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Authors: Mia Dolan

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BOOK: Wishing and Hoping
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‘That man has a bad reputation,' Jacob Solomon had said. He'd raised one bushy black eyebrow as he'd said it, which made him seem as though he only had one eye, the other eye was habitually hidden behind an unruly fringe. Solomon always looked as if he needed a haircut and as if he were wearing someone else's suit. But despite his casual appearance, Jacob Solomon was an excellent lawyer and he rarely missed a trick.

‘I'm not letting him muscle in.'

Jacob had nodded sagely. ‘Very noble.'

‘You don't approve?'

‘Of course I do. But I fear that our friend Mr Rafferty is not noble. I fear he will use ignoble means to get your compliance – or more specifically, your property.'

Michael nodded. ‘I hear he's a man who bears grudges.'

Jacob Solomon had pursed his lips and fallen silent.
Michael took that to mean that he too had heard the rumour that the wife and children of the last man to refuse a ‘business partnership' had died in a house fire. Person or persons unknown had poured petrol through their letterbox and set it ablaze. The police had failed to find the perpetrators and there was no evidence that Rafferty was involved. Paddy Rafferty had ended up with the property after the owner had committed suicide. A spurious contract of agreement had turned up from somewhere.

Jacob Solomon had left quietly after warning Michael to be careful.

Sitting in his favourite seat by the window, he considered what Rafferty's next move might be. He'd insulted the man as well as turning down his approach and no matter what he would still do it again. He'd worked hard to get his business up and running and nobody – absolutely nobody – was going to take a quarter, let alone a half, away from him.

He watched the action across the road. People came and went into the club – men and women. They didn't really register; he was that absorbed in his thoughts.

He didn't jerk out of them until the door opened and Jimmy was there. He'd been so preoccupied, he hadn't seen him cross the road.

‘Boss. There's some woman wants to see you. She says it's personal.'

Michael looked up in time to see a tall brunette wearing a pink chiffon headscarf and matching lipstick pushing through the door.

‘I told her to wait in your office, boss . . .' Jimmy protested.

The woman pushed past him. A cloud of what seemed to be expensive perfume fell over him along with the smell of face powder and hair lacquer.

‘You bastard,' she screamed, pointing her finger at Michael. ‘You got me up the duff and now you don't want to know me. Had your fun and now don't want to take the responsibility.'

Aldo came out from behind the counter. Everyone, customers and waiters alike, stared open-mouthed, drawn by the sight and sound of the woman.

Michael's face drained of colour as he half rose from the table. ‘What the hell . . .?'

Linda Bell was enjoying this and well into her stride. She'd always been a drama queen, and now she had her sights on an acting career. She was playing the part for all it was worth.

‘Don't you give me that, Mickey bloody Jones. You was always coming on to me at the Red Devil. Said I turned you on and persisted even when I kept turning you down. Well, now look at me,' she said, patting the faint rise in her belly where she'd had the foresight this time to tape a small cushion. ‘You'll pay for this, Michael Jones. It's your kid and you're going to pay for it.'

Michael got to his feet. ‘You lying cow!'

‘So what's this, bleedin' Scotch mist?' she yelled, pointing a painted fingernail at her stomach.

Michael grabbed her. ‘You lying bitch!'

‘Oh yeah! I was a lying cow just now and now I'm a lying bitch. That's what they all say. Had yer fun and now you don't want to know.'

She tried to wriggle free, but Michael was having none of it. He held her chin so she had to look up into his face.

‘I know who put you up to this, Linda. Tell Rafferty it isn't going to work. Like you he's nothing but a fucking amateur.' He threw her away from him.

Linda Bell looked frightened. Few people ever saw Michael angry, but he was certainly angry now.

She rallied for a moment. ‘Well, just you wait until your wife finds out. We'll see what she's got to say about it Michael bloody Jones, you smug sod . . .'

Michael grabbed her again and dragged her to the door.

‘Get out! Get out and stay away from me and mine. And tell that Irish idiot, Rafferty, to do the same.'

‘Let go of me,' she shouted, her arms flailing and her handbag socking him on the chin. ‘Let go of me, you vicious bastard. Wait till your wife hears about this. I'll tell her. You bet that I'll tell her!'

With one determined effort, Michael grabbed hold of her right wrist then her left. His eyes bored into
hers. He was aware that Aldo and the other customers in the trattoria had fallen to silence and were watching him with spellbound anticipation but he couldn't help himself.

‘Get this straight. If you dare go with your lying tales to my wife, I'll kill you! I'll fucking kill you!'

Chapter Ten

MARCIE BROOKS SAT
numbly following Linda Bell's visit. For all her bravado about facing Michael while that tart had been there, after Linda had left she hadn't had the energy or the courage to make a move.

‘How do I play it?' she asked Allegra.

Allegra was nibbling at her thumb. At the same time she was eyeing Marcie worriedly. ‘I don't know what to say.'

‘I'm not asking you whether it's true or not. All I'm asking is how do I play it? Do I face him out or do I ignore the whole thing? Is it worth getting into a row about something that might have happened or might not?'

Allegra stopped nibbling her thumb. She was surprised that Marcie could be so forgiving – if indeed there was anything to forgive.

‘I would say nothing. To err is human,' said Allegra. ‘Michael is basically a good man and you two have a good marriage. Marriage may be a union sanctioned by God and His Holy Church, but that doesn't make it perfect. And humans are not perfect.'

Marcie watched her children playing on the floor.
Aran was so like his father. So was Joanna, if it came to that. She wondered briefly how marriage to Johnnie might have been. But the thought was fleeting and no longer caused her the pain it had once. Michael was her main concern. He was the man she loved.

She sighed. ‘It hurts, but I don't want to split up over this.'

‘Then don't mention it unless he does.'

‘You don't think he might confess?'

‘He might, but to a priest not to you.'

Allegra's words were surprisingly calming. Marcie decided not to mention anything to Sally who might be more belligerent about it. Sally had many lovers but no husband. All the same she took a dim view of men who cheated on their wives.

Marcie found the whole thing hard to accept. Why was it she couldn't find it in her heart to hate her husband for what he'd allegedly done?

Because at heart you don't believe it, she told herself. At heart you still believe that he's the man you married, loyal and loving.

The moment she came across an empty telephone box, Linda Bell reported back to Paddy Rafferty as agreed. ‘That's my girl,' he said, sounding as though he were smiling at the phone.

Linda glowed with gratitude as though she were taking an encore on a West End stage not standing
in a phone box which smelled of urine and cigarette ends and was littered with postcards advertising various services: ‘French Polishing – reasonable rates'; ‘School Mistress. Disciplined lessons.'

No more of that for me, thought Linda. She was on the up and nothing could stop her now.

‘How did Jones take it?'

She hesitated, thought about gilding the lily a bit by lying, then decided to tell the truth. Rafferty might be grateful for that.

‘He gave me a message. He said tell that bog Irish idiot Rafferty that I'll kill him if he ever comes near me and mine.'

She could almost hear the rumble of his anger down the phone.

‘Did he now,' Rafferty growled.

She imagined his face turning red, just like it did when he was putting it into her. He always got hot and red in the face when he was in bed with a girl or two.

‘He said he'd kill me too if I went to his wife and told her.'

‘Where did he say this?'

‘In a café. In front of everybody.'

‘So there were a lot of witnesses?'

‘Yes,' she said. ‘There were.' She frowned. The pips would go soon if she didn't get to the point and she didn't have any more pennies to put into the slot. There was only one question on her mind.

‘So! When do I get paid?' she asked, as she slipped the cushion out from beneath her clothes and let it drop to the grubby floor.

Paddy's response came surprisingly quickly. ‘Corner of Cobden Street, down by the gas works, tonight round about eleven. I'll send Baxter along with it.'

Linda frowned. The time and location weren't exactly to her liking. Besides the gas works, the only other places of note down there were a couple of scrapyards surrounded by a fence of corrugated tin. Populated it was not. Deserted in fact at that time of night. Meeting anyone there was unnerving. She decided to check that she'd heard right.

‘Cobden Street? It's a bit late to be down there at that time of night.'

‘Well, we don't want anyone knowing you were putting on a show, do we, girl? Don't want any shady dealings affecting your prospects, do we?'

Linda had been fired from the last club she'd worked at for lifting the wallet of a drunken client. She hadn't taken it seriously when the club manager, an elegant black guy named Leroy, had told her that things were run pretty straight as per the boss's instructions. She'd disbelieved him and paid the price. Now she was getting her own back. Victor Camilleri had owned that club. As far as she was concerned, Michael Jones was his son and therefore as deserving of her revenge as his father was. Linda had a warped view of justice.

‘I suppose it'll be all right,' she said, while thinking of how she was going to spend the money. One hundred pounds! A shopping trip along Oxford Street was most definitely on the cards. She might even venture up west and go in Harrods. A hundred pounds could buy her something really classy.

Paddy put down the phone and gritted his teeth over the Churchill-size cigar he favoured, rolling it over his tongue to the corner of his mouth.

‘Stupid cow.' He looked up at Baxter. ‘That bastard Jones threatened to kill me and then threatened to kill her. A bad mistake.'

‘How's that, boss?' said Baxter.

Rafferty grinned like a snake about to swallow its dinner. ‘He said it in front of witnesses.'

Baxter didn't need his boss to explain things further. He knew where this was going. Paddy Rafferty was only cool up to a point. Once somebody insulted, crossed him or turned him down on a deal – a deal that was in his favour – they were dead meat. Michael Jones had done all three. Paddy Rafferty was out for a sudden and very cruel revenge.

Their eyes met in mutual understanding. Baxter was as cold as Rafferty but like a bullet he had to be aimed at his target.

‘She'll be there at eleven tonight. You know what to do?'

Baxter nodded. Of stocky build, Baxter had an inconspicuous air about him. He wasn't handsome, he wasn't huge and neither was he that imposing. In short he was the sort of bloke people didn't really notice. In the past he had been a freelance contractor known to every high-flying criminal in London. If any of them had wanted to get rid of someone, he was the man they hired. Nobody knew for certain how many people he'd killed in his time, and no one was counting. He was a convenience who'd never been found out – not for murder anyway.

Charlie Baxter had been working for Paddy since coming out from his last term in the ‘Scrubs'. Paddy had been the only bloke to give him a chance even though he knew what he'd gone in for. Baxter hung about in lavatories waiting for willing men. Something about that turned the stomachs of some, but Paddy had given him a chance, providing he kept on the straight and narrow, went along to the counselling sessions and took the tablets – bromide mostly – same as Paddy himself had taken in his National Service days. He sometimes thought it was the best thing he'd ever got from the army. The rest of it was all bullshit as far as he was concerned. He still had contacts there; handy if he ever wanted a gun, which sometimes – just sometimes – he did.

The smell of grilled steak with all the trimmings filled Marcie's kitchen. She loved cooking for Michael when it was just the two of them. He'd even brought home a bottle of wine.

Together they'd put the kids to bed. Marcie loved that too. It wasn't often they got to do it what with him working some nights making sure the club staff were doing their jobs properly.

Friday night was usually a busy night so it had come as a complete surprise that he'd rang earlier and said he fancied a quiet night in.

‘It's Friday. You're not usually home on a Friday.'

‘I felt like a change. I fancy spending some time with my missus. Is that OK?'

His tone was a little sharp, but she didn't react. There was no point in looking for trouble or indeed a gift horse in the mouth. She'd love to have him home. If he was here he wasn't seeing the Linda Bells of this world was he?

The feeling that she'd been stabbed in the heart was still there, but she'd determined the subject would not be mentioned. Like a lot of bad things in her life, it would be brushed from her memory – at least she hoped it would.

Allegra's serenity had helped her come to terms with the shock. It was early days but she was sure she would get over it. She
had
to get over it for her children's sake.

She smiled at him brightly when he came into the room after reading a bedtime story to Joanna and taking a look in on Aran.

BOOK: Wishing and Hoping
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