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Authors: John Lambshead

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CHAPTER 3
FRANKIE

The various editions of the
A to Z
are the Londoner’s bible. The pages contain a comprehensive index and grid map to every street in the vast sprawling city. Rhian used it to find a subway under the dual carriageway and followed its guidance in the maze of streets north of the tube station. Vernon Road was a cul-de-sac, which ran off a side road that came off another side road in a sort of spiral. She followed the roads around, taking the route that a car would have to follow. She suspected that there would be a shorter footpath somewhere, but the
A to Z
did not always see fit to show those.

Vernon Road consisted of rows of four-story terraced houses that were at least a century old, Edwardian or maybe Victorian. They had been originally built for the wealthy middle classes. The front door was up a flight of steps, under which were what had been servants’ quarters. Of course, over the years the properties had all been converted into small flats and blocks of bedsits. The wealthy middle classes had long since fled the city and moved out to the rural bliss of the Home Counties around Greater London.

She scanned the newspaper to remind herself of the exact address and checked off the numbers on the houses as she walked down the road. Number three was right at the end; there did not seem to be a number one. The house was behind a handkerchief-sized, but neatly cared for, front garden. Three-A was the basement flat. It had its own front door at the bottom of a small flight of steps to the side of the building.

Rhian knocked on an ornate and truly hideous brass knocker shaped like a lion’s face. After a brief pause the door swung open, decisively propelled by a tall woman in a long skirt and blouse in autumn colors. They were cut in an “East European peasant style” that had been fashionable a couple of years ago. She peered at Rhian through large strong glasses that completely distorted her eyes. She looked old to Rhian, almost as old as Gary.

“You must be the girl about the room?” the woman asked in a middle-class southern English accent.

“Yes,” Rhian replied.

The woman cocked her head on one side, causing light brown frizzy hair to drift across her face.

“I thought you were Welsh when I spoke to you on the phone,” she said, looking at Rhian’s dark hair.

Rhian sighed. She had worked hard at losing her Welsh lilt in exchange for a typical London accent, but everyone still identified her as from the valleys after only a few words.

“That’s an interesting door knocker,” Rhian said, for want of anything more intelligent to say.

She felt a strange aversion to the knocker that surprised her. Why an inanimate object should bother her so was a mystery. Its blank bronze eyes stared at her as if alive. She almost had a compulsion to make her excuses and walk away.

“It’s a copy of the 1154 a.d. Norman sanctuary knocker from the north door of Durham Cathedral,” the woman said, with the pedantic precision of a scholar.

“I see,” said Rhian, who did not see at all. It was beyond her why anyone should go to the trouble of fitting such a monstrosity.

“If you rapped on this knocker to request entry and confessed your crimes, then you were absolved of sin and allowed to go free. Have you any crimes that you wish to confess?”

“I don’t think so,” Rhian replied, smiling politely.

“Come in anyway,” said the woman.

Rhian’s air of unease evaporated as if an invisible barrier had been removed, and the woman ushered her into a long corridor with high ceilings. The knocker was just an inanimate lump of metal moulded into an unattractive shape. All the rest was her over active imagination.

Like most London properties, the house was much deeper than wide, the layout allowing builders to cram in as many properties as possible along the street.

“My name’s Francisca Appleyard. Everyone but my mother calls me Frankie.” She held out her hand.

“I’m Rhian Jones.”

Rhian took the woman’s hand, consciously making herself squeeze. A supervisor had once cruelly told her that she had a handshake like a dead haddock. It was part of his petty revenge for being turned down.

“Drop your bags here and I’ll show you around,” Frankie said. She pushed open the first door on the left. “This is the lounge.”

The room was comfortably furnished with a sofa and a red leather swivel chair. The furniture looked expensive but was showing signs of wear. Light came in through a large window, which opened onto the basement well at the front of the house. Looking up, Rhian could see the small garden and the street. Net curtains prevented people on the pavement from looking in, so the window was like a two-way mirror. A bulky TV set stood in a corner away from the window. It had been an expensive state-of-the-art device when new but was now obsolete. Rhian had the impression of declining fortunes, or maybe Frankie had bought second hand. Bookcases and cupboards lined the walls right up to the ceiling.

“You would have free access to this room,” Frankie said. “I am the only other person in the house. This is my bedroom here.”

She pushed open a door to a room at the rear of the house that was larger than the sitting room. A double bed took pride of place in the center. This room was lined with shelves carrying books and strange objets d’art. Rhian was struck by an ornate mask carved from polished dark wood.

“Nor’ombo chieftain’s death mask,” said Frankie, following Rhian’s gaze. She clicked her tongue in the middle of the name. Rhian wasn’t sure whether the woman was making a joke. Rhian put a polite half smile on her face, as she didn’t want to appear stupid.

Frankie drew back long ceiling-to-floor drapes at the back of the bedroom to reveal French windows.

“The garden out there is mine as well, and you are welcome to use it. I am afraid that the only way in is through my bedroom, but that shouldn’t be a problem during the day. I like to sit out and read in good weather, but I advise you not to sunbathe
au naturelle.
The old boy upstairs has a pair of binoculars and is a bit of a perv. The bathroom is over there,” Frankie said pointing to a door on the right. “There is another door into it from the hall.”

She took Rhian back out into the hall to demonstrate.

“The kitchen is in here,” she opened the door on a modern kitchenette with wall-mounted storage, “and this is the guest room.”

The spare bedroom door wouldn’t open fully because of the bed in the way. Frankie had to slide round it, moving further in so that Rhian could follow.

“It’s a bit small,” Frankie said, defensively, “but it’s warm and cozy, and you’ve the run of the rest of the flat.”

The room was indeed small; the wardrobe doors couldn’t be fully opened either because of the bed, but it was warm and freshly decorated in bright, friendly colors. A window at the end let in natural light and gave a pleasant view of the garden.

Something strange happened to Rhian in the little room. She saw the world in color again for the first time in ages as if someone had switched on a floodlight. No, that was not quite right because she had recognized colors, distinguishing red from green, but emotionally they had all been shades of grey. Her world had been shades of grey since James—she bit down on the emotion—since the terrible night she lost James. Something about the little room lifted her soul.

“The room is lovely,” said Rhian, genuinely pleased.

“Good! Let’s have a cup of tea and discuss terms,” Frankie said.

Rhian sat on a stool in the kitchen and watched Frankie go through the English tea ceremony. She used a large china teapot shaped like a country cottage.

“The rent is three hundred and eighty pounds a calendar month, about ninety quid a week. Is that okay? It does include everything.” Frankie said, anxiously, watching Rhian carefully.

Rhian considered. It would be tight, but the bar work would tide her through until she could find a better job. She smiled at Frankie, “That will be fine.”

“I’d like one month’s rent in advance as a deposit,” Frankie said.

“Oh!” said Rhian.

She took out the envelope and counted the money twice. However she rearranged the notes, she could not make the deposit.

“How much have you got?” said Frankie, sipping her tea.

“Two hundred and ten pounds.”

Frankie sighed. “And you will need something to live on until payday. Give me ninety quid and we’ll call it quits.”

Rhian handed over a ten and four twenties, and helped herself to milk. “Have you had many other tenants?” she asked, politely.

“One or two,” said Frankie, evasively. “Sugar? No? Is that how you keep so slim, dear?”

Frankie shoveled two spoonfuls into her own mug. “I’ve been a bit unlucky with lodgers,” Frankie admitted. “They tend to move on quickly.”

“Have you lived here long?” Rhian asked, to fill a gap in the conversation.

“My partner and I lived here for some years,” Frankie said.

“Ah,” Rhian said, neutrally.

“Don’t worry, dear. It’s all ancient history now. He announced that he needed to find himself, so he went on a solo bus tour across North America.”

“Did he find himself?” asked Rhian.

“I don’t know because I haven’t seen him since. According to a postcard from Nevada, he did find a nineteen-year-old blonde lap dancer called Suze ‘with an
e
.’ She thought that his English accent was cute.”

Frankie said the last few words through gritted teeth. She looked at Rhian and blushed.

“Well, maybe it is not quite yet ancient history.” She grinned at Rhian. “Unfortunately I had resigned from my job at about the same time to go freelance, so this household went from two reliable salaries to one slightly dodgy income. So now, Miss Jones, I have need of a tenant.”

Frankie grimaced. “Sorry, what am I doing pouring out my woes to a stranger? Do you have any personal disasters that you might want to relate in retaliation?”

Rhian had a flashback. The doctors had warned her about them. She wasn’t in Frankie’s kitchen any more but on a building site. James lay still on the ground, head turned showing a terrible gash. His blood was black in the moonlight.

She snapped out of it. Frankie gazed at her waiting for an answer.

“No,” Rhian replied quickly. She took another sip from her mug. “Would your employer not have taken you back, under the circumstances?”

“Probably, but I had already started up and I thought that I would like to give running my own business a fair try. I was not entirely happy with my late employer.”

Rhian waited, but Frankie did not elaborate.

“What do you freelance in?” asked Rhian, to keep the conversation going.

“I’m a consultant,” Frankie said.

Rhian entered the Black Swan at around seven that night. Three or four men leaned on the bar, and a mixed group of young people sat around a table. Gary was the only person serving. She watched him deal with the customers with polished skill, friendly with each one but moving on to the next with minimal waste of time. When he was free she walked up to the bar.

“What’ll it be, love?” he said, automatically, without really looking at her.

“I’ve come about the job,” she said.

He looked up.

“It’s you, the Welsh girl who was in earlier. I wasn’t sure you’d come back. You seemed a bit shook up.” He looked at her, head cocked on one side. “I suppose I ought to interview you.” He got out an official form and a pen. “What’s your name?”

“Rhian Jones.”

“Age?”

“Twenty-two.”

“Address? Oh, you can fill all this in later.” He put the form under the bar.

“Have you had any experience serving in pubs?”

“No, but I’ve worked in shops.”

“Good enough, you’re hired. Welcome aboard.”

He shook her hand.

“We don’t send temporary staff on training courses but use the mentor system. That means that you shadow another member of the staff until you get the hang of it. As I’m the only person in the place tonight, you shadow me. Take your coat off and come behind the bar.”

She did as she was bid, smoothed down her blouse sleeves so they covered her arms. Gary had her watch him while he took orders and served customers.

“I only carry a limited stock, and each item has its own key on the till. Actually, it couldn’t be simpler.”

Rhian privately agreed. Some of the corner shops she had worked in had old-fashioned tills where you had to put in the prices yourself. She had a bit more trouble mastering the beer pumps than the till, but she persevered.

“What happens if someone wants something complicated, like a cocktail?” Rhian asked.

“A cocktail! Our customers?” said Gary, incredulously. “The people we get in here think a light and bitter is the height of sophistication. Allow me a word of advice, Rhian. If someone asks you for a Long Slow Screw Against a Wall, tell him that you’re not that sort of girl. They won’t be asking for a drink.”

Rhian blushed, to Gary’s obvious delight. She busied herself in the work. Pretty soon, he let her serve the customers while he got on with the paperwork.

One of the boys from the group around the table approached the bar. “A bitter, please.”

She took a pint glass off the rack above the bar and held it under the tap. When she flipped the lever, the beer spat into the glass with a cough. She tried again with much the same result.

Gary appeared at her elbow. “The keg needs changing. I’ll just pop down to the cellar.”

He pulled up a wooden trapdoor in the floor that she hadn’t noticed and disappeared down some steps, flipping on a light at the bottom.

“I’m a student,” said the boy, engaging her in conversation.

“I guessed,” said Rhian. “You’re wearing a scarf.”

“I could have gone to York, you know,” said the boy, aggressively. “I had the grades, but I wanted to be among real working people, so I chose Whitechapel University here in the East End.”

The boy’s accent placed his origins from somewhere in London’s rich outer suburbs in the western Home Counties—Surrey or maybe Buckinghamshire. A series of loud clangs from the cellar indicated that Gary was coming to grips with the aluminium barrels.

“You’re Welsh,” said the boy.

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