Authors: Campbell Armstrong
She'd been humiliated.
Dangerous men, all three of them. Animals.
And they were still in his house.
All night long he'd been separated from her, locked in a small storage room â but where were they keeping Meg? He'd listened hard, ear pressed to storage-room door, but he'd heard no sound of her. Once or twice there were noises from downstairs, men clumping and thumping around, going from room to room, laughing and cursing as they broke into the drinks cabinet.
But nothing from Meg.
Was she in the bedroom, miserable and alone?
Was somebody with her, guarding her, making sure she didn't try any desperate moves? The fact he had no idea escalated him to a new scary high of anxiety. He'd shouted aloud a few times, called her name, but the only response he got was when one of the men climbed the stairs and struck the door with what might have been a hammer and screamed at him to shut the fuck up and if he didn't, if another peep was heard out of him, if if â the man didn't spell out the consequences.
Montague had listened to the footsteps fade and then more clattering noises from below. He'd sat hunched in the tiny box of a room, tense and miserable hour after hour, plans rushing through his mind only to be discarded: escape the windowless storage room â but how? Rescue Meg â but only if he could free himself from his prison. Nothing came to him, and his nerves grew all the more taut. Meg, where was she? What were they doing to her?
In quieter moments, when he managed to think with any kind of lucidity, he understood the policy â separate and conquer, keep them apart and Montague would be all the more malleable and ready to meet their demand.
He rose from his desk, walked out of his office. He didn't look at the staff. He wondered if anyone was watching him. One of the gang, say. Sent here to keep an eye on him. Fine with him, he was being obedient, he wasn't doing anything stupid like secretly calling the police, he'd never jeopardize Meg. He thought of her now as he entered the locked vault where the safe-deposit boxes were stored. He'd asked to see her, just to check on her before he'd left the house that morning, and all he received was a shotgun thrust into his chest.
Do the business, you'll see her then â¦
The air in the safe-deposit vault was filtered but still stuffy. In and out, quickly. Even if he gave these animals what they wanted, he had no absolute guarantee of Meg's safety. Were they the kind of men who'd keep their word?
Fat chance, but one he had to take.
He used his emergency pass-keys to open a safe-deposit box, which he carried to a private cubicle. Inside the box he found an envelope, ordinary, brown. This everyday envelope was worth his wife's life. He had an urge to open it. He checked the seal, slipped his finger beneath it, tested the strength of the gum. He could slit this open and reseal it without anyone ever knowing.
He eased the flap open very carefully.
It contained a single sheet of paper with the typewritten words:
The Azteca Bank of Aruba. Account: 957 8671-045. Password: countdracula
. He placed the paper back in the envelope, licked what little gum remained on the flap, resealed the envelope and pressed it tight with the fingertips of his good hand. He put the envelope in the inside pocket of his jacket and stepped out of the cubicle, then returned the box to its place among all the other safe-deposit boxes.
Done.
He left the Bank, conscious of Mrs Liddle watching him from behind her desk, and he walked up Buchanan Street. He was a tangled knot of aches and pains and nerves. On St Vincent Street he headed west.
Somebody will meet you
: that was what he'd been told.
You'll hand over what you took from the Bank and go back to your office until we call you
.
Keep walking along St Vincent. How far, he didn't know. He reached the corner of Hope Street.
Hope Street: remind me of irony.
He wondered again if he was being watched. Perhaps a member of the gang had been detailed to track his movements. Or maybe there were more than three men involved, a fourth member whose task it was to make sure he did what he'd been told. He knew nothing about how gangs were structured. All he knew was that this vicious trio dictated his future. Christ, he felt such a loathing, such a burden of anxiety.
He was so absorbed by his feelings he didn't see the man who appeared at his side.
âYou got something for me?'
Montague turned. The man wore a navy blue scarf that covered his jaw and mouth. His sunglasses were impenetrable. The scarf muffled his voice. A slit allowed Montague to see that the man's cheeks were volcanoed with the pockmarks of old acne. They looked like small asteroids that had been bombarded by space debris.
âHand it over fast.'
It was suddenly of enormous importance to Montague to have reassurances. âI want to know you haven't harmed my wife.'
âShe's shipshape.'
âHow can I believe you?'
âBecause I'm fuckn telling ye.'
âThat's not good enough. I'm supposed to accept your wordâ'
âPal, it's a matter of choices. You give me what you've got for me, OK, your wife will be waiting when you get home. Intact, if you get my drift. You act in any other way, you go home to an empty house.' The man slipped a hand menacingly into his coat pocket. âAnother choice is I fuckin chiv you right here in the street, mate. Nay problem. And then you've got nothing but a big bad bleeding wound, likely fatal. And the only home you'll go to then is a funeral one.'
He imagined Meg being harmed. Or worse, made to disappear. He imagined dying in a city street, a knife in his ribs. The images ripped him apart.
He took the envelope out, and gave it to the man who glanced at it before pocketing it, and then he was gone quickly, overcoat flapping, down Hope Street in the direction of Sauchiehall and God knows where after that.
Montague walked back to the Bank. In his office he shut the door and thought, I could have tackled the man, grabbed him, dragged him to the police. In whose dreams? He'd wait until 5 p.m., then leave. He wondered why these villains needed â and here he checked his watch â another seven hours? What did they propose to do with all that time?
Of course, it might take them hours to make sure the paper was authentic. Phone calls to make, people to confer with. They might have to wait until the Azteca Bank in Aruba opened before they knew for sure that they had the genuine article. He'd never heard of the Azteca Bank. He didn't know their hours of operation. Complicated time zones might be a factor. He tapped his keyboard. The Azteca Bank had a gaudy website, all blue and gold and palm trees. He scanned it quickly.
The Azteca Bank, founded in 1987, has deposits of 13 billion dollars. Our aim is customer satisfaction, complete confidentiality, and discretion. We offer investment counselling, and professional advice on legal matters, among many other services. Contact: azteca@aruba/14.com
.
It's a money-laundering outfit, Montague thought. No phone number, no address, no opening hours.
He swallowed an aspirin and thought of Meg. He needed to hear her voice. Nobody had told him he couldn't phone the house if he wanted. He punched in six of the seven digits, then replaced the handset. If he called, he might upset these gangsters.
But Meg. God, he needed to know she was all right, if being all right was even possible in the circumstances.
He fingertipped the numbers slowly. The phone rang for a long time. What was happening in his house, what was Meg doing, what were the gangstersâ
He heard Meg's voice. âHello.'
âMeg,' he said, relieved. âAre you free to speak?'
âYes, Sammy.'
âHow are you darling?'
âFine, I'm fine.'
Fine, how could she be? âThose men, what are they doing?'
âThey've been different this morning,' she said.
âDifferent?' Did he hear somebody breathing on the extension? He wasn't sure.
âNot like yesterday.'
âI got what they wanted,' he said.
âThat's why they're pleased.'
Montague was appeased somewhat. But still unhappy. âThey haven't hurt you, have they?'
She said, âNo, nothing like that. They'll be gone before you get home.'
âAnd you ⦠you're comfortable with the situation?'
âComfortable? How could I be
comfortable
? It's better than it was yesterday, that's not saying much.'
There. He heard a tiny note of stress in her voice. Why wouldn't she be stressed in this situation, for heaven's sake?
âWhen you come home, all this will be behind us. And we'll forget, won't we?'
âWe will, I promise. We'll go away for a few days. Somewhere nice.' He adored her. âI loveâ'
The connection was cut. He imagined a man's hand tugging the wire from the wall.
He took another aspirin. Seven hours, counting down.
22
Perlman napped fitfully in the armchair, and opened his eyes only when Betty shook his shoulders.
âI've been up for ages,' she said. She had a blanket draped over her shoulders. âIt was my place to go to the morgue, not yours. I didn't have the courage. I couldn't look at him.'
âCourage doesn't come into it.' His mouth was dry. Betty followed him inside the kitchen where he filled a glass from the tap and drank it in one long swallow.
âI backed out. I was a coward. You saw him. Now it's my turn. A mother should see her son.' She lit a cigarette.
Maybe not, Perlman thought, and drew a second glass of water. âThey're going to need a family member to make the formal identification. I tried getting in touch with Kirk's wife, but I couldn't track her downâ'
âNo, I don't want
her
to go before me. Kirk never loved her.'
âIf that's what you want.'
âIt's what I
need
, Lou.' She made a flustered gesture with her hands, as if fumbling for something in the air. Cigarette smoke wafted into her eyes and stung. âFuck.
Fuck
.' She leaned over the sink and splashed water into her eyes then dried her face with a paper towel.
Perlman listened to the squeak of the old tap and wondered how he could prepare Betty for the morgue. This was once your wee boy, Betty. Now he's skin and bone, opened up and restitched, in a cold box.
âI'll come with you,' he said.
âI'm grateful, Lou, but I need to do this on my own.'
A mother looks at her dead son and indescribable emotions churn through her â feelings beyond Perlman's experience. He didn't have the biological equipment, he hadn't carried a child, hadn't established that bond, he wasn't even a
father
.
This was more than a dead son, this was a butchered carcass.
âLet me drive you there,' he said.
âNo, I'll take my own car.'
You couldn't break down her obstinacy if she'd made her mind up. He realized that much about her. âI could call you a taxi.'
âI'll drive myself, Lou.'
He held her a moment, then he walked with her to the front door. He needed to prepare her. There was no way he'd let her leave, not knowing. She opened the front door.
âWait, Betty. Just wait. Before you go.' He put his hands on her shoulders and looked directly at her.
âTell me what it is, Lou,' she said.
He tried to pick his words.
You're not going to find him as you might expect, Betty. He was cut
â
She interrupted. âHe was stabbed, is that what you mean?'
âNo, it's more than thatâ'
âHow more? They cut his face?'
Perlman shook his head. There was no simple way to say it aloud. He fumbled to make a compassionate sentence out of words that had no mercy. He heard himself speak as if novocained.
She buckled, and Perlman caught her, held her against his body. âOh dear God, oh dear God, no, no â¦'
âI'll come with you, Betty.'
She pushed him away fiercely, as if to say she could stand on her own two feet, she didn't need anyone else to do things for her. She looked stricken and lost and yet utterly determined to maintain one small space inside her that was intact â even if it was already beginning to crumble. She ran toward her car, an old brown Mini with a faded gold racing-stripe. He went after her, calling out her name, but she didn't turn back. He waited until she'd driven out of sight before he shut the front door and listlessly gathered the few items of mail that lay on the floor. An electricity bill. A TV licence reminder. A credit card statement. He tossed the post back on the floor.
His phone rang, and he went into the living room to answer it.
âMeet me,' Scullion said.
âWhere and when.'
âI've got a quiet place in mind.'
23
Perlman had never been inside Glasgow Cathedral. He'd passed it almost every day of his life, but he'd never entered it. Some hangover from childhood. Good Christian Germans had murdered his relatives in camps â Ephraim never quit drumming the holocaust into him. He looked up at the spire, idling before he went inside. A morning of rare sunshine gave the dark grey steeple a bright clarity. He pictured monks wandering around here through the centuries, chanting, praying, growing things â whatever else monks did.
Maybe he needed a church today. Maybe he'd find some form of uplift. He never prayed, but perhaps he could find it in himself to offer up a few silent thoughts about Betty.
Inside, the cathedral was as huge and hushed as a god's heart. No city traffic could be heard. The long stained-glass windows, etched in rich colour, magnetized him. In the nave, his eye followed a line of stone arches which supported a second arched storey. Higher, there was a vaulted ceiling that suggested impenetrable mysteries. He was surprised: in the centre of this rowdy city a lovely sanctuary of tranquillity he'd never known.