re making good money, Brian.”
Good money’s one way of putting it. My conversation and looks were
the start. Then the hand. Then the hand and the mouth, Listerine
burning my gums to take the taste of rubber away. Mr Ross with the
hair plugs and the stroke-victim smile. Mr Sutton, the writer who
drank Advocat and propositioned me with a creamy scum on his thin
lips. Mr Forelli, the man who invited me to see Jim LeBoeuf with him
at the Riviera. I turned him down, even though he promised to pay
me. There were some things I wouldn’t do: seeing an impersonator
trash the King was top of the list.
She crosses her legs, her skirt riding up. She doesn’t pull it down. “I’ll
be sorry to see you go, Brian. Anything I can do to persuade you other-
wise?”
“Nope. It’s why I came over.”
“For your mother.”
“I told you?”
“Only when you’re drunk.” She smiles. “And only about a million
35
times.”
I watch Lauren Bacall try to feed the fish with Jack Daniels. “Yeah,
well, it meant something to her.”
“I’m sure it did. You’d do anything for your mother?”“What kind of
Elvis would I be if I didn’t?” I say.
“Very true, Brian. When’s the competition?”
“Next month.”
She raises her glass, clinks it against mine. “Well, good luck.”
“Ta.”
****
He’d sung while he was pushing into me. That fucking song again,
becoming a standard joke: “Are You Lonesome Tonight?”
“You like it?” he says. I nodded.
“Course you did.” He shifts position, reaches for his tumbler of single
malt. “I knew it. You were fuckin’ tight.”
He waves his hand at me. “Don’t worry about it, Brian. I just opened a
new door for you.”
“You opened my arse for me. And it costs extra.”
36
“No. No fuckin’ cash. Get out, you little fag. Come in here pretending
you’re fuckin’ new to this, get me worked up and let me fuck you and
then what? You try to scam me?” He gets to his feet, the glass in his
hand. “You know who you’re dealing with? I am known, you little cock-
sucker.”
As a drunk. You’re known as a violent fucking drunk. But I’m the one
who’s dressed. And wearing boots.
“Give it up or I take it.”
He throws the glass at me. His aim is off; the tumbler smashes
against the wall over the bed. Rains glass onto the pillow. He stands
there, folds his arms. “I ain’t paying you for nothing, how about that?”
“Then I beat the shit out of you,” I say.
Thinking, this is my last job. Fuck Frankie, fuck giving any notice. I’ve
got enough. All or nothing with the next competition, then if that goes
tits-up, I’m gone. I’m out of this fucking city and back to England.
“You got the moves, Elvis? You think so?” I stand there.
“That’s what I thought, you fuckin’ fag.”
Two steps is all it takes. Two steps and my hand connecting with
Forelli’s mouth. It started as a slap, but tension curled the fingers on
the way up to his teeth, and then Forelli’s thumping backwards on his
heels. He drops into the chair and I put a boot in his naked crotch,
grind it. He screams. But the rooms here are all sound-proofed, and
Forelli knows it.
I move towards Forelli’s clothes, grab his jacket and rifle through the
inside pockets. He makes a pained move to stop me and I point at
him. “Don’t be an arsehole.”
“You got the moves alright.” He smiles, but it’s not pretty, blood
spilled from a hole where a tooth used to be. “You’re not gonna get
away with this.”
I pull out his wallet, take out the folding cash and stick it in my back
pocket. More than enough to keep me in the style to which I’ll be-
come accustomed. I wish I’d done it sooner. Then throw the wallet at
him. Give Forelli credit; he doesn’t fumble for it.
37
****
After the pub, after the funeral, I fucked my girlfriend on the stairs.
She was dry. She sobbed through it, but I had to keep going, forced
myself to finish. Had to prove I could. And after the tears stopped, I
dumped her.
****
Check into three hotels in four weeks, got to keep moving. Lose the
scent and keep practising my routine. Now I’m camped out in a motel
out of the city. The desk clerk was happy to tell me – once he clocked
the English accent – that it wasn’t so far away they tested the atomic
bombs in the fifties.
Right enough, the guy had a yellow tint to him. I’d put it down to the
pint of Wild Turkey sitting on the table behind him.
38
I hefted the cabin key in the palm of my hand, looked at him. “I’m
Vegas Elvis.”
Because things had to change. Right now I’m staring out the window,
a cab coming for me in an hour to take me to the Imperial Palace.
These past four weeks, I’ve been drinking more, eating what I could
from free buffets. It means that I’ve grown a gut. Look in the mirror
and a man older than I am looks back, the seeds of my dad already
sown. Justify it to myself in that, well, Forelli or whoever, they’ll be
looking for a ’68 Comeback. If Frankie wants to pursue, she’ll be look-
ing for the same.
Outside, the cabbie hits the horn. I shake a crick out of my neck, grab
the white jumpsuit and head out the door.
****
No room to pause, not while the blood’s up. The band segue into
39
“Bossa Nova Baby”. An underscore of chairs against wooden floors,
people up out of their seats. The clink of glasses, a steady clap along
to the beat.
And Christ, but that’s the point, isn’t it? I can’t see them, but I know
there are ladies out there slipping off their seats. Get ‘em juiced up
and ready to go.
I’m the fucking King. The King doesn’t wank off strangers for cash, he
doesn’t put strange cocks in his mouth to suck dry, he doesn’t take it
up the fucking arse because he’s THE KING. He makes the sexual
rules and they’re all hetero. He has bobby-soxers and blonde hookers
in the Jungle Room, he hangs out with Hefner and if he doesn’t like
what’s on the telly he takes a big fucking gun and blows it to smither-
eens. He fucks and fucks and fucks and when he’s done, he has a
banana and peanut butter sarnie, deep fucking fried, pops some
hardcore prescription pills and then he goes back to fucking.
He is God.
And so am I.
The past six months flare like the stage lights, make me disappear
into white. I’m back, King for a night. King for the rest of my fucking
life.
The band hits its crescendo and crashes the song into concrete. After
that, you can’t hear anything but applause, cheering, whooping.
“God bless you all,” I say, squinting through the light.
****
40
We both died on the same night, the King and I. His heart fluttered
out in a Graceland bathroom, mine just as soon as I spilled from the
womb. Doctors fought to save the both of us, but I was a survivor.
Talk about your sob stories, I always had the feeling my mam
would’ve preferred it the other way round. Keep Elvis in business and
have me as a stillborn.
I’m thinking that as one of Forelli’s boys bundles me into the back of
a car. There’s two of them, blending into one smell of hired muscle.
Forelli smiles. There’s a glint of gold where his tooth used to be. “I
liked to fuck Elvis.”
“I was always partial to Sinatra,” says one of Forelli’s boys.
“You like to fuck Sinatra?” says the other.
“Fuck you.”
“Same here,” says Forelli. “Sinatra had class. Wouldn’t whore himself
like Presley did. But Elvis was pretty, I’ll give him that. In the day, he
was. Not when he came to Vegas. All used up by then. Someone
should’ve put the fat fuck out of his misery.”
I look at the desert, flying by. Hear the click of the glove compartment.
Another click, the unmistakeable sound of a gun being cocked.
“You know they used to test atomic bombs out here?” I say.
“Then you’ll be glowing if they ever find you,” says Forelli.
“They ain’t never gonna find him, Mr Forelli.”
Doesn’t matter how many Presleys there are, Las Vegas is always
going to be Sinatra’s town, a mob town.
41
I look down at the sequined scarf hanging from my neck, then out at
the desert. The lights of the city are long gone; all I’ve got to look for-
ward to now is the dirt.
42
Allan Guthrie
Allan Guthrie lives in Edinburgh. As well as writing crime fiction, he's a
literary agent with Jenny Brown Associates and a commissioning edi-
tor for cult US publisher, PointBlank Press. His debut novel, "Two-Way
Split" was shortlisted for the CWA Debut Dagger award. His second
novel, "Kiss Her Goodbye", has been nominated for an Edgar award
(best paperback original) and a Gumshoe award (best European
crime novel). His third novel, "Hard Man" will be published in spring
2007.
43
HAPPY SLAPPING
You’re awake? Excellent. Sit up straight. I know it’s uncomfortable but
the folks at home want to see you.
That’s it. Smile. Okay, don’t. How do I know? It’s all in the eyes. I can
tell, even with your mouth taped up.
Whoa, don’t get too excited now. Your friend had a little accident.
Let’s move him out of the way a bit. There.
Okay?
Okay. We’ve got a few minutes. Nine minutes to be precise.
Look at the webcam. The folks at home are watching this, so don’t
disappoint them. Stop shaking. Come on, now. Thought you were a
big tough man.
Right. I’ll go back to the girls. Set the scene. Shhh. If you don’t shut
up, your audience won’t be able to hear our story. That’s better.
Thank you. As I was saying, not a gang, just a group of young girls on
a night out. They stagger past the bus stop, heels and glitter and beer
and McDonald’s and fags and backslaps and skirts so short you can
see what you don’t want to if you’re not careful. And they’re scream-
ing with laughter, grinding like a herd of orphaned baby elephants.
The rest of us, us sober people, sober on a Friday night, mind you, us
model citizens at the bus stop, we turn our heads away. Don’t want to
see the pissed-up weekend slappers. Don’t want to make eye contact.
Don’t want to know they exist. Better to watch raindrops trickle down
the bus shelter’s scarred Perspex instead.
I smell Denise’s apple shampoo as I hug her closer. Her damp hair
tickles my chin. It’s nice.
“You know what I wish?” she whispers. I stroke the back of her neck,
feel the tiny hairs stiffen beneath my fingertips.
“What?”
“I wish I had a button I could press that would detonate bombs in
their heads.”
44
She’d have done it, too. Some balls on her, Denise.
Look, don’t give me that. You’d have done the same, you cunt. Din
they were making, you’d be doing everybody a favour.
Anyway, she pulls away a fraction and I feel a blast of cold air like I’ve
lost a layer of clothing. “The state of that,” she says, looking over my
shoulder.
One of her mates puts her arm round her friend, sticks a beer bottle
under her nose. She says, “Another drink, Bren, you’ll be fine. Go on.”
Bren raises her head, swipes at the bottle, stumbles backwards, tee-
ters on her heels, lands on her arse in a puddle. Her skirt rides up,
exposing a plump cheek.
Yeah, I’m looking. Don’t want to, but it can’t be denied that there’s a
certain attraction in seeing people make a fool of themselves. Apart
from old comedians. Norman Wisdom, that kind of dickhead. No at-
traction in that, is there? You don’t know? Before your time, I sup-
pose. How old are you? Twenty-three, twenty-four? What about your
friend over there? Nineteen, huh? Well, that’s pretty young to die. A
real shame.
Where was I? Oh, yeah. Watching Bren being sick. Not just me. Every-
body at the bus stop is riveted, apart from Denise. Her head’s tucked
back into my chest. I’m warm again and I smell apples.
More yells. Not from Bren but from one of the other girls who’s just
noticed her friend’s collapsed. She’s shouting “Oh my God oh my God
oh my God.” One of the shouting girl’s friends shouts at her to shut
up. She does. Another one says, “You okay, Bren?”
“Aye,” Bren says. She grins. “Lucky I’m wearing fucking knickers, eh?”
She spews down her front. No pause, as if the vomiting is the ques-
tion mark at the end of her sentence. Don’t look at me like that. It’s
how I was thinking at the time. You’ve got no poetry, that’s your prob-
lem. One of your problems, at least. Neither had Bren. Best she can
45
say is, “Aw, fucksake.”
Our bus pulls up. I’m tempted to rush over to Bren, help her to her
feet, thank her for the show, but Denise is tugging my sleeve.
Denise has the money ready, keen to get moving. She’s onto the bus,
feeding the coin slot, looking over her shoulder and calling for me to
hurry up. I climb aboard, the girls’ voices fading behind me. I wonder
how Bren feels, stinking and wet.
The bus. Up top’s nearly empty. Just five young guys near the back.
Two of them kneeling in the aisle sniffing something off the seats, a
tall streak of a youth filming the whole thing with his mobile phone,
another couple laughing. I can understand why the bus is full down-
stairs.
Ring any bells? Huh? You may well stare into your hands, my friend.
How long now? Just over six minutes. Well. Better get a move on with
the story, then, I suppose.
We sit at the front, me in the aisle seat just in case there’s any aggro,
pretending to ignore the jeers from the back, and taking sly glances in
the overhead display panel where the security camera cuts from one
location to another. We hold hands.
And wait.
And wait.
And then it comes.
“Hoy,” a voice cries. “Arsehole.”
46
Denise squeeze’s my hand.
“Talking to you,” the voice says. “You deaf or are you just being a
cunt?” Laughter.
Something hits the back of my head. Not hard. It doesn’t hurt. I don’t
know what it is. Could be anything.
The security camera cuts to the rear and there’s the culprit on the
overhead screen, hand in a bag of peanuts, selecting another salty
missile to launch my way. The thin prick with the phone has it pointed
my way, wiping tears from his eyes with his free hand. The pair who
were in the aisle before are in their seats now, wiping their noses and
sniffing.
Okay. I stay seated. The camera shifts. An outside view of the bus
trundling along the shopping drag no faster than if it was being
pushed by a bunch of old ladies.
I turn. Hand goes to the back of my head. I look at the floor. A ten-
pence piece. Take my hand away and my fingertips are red and tacky.
I’m cut.
Denise bends my head down, takes a look. “You’ll live,” she says.
47
“Let’s go downstairs.”
“Fuck it,” I say. “Those cunts can go downstairs. I’ll help them.”
She tugs at my sleeve but yank my arm away.
They’re quiet now. Didn’t expect this. Somebody about to stand up for
himself.
Well, did you? Tell the ladies and gentlemen at home. Huh?
Nah.
I lean back, well out of the way, as his head comes towards me.
He tries again.
And again I avoid him. I laugh. Can’t help myself.
He tries to prise my fingers off his shirt but I won’t let go.
He attacks again, thinking he’s caught me off guard. But, no. His head
swings aimlessly. Then he pogos where he’s standing in a frenzied bid
to butt me. He’s like a drunk goat.
His knees give way. I’m holding him up and he’s swaying. His eyes
water, blood leaks from his left nostril. His jaw’s nice and slack, so
there’s little resistance when I open his mouth and shove his ten-
pence piece down his throat.
“I think you dropped this,” I say for his mates’ benefit. I wipe my fin-
gers dry on his jacket, then let him go. He slumps to the side.
48
I grab the thin guy’s phone out of his hand and turn it towards his
mate. Catch a nice shot of him choking. ‘Spose that’s the money shot.
Cheeks red, and not just from the blood from his nose. He’s twitching.
Aw, petal.
Denise is behind me. “You should do something,” she says. “He might
die.”
His mates are bent over him now, finally, pawing at him, sitting him
up. The youngest one – can’t be more than nineteen – is asking inane
questions like, “You okay, Dave?” and “What’s the matter?”
And eventually Dave’s had enough. He coughs, splutters, and the coin
shoots out of his mouth. He looks at me, eyes glazed, drool and blood
hanging from his chin. He’s crying.
“Hold it,” I say, moving the phone closer. “Lovely little close-up.
Waaaaaaait. And cut.” I stick the phone in my pocket.
Now that’s funny. I have to laugh at that. Denise is right behind me,
but she’s not laughing. No sense of humour sometimes.
The little bastard eyes me. “You can’t get away with what you’ve just
done. I’m calling the cops.”
I shake my head. “Go on.”
Hang on a minute. Just want to check the time. Okay. We’re fine. Will
you stop shaking? You’re making me nervous. And quit that bubbling.
It won’t look so good on the website. Go on, smile for the camera. No?
Be like that. See if I care.
49
Everybody gets off the bus apart from the thugs and us and within a
couple of minutes the cops arrive, an ambulance right behind them.
They split us up, us warring groups. Take me and Denise downstairs.
Don’t know what they do to the peanut and money guy upstairs. Don’t
really care.
We tell the cops what happened. Point out that it’s on CCTV, which I’m
sure they already know but they don’t let on. And then I hand over the
phone. It’s definitely on there.
So we all spend a minute figuring out how to work it. Then play it
back.
It’s all there. Clear as day. Right from the two guys snorting coke off
the seats.
The ambulance isn’t needed for the money guy, so the medics trot
downstairs and bugger off into the rain.
One of our cops goes to talk to one of the upstairs cops. Comes back
down.
Fuck’s sake. He’s got a real twinkle in his eye, this one. I think he’s
chatting up Denise. Pervert.
His eyes widen at her language. I catch him checking out her tits.
“Yeah. Probably get them on that.” He nods. “You two go on home
50
and take it easy. We’ll be in touch.”
We didn’t say much, Denise and me. Living at the end of the bus
route meant we had a choice. Either we could wait for an hour for
another one or get a taxi. I flagged one down, fuck the cost. Some-
times you had to pay for living in a house instead of a flat. Got home
in twenty-five minutes at a cost of thirty quid. Straight in the door,
Denise went to the bathroom, started running a bath. She was pretty
shaky. Me, too. We can be honest, can’t we?
I poured myself a drink. Poured Denise one. Took it to her in the bath-
room. She was on her knees throwing up. Couldn’t help but think of
Bren in the shop doorway.
You remember it? Oh, I see. Still hurts, eh? Good. Your brother, wasn’t
it? Five years is a long time. But at least he’s going to live. Not like the
rest of you.
Well, I don’t know about you, but I remember it clear as day. Just fin-
ished dinner, about seven o’clock, the doorbell rings. I go to answer it,
not suspecting anything.
I get to my feet, but I’m still dizzy, and I fall back down. Think of Bren,
her exposed cheek. I don’t spew, but I do say, “Aw, fuck.” Cause I
51
know this means trouble.
I’m screaming now. Hurts my head but I can’t stop. No question De-
nise has heard. There’s a noise in my head, a different noise, not the
screaming. Blood in my mouth. My cheekbone, my jaw, my lips, my
nose – they’re made of fire.
I don’t know how long she’s been there, but Denise is in the doorway,
staring, wide-eyed. Then she shouts and runs. Right at you. Not that it
does any good.
Cause you stop her easily enough and then you fuckers do that really
wicked thing.
I thought I’d pass out. You smashed the bone, you know. Took forever
to get it working again, and even now, it’s nowhere near right. Want to
see? I can’t straighten my arm out. Won’t go any further than that,
see?
So, there you were. You and your coke-sniffing friend and the young
guy over there—he looks so peaceful, doesn’t he?—and of course the
tall, skinny prick with his nice new camera. Recording everything.
I recorded him, too, a few days ago. He was a real squealer. Anyway,
he was recording everything.
You know what I saw? Cause it’s stuck in a little camera of my own in
my head where it plays on an endless loop.
52
Denise punches him. Closed fist. The way a man would.
He says, “She punched me.” Finding it funny, but it’s hurt him. He
knows he can’t let it go.
I try to get up. I know I’m no use, but I can’t lie here and watch this.
You whack me on the knee with the bat. That was a different kind of
pain.
You hand the bat to your young friend and step up to Denise. Every-
thing’s quiet. Even me.
You slap her. Not once or twice but for a long time till she’s sagging in
your friend’s arms, her head slumped, nose bleeding.
Then you and the coke guy rip her clothes off.
You should have seen the look on your faces when you managed to
rip her bra off. Wondering what the fuck’s going on. Wondering if you
can believe the evidence of your own eyes.
Denise’s beautiful cock is too much for your little mind to handle.
I’m on the floor clawing my way towards you with my good hand, that
dead nineteen-year-old kid beside you pounding the backs of my legs
with the baseball bat.
But not you. It’s a personal insult that you could have wanted to fuck
a man. But that’s the truth of it, isn’t it, my friend? You found Denise
attractive.
53
Twenty seconds.
But Mr Macho can’t be seen to find another man attractive, so he has
to prove how manly he is to all his little mates.
Her head’s a mess by then but you keep on going anyway. Swearing
at her. Pounding away at her. The bat dripping. The walls streaked
with red.
You should have killed me too. I was going to ask you why you didn’t.
But we’ve only got ten seconds here. Not long enough to explain, is it?
Nine.
And I think I know why, anyway. So’s I could suffer. Right?
Eight.
You’re the last.
Seven.
Didn’t you ever wonder why I didn’t tell the police who had done it?
Six.
“They were all wearing balaclavas, officer.” You think it was because I
was scared?
Five.
Fuck you.
Four.
Three.
Two.
Smile for the camera. There’s going to be a big flash in a second.
One.
See you in Hell.
54
Breanda Cross
Breanda has just released a faction novel “Shark Arm Unhooked?” A
famous unsolved murder of Sydney in the 1930's, when a man's arm
was disgorged by a shark in captivity, in front of dozens of schoolkids.
Padding over to the bar, I opened my top desk drawer, poured myself
a scotch on the rocks, and drank breakfast in a single gulp.
suddenly the door swung open and a blonde walked in. She was big,
she was blonde and she was beautiful. Before I could speak she
came up to me and grabbed my lapels.
I looked her up and down. Her dress was so short you could plan a
trip to the promised land and be back before the meter had run out.
I knew the club. It was a bit too spicy for my taste. Even so I said,
“Well, lady, if you’ve got the money, I’ve got the time. I usually check
out at 100 bucks a day, but for you, I’ll do it for two fifties.”
My little joke went over her head. Instead, she said, “Thanks, I appre-
ciate it.”
I watched her sway on her high heels, each curve going in a different
direction. Outside, her white Mercedes was parked in a no parking
zone. It was the only car there. We got in and by jumping a few red
lights it took us five minutes to cover a twenty- minute ride. We finally
cruised into an alley behind the club.
Smoke and the sultry sound of a torch singer wafted up the stairs of
The Gentleman’s Relish, and I found my nostrils flaring. When we got
inside I could see why. A dame was singing, ‘Come on baby light my
fire”. She was igniting every man in the room.
56
Tutti sashayed her way to the dance floor and began to gyrate in time
to the music. She pulled me towards her and held me close. Her
hands were all over me and my knees went stiff at the joints.
Suddenly she stopped dancing and made her way to the bar. She
turned, and disappeared into a back room. Before I could follow she
came out again, followed by a heavyweight who looked as if he was
on sick leave. He appeared to have more tattoos than i.q.
Adjusting her dress so that all the packaging was in the right place,
Tutti said, “I’m just going in the back room, I’ll whistle if I need you.”
I was going to say that she could pucker up for me any time but
changed my mind. Instead I turned to the human canvas and asked,
“So what’s the trouble?”
His face crumbled like an apple. “I owe Big Eddy a lot of dough,” he
said.
I was about to tell him I thought owing dough to Big Eddy might be a
bit sticky, but could see he was in no mood for humour. Instead I
asked, “Where does he hang out?”
Duane nodded behind him, “He’s having dinner in the back room.
He’s a gold-card player. Only goes for top stakes.”
“Stay here,” I told him. I turned towards the back room. Suddenly a
shot rang out.
I ran into the darkened room and immediately tensed as I heard the
sounds of a scuffle over in the corner, behind a large room-divider. A
dame’s muffled voice was crying out, “No, no, let me go. Let me go.”
Only a single bulb dangled from the ceiling, and I could see the shad-
ows of a great big dude, throttling Tutti. In a single bound I threw the
57
screen across the floor, grabbed him by his shoulder pads, and pulled
him off her. With a much practiced Bruce Lee move, I gave him a left
and a right. His body landed on the floor - and his brains in the waste
paper basket.
“What the hell is going on?” came from my lips as I rolled him over.
From the hole in his head I could see he was dead. And would be the
same tomorrow.
Not the way I’d planned lady, I thought as I straightened up. I turned
to look at her. Duane had opened the box, and there was my gun
carefully stashed on a clean white lace handkerchief. He had a grin
on his face - like the cat that had left the bad cream to the dog.
I heard a siren as the police car made its way along the main street.
Tutti gave a brittle laugh.
She hadn’t been in any danger at all. There wasn’t a mark on her. I
had been wrestling with a dead guy. She had staged the little charade
just for my benefit, knowing I would go to her rescue. Big Eddy had
obviously been slugged with my gun just before I came into the room
“Bad luck, sucker,” she sniggered. “Duane needed someone to get rid
of Big Eddy for him. See, Eddy had a funny old-fashioned notion he
could expect a few debts would be paid.”
“Sure I have. I’ve bin with my date all evening,” he said, nodding over
towards Tutti.
“I thought she was your sister,” I said.
58
“Yeah well she would have been if my mother had married her father.
But as it was, they never had the pleasure of being introduced.
Just then two burly policemen bounded in. “O.K. who called the pigs?”
one of them asked, brandishing his .38.
“I did, officer” Tutti said demurely. “This broad was hassling me, and
Big Eddy kindly came to my rescue.” She looked at me as if I was a
social disease. “Then, she took out her gun and shot him.”
I decided to play it cool. “O.K. officer, it’s a fair cop” I said quietly, and
could see the look of triumph that passed between Tutti and Duane.
“But not for me, for them.” I said as I sprang over to the side of the
room. “I’ve got something to show you.” With that I began to tear off
my shirt and was just going for my pants when one of the cops
grabbed me.
“O.K. ma’am. This ain’t no Show and Tell school. Don’t add exhibition-
ism to the rap,” he said.
“Far from it,” I said. Then I unclasped the miniature cameras I had
secured in my ornate gold tie pin and belt buckle, and the miniature
tape recorder attached to my shades.
“I’m not called Wannabe Bond for nothing,” I shouted. “I think you’ll
find all the evidence you need, officer. Ever since I walked into this
dive, I bin recording this set-up on my techno digitally-mastered fre-
quency detective kit.”
“I’ll get you, Bond. I’ll glue this rap on you if it’s the last thing I do.”
shouted Duane as the cops trussed him up like a turkey.
59
THE VALENTINE DAY’S MASSAGER
It was Friday night in the down part of town and the drunks hadn’t
sobered up from the night before.
My name’s Bond, Wannabe Bond. I’m 5’10, weigh in at too many lbs.
and I’m dynamite in tricky situations – it’s a hereditary medical condi-
tion that may be terminal.
As I walked through the door of the Spicey and Hot Nite Club I could
hear the sounds of The Reluctant Virgins all female rock band playing.
They were famous for their brass section. The oral sax player was
unbelievable.
A full size Barbie doll was standing at the door, but when I looked
more closely I recognised most of her accessories had once belonged
to Pamela Anderson. Her dress was out of place, and so was my
imagination.
I said, “Hi there, dollface, Is this the place for sex, drugs and
rock’n’roll? She looked me up and down, noting where I placed my
I.D. and said, “Well, the sex is D.I.Y., the drugs are B.Y.O., and the
music is Rhythm and Blues.”
“That’s O.K.” I said, “I’m Catholic, and whenever I forget the rhythm
method it makes me blue anyhow.”
She laughed and it set my xy chromosomes looking for partners.
I began to walk in but she said, “Hey we’re pretty fussy who we let in
here – and you look like a gal I’d like to forget.” Now I’d heard this
kind of talk before. It sounded cheap and nasty, just how I like it. I
could see we were going to get on great.
It turned out the dame’s name was Trixie, and boy, did she live up to
it. I asked her to dance, and as we sashayed our bodies meshed to
60
the cadenza of poker machines. She clung to me like poison ivy, and
there were parts of me getting a rash.
I asked her if she wanted a drink. “Sure she said, an Elvis Presley
special”.
This was new to me until she added, “I wanna be All Shook Up.”
Now this is an invitation you don’t get too often, so I began to ma-
noeuvre her towards the bar. We kept bumping into other couples
who had got stuck playing leap frog, when she suddenly gasped and
ran from the dance floor.
I turned and saw a big dude with most of his DNA missing. He strut-
ted over and stood in front of me like a towering inferno. His belly was
so big his trousers hung on hope, barely covered his faith, and had
little to do with charity. It was difficult to realise he was the product of
a million years of civilisation.
I could see the glint of a knife in the top of his sox and knew it wasn’t
there as part of a designer label.
“You can’t hit me”, I sneered. “Don’t you know I’m a woman.”
61
“KERPLONK, KAPOW”, I shouted again in full voice - but still he kept
coming.
Dynamite.
“That’s below the belt” he spluttered, holding his hand over his nose.
And I was happy to agree. My medical condition had struck in the nick
of time.
I looked around the room, it was empty. All but for Trixie. She was
looking at me with stars in her eyes.
“Wow, you’re some mover, shaker” she said with admiration a few
minutes later as we propped up the bar. “So Wannabe, how do you
make your crust?”
“I’m a P.E.” I told her.
“A Pest Exterminator” she said, “Hey that accounts for the strange
smell.”
“Well, that’s one way of describing it” I agreed, “but I prefer to think of
myself as a Private Eye.”
“A Peeping Tom” she said with a shiver of anticipation that made all
her body parts move in different direction. “Why, what a turn on.”
I could only think that with a woman like this I’d be a willing pupil but
asked her what she meant.
“Well, I put ads out in all the telephone booths and newsagent win-
dows, that I do Swedish massages – satisfaction guaranteed.” she
said with a secret smile, and suddenly, everything she had hidden
was up for grabs.
62
We walked out of the club, and out of the story - the moral of which is
– women are clever bitches. And no man should mess with them.
63
TOO MANY COOKS SPOIL THE PLOT
Sunlight hitting the trail of dust on the windows suggested it was mid-
morning. I’d been sleeping on the couch in my office in the down part
of town. My apartment had been unavailable since a ‘Final Rent No-
tice’ had been pushed under my door the week before. The other
alternative, to bed down with Attila the Mum, was yet to be investi-
gated.
My mother and I shared little outside the Wannabe name. Home had
been a war zone for most of my life. And now it’s only advantage was
being in the cheap zone. When I was ready to explore a near-death
experience I would try it again.
I had been playing solo for well over a month, and the sexual tension
was building up. Sex is like air. It isn’t important, unless you aren’t
getting any. I’d tried sex with a man once. It was all right, but not as
good as the real thing. Don’t get me wrong, there are some men I
don’t mind at all, although most of them are dead. In fact the ones I
meet usually finish up that way. But for the live ones, well, the way I
see it is that men have two emotions, Hungry and Horny. So girls, if
you see one without an erection, make him a sandwich. However,
right then, the office was as unfriendly and empty as a morgue on
Halloween and I was ready for a bit of company.
Which is why I was very receptive when the door suddenly swung
open and a dame walked in. She was big, she was blond, and no
doubt thanks to an accomplished cosmetic surgeon - she was beauti-
ful. She wore nothing but cleavage and high heels, and her perfume
smelt like Invitation.
“Hi ma’am, what’s a dive like this doing near a girl like you?” I asked.
O.K., it was corny, but I’ve never claimed to be an intellect.
She laughed and it was like dollar coins spurting out of a poker ma-
chine. In a sultry voice that encouraged me to become a born-again
pervert, she said, “Hi yourself, girl-friend.”
64
I found myself replying an octave higher than soprano. “What seems
to be the problem, honey?”
Her face drooped and a small frown tried to force itself through the
botox. “I’ve got troubles,” she said.
From where I was sitting I could see she was advertising both of them,
“So how can I help you, sugar?”
“My name isn’t Sugar,” the blond demurred. “ Or Honey,”
“Hey then, Candy,” I tried, “Sweetie?”
The blonde shook her head. “Close, but not quite. It’s Gloria Stits, but
everyone calls me Nellie.”
“You look nervous, Nellie,” I said foregoing the obvious repartee.
“I’m always nervous. I need a man... fast,” she whispered.
“Sorry, you’ve come to the wrong place, ma’am,” I said, then moving
aside the large sign on my desk that says, ‘Grow dope. Plant a man,’ I
pushed the smaller one before her which cranks up my name and
credentials. “But if you need a Private Investigator, I’m the best.” I
decided not to use the old joke that I investigated privates. After all, I
was keen on getting the job: it meant the difference between living
and gastronomic suicide.
She perched on the edge of my desk, and swung her legs over the
side showing off the edge of her Brazilian wax. Then, taking a dainty
handkerchief out of her purse, she lodged it carefully under her mas-
cara and began to cry. “I have a half-brother who owes a lot of money
to DoughBoy Donovan.”
“So he’s outta bread,” I quipped. “That must cut him up.”
I knew DoughBoy on a personal basis. Only he was the one owing me.
His wallet was in a permanent state of constipation but then, so was
his face, and had been since the heel of my stiletto had accidentally
found itself on his forehead. He hadn’t liked me much then, and I was
probably off his Christmas list.
“Do I get a slice of the action?” I asked. She was cute, but hey, it had
been a long time between rent payments and I was eyeing her more
as business than pleasure.
“Come with me,” She beckoned like a black widow spider enticing a
mate, and I was ready to lose my head.
65
She led me outside to the Tradesmen’s Entrance where a Porsche
was pretending to be a bread van. I got in beside her. She revved the
car up until it sounded as if it was being neutered and we drove to the
wet side of the city where all the drunks were anonymous. We pulled
up outside a nightclub called, ‘Bums’n’Tits’, a beer-swilling, smoke-
ridden haven against unemployment where you could always find sex,
drugs and hit men. I knew it well – a real home from home.
On one of my more eventful visits a chair had come in contact with his
nose and ever since then he had looked like a humpback whale sniff-
ing coke whenever he grinned, which was often. “Yeah, well Wan-
nabe, there are exceptions, you know,” he smirked.
I looked around the room and noticed we had a few new punters.
There was a dame over by the bar singing, I can’t get started, which
from the sound of her voice left me thankful for small mercies. She
certainly had an hourglass figure, but in her case the sand had landed
in all the wrong places and was now drifting out with the tide.
“So maybe you need a wick, Wannabe,” he said. “Believe me, she
fires on all cylinders once she gets hot. She’s an old flame of Splinter
Woods.”
He nodded towards the bar. I knew Splinter from the old days, along
with his pipe-puffing sidekick Smokey Embers. They were arsonists,
but lately had branched out into Occupational Hazards.
“They’re both here to get away from the heat,” Ric whispered.
They turned my way and their faces lit up when they saw me.
“Hey, Wannabe,” Splinter said, “Ain’t seen you in a whiles. As I re-
66
member you owe me, and now’s a good time to pay me back.”
I could tell he had a chip on his shoulder, and as I didn’t want to get
into a fight in front of my new client, I said flippantly, “Don’t be a sap,
Splinter, you know money doesn’t grow on trees. My bank roll is dead
wood right now. I’ll pay you back once I get the lucre DoughBoy Dono-
van owes me.”
Dinah began singing There’s a fire down below and was looking all
loving at Splinter. I decided she was a good match for him. Anyway,
Nellie was getting restless beside me. “Don’t bother with her,” she
said, jealously. “She’s been going down the ladder of success wrong
by wrong.” She pointed to the other corner of the room. “My brother is
over there,”
I peered over to where she was looking and was disappointed. I recog-
nised him from mug shots on recent election posters. Now I don’t like
politicians. The way I see it, all politicians are like diapers. Both need
changing frequently, and for the same reasons. Apparently the elec-
torate felt the same way. He had bombed at the polls.
He was dressed in a baggy white suit. Blonde, blue eyed and button-
nosed, looking every bit like the after ad for cosmetic surgery.
There were two minders sitting beside him scoffing on Turkish De-
light, trying to be invisible. One was short and slim, with a thin, peaky
face like a rodent. The kind of fellow whose mind and body go in dif-
ferent directions. The other was just as ugly. Even his mother would
have had a problem letting the stork leave the package. He could
have passed as twins with a hippopotamus, with the hippo coming in
prettiest. He was fat and maybe back in the good old days he had
worn his hair in a crew cut. But the crew had long since deserted, and
so had his hair.
From the look of them all I was in tough company. Even so, if Tim
Larden was her brother he was a potential client, and as eating is an
old fashioned habit I like to cling on to, I thought I’d best introduce
myself. I wandered over towards him.
67
“My, you have a good memory,” he sneered.
I eyed up the triple scotch he was gulping down and thought if it was
a heart attack he was after, he was on the wrong kick. My view is that
heart attacks are God’s revenge for eating his animal friends, and I
like to think that whisky is strictly vegetarian.
Mr. Larden gave a wimpy smile. “Enough with the smart-arse, Wan-
nabe, let’s get down to business,” He leant towards me, “How are
you placed with the cops around here?”
I shrugged. “I can take ‘em or leave ‘em. Most of the time I like to
ignore ‘em. Unfortunately they seem to feel differently about me. I’m
often invited to join them behind bars, and not ones that serve alco-
hol.”
“Hmmm. Interesting” said the pollie. “You’ve had a few run-ins with
them, eh?”
68
no doubt I was simply a victim of bad timing. After all, everyone was
going to die, sooner or later. I just gave them something more inter-
esting to have written on their death certificate for the mourning after.
Yeah, and one day will be quite enough, I thought. He was probably a
bastard by birth as well as vocation.
I was about to tag along when I saw Ric making eye-movements be-
hind him. They were “I wanna talk to you” signals. He came towards
me and as he got close he whispered, “The drinks your friends or-
dered are over by the bar.”
I was just about to say, “They’re not my friends and they didn’t order
anything,” when I picked up on Ric’s cryptic message. Looking back
into the gloom I saw what he was referring to, and my missing break-
fast threatened to meet the missing lunch.
There were two goons at the bar. One was an empty space of a man
who fancied himself quite the dapper blade called Razor Sharp. He
was a big-time crook with a low i.q. He sold his services to the highest
bidder, and what he did with his time usually got highlighted on the
front pages of the daily press. One of his pastimes was cutting peo-
ple’s throats.
“Razor has just come in with Rusty Chaine,” said Ric, nodding to his
companion. “They were in here yesterday talking to your girl friend
and her brother.”
Rusty gave the impression he was depriving some village of its idiot,
but what he lacked in brains, he made up with brawn.
69
“Thanks Ric, I owe you one.”
I didn’t like the odds. Too many people who didn’t like me were under
the same roof, and the dame I’d got the hots for – Nellie – was the
common denominator. I was about to make a quick exit out of the
door when Razor saw me and sauntered over.
“Well, now, if it isn’t Wannabe Bond? How come you’re sticking your
nose back in this joint? It isn’t as if it’s Fright Night.”
“How are you, Razor?” I smiled. “You’re looking a little dull, or maybe
it’s your batteries need changing.” The quip was electrifying.
I saw Nellie coming back towards me. She ignored Razor and Rusty
completely and took my arm roughly. “Come on Wannabe. The sooner
we get the business over the sooner I can see how to repay you with
the pleasure,” She was purring like a cat as she added, “I can’t wait
to get out of these tight clothes and relax.”
I grinned sheepishly. “Way to go, babe,” was my only reply. I’m just
not good at banter when I’m about to get fried. “Catch up with me
later, Razor,” I said, “unless you have to cut and bleedin’ run.”
Nellie took my hand, wedged it firmly between her arm and ample
bosom, and led me through the door into a small corridor, then up
some steep stairs, our bodies melding into the darkness. I wasn’t
complaining. I could hear the voices of the politician and his minders
in a room at the top of the stairs. She opened the door. It was so dark
I could hardly see a thing. Then, before my eyes became accustomed
to the gloom, I felt someone come up behind me and push me inside.
From the size and bulk it had to be the happy hippo, BaldyBonce.
He put his arm around my neck, pulling me back whilst his rat-faced
colleague began to frisk me. His hand went into personal places usu-
ally only frequented by girl friends. I brought my knee up to his crotch
and came into contact with something small and soft. He gave a yelp
of pain and staggered back, so I swivelled around and tried the same
move with the other leg on the bald hippo. But he was ready for me
and grabbed my foot, flinging me across the room like a piece of fluff.
70
I landed in a heap, and lay there for a moment catching my breath. I
was shaken but beginning to stir when I could see BaldyBonce mak-
ing his way towards me again.
Suddenly a shot rang out and a slug whizzed past. Thinking it proba-
bly had my name on it I fell to the floor. In the darkness I could see
another figure flat on his back. He was big, and was lying very still.
It was DoughBoy Donovan and he was dead to the world. Even if the
entire Bay Watch Babes gave him the kiss of life – he would still be
dead tomorrow. There was a clatter of a gun falling on the floor and
from what I could see of it I realised it was mine. It was a set up. It
had been my gun Hippo and Rat-Face had been after when they
frisked me, not my virtue. My gun would be covered with my prints,
and all of them originals.
I made a move towards it, but before I could grab it, Baldy crunched a
hob nailed boot over my hand. He leered down at me and the rodent
joined him grinning. “Don’t bover to retrieve your gun, Wannabe, I’m
sure the cops’ll find it for you,” he said.
A clatter of high heels suggested Nellie had come up beside him. Her
skirt was so short I could see the San Andreas Fault quite clearly now.
She was wrapped around The Honourable Tim and both were smiling.
“So good of you to call in, Ms.Bond,” the politician said politely. “I
understand that I’m not the only one to run foul of DoughBoy. He’s
71
got a contract out on you, too.”
“Yeah, we’re gonner make it look like you and DoughBoy were playing
colanders and sieves,” the bald minder said. “Sorry we gotta kill and
run.”
“But you won’t be lonely,” Tim Larden said smoothly, “We’ve already
called the cops. Such upright defenders of the law.” As if to prove the
point, I could hear the police sirens in the distance.
“You say I’m a bitch like it’s a bad thing,” Nellie whined as she began
to walk out of the room. “But I’ll take it as a compliment. After all,
dogs don’t worry if you call them by another name.” She changed her
voice to mimic mine. “Goodbye, Sugar, or do you prefer, Honey, or
Sweetie?” She spat the endearments out as if they were a bitter taste
in her mouth, finishing up with “Dyke!”
Well, had I ever rung the wrong number? Although she was right, of
course, and at any other time I would have joined the debate. But I
felt a bit inhibited with the egg timer on my life running on merely a
few grains.
“All right, Bond,” Razor was snarling. “You’re in a sticky situation, your
number is up.”
“Yeah.” Rusty was almost giggling. He began to count on his fingers in
great concentration, “Seven, eight, ten, you’re it.”
72
“What happened to nine?” I shouted, “I’m planning on at least nine
lives.”
There were two, short, sharp explosions coming from the doorway as
more shots echoed around the room. There was a scream and I felt
Hippo slump down beside me.
The two extra bodies lay still. The floor was getting crowded. I stag-
gered to my feet just as Ric came in. “Say, what’s going on in here?”
He switched on the light, staring at the three bodies lying inert in
pools of blood. “Christ, Wannabe, not again,” he said. “There are
other ways of getting rid of non-paying customers, you know.”
“My, aren’t you the popular one,” Ric said with his familiar grin. “And
Splinter and Smokey are downstairs, still waiting in line.”
Just then we were both aware of the sirens right outside the front
door and brakes screeching to a halt. Doors slammed and I could
hear the cops giving each other directions.
“Is this the back way?” I nodded to the window on the far side of the
room. Looking down I could see a narrow back alley.
Ric nodded, and I flung the window open wide, saying, “Thanks Ric, I
owe you one.” I made a sudden dive through the window, hoping I
would think what to do before I landed outside - although the really
nice thing about not planning is that failure isn’t too big a disappoint-
ment. But this time I was in luck. I landed on Rusty as he was leaving
the back door. It was a soft landing as I trampolined right onto his
73
belly. Razor was right behind, and I fell onto him on my second sur-
face for air.
“Christ, Wannabe. You’ve got more lives than a Siamese cat. Don’t
you ever lay down and die?” Razor said.
“No, and with the cops this close to three corpses I suggest you don’t
either,” I said.
We could hear the cops making their way through the bar, before
going upstairs. Then from the sudden yell of excitement, it was appar-
ent they had found our three parting presents.
Crouching low into the shadows, we made our way from one garbage
dump to another, before gaining the main road. It was fairly quiet with
only one car coming down the Highway. As it got close, Rusty threw
Razor in front of it. The driver screeched to a halt yelling, “What the
bloody hell do you think you’re doing?” as he got out of the car.
“Wanna lift Wannabe?” he called out as the car began to speed away.
I gave him the finger and was about to make my way back to my car
when I heard an echo.
“Yeah, wanna lift, Wannabe? We’ve got a nice comfy car waiting.”
“You look like shit, Wannabe. Is that the style now?” jeered B1 who
was a clone of his partner, without the courtesy.
I put my hands up. I know when I’m beat. “O.K. So what’s on your
74
mind, officers, if you’ll forgive the tautology,”.
“We’ve just found three corpses, and each one had a grudge against
you,” B.1 continued. “I hope you’ve got a good alibi?”
I sighed. The way my life was going, if everyone with a grudge against
me finished up dead, I would finish up with a tally larger than Capone.
Resigned to the fact it was a bad night for the telly, and prison grub
was four-star for me these days, I said “I’ll tell you all I know, but you
probably won’t believe me.”
It took five hours to convince everyone at the station that I was simply
a victim of circumstance, and that my nose wasn’t planted on my
chest. So it was the early hours of morning when I finally left the sta-
tion and hailed a cab.
Depressed, I got into the elevator, and just to make things worse, my
favourite tune came through the Musak channel. Mick Jagger’s ‘I
Can’t Get No Satisfaction’ just doesn’t cut it with a Mantovani back-
ing. Hell, was I that old? I felt I was going around on a turntable and
couldn’t get off. In the 60’s people took acid to make the world weird.
Now they were taking Prozac to make it normal.
“Wannabe, this is your mother: the woman who carried you in her
womb for eleven months in absolute agony. Call me.”
“Wannabe, this is your mother: the woman who scrimped and saved
and wore her fingers to the bone so that you could go to college and
75
freak around and waste your life. Call me.”
“Wannabe, this is....” The line went dead as I yanked the plug from its
socket. It was like cutting an umbilical chord, but without the pain.
I poured myself a scotch. It was going to be the last from the bottle. I
sat down in the one comfortable chair and thought about Nellie. It
was not the first time I had got taken in by a chick.
She was right. I should get myself a dog. I had thought about it from
time to time. After all, there were so many compensations. Dogs will
forgive you for playing with other dogs, and what’s more, a dog will let
you put a collar on it without calling you a pervert. Then again, a dog
couldn’t ask you how your day was and congratulate you when you
didn’t get killed.
I gulped at the last few drops of the liquor morosely. Maybe I was in
the wrong business. I had certainly misread all the clues. I thought
about life, and counted how many people wanted me dead. Flicking
though some opened bills I saw the Final Rent Notice again, and a
few others To Be Paid. The count doubled.
Suddenly, in the quiet of the night, there was a knock at the door.
Three raps. I got up to answer it.
There was a dame standing there that would have made Helen of Troy
look like a has-been. Her dress was short and tight and her perfume
smelt like Invitation.
“Is this the right address for Wannabe Bond?” she asked, “My name
is Sarse, Gloria Sarse,” It seemed that Glorias were coming thick and
fast into my life. Her voice was dripping with so much honey I was
convinced at least a dozen hives must be B-empty. I couldn’t fly into
the web fast enough.
After all, she was big, she was blonde, and she was beautiful...
76
Jason Golaup
Currently studying a correspondence course in Creative
Writing, Jason writes short stories and has won prizes in
poetry competitions. He is currently focusing on writing
short stories and this is his first published work.
77
GETTING RID OF OLD JUNK
“It’ll be a laugh,” Hammy had offered, like Figo was signing for Falkirk.
I’d been in The Shed for a full hour yet the set had revolved around
The Soup Dragons, Flowered Up n The Farm, n was currently knocking
out Primal Scream…...though there’s nothing wrong with a bit a
Boaby.
Mani should’ve been on the decks but they’d fucked that up as well.
So 30 quid a head had lumbered us with DJ Shug - a peroxide blond
tosser whose only association with Manchester was that he was a
dead ringer for Gary Barlow. But even flabbier.
“Jack n coke,” I spat at the bar staff. If I’d had a blade I’d have ripped
it across my wrists.
“Manchester, la, la, la…….Manchester, la, la, la,” chanted some guys
sporting retro ‘Happy Stoned Carpets’ tops.
“CALL THE FUCKIN COPS!” yelled a Bez clone. His arms flailed wildly
towards me like Superman on fire.
78
spun on the wheels of steel n it felt like 1990 again. Neds, scallies n
casuals loved up on E, trading swords n Stanley blades for hugs n
kisses. Everyone their bestest mate…...I even managed to force a
smile. But it didn’t last long. Another memory from 1990 became
reality in front of my eyes.
Skinny Tam. Black teeth. Yellow skin. Parting the sea of flapping
denim like he was The Fuckin Man. I hadn’t seen him in years but he
hadn’t changed a bit. His coupon was still a bag a spanners.
* * *
...Tam’s trial...none of his mates sticking him in... not guilty verdict...
* * *
“Ten Es, four tabs n two grams a Billy,” recited Tam like he was wait-
ing tables at Casa Trance Dance.
79
He made for the exit doors. An aroma seduced my nose and lungs. A
soothing, blissed-out smell. Dope. I felt like loitering to get a buzz off
the mellow fumes but followed Tam outside, passively inhaling the
thick clouds of marijuana smoke en route.
The freezing December chill had me exhaling breath rings like I was
back with the hash heads toking on a big Jay. Tam was bent down
amongst some trees, shiftily looking up now n again to see if anyone
was watching him. He continued with his eagle-eyed manoeuvres
momentarily before making his way out towards me.
“Two ticks mucker,” he whined, ambling back across the road n into
Queens Park. He didn’t clock me following him into the trees.
“Whit the fu -”
He’d been caught off guard by the electrical flex that I’d thrown
around his neck. I pulled it tightly. Tight as fuck. But the cable cut
into my hands. Felt like my fingers would be severed off.
Despite the surprise, his reflexes were quicker than I’d thought that
they’d be. He grabbed hold of the flex n spun around.
The stench distracted me, fuckin with my mind. Everything was dis-
torted n fuzzy like a shoegazer’s guitar effect. I panicked. What the
fuck was I doing? Was I mental? Off my head? Could I actually go
through with what I was planning to do?
I’d been there before. Tam had bragged about how he’d got away
with killing a coon. So I’d attempted to attack him with a butcher
knife. But my bottle had crashed. Shat myself.
80
Tam’s long leather jacket made a squelching sound as he struggled
with the flex. The flex was slipping from my grasp, but I deliberately
let it go n decked him with a hook that John Prescott would’ve been
proud of….. I grabbed the flex, pulling it around his neck again.
“Ah know yae fuckin know me. D’yae think ah’ve furgoat whit yae did
tae ma da, ya junkie bastard?”
I rifled through his pockets n found his wallet. Stuffed mine with all of
his cash, n discarded his empty one.
* * *
I imagined that neon arrows n huge lettering were hovering above me,
grassing me up to the bouncers as they checked my pass to regain
access to The Shed. I felt like a drug smuggler going through cus-
toms. Sweating like a rapist. Sirens, bells n buzzers going mental in
my head. But it was kosher. I got in.
Fuck it, I thought, n got my rocks off to The Charlatans. It was like
sex. The wah-wah guitar chugged away as the Hammond organ
ground in unison. Both going at it hammer n tong, until the track
ended abruptly in its familiar orgasmic climax.
81
A machete-wound grin sliced across my face. Everything that had
seemed cheesy was now on it. The Reni sunhats exhibiting DIY Jack-
son Pollock artwork. The Inspiral Carpets ‘cool as fuck’ T-shirts. The
floral tie-dye hooded tops.
82
TK Dan
TK Dan lives in Newcastle and has an unhealthy interest in old punk
rock singles.
83
PASTY IN LOVE
Play
It’s when the guy’s kecks are round his ankles, the welding torch is lit
and the bolt cutters appear that I realise things are maybe getting out
of hand. By this point the women are braying, cackling, rabid.
But Pasty, Pasty is ice cool, their hero the main man, the man with the
plan. They cheer and whoop as slowly, for effect, he pulls the welding
goggles onto his head then lowers them to his eyes. Billy opens and
closes the bolt cutters snapping the jaws together like castanets,
Pasty holds the torch mixing the gas and air until the flame intensifies
into a concentrated violet bud of searing heat.
I step forward, put out a hand grabbing Pasty by the bicep. He turns to
me, his eyes blacked out and mirrored by the welding goggles.
“Pasty, enough man,” I reason “You’ve made your fucking point.”
He shrugs me off with a grin, “Haddaway and shite man! We’ve only
just begun.”
Pasty and Billy shout into each other’s ears above the women’s din,
briefly conferring as to their strategy. There are a couple of nods and
Pasty gestures to me. He points to the guy, points to me and then
points to the pulley which has strung him up. He winds his finger in a
circular motion indicating that I should lower the guy down. With a
sinking feeling in my stomach, I make my way across the workshop
84
and, to my eternal shame, do so. The women cheer ever more loudly.
I look around. Trying to find her. The object of Pasty’s affections. No
luck.
Rewind
We’d seen her around. She popped in the pub now and again. Never
spoke and Pasty went strangely quiet whenever she appeared. None
of the usual grunting and gurning and “look at the tits on that” type of
comment that signalled his usual interest in a woman. Even lost his
temper with Billy, told him he needed to grow up when he’d re-
marked, “canny arse.”
She started the whole thing. Stopped us one day on the Shields Road,
asked us if we’d heard. I could tell Pasty was smitten then, and to be
fair she was a cut above the bottle blonde, Jordan look-alikes he usu-
ally went for, all tan and tack.
“Ah’ll find out, divven’t worry about that. Ah’ll dae something nae
bother.”
I wasn’t sure about it from the start. I’d asked him, why do it? What’s
in it for us? At first he’d taken the moral high ground, something of a
first for Pasty, saying we should help “our community.”
“Or one particular member of our community,” I’d sniped. I’m not sure
he’d got the reference, but he’d known I was taking the piss and
grabbed me by the throat, smashed me into a wall.
“Never had yer doon as a Gary Glitter fan,” he’d hissed and then
grabbed my bollocks, “or are yer getting hard doon here? Eh Bam-
ber?”
He had an idea about who might be able to help. Just didn’t know
where he lived. We popped into the pub to make enquiries. Pasty
banged his fist on the bar to get the barman’s attention.
85
“Davey! Davey! That specky cunt who comes in here with the big
newspapers where does he live?”
“Ah divven’t knaa’ who yer mean Pasty,” the barman replied as he
poured a pint of Carling for another customer.
“Aye yer dae, the clever cunt who thinks he’s everybody’s mate.”
“Aw John Lennon yer mean,” laughed the barman, “Molineux Ah
think.”
“Whereabouts?
“Er…..same floor as Macca Ah think, but Ah divven’t knaa the num-
ber.”
“That’ll dae,” said Pasty banging the bar again.
“Why do yer want to know?” asked the barman puzzled.
“He’s going to be helping me with me enquiries,” said Pasty with a sly
grin before turning to me, “Howay.”
He strode purposefully to the pub door pausing only to drag Billy away
from the bandit which had exercised it’s usual magnetic pull when
we’d walked in. “Had on man, Ah’ve got two melons on hold here!”
“Ah’ll get hold of your melons if yer don’t shift yer arse,” growled Pasty
pushing him towards the door.
Pasty stuck out his hand and the guy, who I vaguely recognised from
the pub, very gingerly put out his. Pasty grasped it and slowly began to
crush it grinning all the while, “And what’s your name?” he asked.
“Simon,” the guy managed to say weakly through gritted teeth, his
face contorted in pain as Pasty mangled his hand.
“Nice to meet yer, Simon,” said Pasty, “we need to talk.” And with that
he released the hand and pushed Simon down the corridor and
through the living room door. Me and Billy dutifully followed and
stepped into a room set up for dinner. Candles were lit, soft acoustic
86
music wafted out of the stereo, glasses of red wine were on the table.
A bearded bloke in a chunky knit sweater sat at one side of the table
next to a willowy blonde. A woman, vaguely hippyish, with red cork-
screw hair and a pale complexion, entered from a door to the left
wiping her hands on a tea towel.
“Simon, what’s going on?” she asked. The fear was already there in
her voice.
“Aw,” said Pasty affectionately looking at the scene before him, “Yer
shouldn’t have gone to all this trouble for us Simon.”
I leant against the door frame stonefacing it; I was in it now. Billy be-
gan to move slowly around the room, paying no attention to the peo-
ple, but poking about on bookshelves and in drawers.
“Sit down pet,” Pasty said to the woman, an edge of steel in his voice,
“You and all Simon.” The woman slowly lowered herself and Simon
pulled up a chair. The other couple sat transfixed. Pasty sat down too,
reached out and picked up the bottle of wine and looked at the label.
“Mer-lot,” he announced finishing with a hard ‘t’ on lot, “Is that a good
‘un Bamber?” he shouted across to me.
“It’s okay,” I muttered.
“He knaas all sorts Bamber,” Pasty announced to the dinner party
“Been to university and everything.” Pasty lifted the bottle to his lips
and took a swig. “Hmm not bad...”
Billy was momentarily distracted from his noseying, “Aww gis a guzzle,
Pasty,” he said nodding towards the bottle. Pasty passed it over and
Billy took a huge mouthful, promptly screwed up his face and spat it
out, spraying the people sat at the table, “That’s fucking shite!” he
shouted outraged.
“Whereas yer can see, Billy’s a right ignorant cunt,” said Pasty jerking
his head towards Billy who was looking at the label in disgust.
“Mer-lot? Shit-lot!” pronounced Billy before hurling the bottle with
great force at the opposite wall. The bottle smashed into smithereens
showering the dinner party with red wine and splinters of glass. Simon
sat stock still. The woman with corkscrew hair recoiled. The willowy
blonde began to sob.
87
so bad is it?”
“Fucking hell!” shouted Billy with glee, who’d gone back to poking
around and had pulled a book out of the bookshelf, “Look at this!
Dirty fucking pictures!”
Pasty ignored him, “Ah believe yer a probation officer Simon?”
“What the fucking hell is he trying to do to her?” pondered Billy as he
twisted the expensively printed copy of the Kama Sutra one way then
the other.
Billy snapped the book shut. There was silence in the room. Simon
dropped his head, “I’m sorry, I don’t have access to that kind of infor-
mation.”
“Well you’re going to fucking get it,” snarled Pasty, “and quickly.”
“You can’t do this,” protested the bearded guy.
“Y’knaa you’re starting to get right on my tits,” said Pasty turning his
attention to him, “Is he getting on your tits Billy?”
“Aye, and Ah wouldn’t mind getting on his lasses tits and all,” ob-
served Billy enthusiastically, nodding towards the willowy blonde.
“Oh Billy, there’s nae call for that,” admonished Pasty not taking his
eyes off the bearded guy “Nae call at all.”
“You can’t do this, we’ll get the police,” gushed the woman with cork-
screw hair.
“And tell them what?” I asked, “that we came around your gaffe and
spilt a bottle of red wine? Aye…they’ll scramble the police helicopter
for that.”
“ Eee…..Yer’ve even managed to piss Bamber off now,” mused Pasty.
Simon looked up, pure hatred and venom in his eyes, “So what are
you going to do if I don’t play ball?” he asked petulantly.
88
His head drooped again. Pasty stood up. “Monday. No later.” He
walked past me and down the hall.
Billy took one last look at the book in his hand then flung it across the
table scattering bread rolls and wine everywhere. The assembled
company sprang back.
“That’s shite,” he said accusingly pointing at the book, “if yer ganna
have porn at least have something decent. Proper photos, come
shots, minge, something yer can get yer teeth into.” He shook his
head in despair and stalked off into the hallway. I waited a moment,
nodded my goodnight, gently closed the door and followed him
We’d waited for him outside the entrance of his block of flats. Threw a
blanket over him, wrapped duck tape around him. Had him in the
back of the Transit in under two minutes. He’d begged, pleaded, of-
fered us money, anything. Pasty landed him a punch square in the
face, taped his mouth and left him in the back to roll around. When
we’d pulled up in front of the workshop, there was a reception com-
mittee. Women from the Estate.
“What the fuck?” I exclaimed.
Billy grinned as he brought the van to a halt, “Thought the ladies
might appreciate the show.”
Play
Pasty has momentarily laid down the welding torch and now has the
victim’s right hand in his grasp. He has splayed the fingers so that the
little finger is separate to the rest. Billy carefully positions the bolt
cutters just above the knuckle. A woman, eighteen stone if she’s an
ounce, hair scraped back, huge hooped gold ear rings pulling on her
lobes and a T-shirt, bearing the motto, ‘If you think I’m a fucking bitch,
89
you should meet my mother’ bustles her way through the gaggle of
women to the front to see what is going on. It is she who turns to the
rest of them and starts the chant.
Billy grins at his audience and then with one sharp, deft jerk snaps
shut the bolt cutters. The finger shoots off across the workshop, look-
ing for all the world like a cocktail sausage carelessly flung off some-
one’s plate at a wedding reception.
The women cheer, hands punching the air. The gagged victim’s eye-
brows shoot up cartoon style as his body bucks and buckles. Pasty
smiles, a job going well. He picks up the welding torch and signals to
me to wind the victim back up and, grimly, I begin to haul on the pul-
ley’s chains. As I do so a hand shoots out and grips my forearm. The
beautician has arrived. She surveys the scene dumbstruck, stunned.
The women are cavorting beneath the suspended figure, while Billy
nods and grins inanely in the middle of them, lapping up the atten-
tion.
“Is this what you fucking wanted?” I shout to her above the din.
“What’s going on?” she asks wide eyed, innocent.
“We’ve got your man,” I sneer sarcastically nodding to the winched
and swinging figure now drenched in the blood which is pissing out of
the joint of his little finger. She looks back at me fear and horror para-
lysing her face.
I look back to the figure on the chains, twisting and turning, racked
with pain. Some of the women are jumping up now, trying to grab hold
of him, to bring him back to earth, to tear him limb from limb.
90
There is cheering, whooping and whistling from the women. I look
around. Pasty has picked up the welding torch and is pushing his way
through the crowd towards the figure.
He turns his head towards me, his eyes still blacked out by the weld-
ing goggles. The women begin to chant, “Burn! Burn! Burn! Burn!
Burn! Burn! Burn!”
Pasty is distracted, trying to work out what the fuck I’m on about, and
the women impatient for their vengeance, begin jostling, shoving. At
first he swats them aside like flies as he looks over to me and the
beautician again.
The fat woman with gold hoop ear rings barges towards him and
shouts out, “ Ah’ll finish the job if you haven’t got the balls for it!” She
makes a grab for the torch but Pasty snatches it away above his head
out of her reach.
The torch catches the guy’s trousers hanging around his ankles.
That’s all it takes.
Flames begin to creep up his legs.
“Pasty!” I shout, and point up at the guy. Pasty looks up just as the
victim realises what is happening to him and begins to flail around in
panic. He swings back towards Pasty and the blazing trousers catch
Pasty full in the face causing him to reel back and fall. There is a col-
lective sharp intake of breath from the women as they realise what is
happening and I swear I hear one of them cackle in the silence before
the full horror of the situation becomes apparent.
“Get the fucker down! Get the fucker down!” he screams at me. Big
91
mistake. I quickly lower him on to the floor, where he rolls around in a
frenzied attempt to extinguish the flames. I can only assume that he
rolls into a pool of petrol, oil, something flammable, because all of a
sudden there is a big bass whoosh and the flames reach the rafters.
There is bedlam. Women begin to shriek, scream, cry. Some claw
their faces, tear at their hair and screw up their eyes unable to watch.
Others stand transfixed, their mouths open. It only takes one or two to
make for the door and then there is a stampede.
He douses down the man and the flames subside as quickly as they
appeared.
“Good lad Billy!” I find myself saying as if encouraging a child in a
game of junior school football.
The women, including the beautician, are gone and after all the
chaos, the jeering, the shrieking, the shouts, the screams, the only
sound is the hiss from the hose and the sizzle of steam rising from
the charred carcass in front of us.
Pasty paces backwards and forwards rubbing his chin, “Fuck. Fuck.
Fuck,” he mutters looking down at the body.
“Is he still alive?” I ask more in hope than expectation.
“Why how the fuck do Ah know?” snaps Pasty focusing his anger on
me.
The last of the flames out, Billy turns off the hose and gingerly I kneel
down by the body. The stench is almost indescribable, sickly sweet,
char grilled, barbecued but also chemical from the petrol. I begin to
heave and desperately try to keep it under control.
I remember basic first aid from somewhere about using the back of
the hand, which is more sensitive, to try to ascertain whether some-
one is still breathing. I look at his head, the hair is burnt off but there
is still a wisp or two, here and there, sticking up singed. The skin on
the face and cranium is blackened, even crispy in places, but there
are patches which are red raw where it has all been burnt off. I cau-
92
tiously reach down and gently begin to peel back what remains of the
tape across his mouth. I stop to retch as I realise skin is coming off
with the tape, but realising there is no alternative I carry on. The tape
off, I’m about to lower my hand when he belches out a cloud of black
smoke.
He’s pumped, wired and I dare not argue with him. He paces back-
wards and forwards, muttering, cursing under his breath. The animal
cries are more intermittent now, he passes in and out of conscious-
ness, whimpering and wailing. I watch as the blackened skin begins
to bubble and blister in front of me.
“Did you want to kill him?” I ask puzzled. It’s a genuine question; I’m
not sure about anything in this fucking mess anymore.
“Of course Ah didn’t want to kill him. Think Ah’d have that fucking
pack of hyenas here if Ah was going to kill him,” he gestures to the
door. “Ah was just going to braise his balls a bit, give him a warning to
fucking behave.”
“He was the wrong guy, Pasty. That’s what I was trying to tell you.”
He looks at me blankly, and at first I think he hasn’t heard or hasn’t
understood, then he goes ballistic, “BASTARD! FUCKING BASTARD!”
He storms across to an oil drum, and starts kicking it repeatedly.
“BASTARD! BASTARD! BASTARD!”
I look down at the figure on the floor. He’s out now. Unconscious.
We’re losing him.
“Pasty,” I reason “we’ve got to get him to a hospital and quick before
we’re looking at a murder charge. Half the fucking estate witnessed it
and the other half will know about it within the next half hour.”
93
He pauses for a moment grabbing a workbench with both hands,
thinking, then finally a decision is made.
“Get the fucking van, we’ll have to take him,” he barks at Billy before
turning to me, “You get a fucking blanket round him.”
As Pasty opens the workshop doors and Billy reverses the van I look
around for a blanket, eventually finding a tatty, tartan travel rug that
has definitely seen better days, but it will have to do. I drape it over
him as gently as I can, but the pain of it on him must be unbearable
as his eyes blink wide open, stark, staring and with what little life he
has left he begins to scream incessantly. I shake my head and swal-
low, feeling tears of frustration welling up. How the fuck did I end up
here?
The van reversed and its doors open Pasty comes round and gets
hold of his feet. I try to lift him from beneath his shoulders, but as I do
so I feel his skin shift and begin to slough off. I finally lose it and stag-
ger off across the workshop vomiting prodigiously as I go.
“Oh for fuck’s sake!” shouts Pasty, “Billy! Get round here and get hold
of this fucker! Bamber’s gone fucking nancy on us!”
Billy drives.
“Where am Ah ganning?” asks Billy as we pull onto City Road.
“The RVI has a burns unit,” I volunteer from the back.
“Not the fucking RVI !” orders Pasty, “It’s the centre of bloody toon.
Every fucker’ll see us.”
“The General then,” I blurt out “it’s got an A & E.”
“Not the fucking General either,” warns Pasty, “there’s nae where to
dump him.”
“Dump him?” I ask incredulous.
“Why yer didn’t think we’d end up sitting holding his hand in fucking
casualty did yer?” rages Pasty, “CCTV man! We cannet afford to be
seen. We’ll dump the fucker as close as we can to the Freeman.
There’s a few quiet streets around there. Some fucker’ll find him.”
We eventually pull over onto the side of a road next to Jesmond Dene.
We pick our moment and quickly unload him onto a grassy verge. He
manages the slightest of moans as we do so. Still alive then. Just.
As we drive away I look back out of the Transit’s window and see his
prone figure lying on the grass verge still covered in the tartan travel
rug.
94
“Poor bastard,” I murmur. Pasty explodes.
“Divven’t waste yer fucking pity on him. It’s our arses we’re going to
have to watch now!”
Fast forward
For a couple of weeks the police, the newspapers and telly were all
over it like a rash. Gangland justice, drugs, those were the popular
theories. Tense times. We kept our heads low, following develop-
ments in the Chronicle and on North East tonight. I expected the
knock on the door, the hand on the shoulder at any minute. So many
witnesses. Pasty was more cavalier in his attitude, “Think any fucker’ll
mess with us after that! They’re scared they’ll get the same. Fucking
cushty man!”
And he was right. People gave us an even wider berth than usual. As it
happened the guy survived, but even he was saying nothing. Post
traumatic stress the papers called it. Pasty clapped his hands with
glee when he read that. “Is that a posh way of saying he’s scared
shitless?” he asked.
Exasperated I lost it, “Jesus, Pasty, is that all you can say? We’ve
maimed a fucking civilian.” But he wasn’t having any of it.
I shook my head; there was no reasoning with him. He went on, “Not
my fucking fault some twat’s unlucky enough to have the same name
as a beast. And besides, we’ve done the Estate a favour.” He took a
sip from his pint savouring his self righteousness. “It’s a fucking mes-
sage to the rest of the fuckers to behave. If that’s what happens when
we suspect somebody..…imagine what we’ll do if somebody’s really
fucking about. Now finish yer pint and stop fucking whining. We’re
fucking invincible man.”
About a month later we were ambling down Shields Road and he saw
her. There coming up the street, pristine as ever in her white work
uniform was the beautician. The object of Pasty’s affections. He
stepped out into her path.
95
“Aal reet?” he asked.
She put her head down and weaved her way past him.
“Ah said, aal reet?” he called after her, but there was no reply. Just
the sight of her pert arse disappearing up the street.
“Fucking slag,” Pasty muttered as he pushed his way into the
Butcher’s Arms.
96
Christopher Morrow
Christopher Morrow is a London based writer. He has vari-
ous things published in various places and none of them
are nice. He writes about crime, from the view of the dark
men, and it’s as real as he can make it.
97
POKER-ING
I’m sweating like a rapist.
Dripping.
Fucking coke head twat. Can hardly keep his head together to deal
the fucking cards. I mean, who employs a fucking beak sniffer as a
fucking card dealer? What sort of bollocks is that?
Mickey was cautious in his betting, layed low, rather than laid low if
you know what I mean. I can spot a fucking punter who thinks he’s
got the nuts. But, to be fair, he has. He’s beat me all over the shop
here, I’ve got bollocks, fuck all.
Mickey the pimp smiles at this, perleeease, it’s like shooting puppies
in a barrel.
"Yeah, yeah. I’ll fucking see that and raise you a bag my son."
A full Rio. The thousand pound of crack befuddled tom earnings, still
greasy with travelling salesman and bored hubbies spunk, sloshes
into the middle of the table. Mickey licks his fingers, ooooooohhh,
icky.
Not that I’m gonna win, but I’m fucked if I’m touching that money with
bare hands.
98
I wanna sneak a look at me watch but resist the impulse.
Now, that is only a six hundred pound raise from me and I aint got
much more in front of me and I can see this prick looking at my small
stash thinking he can fucking buy this. Softly, softly, catchee monkey.
He sploshs a big brick of 50s down. Stares. Weasel Boy grins. They
think they got me. The other bent nose table sitters and lurkers snuf-
fle at another prat bought out. Mugs.
"OK, five grand. Fuck me, we got a game at last." I go into me jacket
pocket, pull out fucking untold wedges of folding. All red and shiny,
fifties. Bent as arseholes mind, only just removed from Monopoly
money. It’ll do in this heated atmosphere, they are just seeing cash,
not snide cash.
I got four minutes to play. If this goes wrong then my life aint going to
change and then I am really, genuinely, double fucked.
He’s looking at the river. All the high hearts and he’s holding at least
one of the others. He’s got me donald ducked and he knows it. The
fucking best possible I’m holding is three aces, which he’s got beat.
I’m a little pissed off, ergo the rapist sweat, that it’s this obvious I’ve
got nothing but I aint working to cards, just time, no choice.
He fucking umms and arrs a bit and then nods to a lumpy lurker.
Lumpy, all shoulders and cropped head goes to the desk.
Job done, I just got to keep my head till the cavalry arrive. This is it.
The one shot deal. No more cards. No more London. No more of this
nonsense. Life changing stuff, gone, fucking gone.
99
Lumpy brings over the breeze block of cash.
"Your bet mate" he says to me, all fucking shiny in the glow of his
stash which is now nestling in front of him.
"It’s little bit more than that mate, I aint fucking counting it, get one of
these muppets to do it. You’ve fucking lost mate."
Mickey goes a little bit goggle eyed at this, a lot strong coming from
the likes of me. Proper insults that is. I don’t give a fuck. Sneaked
another look at me kettle, the door is going in right now. The chaps
are going to pile through it, tooled up to the fucking eyeballs and all
these sleazy ponces and lump heads are going to get fucked and we
are robbing them of fucking everything that aint nailed down.
Now.
Fucking now.
"I’ll see your fucking hundred grand and raise you another hun-
dred…..which you aint got. Unless you got another pocket son."
He’s right. I aint got another pocket. What I have got is something
vibrating in my pocket. It’s called a mobile phone. It aint ringing be-
cause I turned that bit off earlier, just left it on vibrate. I don’t think
it’s going to be good news.
100
In fact I think it’s not worth answering.
Mickey is noticing that I’ve gone a bit wonky and am staring at the
door whilst my jacket is vibrating.
Fuck.
Double fuck.
Well, life changing after all then. Who needs fucking legs?
101
Julie Wright
Julie Wright lives by the seaside in Sunderland. She works for some
nice people who let her write about business. They either publish
what she writes traditionally or put it on their website. Her greatest
achievement is having been sacked from the Guides for being a bad
influence. Her greatest shame is having joined a para-military uniform
wearing organisation in the first place. This is her first published fic-
tion.
102
IT COULD BE YOU
‘Give us the fucken money.’
Beggsy was on his knees, a gun barrel rammed into the back of his
neck. Uncomfortable. But at least he was still alive, unlike the bird
who’d been swallowing his cock when the Irishman burst in. Before
he’d won the money, she wouldn’t have swallowed his chat up lines.
Now she was stone cold, blood and semen congealing on her sweet,
young face. What a waste.
‘Give us the fucken money.’ The Irishman rammed home his point
with the gun. Beggsy toppled forward.
‘Let me up. I can’t do anything down here.’
The Irishman considered. ‘All right, then. But no fucken funny busi-
ness.’
Beggsy nodded and the Irishman took a step back. Beggsy clambered
awkwardly to his feet, pulled up his jeans and fastened them. Difficult
to muster any dignity with your knob swinging in the breeze.
Irish pistol whipped him. Beggsy hit the floor again. He sat up slowly,
woozy, a bloody rose blossoming on his cheek.
Beggsy was scared out of his wits. He wasn’t a hard man. Just a bloke
who’d come into some money. Irish watched while he got it together,
climbed to his feet again, jelly legs making him wobble like a newly
birthed colt.
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fucking idiot. ‘Give us the fucken money.’ Back to the tape loop.
***
Gran pitched a regular two quid stake per draw. A scratch card and a
lucky dip. She struggled to afford it out of her pension, but reckoned it
was worth it. After all, it was her only pleasure. That and the Superk-
ings. The wall behind her chair was tarry with nicotine, her hair at the
front discoloured by the smoke.
First ball: miss for him, hit for Gran. Second ball: miss for him, hit for
104
Gran. Third ball: same story. On and on until all six numbers are out.
Beggsy feels sick. He knows he shouldn’t, she’s his gran, for Christ’s
sake. She’ll buy him an apartment, see him right for spends. But it’s a
waste, isn’t it? All that money going to such an old woman? He could
just as easy buy the cosy bungalow for her, buy his mam the house,
give them both some cash. Get a little of the warm fuzzies for himself.
He’s a young man, young enough to enjoy the win. It’s only right that
he should have the money.
***
Irish had him face down on the carpet. It was deep and soft. It even
smelt expensive. Good fucking shit. Everything in here was good fuck-
ing shit and Beggsy loved it all. Loved the lifestyle. Fucking loved be-
ing rich.
The whole thing about giving his money away to this dickhead was
burning him. Even if it was only temporary.
But he didn’t want to die. Fucked if he did. He was having far too
much fun.
105
Beggsy headed up to his bedroom. Swung back the full length mirror
on the wall and only hesitated a moment before tapping in the combi-
nation and opening the safe. The Irishman smiled. Motioned Beggsy
into the corner and loaded money into a sports bag.
‘Just out of interest, who inherits if you die? Your mam or your gran?’
‘What makes you think it’d be my mam or my gran?’
‘You’re famous, son.’
The papers. They’d been full of stories about Beggsy and his generos-
ity. He’d wanted the publicity, wanted the world to know he was rich.
Irish packed the cash into the bag, then turned and grinned at
Beggsy. ‘Proper little saint, you are.’
Beggsy sighed, hung his head. ‘Gran. Gran gets the lot.’
‘Was it really your ticket that won?’
‘What?’
‘Well, if it had been me, I’d have said it was mine whichever it was.’
‘Thief.’
‘All that money. Wasted on an old woman. It’s not like you didn’t buy
her a bungalow, now, is it? And that was all she wanted, wasn’t it?’
Irish put the gun in his pocket, zipped up the sports bag.
Beggsy nodded, relieved now that the gun was out of sight.
‘So. Was it really you that won?’
Beggsy shrugged. ‘I signed the back of the ticket. I got the money.
Course it was me.’
Beggsy went cold. He fell to his knees. ‘She can have it all! Or you
can…..Please, don’t do this.’ He was sweating, gibbering.
Irish lowered the gun. Beggsy dared to hope. Then Irish strode over to
Beggsy, put the barrel under his chin. ‘Your Gran says “tara, son”.’ He
pulled the trigger. The top of Beggsy’s head exploded. Irish wrapped
Beggsy’s fingers round the grip and left with the sports bag. Payment
for the job. The client would get what was coming to her in due
course.
106
LET’S DANCE
‘Jasmine. JASMINE! What you doing?’
What am I doing? You might well ask. I take a last look at the cynical
young woman in the bathroom mirror, give my nose a quick rub and
plaster a smile on my face. Tonight I’m Jasmine, and Jasmine is com-
pliant and smiles a lot.
It’s an inescapable fact that when you live the life I do, you get to fuck
some really ugly men.
Take Matthew, the dickless wonder huffing and puffing his way to
ecstasy on top of me right now. He’s short and skinny, pot bellied,
growing a forehead, and his face is…..just not quite right. Things are
kind of misshapen and out of line. The worst thing about him is his
hands, small and soft in exactly the way a man’s hands shouldn’t be.
107
nise my face, either.
She was fourteen when she had me. I was eight when she left. I
caught her sneaking out of her parents’ house in the dead of night,
clutching a bin bag full of clothes and slap.
‘Shhhh!’ she urged, putting a finger to her lips. ‘Don’t wake them up.
They wouldn’t understand.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘I know.’
‘Where are you going?’
‘Away.’
‘Who with?’
‘A friend.’
‘How long for?’
Something that might have been guilt flickered uncertainly across her
face. Embarrassed to be found in such unfamiliar territory, it skulked
off into a dark corner and hid. She dropped the bin bag and knelt
down to my level.
‘For good. You’ll be okay. Your nana and your granddad will look after
you.’
She checked her watch. ‘Don’t frown so much, you’ll get lines. Men
don’t like girls who look serious. Look after yourself when you turn
thirteen. Start using moisturiser. And always be sure you get this bit.’
She put her finger between her eyes, at the top of her nose.
‘Otherwise you get kind of a cornflake there, especially in the winter.’
Then she stood up, picked up her makeshift suitcase, turned away
from me and crept out of the house. I watched from the window and
saw her climb into a silver car parked further up the street. She didn’t
look back.
108
burgers and fries, chased them down with cola, more ice than pop in
the cartons, then into the station, where we piled into the booth and
had our pictures taken.
I played all her records at first, over and over, just because she’d left
them. The Human League, Prince, the Police…..After a while, I tended
to play just three that I don’t think were hers at all. I think one of her
old boyfriends had left them, probably Scotty. He was nice. He bought
me comics and he played the guitar. I was sad when they broke up.
The big three were the Stooges, the MC5, and the Ramones.
I’ve still got all those albums, every one, even the Human League.
Whatever’s happened, wherever I’ve been, I’ve managed to hang on
to them. And I still play them.
They let me live with them until I was sixteen then they put me on the
street, duty done. In some ways it was a relief. I’d spent the previous
three years fighting Granddad off. Dirty old fucker.
109
making the tea, putting a candle on my birthday cake, so there was
just me and him in the room. Jesus, it was disgusting. He was all over
me, fat fingers and skinny lips, cheap aftershave and stale tobacco,
muttering about me being ‘all grown up now’ while he tried to get his
hands in my clothes. My breath caught in my throat and I felt sick. No
wonder my mum had warned me about being thirteen, no wonder
she’d got out when she could. I counted myself lucky I didn’t have six
toes or two heads.
I learned the danger signs early on. Phil Collins. Phil Collins generally
heralded an unwelcome advance. To this day, I can’t hear ‘Sussudio’
without getting up and walking out of the room. Mind you, I think
that’s a completely normal reaction for anybody.
I put a bolt on my bedroom door soon after that first time. Made a
right mess doing it, but it did the trick. Whenever I could I stayed with
a friend or I had a friend stay over with me. In my room on my own, I
had to stop playing Mum’s records. I needed to be able to keep tabs
on him, listen out for him creeping around the place trying to catch
me unawares. Sometimes I’d hear him breathing on the other side of
the door. Or he’d try the handle and I’d jump out of my skin and pray
that I hadn’t forgotten to fasten the bolt.
Despite everything, there were times when that fucking song would
start up and he’d appear out of nowhere, staring and grinning. ‘Let’s
dance.’
‘Oh, go on, pet,’ Nana would say if she was around. ‘Have a dance
with your granddad.’ But she wasn’t watching where he put his hands.
She didn’t have to feel him rubbing his cock up against her and stick-
ing his tongue in her ear.
Cast adrift at sweet sixteen, I found that I couldn’t get a job because I
didn’t have a home. But I couldn’t get a home because I didn’t have a
job. It’s a headfuck. I very nearly wore out the few friendships I had,
kipping on people’s floors and couches, scrounging meals, bumming
handouts. I desperately needed a roof over my head. Then I met a
guy. Hutch. Twenty-four and streetwise, said he’d look after me. After
110
a couple of weeks of treating me like a princess he changed my name
to ‘Krystal’ and put me out to work. It’s the nearest thing I’ve ever had
to a regular job. I hated it. Before long, I hated him, too.
I don’t know who was most shocked when I stuck the knife in him. He
still looked surprised when he was bled out, bone white and stone
dead.
I froze when I did it and that was good because it meant I didn’t do
anything rash or stupid. The other good thing was that the blade
slipped in between his ribs, got in deep, the wound fatal. Lucky really.
Anything less and it would have been my unblinking eyeball flies
strolled around on. Eventually. Under those circumstances, mine
wouldn’t have been a quick end.
Once I’d got my head together, I stuck a fork through his tongue to
make sure he was really dead. Then I cleaned up, cleared out his
stash, loaded whatever stuff I wanted into a suitcase and got the fuck
out of Dodge.
Hutch had so many enemies, anyone could have done it. The fucking
Pope probably wanted Hutch dead. Hell, God probably had a hard on
for him. The busies pretended to look for the guilty party, but their
hearts weren’t in it. They didn’t want to bang someone up for provid-
ing a public service.
The nicest thing about it was I got enough cash together for a place of
111
my own. And while it didn’t exactly get me off my back, it did get me
off the streets.
That was six years ago and I’ve done pretty well since then. I’ve got
my own place. Not too flash. Benefits, you know how it is. I’ve got a
decent car. Good clothes. Lots of stuff. A couple of close girlfriends I’d
trust with my life. And a growing nest egg that one day soon I’m going
to use to get out of this shithole for good. I won’t be doing this by the
time I hit twenty-five, you can count on it.
I’m not on the game any more. I’m more a professional girlfriend
these days. Strictly short to medium term. But just because I don’t
charge up front for a blow job doesn’t mean I do it for free. Only mugs
fuck for free. Everything has a price.
In addition, if there’s something I want that a man won’t either buy for
me or give to me, I generally take it. I’m a good thief. Efficient. I have
the knack of taking things they won’t want to report stolen. All I need
to do afterwards is disappear.
Take the coke I did just now. It used to belong to Ian. He had an al-
mighty habit. He’d have got through it in a week. It’s lasted me ages. I
just use now and then when I need a bit of a lift. Something to see me
through. Like when I fuck a freak like Matthew. If I was a bloke, I’d
probably take viagra.
Let me tell you about my current client. You know what he looks like:
112
ugly as sin, kind of scary, just plain wrong. But he’s rich. Very rich.
Something in computers. Own business. Technical geek.
Matthew only employs men. He can’t cope with the idea that a
woman might be able to think for herself. He can’t even look women
in the eye. Judging by how he does look at them, I think his mother
breastfed him until his age was in double figures and he misses the
tit. Hence Jasmine and her lisping giggle, biddable nature and perpet-
ual smile. I think she’s the first fuck he didn’t book in advance. It took
her ages to chat him up. He couldn’t believe she was serious and she
was supposed to be shy.
Matthew drives a top of the range BMW. His place is fucking incredi-
ble, a big, flashy pile on millionaires’ row. Or debtors’ retreat, as Nana
used to call it. You could make all the noise in the world in there and
no-one would hear. Not like the cardboard-walled shack I grew up in.
It’s filled with art and antiques that would make a Sotheby’s dealer
weep with joy. Not that he’s blessed with taste. He bought them
wholesale from some gallery place. He’s got the biggest flat screen TV
I’ve seen outside of a run down council estate, and a home cinema.
All that’s fine, it just means he can afford me.
Not the album, give me some credit. The system. You could hear eve-
rything so clearly. I could practically hear them breathe. Move.
Fuckers could have been in the room.
What a waste. I was aching to hear something good on it.
113
‘Shit, that’s fucking awesome!’ I gushed in a totally un-Jasmine-like
manner. ‘Hey, why don’t I bring something over? See how it sounds.
Something classical.’ I pretended to think. ‘Early Stones, maybe.’
Ease him in gently, I reasoned. Play him something familiar. Then
whack him with the Holy Trinity: Stooges, Ramones and the MC5.
He grinned. ‘What do you want to listen to that old shite for? Look…...’
He brandished another CD case. ‘I’ve got James Blunt as well as Cold-
play. Bang up to date, me.’ He changed the disc and sleazed closer.
‘You need to get with it, Jasmine. Stop being such an old fashioned
girl.’ He put his clammy little hands on my waist. ‘Come on, let’s
dance.’
‘I don’t d…...’
My mind was buzzing as I blew him. All that gear. All that amazing,
awesome kit. A home cinema, and a DVD rack that would hold thirty if
it was full. It holds about a dozen. Seven channels of sound and a CD
unit that would hold fifty if it was full. It holds two dozen, tops.
‘How come you’ve not got many discs?’ I asked him. My set up wasn’t
this good and I had loads more than he did.
‘No point,’ he said. ‘You can only play one at a time.’
I was stunned into silence.
His biggest crime was to have a deck wired in and no vinyl. Not any
more; he’d binned the lot. Check out his artistes of choice: Coldplay
and James Blunt you’re aware of; they nestled up against the Pussy-
114
cat Dolls, Gwen Stefani and Girls Afuckingloud.
‘Local lass in the band,’ he told me. ‘You’ve got to support your own.’ I
did. There are some great local bands, but for crying out loud, not that
shite.
All that power. Not just the volume, but the depth and breadth of
sound, the richness, the resonance. Aural velvet. It sounded like I
reckoned heaven should. Rock ‘n’ roll heaven, volume without distor-
tion, zips, leather and ripped denim, somewhere Fred ‘Sonic’ Smith
could hang with Johnny Ramone.
I have recently, as they say, been on the horns of a dilemma. It’s Mat-
thew’s job to provide, but he’s not coming up with the goods. Oh, he’s
tipped up clothes and jewellery, a couple of long weekends away, a
week in the sun, stuff like that. But nothing major. And one of the
weekends was a golfing trip. I don’t golf. I shop. I’m not getting a good
return on my investment. He flatly refuses to buy me a system like
his. It’s a one-off, he reckons, and if he gets me one it won’t be
unique anymore. Selfish pig. Another one that won’t share. And of
course, if his system should be stolen, he wouldn’t hesitate to report
the theft. He’d want to claim on the insurance. Then no doubt he’d tip
off the police about the vampiric, lisping girlfriend with the hungry
eyes, the one he can’t seem to get in touch with any more. The whole
thing has been keeping me awake nights. Should I cut my losses and
walk away with what I’ve got? Can I somehow force the issue? Is there
another way to deal with this? I’ve tossed and turned into the wee,
small hours for weeks trying to work out what I should do.
But not that night. By then, it had all become clear. That night I slept
like a log.
Next morning I made him breakfast. Wore his shirt and looked cute,
just how he liked it, bare feet numb from the cold, slate floor in the
kitchen.
‘Sorry, love, I can’t see you tonight,’ I told him. ‘Girls’ night out.’ I
smiled.
‘Tomorrow, though. We’ll go round the town then come back here.’ He
grinned and stared. ‘We can have a little dance to James Blunt.’ That
had turned into one of his favourite pastimes. But not one of mine. In
115
fact, it was during one of those little dances, while I was feeling light-
headed and nauseous, that I realised what I had to do to resolve the
situation.
I nodded. ‘I can’t wait.’ He looked back as he got in his car and I blew
him a kiss. ‘Missing you already,’ I simpered. Or rather, Jasmine did. I
don’t do shit like that.
I could just hear him telling the geeks at work how he was knackered
after last night. Showing off his new scar and bragging about how
carried away his lass gets. He’s such a stud. Not for much longer,
though. It was time to move on.
I cleared up the breakfast things and made the bed before I left. I like
a tidy house.
‘Matthew,’ I said. My voice broke, then I cried and howled for my poor
dead boyfriend, taken far too soon by a cruel, hurtful world. Eddie
made all the right noises, but I could tell he just wanted to get off the
phone. He’d drawn the short straw. I calmed down and he took my
address. For the police. They’d be in touch.
I confirmed that I’d spent the night before last with Matthew. ‘If only
I’d been there last night,’ I choked, tears clouding my vision. ‘If I had-
n’t been out with the girls, he might still be alive now.’ I broke down.
116
The nice policewoman passed me a handkerchief and put her arm
around me.
My mates confirmed that we’d all been out together, his staff that
Matthew had gone to the pub with them because he wasn’t seeing
me. Greedy fuckers, happy to spend time with the boss just so long as
he’s buying.
The next few weeks passed in a whirl of black clothing, tissues and
cups of tea. His mother liked me. We cried together. I helped her with
the funeral arrangements. Matthew went through the curtains at the
Crem to that God-awful James Blunt number. I assured her it was her
son’s favourite song. Hid my smile in my hankie and turned a giggle
into a sob as he exited my life for good.
Then, finally, I got to take that beautiful system out of my loft, where
I’d stashed it the day I took it from Matthew, the day I dumped a
whole load of look-alike second hand gear from Hylton Road into his
trashed lounge before stoving his head in with one of his beloved golf
clubs. I took my time setting it up, relished every second, every con-
nection. Balanced the speakers. Levelled the deck. Checked the
speed with the strobe. Anticipation made my spine tingle.
Set up complete, I took the album I’d placed ready on the coffee table
and slipped it out of its sleeve, placed it reverently on the turntable.
Put a light to the three skin joint I’d made up earlier. Hit ‘play’ on the
remote and sat back, eyes closed. The room exploded into vibrant
sound. The MC5 invited me to kick out the jams. I couldn’t get the
smile off my face.
117
Milky Wilberforce
Milky is a rockabilly addict who writes stuff nobody reads. He lives in
Sunderland which is mint.
118
FRANKIE’S ON A JOB
God Islington was spooky that night. Dark clouds scudded across a
deep blue sky and the moon was halved but still shining bright so that
shadows stalked and moved all around me. The street was wide and
tree-lined, white stoned buildings rose three and four storeys above
the road. Above it all was the silence of the street and the permanent
background buzz of London.
I parked the Mondeo opposite the apartment block and waited. It was
chilly so I hunkered down into my Puffa and let my breath steam
things up. I checked the address again, yes this was definitely it, num-
ber twelve, top floor. Mandy’s light was still on, shining luminous
through condensation and curtains.
The building was set back from the road with what would have been a
pleasant family garden for the Victorians who’d built the place. The
windows were PVC double glazed, bit horror-show but no doubt they
kept the bills down. It was difficult to see the roof in this light but it
was a red-slated affair, continental, completely at odds with the grey
slate around it. The flat must cost thousands a month to rent. This girl
had class but how she could afford to live around here was quite an-
other matter. Billy was right; Mandy must have something going on
the side, maybe even a piece of him.
I’d done a recce that morning. Access was the usual method, you
buzzed and somebody answered from their flat and let you in. Break-
ing in through the front door would be difficult and noisy and out of
the question. The only way in was to hope that one of the residents
would be late so I could sneak in behind. This was risky, this was not
so good.
The place was dead except for Mandy, she was definitely a night bird,
and it was gone three by the time she put the lights out. I was getting
pissed off, cold and bored and still no fucker had even thought about
entering. I was feeling more and more conspicuous with each passing
minute. I slouched down in the seat and tried to wait. Billy Fraser
would pay for this one of these days, I’d fucking make sure of it.
119
It was about an hour later when I got my break. I was dozing slightly,
having decided the thing was a dead loss and that I might as well get
some kip while I could. There was a clatter of a bottle being kicked
along the road, I sat up and wiped the steam from the windscreen.
About twenty yards away was a young bloke wearing a dark grey suit,
tie loosened at the neck playing football with a coke can. He was roy-
ally pissed and looked like he’d been on the go since leaving work.
Stylishly he volleyed the bottle into a wall where it smashed in a mil-
lion pieces. He pulled his shirt over his face and began running in
circles, arms out-stretched in a mock goal scoring celebration.
His childish cavorting must have made him dizzy because he soon
stopped only to stagger on spastically. When he reached the entrance
to the block he stopped and then fell over the gate. He retched loudly
and gutturally and his extended belched turned into a torrent of puke.
When the vomit had stopped coming and he’d spat his mouth clean,
he tried to stand up. His body swayed into an ellipse, his hips thrust
outwards to regain his balance like a weeble. Again he belched loudly
and the wet splashings told me that even more puke was coming out.
Action stations, I slipped off the Puffa and opened the car door. I
skipped across the damp tarmac to the gate, jumped across the path
on to the bedding that lined the gravel and ran across the lawn to
crouch in the bushes beside the front door. An aeon later, the piss-
head rolled up, his staggering gait making him cover twice the dis-
tance.
Hand cocked like a gun he slowly took aim with his right index finger,
circled above the entrance pad then pressed a button, long and hard;
the jarring electronic buzz went on for a minute or so. The noise
seemed to fill the world and I was sure it’d wake Mandy. Eventually
the buzzing was broken off by a bleary female voice answering the
call. Was it her? I looked up, Mandy’s light was still off but on the floor
beneath her, a light was now on.
“Yes? Who is it?” She was sounding tired and pissed off.
“Katie, it’s me Guy.” He was sounding hopeful.
“What?” She was sounding angry.
“Can I come in? It’s freezing out here.” He was sounding pathetic.
“What time is it? Bloody hell Guy, it’s gone four.”
“Is it? Oh. Were you asleep?”
120
“Yes I bloody well was asleep! What do you want? “
“I thought we could you know, have a chat. About us.”
“Guy, there is no us, there hasn’t been an us for two months now. Are
you pissed?”
“No, no, I haven’t touched a drop all night”
“Liar, look we’re finished, leave me alone will you, just go home.”
The button clicked with an ominous finality but Guy held his finger out
again, cocked in mid air, contemplating pressing. His courage gave
out and he dropped his arm to his side obviously thinking better of
annoying Katie even more. He turned and slumped to the ground, his
back pressed hard against the front door. Within thirty seconds he
was snoring.
The sound of crunching gravel banged into my head like a jailer’s keys
and I instinctively crouched into a foetal ball. Timidly I parted the
bushes and saw a woman’s foot in flimsy black leather stilettos poke
tentatively at the comatose Guy. The foot disappeared and I moved to
get a better view but all I could see now was her other foot. From
above came the sound of jangling metal on metal as she searched in
her bag for the door key. She found it and slid it in smoothly and si-
lently. Glory of glories a resident coming home. Trouble was I couldn’t
see how I could creep in behind her given my current position in the
undergrowth and certainly not with arsehole lying there.
She entered but after a few seconds I realised I hadn’t heard the door
lock home so I risked another peek. At last Guy was of some use, his
head was stuck in the door, wedging it open. The woman had obvi-
ously realised she couldn’t move him so she’d just walked over Guy’s
prone body. I could have kissed him. I rested a moment, caught my
breath and then took thin leather gloves from my black jean pockets
and slipped them on. By now my nipples were sticking hard and proud
through my black T-shirt, I was freezing but at least things were under-
way.
I burst from the bushes in a rustle of dry twigs and wet leaves,
scrunched lightly into gravel, pushed the door open and entered. With
my right foot, I kicked Guy away and gently closed the door behind
me.
The lobby was tall and made of marble with a swooping staircase that
121
spiralled round the thirties style wire fronted lift like a snake round a
stick. I chose the stairs and began ascending quickly, two stairs at a
time. I made hardly a sound and the building seemed dead as a
morgue. On the third flight, I heard the lift begin to operate, doors
clanged shut and it began to descend sounding as if it was bouncing
down the walls from side to side. I stopped, waiting, listening for
movement of people. The lift reached the bottom and stopped, metal
ringing in the air like a tuning fork.
But nobody got out. The lift just sat there, doors closed. Then I real-
ised, the woman who’d crawled over Guy must have used the lift to
get to her flat. The lift’s default position must be ground floor, so after
a few minutes of inactivity, it had descended back to where it was
most likely to be used. I smiled with relief and resumed my ascent of
the slippery, shiny, marble staircase.
The top floor was the eighth and Mandy was in 804, second door on
the left. I paused outside to regain my breath. At the end of the corri-
dor, the moon was casting a blue-white glow on the maroon carpet,
which was a thick and luxurious Axminster, my feet sank lusciously
into the material and I realised just how much she was taking the piss
out of Billy.
What’s more she was stupid. I pushed gently at the door and it just
swung open, no lock, no nothing; the thick bitch hadn’t even locked
her front door, not even put it on the snick. Then I had second
thoughts, was this a trap? Was Billy setting me up? It wouldn’t sur-
prise me; those questions about Ronnie Carter came back hard and
sharp now, was this Billy’s way of testing me or sorting me out once
and for all?
The flat had a small lobby of wooden parquet floor which fed into five
doors cut into wooden panelling of dark mahogany. This was getting
stranger; surely this was no bird’s house? It was too dark and Victo-
rian, like a gentleman’s hunting lodge. The second door on my right
was slightly ajar and I could see the kitchen behind it. I leaped for it
and closed the door behind me.
122
another door opening and closing, then the sound of pissing. A man
pissing.
The alarm bells were clanging big time now. What the fuck was going
on? What the fuck was a bloke doing here? Quit while you’re ahead, I
decided; get out before something uncontrollable kicks off. I headed
for the door.
“Shit!” Mandy spat the word out, harsh and pointed, containing
within, the knowledge that she’d been found out by Billy and that I
was there to do something about it. She froze, eyes fixed on mine,
time stopped.
Hanging from a magnetic metallic band on the wall close to the stove
were a row of carving knives, I snatched one, took two large steps
towards her and rammed it up beneath her rib cage, through her
lungs and into her heart. Our faces came up close so I could feel her
breath on my chin. We stared deeply into each other’s eyes till hers
clouded over. I withdrew the knife and she fell to the ground with a
look of utter astonishment on her face.
Behind her there was the sound of flushing and a man came out of
the mahogany door directly opposite me. He was in his fifties, short
and completely covered in a fuzz of grey hair. He had the look of
someone I knew.
“Fuck me” – he saw the girl at my feet, blood oozing out in a crimson
pool towards him. He froze, transfixed by Mandy dead on the floor at
my feet. Billy was right, she had been fucking someone on the side
and now he’d seen me, which was a pity. Without thinking, without
even pausing, I took three steps towards him and repeated what I’d
just done to Mandy. The look of astonishment that covered his face
as I stepped back to admire my handiwork was even greater than
hers. The life emptied from his watery grey eyes and he too collapsed
at my feet, his right hand reaching out towards Mandy.
I returned to the kitchen, taking great care to avoid the growing pools
123
of blood that were spreading towards each other. I washed the knife
in the sink and hung it on its metallic band and then left the flat, clos-
ing the door gently behind me.
Moving quickly, I took each stair one at a time, skipping down to the
ground floor in a couple of minutes. Guy was still there, out for the
count, obstructing the front door. I leaped over his prone body and
scampered up the gravel path, across the road to the Mondeo. I
bleeped the door open and got in, revved the engine and pulled away,
as quickly as I dared.
Brighton was quiet and empty as I pulled up on the sea front some
ninety minutes later. I let the car idle down, the air conditioning turn
itself off and bathed in the silence. This was a strange lonely feeling
I’d never encountered before, what was going on? It couldn’t be that
bloke surely? Okay he was a bystander, he’d been in the way but that
had happened many times before. What was the difference this time?
Maybe it was the game itself, it was getting me down, the loneliness,
the suspicion, always the Fear coming on me in the early hours.
All this was getting to me, had done for a while. All I’d ever wanted
was to have the money to go to a few clubs, drop a few E’s, live the
life. Be a face. Now look at me, gun for hire, topping people just be-
cause they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. Shite when I’d
124
first heard “Strings for Life” that was meant to be a gateway to a bet-
ter world, not this, not this. This isn’t what I am, what I believe in. All I
want is to be in control, do what I want, when I want, not have some
bastard telling me to be in at work nine to five and still not have
enough money for Alone or the Ministry.
I looked out across the sea, the half moon hung in a cloudless sky,
casting a glittering trail across the sea. Far off the blast of a ship’s
horn disturbed the gentle white noise of the waves rolling up and
down the stony beach. I got out and began walking up and down the
concrete car park, allowing the bitter salt air to penetrate every pore,
every thought, trying to seek comfort in nature but it never came.
I bent over and for the first time in ten years, I threw up.
I lay there till the cold sea breeze finally woke me to the rising dawn
sun. I tried to stand up but my legs were like jelly and I collapsed into
the car’s bonnet. I slid to the ground, eyes closed, filled with fear,
panic and dread.
125
Laird Long
Long pounds out fiction in all genres. Big guy, sense of humor. Writing
credits include: Blue Murder Magazine, Futures Mysterious Anthology
Magazine, Hardboiled, Thriller UK, Shred of Evidence, Bullet, Robot,
Eternal Night, Another Realm, The Dark Krypt, Albedo One, and sto-
ries in the anthologies Amazing Heroes, The Mammoth Book of New
Comic Fantasy, The Mammoth Book of Jacobean Whodunits, and The
Mammoth Book of Perfect Crimes and Impossible Mysteries.
126
BRIDEGOON
The bell over the door jingled, advertising the fact that someone had
entered the building.
“Right with you!” Conrad yelled from his back office, cursing Debbie
under his breath. Debbie was the receptionist, and she was sick again
– pushing fifty and coming apart like a lemon-toned Dodge Aspen.
Conrad slammed the filing cabinet shut, stubbed out his cigarette,
and walked heavily down the short, linoleum-tiled hall. He halted
briefly at Ovide’s open door. “Doin’ anything besides trolling for
porn?” he asked. He didn’t wait for an answer.
“Hi,” Conrad said. He stuck out a huge, freckled hand and the little
guy pulled a damp mitt out of his pocket and shook.
“Hi,” he said back. “How’re you doing?”
Conrad studied him a moment. He looked familiar. The little guy piled
on another layer of sweat during the tight silence. “Dwight Timchuk,”
Conrad finally stated, satisfied.
Timchuk bobbed his head up and down like a bench seat hooker.
“You remember.”
Ovide crowded in behind Conrad. The tiny reception area was packed.
127
“Hello,” Ovide said, reaching past Conrad’s enormous stomach and
grabbing Timchuk’s hand for a brief arm pump. He normally liked to
do it two-handed, to inspire trust, but there wasn’t room.
Timchuk rubbed his pudgy, little hands together – they were covered
with red blotches; some kind of rash. “Zero tolerance. You know.”
“Sure, I-”
“You here on business?” Conrad interrupted. “Or just filing a progress
report?” He coughed harshly into his hand, wiped the remainders on
his pants. He didn’t like bailees hanging around the office, thinking
they had a friend.
Timchuk giggled again. “Yes, business. That’s what you guys call it, I
guess.” He looked down suddenly. The sunny disposition was gone,
and a tear shower was on the way. Conrad hastily pointed down the
hall, almost taking out Ovide’s eye. “Let’s talk in my office,” he
barked.
The floor creaked as they walked single-file down the narrow hallway.
The small, stand-alone, corrugated metal building was located in the
middle of a warehouse district, three blocks down from the Law
Courts building. The traffic in the area was mainly tractor-trailers,
loading and unloading. At night, the area was as dead as an actuary’s
personality - guard dogs and night watchmen eyed each other suspi-
ciously.
Conrad fell back into his black, leather chair, air whistling out the
sides. Ovide grabbed a couple of padded folding chairs for himself
and Timchuk. File folders, letters, bills, forms, and other sundry paper-
work was scattered all over the top of Conrad’s massive maple desk,
some of it in piles, some of it loose. Cigarette butts boiled out of an
upside-down GI’s helmet. The faux-wood-paneled walls of the office
were sparsely furnished – a couple of framed pictures of Conrad’s
128
Vietnam gunship unit, and his various licenses. Sun drifted through a
dirty window, torn into stripes by the dusty, wooden blinds.
Ovide handed Timchuk a cup with the logo ‘California Bail Agents
Association’ on it, and filled it with coffee. Conrad picked up his mug,
blew in it, and shoved it at Ovide. Ovide filled it to the rim, and smiled
pleasantly at Conrad. Conrad’s hand got shaky, and he spilled some
of the hot brew as he brought the mug up to his lips. Ovide filled a
paper cup with water for himself.
Timchuk grinned sheepishly. His teeth were small and stubby like his
fingers, only cleaner. “Well, uh, you guys do private investigations,
don’t you?” He looked from one man to the other. “I mean, you’re
P.I.’s as well as bail bondsmen, aren’t you?”
Conrad blew a blue stream of smoke into the air. “We offer many
services, Mr. Timchuk,” Ovide replied. “My associate and I,” he ges-
tured absently at Conrad, who frowned, “are both licensed private
investigators in the state of California, as well as licensed bail agents.
So, how can we be of assistance?”
Conrad chugged his coffee and slammed the mug down on his desk.
“This about your wife again, Timchuk?”
Timchuk nodded, and shunted to the edge of his chair. “Yes, it is.
129
She’s been missing for ten and a half days now, and the police can’t
seem to find her. I’m sure they’re trying,” he pointed out democrati-
cally, “but I don’t know how hard.” He clenched his hands together
and stared down at the floor. “She took our daughter with her,” he
added, in a broken voice.
The two men filed out of Conrad’s office. Timchuk threw a disap-
pointed look back over his shoulder. Conrad stared at him with un-
blinking, frog-like eyes, grunted, then spat into a waste paper basket
labeled ‘suggestions’ next to his desk. He ground out his cigarette in
the helmet, pulled out another, and lit it. The screen saver on his com-
puter shoved against the back wall blinked ‘Uzi does it’. He opened a
thick file, hit the hands free button on the phone, and punched in a
number. “Mrs. Johnston?” he asked gruffly. “Where the hell is your
boy?” He listened to the plaintive wailings for a moment, then said:
“He’s got a court appearance in half an hour. He said he was coming
to see me fifteen minutes ago.” He listened again. “Yeah, well, get his
ass down here – you hear!?”
*
Conrad shoved his way out of the Law Courts building and trudged
back to his office. The sun beat down on his blistered neck. The sun
was too damn close to the Earth at this latitude, he thought. Made
everyone just a little nuts; fried people’s brains – like in the Middle
East. He was used to cooler climes. Like St. Paul, Minnesota, where
he had banked fifteen years as a police officer before a paedophile
with matching black eyes and a split nose had forced him to resign.
Johnston had been neatly squared away for two years less a day, but
Conrad wasn’t wasting anymore time thinking about him. He was
thinking about Dwight Timchuk and his pale, sweaty face and his
pudgy, nervous hands. He pushed open the office door and the bell
tinkled its welcome and warning. He waited for fifteen seconds, but
Ovide didn’t make an appearance. He banged his knuckles against
130
Ovide’s closed door.
Ovide mumbled something into the phone like, “See you tonight”, and
hung up. “Huh? Yeah, sure, won’t happen again.” He smiled, and all
was forgiven.
Conrad sank into a chair. There wasn’t enough room to even cross his
legs in the tiny office. “You file your license renewal education form?”
“Just about to do that,” Ovide replied. “What’s the deadline again?”
“Beginning of this month.” Conrad lit up a smoke. “What did Timchuk
tell you? Something that should be accompanied by violins, no
doubt.”
Roxanne didn’t know a lot of English, but she had worked at a coffee
shop on Laurel Canyon Boulevard until her sudden and unexplained
departure. She was twenty-five years old and Dwight was forty-two.
Dwight worked at the Department of Motor Vehicles, Long Beach of-
fice. He had a clean record except for the domestic assault incident
131
six months previous, in which his wife had alleged that he had used
her face as a toilet brush - then subsequently dropped the charges.
The benevolent, dead hand of the State, nevertheless, guided Dwight
to a prison cell despite his wife’s retraction. He was currently on full-
pay family leave from the DMV, and had a couple of unrelated griev-
ances pending.
“He thinks another man,” Ovide replied, smoothing his hair back with
both hands.
Conrad took a long pull on his cigarette and exhaled through his nose.
“Cops got any leads?”
“Just the Dear Dwight letter that Roxanne left behind.” He held up a
photocopy. The writing on the page was sloppy, and there wasn’t
much of it. “She says that she and her daughter can’t take anymore
of his ‘abute’, so they’re leaving.” He paused. “Dwight claims it’s syn-
thetic hogwash, the kind of stuff Pravda used to print, but admits that
it is her writing. Cops aren’t so sure it’s hogwash.”
“That I did. The ancient veteran cracked open the file for me – after I
promised to introduce him to Debbie. He says that his flat-footed com-
rades aren’t looking too hard. They think that the evidence points to a
mail-order marriage gone past due – return to sender.”
132
Ovide revealed his gleaming teeth in a smile, then waved his hand in
front of his face to dissipate some of the blue haze. “You never know,
you’re right. However, all I have to do is find Mrs. T and the little T..”
Conrad stood up. He dug around in his left ear with a sausage-like
finger. “You find them and bring them back, or you tell Dwight where
they are, and he’ll probably buy a gun, draft a woe-is-me confessional,
murder the pair, and then kill himself - so they can all be together
forever in the Promised Land outside Waco, Texas.”
“Not much of a romantic are you?”
“I could be the last of the red-hot lovers for all you know, but I’m first
and foremost a realist.”
“Well, they’re going to have to meet eventually,” Ovide responded,
picking up the phone. “Like Gorbachev and Reagan. I’m just helping
things along – at two hundred and fifty a day, plus expenses. Remem-
ber?”
*
“Excuse me, please, but you’re from the what again?”
Ovide smiled. He adjusted his tie with his long, smooth fingers. “I
work for the California Payroll Association. I just started there a month
ago, actually. Fresh out of the auditing program at Redondo College,
you know.” He grinned sheepishly. “And Hava Java was my first as-
signment.”
The man smiled warmly, seeking a connection. “That’s quite all right,”
he said. “But why have you come here – this I do not understand?”
133
of his jacket. “Let’s reconvene on the couch, shall we?” he said. “It’s
far more comfortable.”
Ovide smiled his agreement and they sat down together on the small,
cream-colored couch. It was more love-seat than couch.
“Why don’t you try to relax, Mr. Lambert, and we shall discuss your
request,” Krutov said soothingly, drawing Ovide closer towards him.
The office door suddenly banged opened and the receptionist briskly
waddled in. She was carrying a gun-metal teapot and two bone-china
cups upon a silver tray.
Krutov looked up, annoyed. “Set it down on the desk, please, Mrs.
Garenko. Thank you.”
Krutov stamped his foot impatiently on the thick shag carpet, making
a sound akin to someone’s bottom being whacked with a velvet ba-
nana. “That will be all, Mrs. Garenko!”
Mrs. Garenko sniffed grimly and exited the room. She left the door
slightly ajar.
Krutov quickly jumped to his feet, shut the door, and returned to the
couch in one flowing motion. It left him a little breathless. “A good
woman, Mrs. Garenko,” he remarked bitterly. His eyes rapidly filled
with Ovide again, who was looking young and fresh in his off-the-rack
blue business suit.
“So you deduced that I might have some information regarding Mrs.
Timchuk,” Krutov stated. “Very clever. The California Payroll-”
“The CPA,” Ovide said.
134
Ovide nodded. He moistened his lips with his thick, pink tongue.
“Money owed is money due.”
Krutov solemnly nodded his head. “Yes, now I see. It comes clear. You
did a very good job of explaining it, Ovide.” He clapped his hands to-
gether, then put them down flat on the couch, his right hand sliding
gracefully under Ovide’s left buttock. “Ovide Lambert,” he murmured,
looking deep into Ovide’s shallow eyes. “What a lovely name. Tell me,
have you ever been to Europe, Ovide?”
Ovide shook his head, and a sad frown blossomed on his crimson
lips. “No, I haven’t. But I do love all things European.”
Krutov shuddered. “Oh yes, of course. I only met Mrs. Timchuk once,
you understand, and I have no idea where she is living presently, but I
do know of a Russian gentleman who, uh, helps women such as Mrs.
Timchuk emigrate from foreign lands and achieve U.S. citizenship. I
believe that he performed such a service for Mrs. Timchuk.”
Ovide grinned. “That’s great! I can mail the cheque to him, if you think
that’d be all right, and get it off our books. The other employees at
Hava Java told me that Mrs. Timchuk has been having some, uh,
marital troubles, so we don’t want the cheque to fall into the wrong
hands.”
“Very wise,” Krutov agreed. “Domestic problems can be very unpleas-
135
ant for the well-intentioned outsider.”
Silence fell across the room like a chenille bed curtain. Krutov studied
Ovide’s mouth.
“Uh, could you give me the address of this Russian gentleman you
mentioned, Mr. Krutov?”
Conrad pounded the brake pedal and the van stopped with a jolt - two
houses short of 1046 Shasta Street. He turned off the engine, pock-
eted the keys, and glanced over at Ovide. The rented van’s heavily-
tinted windows kept the sun’s hot glare out and the interior impene-
trable. “You’re sure Roxanne and the kid are in there?”
Conrad waited, then grunted angrily. “What day was it on the school
cycle?”
Ovide smiled. “So, when Teldov went out, I casually dug through the
garbage bins in the back lane and found an empty box of tampons
and a bag full of used diapers.”
“Or, maybe your girlfriend isn’t staying there, and in fact there is a
woman and a baby inside - being the ones we are looking for.”
Conrad frowned. He stared out the windshield at the faded, yellow
136
bungalow. The blinds were drawn tightly shut in every window, in-
cluding the basement ones. Most people didn’t even have blinds on
their basement windows. A dog barked lazily somewhere down the
street.
Conrad set fire to a cigarette, took a sip from a styrofoam cup filled
with cold coffee.
The two men climbed out of the van and walked normal-speed to
the back of the house. Ovide was about to knock on the door, when
Conrad grabbed his arm. “Why don’t you blow reveille on my skin-
bugle while you’re at it,” he whispered fiercely. “Don’t tarnish your
knuckles and let her know you’re coming.”
Conrad pulled a leather pouch out of his jacket pocket and went to
work on the door.
Ovide groaned. “Oh, great,” he said. “Now we can get busted for
b&e.”
Conrad had the back door open in an L.A. minute. The two men
cautiously stepped across the threshold.
137
It was hot as a furnace inside the starter house. They walked softly
through the tiny kitchen and into the living room. The house was spot-
lessly clean for a Russian bachelor pad. The furniture was nonde-
script, but new. A half-empty baby bottle was partially buried under a
cushion on the couch. Ovide stealthily opened a couple of closet
doors, peered inside, then jiggled the knob of a door that was locked.
He motioned to Conrad.
The woman’s voice stopped instantly. The only sound was the ticking
of a clock in the kitchen, and a car driving down the back lane. Then a
baby began to cry. It sounded hungry.
Conrad shoved Ovide down the stairs first. He held the baby bottle out
in front of him like a live grenade.
*
“We’ll have to tell your husband where you are, Roxanne,” Ovide
stated matter-of-factly. The baby grabbed his finger, squeezed it, and
giggled.
Roxanne and Lydia were sitting on the couch. Ovide was sitting in a
chair next to the couch. Conrad was standing by the front window,
cracking the blinds every now and then to check the street.
“Why you have to tell Dwight?” Roxanne asked, her eyes brimming
with liquid sadness. “I no want him involved!” Conrad chuckled.
Ovide ignored him and said: “He has to be involved, Roxanne. Lydia is
as much his daughter as yours.” Lydia giggled again and smiled at
Ovide, saliva bubbles popping out of her little mouth. “If you’re wor-
ried that he’s going to hurt you or the baby, then you should talk to
the police. You should have done that in the first-”
“Dwight will no hurt me! He never hurt me!” she yelled indignantly.
“Dwight is good husband and father!”
138
Conrad grunted. He turned around and looked at Roxanne. “How
about that domestic abuse beef six-twelfths ago? Dwight served fif-
teen days in the county rest home for the privilege of flushing your
head down the crapper.”
Roxanne angrily met Conrad’s eyes. “He did nothing! I make up com-
plaint because I am mad at him. I take back complaint when I calm
down, but your justice system put him in jail anyway! Remind me of
days of Andropov!”
“Vaht a country!” Ovide remarked, tickling the baby.
Roxanne nodded, squeezed Ovide’s hand. “You are very nice man,”
she said. “Your friend have personality of constipated Brezhnev, but
you are nice man. Yes, you are right. I am happy with Dwight and
baby.” She kissed the back of Lydia’s head. “Yuri very upset I have
baby. Lowers property value, he say.” She thrust out her chest.
“Frontage still good, but-”
“So what are you doing here, Mrs. Timchuk?” Conrad reiterated.
She looked up at him. “Yuri threaten to hurt baby unless I go with him!
He take me and lock me inside this house! What can I do? My English
is not so good and-”
139
“You stupid, loud-mouthed bitch!”
A man had snuck in the back door. He had a Glock 9 mm. hanging
loose in his right hand, and anger and frustration boiled out all over
his fat, greasy face. “You stupid, loud-mouthed bitch slut!” he
screamed.
“Yuri!” Roxanne cried. “No!”
Teldov brought the gun up and three explosions rocked the small
house. Stuffing was blasted out of the couch and into the air.
Conrad advanced, the .38 rigid in front of him. He kicked the smoking
gun out of Teldov’s pasty, limp hand.
Ovide cradled the stunned baby in his arms. The silence was thunder-
ous after the gun play. Roxanne lay sprawled backwards on the
couch, a ragged, red hole leaking blood on the left side of her fore-
head.
140
Tony Lagosh
Tony is in his mid-forties and lives in the pleasant idyll of Cambridge
just off Jesus’ Piece. He leads a dull existence as a small time ac-
countant which he livens up every now and then with petty acts of
shop lifting and by sleeping with his boss’ wife.
141
BEING DEAD
Being Dead. Much like being alive. Maybe that’s why I did it.
Easter egg wrappers covered the floor, covered her, covered every-
thing. Shards of chocolate creamed into the carpet, melting into the
twill. An unholy mess. I stood up, levering on the ancient wooden din-
ing table. The linen tablecloth slipped and the curling sandwiches
twitched like they were alive.
I was going to get caught, I knew it. This time was the last time.
Blackness came over me again and I fell, giving in to the blank weak-
ness that rose within.
I woke. Pain was throbbing in my left cheek. It was easier to stand this
time; I hauled myself upwards and touched her leg. I kicked it hard,
out of the way so that I could get to the mirror. There I saw a blacken-
ing bruise, the size of a grape. Must have caught the table as I fell.
Pain and tiredness and being fucking sick of it all. And of course her.
That’s what was doing it I told myself. That was what was making me
puke. I shook myself straight and made for the door. She was in the
way so I trod on her yielding stomach, making her rise like a zombie
then fall back with a rustle in her coffin of red and pink foil.
Outside it was easier. That door behind me, solid, cutting off every-
thing. I started to forget.
Time to run.
142
I clipped on my headphones and pressed play.
Drums, fast and urgent, guitars sidling into their riff. The Damned
stupid, thick idiots but who’d had a brief glimpse into the meaning of
life and captured it in a three-minute punk song. Bastards. It was
there, right there in that second when Vanian went AH! Before the
guitars hiked up the riff into overdrive. That was it, the moment only
the great bands have.
That was what I wanted, that little glimpse of Nirvana, that was all
that I wanted.
And I could get it, boy could I get it. The shit afterwards though, I was
beginning to wonder if it was worth it.
“New Rose” thrashed on, and something stirred. It brought her back,
the music brought her back and then thank god it stopped, cut bru-
tally in its prime. I looked down and saw it was my finger that had
stopped it, the stop button was down hard in its slot.
I began to run, run like the bloke in Trainspotting, fat laughter rising
up to the grey skies above me.
Sirens. Blue lights behind me. Police cars and feds getting out. Noone
saw me. I kept on running. 314 seconds I ran, then I stopped, the
music stopped and my lungs were ballooning out of my rib cage,
ready to burst. Fit, I wasn’t.
I sit in a park. The night is cold, the moon is full. I press play but noth-
ing happens. Batteries gone. Flat. Dead. I need something.
The park has a bench. I go there and sit on it. It is rusty red metal. My
143
arse cheeks turn blue cold. It doesn’t matter.
There is the railway track. I can see it in the blue moon light, cold and
grey and metallic like Cabaret Voltaire. It rises maybe fifty feet in the
air on a rubble embankment hidden by the trees of the park growing
in front of it. When I was young, when we had bottles of cider, we
pretended that the trains ran along the treetops. Fuck, the things we
did for entertainment.
There’s something about it. Standing there defiant like it’s expecting
me to do something. I take the bait and walk towards it, thinking of
trains, thinking of Elvis, thinking of Leslie Thompson playing there.
Leslie Thompson who’d been cut in half, when he was four and I was
five.
I fall on my back and stare up at the stars, two thousand light years
they’ve travelled just to take the piss. I laugh. Nothing else but to. Let
‘em have their fun. I’d had mine.
There is nothing left now, nothing. Today was the last time I could get
at that magic moment. There’s only music now and that, quite frankly,
is nowhere near enough. I pull the Walkman out of my anorak pocket
and chuck it as far as I can into the trees around me. Some lucky
fucker would find that in a hundred years time and have ninety min-
utes of the best-goddamned music that had ever been made.
I walk back through the park, through the silence eerie in its com-
pleteness, clamber over the metal railings and fell on to the road.
Middle of the road, knew I’d always end up here.
I wait. An hour. Two. Nothing came. Far too late for traffic. Everyone in
this town tucked up nicely in bed, dead to the world, dreaming of
fluffy bunnies and pensions.
Fuck ‘em.
A car blasts past my eardrum. It swerves then bangs into the kerb in a
144
screeching heavy black tyre stop.
“Fuck.”
I pause.
I take a breath.
“Off.”
He fucks off.
If the only taste of life you can get is by listening to a crappy cassette
full of thirty-year-old punk songs then you really are underneath the
barrel licking at slime that grows in wet darkness.
That was it. Answers everything. Makes the next step clear.
Wish I’d known before I started making this unholy mess. But I had to
find out, I had to do something. You can see that can’t you.
And there was something there, but fuck, the price I had to pay.
So I stand here, the water beneath me. The sky above me, bridge
girder beneath my feet. Last chance to feel something.
The water hit me. Coldness enveloped me. Wetness subsumed me.
145
I tried to think of Mum. Thinking yeah maybe it was her fault, maybe
she deserved it. But I knew I was faking it. Like Elvis, I was faking it.
146
JOB DONE
Cambridge, 6.13am Work starts early
I thumped the knife into Schroeder and carried on running, leaving it,
proud, protruding from his rib cage. Behind me I heard his breathless,
middle aged running, slow, then stop as blood filled his heart. I span
round and saw him slump to the ground, his back sinking into the
mud of Parker’s Piece, hands waving in the air like a mad raver. There
was surprise on his face, surprise at the kitchen knife in his chest and
at the way the crimson spread across his grey tracksuit. Weakening,
his head lolled and he stared straight at me, green eyes in a sun
tanned face, tough leather skin, framed by a mess of grey white hair. I
watched a vigorous life ebb away.
Job done.
It was touching seven by the time I got back to the car. The sun was
fully risen in a watery glowing white that was burning off the early
morning chill. In the homes that lined the avenue, lights were being
switched on as families woke to a new day. Street lamps were clicking
off like metronomes, loud sharp and echoing in the morning silence. It
was spooky, nerve jangling and it re-ignited the Fear.
I got in the car and began to get changed. Then I saw him.
An old man walking a black and tan collie. He was reading a paper,
idly flicking the pages over whilst his dog strained energetically at the
leash. I dropped on to the passenger seat, the gear stick pushing
sharply into my ribs. I shifted myself off the stick and lay motionless.
Time slowed down, waiting, waiting, expecting the polite tap on the
window; my mind was racing, preparing an answer, an explanation. I
stuck my hand into the glove compartment.
I heard the scattering of the dog’s claws and the faint rustle of the
man’s newspaper fade away. I sat up and sneaked a look. He was
heading towards the River, he gave no glance backwards but I let him
147
turn the corner before I twisted the key to start the engine. I pulled
away. I’d have to get changed somewhere else.
Fifteen miles out of Cambridge I found it. A Little Chef set into a clump
of trees. Keeping my head down to avoid the CCTV I pulled in and
headed for the restaurant. I pushed open the fake wooden door and
was hit by the smell of frying bacon. The sheer normality was shock-
ing, it woke me up quicker than a cold shower.
In the grimly functional, white light toilets, I found an empty sit down,
filled with the smell of stale piss and ineffective bleach. Shutting the
door behind me I got changed, peeling the layers off like an onion.
Pulling the suit out of the bin bag, I hung it up on the door and
smoothed out the creases. I dropped the tracksuits into the bag and
re-tied the knot in its neck. Unhooking the suit from its hanger I
squeezed into it and a cheap blue shirt and matching tie set. Then I
slipped on plastic black shoes and opened the cubicle door, checked
there was no one around and left.
Two hours later, I was walking into Mertz Rental and being irritated by
the ringing of a bell. It brought out a young man, smart in a red uni-
form, beaming a disturbingly happy smile, full of teeth and vivacity. He
had to be a fake, a student of all those self help courses that tell you
it takes 300 muscles to frown but only three to smile. All technique
and no honesty. It oozed from his shiny red skin, the bright green eyes
and the fashionably tousled, dyed blonde hair that crowned a short,
slim frame. He reeked of cloying, disinfectant after-shave.
“Good morning sir, my name is Colin, how can I help you.?” His voice
was sharp and Estuary singsong.
“The name’s Fletcher, just returning the car”
“If you’d like to take a seat I’ll get your file.” With a theatrical flourish
he twirled like Anthea and returned to the back office. I sat in one of
the red plastic seats and idly flicked through an old car magazine. A
couple of minutes later he was back.
“Renault Clio was it sir?” endlessly polite and efficient too, there was
no hope for the man.
“Yes, it’s parked out front.” I stood and tossed the keys on to the
chest high counter and leaned on it, my left arm supporting my chin.
“I’ll need to pay for some extra valeting, I’m afraid I’ve made a bit of a
mess of the car. Stood in some mud and it got everywhere. It’ll need a
thorough cleaning, will that be extra?”
“Oh don’t worry about that sir, I’m sure it’s not too bad.”
148
“No really, I would like it to be cleaned thoroughly. Before anybody
else uses it.”
“It’s all part of the service sir. No bumps or anything?”
“No, as I say, just a bit dirty.”
Colin whisked round the counter, file in hand and went out to check
the car. I could see him through the window, creeping and dancing
round the Clio, meticulously examining for damage, circling it in an
effeminate war dance. With a balletic leap he jumped up and re-
turned, slightly flushed from the cold air, full of brisk efficiency.
“Oh there’s nothing to worry about there sir, could hardly see a thing,
quick hoover with the hand vac and it’ll be as good as new.”
I didn’t push it. Colin shoved a form at me and I signed it. He let me
call a cab and twenty minutes later I was outside Fitness Forever, the
only club I ever felt comfortable joining, clutching the incriminating bin
bag.
It was late morning but there were already fifty or sixty sweating mid-
dle aged women pounding away on running and rowing machines.
Their faces were bright pink and dark patches of sweat were collect-
ing round their arse crack and arm pits. It was not a pretty sight. If
anybody tells you that gyms are a good place to pull, don’t believe
‘em, there is nothing attractive about over weight bodies sweating in
stretch fabric leotards, built up into mountains and valleys by piles of
unwanted flesh. I shuddered as I weaved my fully dressed way
through them, avoiding the occasional flirtatious smile that was
flicked my way.
As I entered the men’s dressing room I fished out the locker key from
my pocket and opened number 672. A pound coin dropped as I swiv-
elled the key.
I quickly undressed, and roughly shoved the Burton’s suit into the
binbag. I tied a knot in the neck and chucked it in the locker and
changed into my Adidas kit.
This is never a good time, this is when the Fear hits in a second tsu-
nami. This is when the nerves come on, the regret, the panic, the cold
blind terror of being caught. But I have my routine and that helps me
cope, it stops the panic, helps me think. Activity is the only cure so I
always end up here, at the gym, pounding away on the running ma-
chine, burning off the hormones, trying to bring me back down to a
149
level where I can think straight and rationally. Inactivity would mean
thought and that would drive me insane. The only way is to lose my-
self in mindless distraction. Repetitive exercise, loud blaring dance
music and cable TV to keep my eyes occupied. Fitness Forever, it’s
the only way.
An hour later, I was walking out of the gym towards my car I’d left
overnight in the gym’s car park. I was calmer, more relaxed, thinking
straight again. Amazing what a good work out can do for you. I
bleeped the car open and cocooned myself in the black leather uphol-
stery. I turned the key and imperceptibly the engine started, I re-
leased the hand brake as the Cream CD kicked in and revved away.
On the Fulham Road I noticed a slim black alley. I pulled over, parked
across the double yellows and put my lights on hazard. I hauled out
the bin bag and nervously entered. It turned sharply to the left behind
a kebab shop. There was a bin there, half full of rotting food and dis-
carded packaging. It stank like a rotting body. I hurled the bag into the
open top and left its metallic crash echoing behind me. I returned to
the car, slipped in and pulled away into traffic.
Now I could really relax, now I could go home, now it was over.
150
Kev Martin
Kev is a cabbie in Carlisle. “Swinging Like Tiger” was first published in
Bullet 4 and is his only published work.
151
SWINGING LIKE TIGER
Nothing like a nine iron.
The rubber grip felt good in my hand, the club felt heavy, satisfying. I
swung it, the swoop in the air was deep and booming, the connection
with Stevie’s head solid and clean.
He fell into the water, moans mixed with bubbles, it was too dark to
see the blood. I turned away from him and walked back up the beach.
I heard Stevie claw his way up through shallow surf, coughing and
spluttering at water and blood and seaweed getting where it should-
n’t.
Over his head, just to the right, the moon was rising from the North
Sea. It was a Daz blue white, its broken reflections rippled in the ea-
ger horse heads rolling up the beach, it was beautiful, calming, at-
mospheric. Stevie was ruining it though, swaying like an idiot, non-
plussed, feeling his head with surprise like he couldn’t quite believe
what was going. This was going to take a bit more work.
I looked at the iron’s head and made out a bit of bone and hair, I fuss-
ily removed it like an over-proud house wife. I let the head drop into
the water swilling it till it was clean, then I swung it in a baseball curve
and connected with Stevie again. The ribs this time, got him in the
ribs, wanted to see what that was like.
152
“Don’t man, please god don’t. I don’t deserve this, not from you at
least.”
“What’s going on in there Stevie? In that thick skull of yours, what you
thinking?”
“I’m thinking what the fuck are you doing? Anyway, it ain’t so thick
now, you must have taken an inch out.”
I thumped the iron into his head again like I was Phil Mickelson. Left
handed, I know my golfers. I wondered what Tiger would make of my
swing. Stevie slumped to his knees, hands clutched to his head. I
wondered if he’d have a go at me, I reckoned not, this was all too
much for him; the surprise would have done for him.
“See it now?”
“No, I can’t fucking see anything.”
“Gone blind have you?”
“No! What? Yes, I mean I don’t know. Fuck! The pain!”
Stevie tried to stand up like a man but he swayed like a dumb clown,
legs flashed upwards and he collapsed backwards into the water. He
was like a cow with an advanced case of BSE, unco-ordinated, legs
everywhere. The sand shifting beneath his feet, the disintegrating
nervous system, nothing was helping his limbs get him erect again.
He splashed in the water, arms flailing eddies of foam into the bleak
night air, very atmospheric. I let him calm down, let the splashing
cease then I went in.
I pulled out a maglite and shone a beam right into his face. It was
fixed, still and pale, a facsimile of Stevie, him but not him if you know
what I mean. The outside was still there but the spirit, the life force,
had gone somewhere else. The blood had gone from his face leaving
his skin a deep chalk white but it was now outside, streaming in wa-
tery rivulets down his forehead and cheeks.
153
I pulled the camera out, one of them tiny digital things that hangs
from a key ring. Comes in handy now and then. I took a couple of
quick snaps for later. I wasn’t sure if they’d come out but hey, if they
did then they’d be worth looking at. Last few seconds of a man’s life,
might be able to learn something, see his spirit leave, see if there is
peace right at the end, see if inevitability can be met with rich accep-
tance, might help me when it’s my turn.
A small guttural groan bubbled up; poor fucker was still hanging on. I
decided to try it another way, might help him along, I was starting to
feel sorry for the poor fucker. I drove the top of the club into his head,
thin edge down. It caved into his skull and stuck there, I levered it free
with a squelching tug that snapped like a cork. Stevie stopped mov-
ing, the hands twitched, the ribs heaved, only the blood kept on mov-
ing outwards and downwards and out there towards continental
Europe. Then a few bubbles of the last bit of oxygen escaping from his
lungs and that was it. Stevie was gone.
I took one last heave and pushed them into the inky black void. There
was a second of silence then a splash.
154
Lauren Frenz
Lauren works hard for a living doing things she’d rather not talk
about. Nothing exciting or illegal, just boring.
Manchester is a fine place to live for now and she kills time by writing.
Maybe one day something good will happen.
155
SADIE
Big Dave Malheureuse walked into the café wearing a huge black
Paul Smith overcoat and an exasperated expression. He found
Sadie’s table, sat down and spread fat banana hands on the Formica.
Dave sighed. It couldn’t carry on like this.
“Sadie doll, what the fuck you playing at?” Sympathetic was not what
he did well.
“What’s the matter? Not got the balls to kill a woman?”
Dave handed back his fee wrapped up in a Tesco carrier bag. She
pushed it right back at him.
FLASH
Sadie’s walking down the street. She’s out shopping, spending that
fee, the cold hard cash she’s blowing on herself, trying to make her-
self feel that somehow she’s worth it; but it isn’t working. There still
lurks that dread, that wondering why she bothers and if living is noth-
ing more than just wading through treacle then what is the point?
It’s a quiet day at the shopping mall, but people still bustle, carrier
bags in hand, oblivious to everything but themselves. Shopping malls
aren’t healthy places for Sadie right now so she heads to the railway
station, a vague notion of travel in her mind. Down the street she
walks, takes a short cut down an alley.
She stops, there’s a guy there and he ain’t looking good. The blood
has gone from his flesh, black encircles his eyes, and crack twitches
his bones. He sees the bag and somehow senses what’s in there. In
an extravagant arc, he pulls out a knife, and waves it like a hypnotist.
156
It looks right for him, broken down, no handle, serrated edge, rusty. It
barely works, but it does, just enough.
“Money, fucking money.” It’s like he’s had a jolt of electricity whacked
through him and he staggers forward. Sadie spots her opportunity,
smiles and falls forward.
FLASH
Big Dave Malheureuse walks into the ward, still wearing his black
Paul Smith overcoat and carrying a big bunch of yellow carnations in
his hand. His fat face, red with panic and burst capillaries is twitching
nervously. He’s terrified of what he’s about to see.
Dave sits in the chair beside her bed, clutching the garage bought
flowers like a nervous date. He waits for her to notice he’s there. Min-
utes turn to hours but he stays there, motionless focused on her,
mind blank, meditating on Sadie and what he can do for her. Given
his line of work there is only one thing he can do but he ain’t going to
do it.
Eventually she begins to surface. She moves and then realises some-
one’s there. She rolls towards him and Dave puts his arms out to
catch her. Sadie smiles blearily at him.
“This is your fault Dave. Leave it to an amateur and look what hap-
pens.”
Exhausted by the effort she falls back in her bed and stares glumly at
the ceiling.
157
Dave shifts uncomfortably, he feels the need to justify himself.
“If I was an accountant, I’d do your books. If I was a solicitor, I’d write
your will. If I was a priest I’d take your confession. If I was anything
else I’d do anything else for you. But I am what I am and I cannot do
this Sadie. Sadie, this is too much.”
“Mr. Soft guy huh?”
He squeezes her hand.
FLASH
Sadie’s finally made it to the railway station. Felt the need to move, go
somewhere, do something, take control. There’s a train coming and
the platform is packed. She’s wearing Dave’s overcoat on top of her
hospital bed clothes. Dave went for a coffee and she took his pre-
cious Paul Smith overcoat while he was away. Her ribs are burning
from the knife wound and she feels a dampness begin to grow as the
blood seeps through the bandage. Her bare feet are stinging from the
inadvertent tramplings she’s getting in the crush.
The train comes banging into the station, she closes her eyes and
falls forward and then……
A hand grabs the belt and pulls her back. She turns and sees Dave.
Her heart sinks, quickly replaced by a rising anger.
158
Come on gimme a break.”
FLASH
She opens a bottle of whisky and pours half into a glass. Then she
takes one of those pestle and mortars she got one year when she
fancied herself a serious cook. Into it she pours all the pills she can
find. Hangover cures, paracetamol, those pink and yellow things she
got on prescription for her depression. She grinds them all up into a
lumpy grey powder and pours it into the whisky.
FLASH
159
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