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Authors: Ted Lewis

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BOOK: GBH
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“Hello, Arthur,” I said.

“Mr. Fowler, look—”

“In a minute or two,” I told him. “Come inside first.”

Behind him, Mickey began to move forward, and when Mickey does that—if you’re in front of him—you have no option but to move forward as well, which is what Arthur Philips did. I turned away and Arthur followed me along the hall and into the room. Mickey closed the door behind us all.

“Hello, Jean,” Arthur said.

“Arthur,” Jean replied.

I stood next to the card table.

“Like a drink, Arthur?”

“Yeah, George. Yeah. I’ll have a scotch.”

I poured him a scotch.

“Anything with it?”

“No, thanks. As it comes.”

I handed him his drink.

“Thanks.”

He knocked off half of it in one go.

“Want to sit down, Arthur?”

Now Arthur was no longer able to avoid looking at the solitary chair.

“Look, Mr. Fowler, I shouldn’t be here at all. Not at all. There’s nothing I can tell you.”

Mickey Brice went over to the chair and shifted it a couple of inches, underlining the point of my request to Arthur. Arthur knocked off the remainder of his scotch and went and sat down. Mickey Brice remained standing behind the chair. From his new vantage point, Arthur now had a better view of the accessories that lay beside the aluminum bucket.

“Why don’t you start by giving us what you can?” I said, refilling his glass.

Again, Arthur swallowed the first half.

“You know what I can tell you.”

“Why not tell us again?”

Jean walked over to the card table and topped herself up. Arthur breathed in deeply.

“Well. Of course, I know all about the job, I mean. There was Lenny White, Tommy Coleman, Maurice Hutton, Billy McClean. So the job goes right. Well, it would, with them on it, wouldn’t it? And the finance, well, it had to come from you, with that pedigree, right? Your law knows that, and the Heroes, they know it, too. They know who to collar, but of course they can’t, it being Sellotaped up, as always is.”

Arthur punctuated his monologue with another belt of scotch.

“But the Heroes pull in Tommy Coleman anyway, and it’s not just for show because they roll out two witnesses contradicting the time and location of Tommy’s fairy tale. So he’s still down there and him and the Heroes are still talking to each other.”

“Which leads us to suppose?”

“Well, whoever the convener is, it’s got to be one of the workers. Somebody what knows what the rest of the community knows.”

“That’s right. So why should one of the workers want to speak out against the union?”

Nothing from Arthur except silence.

“Arthur?”

“Well, one of the Heroes could go to one of the workers in the way they sometimes do, and say to the worker, look, I know you weren’t on that job, but it was your
kind
of job, and you know who was on it, and if I wanted to, I could fit you up for being on the job you weren’t on, so how about it?”

There was no response from any of us. Arthur broke the silence by downing the remains of his drink.

“Give Arthur another one, Mickey,” I said.

Mickey took the glass from Arthur’s hand and as he walked to the card table he brushed against the wires that hung down from the central light socket. They swayed towards Arthur. He leant away from them as though they were poisonous snakes about to strike. Which, in a manner of speaking, they were.

Mickey gave Arthur his glass back.

“Well, that’s what you told Mickey previously,” I said. “Which is fair enough, because I said you could do that. But now I’d like to hear a different story.”

“I can’t tell you anything else,” Arthur said, looking into my face. “Honest.”

“You haven’t got a different story?”

Arthur shook his head.

“Pity.”

I went over to the drinks and poured myself another one. The silence in the room was terrific. I splashed ginger ale on top of the whisky.

“Take your pants off, Arthur.”

“Mr. Fowler,” Arthur said, “I’m straight up. Honest I am.”

“Do it for him,” I told Mickey.

“Listen—”

Mickey cut Arthur’s sentence short by going to work on him. When I turned round from the table Arthur’s trousers and underpants were round his knees. Mickey took the glass from Arthur’s hand and put it back on the card table and then he picked up the short strands of rope from next to the bucket and tied Arthur’s ankles to the chair legs and his arms behind the chair back. After he’d done that Mickey moved the bucket a little closer to where Arthur was, causing a few drops of water to jump over the bucket’s rim and slop down on to the bare floorboards. Then Mickey taped Arthur’s mouth shut with some gauze and plaster.

“We’ll give it a go with the gag a couple of times, Arthur,” said Mickey Brice. “You’ll scream, and you’ll want us to take it off so we’ll be able to hear you scream and tell Mr. Fowler what he wants to know. But we won’t do that at first. Like I say, we’ll give it a couple or three goes so you can get used to it.”

Mickey took his gloves from his pocket and put them on, then gathered the dangling wires to him, taking hold of them not quite at their naked ends. I was suddenly conscious of Jean’s perfume as she moved very quietly to stand by my side. Now the games were over.

THE SEA

E
VEN
J
EAN DOESN

T KNOW
about the bungalow.

Didn’t know.

It’s been in existence for seven years. Nobody in the area knows who it belongs to. Not even the builder, nor the agent I went through. Of course there was a name on the cheques they got, nice cheques that encouraged them to comply with my specifications and furnishings and deadlines. I’ve only been here four times since it was built, which in a way is a pity; it’s really very nice indeed. And when I’m not in residence, the arrangement is that the agent takes care of its maintenance. When I am, a phone call tells him not to, and another phone call reactivates him when I’ve gone.

In the specifications the safe was naturally of extreme importance, as was the cellar. Over the phone the agent once asked jokingly, when he was informed of the cellar’s specifications, if I knew something about the state of détente the President of the United States didn’t. I didn’t mind him having his little joke. But I did tell him that I considered the amount of money he was being paid entitled me to the rights in his material. After that he maintained a seriousness appropriate to the business in hand.

From the outside, the place doesn’t look much, what you can see of it beyond the remains of the copse. There are two bedrooms. The lounge runs the whole length of the house, the side that faces east, looking over the lumpy flatness of the gorse
and the mild ripples of the sand dunes beyond and the unseen lapping of the sea made distant by the enormous expanse of unmarked sand that stretches a quarter of a mile from the dunes before it is troubled by the sea’s first overlap. All this seen and unseen is witnessed through a window of dimensions similar to the one in the Penthouse. Only the aspects are different.

When you walk into the lounge, this window is to your left, but its sill, if you are of average height, about a foot above your eye level. But then when you cross the room’s first space and climb the broad open-tread staircase to the room’s second, broader level, the base of the window is level with the welts of your shoes, if you’re wearing any. Academic, really. After the builders had gone home, myself apart, only the agent and the agent’s man had ever set foot in the place.

Now, from this new elevation, you would be able to glimpse, beneath the soaring eastern light, the sea, made narrow by the preceding breadth of flatness of gorse and beach. And having gained the room’s higher level, at the room’s far end, you would be faced by brickwork, wall to wall, ceiling to floor and, in this wall, a small open fireplace, aluminium trimmed. The only other break in this wall’s deliberate monotony is a four-foot-by-three-foot painting by Allan Jones and a narrow cupboard door beyond which is a trolley that supports two movie projectors, a sixteen-millimetre and an eight-millimetre. Ranged close to this wall, almost huddled around the fireplace in deference to the impression of coldness caused by the room’s lengthy perspectives, is most of the room’s limited furniture, low and comfortable. The wall on the right of the room is covered by a shelving unit, which extends from the brick wall to the edge of the drop down into the room’s lower level. Apart from a couple of hundred books which, despite the central heating, provide the room’s only impression of concentrated warmth, this shelving also supports the drinks supply, the TV and the stereo unit with all its records and tapes. Just in front
of this shelving unit is a jet-black grand piano parked almost at the brink of the drop into the lower level and directly beneath the room’s raised level is the bungalow’s garage, at present housing an unostentatious Marina.

On the brick wall, close to where it converges with the shelving unit, is a small panel of switches, one of which operates the movie screen that slides down from the ceiling if you want it to.

At the moment, I don’t want it to.

I climb the open-tread stairs and go over to where the drinks are and pour myself a scotch and look at Jean’s photograph, which I’d forced myself to take from my briefcase and place on the piano a couple of days before.

Up until now, I’ve avoided looking at it, just as I’d put off taking it out of the briefcase.

The photograph is one I’d taken a few years ago, on our honeymoon, the first time she’d seen the villa in Minorca. She’d been standing by the edge of the pool naked, poised for diving in, and I’d called her name, causing her to turn, but she had already too much momentum from the intended dive and I’d snapped the shutter just as she was going into the point of no return between the edge of the pool and the water. Her laugh is frozen in the warmth of the Spanish sunlight.

I take a drink of my scotch and then stop looking at the picture and walk over to the window and look at sunshine of a different kind as the March wind blusters across the broadness of the sky and the sea beneath.

THE SMOKE

I
N THE LIFT UP
to the Penthouse, Jean was quiet and tense. She held on to me as if I provided some kind of stabilising quality, as though I was supporting her against some form of vertigo. Although there was no longer any need to discuss what Arthur had told us, the course of action cut and dried and needing only implementation, the silence was not for lack of subject matter; in fact just the opposite. Perhaps the expression of our mutual thoughts could not be achieved fully by mere conversation.

The lift stopped, the doors slid softly apart and we stepped out on to the private landing. Below, very faintly, the sounds of the club murmured upwards like the sound of very well-oiled, precision-engineered machinery. Jean still clung on to my arm as we crossed the landing.

Gerry Hatch rose from the landing’s only piece of furniture, a sand-coloured hide armchair. He left the copy of
The Ring
behind him on the dimpled seat.

“Mr. Fowler,” he said. “Mrs. Fowler.”

He took out his own set of keys and unlocked the double doors that opened directly on to the main room of the Penthouse. He closed them behind us and went back to wait for Ernie Hildreth, the night shift.

I stood just inside the doorway and took off my overcoat. Jean had halted at the top of the steps that led down into the sunken central area of the room, her coat still draped round
her shoulders, a negative silhouette against the blackness of the picture window that composed the entire wall opposite her, a window that always seemed a carpark’s length away. Lights decorated the rain-speckled glass like paint splashes on an abstract. I joined her at the top of the steps and draped my overcoat over the retaining rail. On the low glass table in the centre of the sunken area, Harold had left salad and a choice of rare beef or chicken, and also champagne.

“You all right?” I asked.

Jean didn’t answer. Instead she walked down the steps and sat down in the deepness of one of the long hide sofas that were fitted flush to the area’s sides. She sat crouched forward a little as if she had stomach ache, or was cold. The coat was still draped round her shoulders and she stared at the food on the table in front of her.

I walked down the steps and took the champagne from the bucket, flipped the cork and poured some of it into the glasses.

“Your very good health,” I said to her.

No response.

“Or should I say to our continuing good health, in view of information received?”

Instead of picking up her glass and drinking, Jean tore one of the legs off the chicken, studying it for a moment before beginning to eat.

I drank my champagne and poured some more. Then I walked over to the phone and lifted the receiver.

“What are you doing?” Jean said.

“Calling Collins. Why?”

“Do it later.”

“You what?”

Jean put the chicken leg down on the table, stood up and walked over to me. Her coat was still round her shoulders and her lips shone with grease from the chicken. She put her hand between my legs.

“Now,” she said.

“I don’t want to miss him.”

Her grip tightened on me.

“No. Do it to me now.”

She was still chewing and a sliver of chicken spilled from the corner of her mouth but neither stopped her from kissing me and putting her arms round my neck and bending her legs so that her dead weight began to overbalance me and tug me down to the floor. I fell on top of her and her legs closed tightly together and then began to slither against me frantically in expectant ecstasy. Her hands almost ripped my zip apart.

“Do it now,” she said. “For Christ’s sake.”

THE SEA

I
COME TO THE
end of the lane that leads through the gorse to the sand dunes. Then the lane becomes a concrete path that the Ministry of Defence has laid to give access between the dunes to the beach beyond. I automatically read again the sign that warns that if the red flag is flying so is the RAF, strafing the shells of old tanks and army lorries that are dotted around on the beach’s vastness. Today the flag is not being flown.

BOOK: GBH
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