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Authors: John Dalton

BOOK: The City Trap
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‘I’ve got someone in mind who might do it, this guy who works for me, but I was thinking first that we should try and take the business off him.’

‘You mean kind of blackmail him out of it?’

‘Why not? If we’ve got him linked to murder . . .’

‘It won’t be easy.’

‘. . . And I’ve got some cash. With your help we could set ourselves up with a nice number.’

‘I don’t know. It’s nice in theory, but in practice – well think of the man, Bertha. You know him well enough.’

Bertha felt a stab of anger. Paddy had gone all soft, tucked away in the suburbs and wanting the quiet life, no doubt holding on till some friggin pension becomes due.

‘Come on, Paddy, you want the guy, there’s money in it too. Those cheap sauna joints you run can’t pay that much.’

‘So what do I have to do?’

‘Nothing. I’ll do the doing but I need you as a backer.’

‘I guess, in a way, I owe you one.’

‘Let’s shake on a renewed friendship.’

Paddy Conroy had cold damp hands. That hadn’t used to be true. The way it goes downhill. Bertha felt another stab of anger.

‘Fuck it, Paddy, we’re stuck and we need change!’

* * *

It was nice not to be stuffing a raucous balti down your throat, feeling the ghee clog your ventricles and wadding in naan against the chilli burn. This was civilized. A tablecloth,
napkins and a cute little basket of garlic bread. Des didn’t know where to put his hands, though he secretly knew where he wanted to. Pearl sat opposite him looking glorious in the intimate
peach light that shone from the walls. She wore a tight-fitting black dress with an amber brooch which matched her hair perfectly. Des looked into Chinese eyes and thought of clippers sailing the
seas of Trinidad, ships from all over the world made one in those eyes. Soft bastard, he thought.

‘You want to tell me about your week?’ Pearl said.

‘Private investigator?’

‘Yeh.’

‘Not really. It’s shit-shovelling, dirty deeds and dirty thoughts and not a lot to feel proud about.’

‘You make money.’

‘Yeh, s’pose so, and it beats driving a taxi or working in a bar, but . . . well, I guess the dirt’s wearing off on me.’

‘I know the feeling.’

‘You want to talk about your work?’

‘Nah, it’s the same story. Shitty, fucked up people, a shitty pimp who screws with my mind.’

‘My, what a pair we are!’

It was an Italian restaurant, and Des went with a pasta and chicken concoction. He made an effort to eat in a composed way. So did Pearl and the result was laughter.

‘Are you trying to make out I’m really a pig?’

‘It’s obvious, Des. Go on, be yourself. Shovel it in.’

‘Of course, you went to some finishing school down south.’

‘I know all about etiquette.’

‘Etiquette. What a bloody stupid word.’

‘I like it, Des. It reminds me of manicured fingers lifting titchy china cups, rich blue-rinse ladies talking posh, you know, afternoon piano sessions and never having to clean the
loo.’

‘Such people don’t need to go to the loo, they’re so refined.’

‘Don’t you think it would be nice to be so above it all?’

‘With you . . . yeh.’

Pearl gave off a sweet smile that made Des quiver down to his shoes. It was a good sensation. What the future might hold ceased to concern him.

‘Let’s imagine we’ve all the time in the world.’

‘You’re reading my thoughts, Pearl.’

‘That’s a good sign.’

‘Like just sitting here and enjoying ourselves.’

‘No dirty thoughts.’

‘Well, a few maybe, but nicely restrained.’

‘You sweet me and I’ll sweet you.’

‘Sounds fine to me . . .’

And so it went on, a languid night in a restaurant until they were kicked out at closing time. A strange feeling that Des had with Pearl of wanting but not wanting to touch her. Warm smiles in
the dark as he drove her home, smiles not seen but felt. He stopped outside her house. In the streetlight, Des saw Pearl raise a thin eyebrow and smile. ‘All the time in the world, eh?’
he said, their hands briefly touching and then Pearl slipping away from him. Des didn’t drive off straight away. He bathed a little in the good vibes he felt, looked up at the streetlight
glow and almost believed it was the sun.

17

You don’t phone a bigwig like Sir Martin Wainwright and expect a meeting. The only thing to do is doorstep. So, not so bright but early, Des headed out of the city to the
leafy lanes where most bigwigs live, leafy lanes with no names and long sweeping drives equally anonymous. It was a disconcerting experience. No pavements, or people. Wide tilting spaces being
sucked off into a cavernous sky. Dense greenery flopping down over dark places where some kind of pain lurked. Des hunched over the steering wheel and kept his eyes close to the road. It took quite
a long time before he found the right discreet drive with its locked iron gates. He stared at a phone and video camera. The signs of privilege and unequal exchange. The ultimate put-down. Des
wouldn’t have used the system, even if he thought he could get in. A field full of cows beckoned.

Thoughts of Pearl kept him going. Smooth amber brightly glowing in a cosy place where memories had been banned. That restrained anticipation of delight got him through the squalor of the field.
The midges and thistles, the shit and blowflies, the mad-eyed cows gushing piss. He made it to the security of a copse of trees and a wooden fence topped with barbed wire. But this didn’t
prove much of a barrier. An overhanging branch provided a lift up and Des soon worked his way over. Then he was crunching forecourt gravel, feeling more at home, and running his fingers along the
lines of a Jaguar. He reached for the front door bell. Des kicked the mud off his shoes and smiled.

The housekeeper who answered the door was not pleased. ‘How did you get here?’ she said belligerently. The backwoods twang seemed comical to Des.

‘Walked up the drive.’ Des smiled. ‘Your gates are wide open.’

‘What? Well, they shouldn’t be, and you shouldn’t be here.’

‘You’d better send someone down to sort it out then, and in the meantime, you can announce me to Sir Martin.’

‘What? Well, who are you?’

‘McGinlay, private investigator.’ Des pulled out a grubby card. ‘I’m engaged in a private and delicate matter that Sir Martin alone knows about, so, you’d better
inform him I’m here. It concerns a certain Claudette Turton.’

Des was beginning to enjoy himself. Talking to a maid no less! He stuffed his hands in his trouser pockets and grinned. She looked apprehensive but eventually scuttled off, leaving Des to gaze
at a rusty suit of armour that seemed to serve as a hat stand. After a few minutes, a pale beanpole of a man in a black suit came into the hall, evidently to keep an eye out. But Des wasn’t
perturbed. He cast his eyes around the candy-striped hall and thought Sir Martin’s pile was no huge deal. Six bedrooms maybe, who gives a fuck? And then the maid returned, her brow a
spider’s web of frowns.

‘Sir Martin will see you. Will you please come this way, sir?’ she said with half-hearted politeness.

Des smiled anyway and ambled his way after her.

‘I admire your etiquette,’ he said as he was shown into a side room.

Sir Martin was, well, grey. He had a full crop of grey hair, a neatly clipped grey moustache and he wore a grey suit. His face, too, was tinged with grey. He didn’t look
any different from the pictures in the newspapers – as if the guy was walking front-page news. He sat at a small table and beckoned Des to sit down.

‘I don’t really know why I’m doing this, Mr – er – McGinlay. I don’t recall ever having requested your services. However, I do sometimes have reason to turn
to private investigators so maybe your name has slipped my mind.’

Sir Martin was getting flabby. But Des didn’t need the tight suit to tell him that. He’d seen photos of the real thing. He put his hand inside his coat and felt the envelope. Sir
Martin’s burnt-umber eyes waited, burnt eyes above a high-boned precipice of pitted flesh, a mouth resolutely small. Des hesitated. He didn’t feel comfortable with the eyes, feeling
there was something odd about them, distant but also rudely penetrating. Des felt himself shrinking back but he managed to check himself. Sod the deference, he thought, and so launched in.

‘It’s a difficult situation this.’ Des fumbled for a fag and then lit up. The room was practically empty, a kind of cold-shoulder reception place for tradesmen and the unwanted
such as himself.

‘I’ve been on this case, chasing a bare arse halfway across the city and not knowing who it belonged to. But it seemed like an important arse because two people who saw it ended up
dead.’

The grey face remained impassive and the eyes still drilled, though Des thought he saw a slight smile beneath the clipped moustache.

‘Now of course, I don’t believe that this arse has the capacity to shoot bullets or anything like that. I mean, I guess you could say that it’s just a good-time arse having
fun.’

‘I think you’d better get to the point, Mr McGinlay.’

‘You’re right.’ Des slipped the envelope across the table. ‘Take a look inside. I’m sure you’ve seen them before. Did Claudette mail them through the post to
you, or did she nobble you outside your political headquarters?’

Sir Martin was a man of perfected calm, Teflon exterior. His trade no doubt cultivated that. He looked at the photos and then dismissively pushed them away.

‘Fakes, Mr McGinlay. I’m sorry you’ve wasted your time.’ The mouth hardly moved beneath the moustache.

‘Come on . . .’ Des was nearly speechless. ‘Is that what you’re going to say to the police and press when I hand these bleedin prints in?’

‘Such fabrications have been known. It’s easy to transpose one face for another, happens all the time in the photographic world.’

‘Bullshit.’

Silence descended on the room. The almost motionless Sir Martin stared down at the table; only his little finger moved, waggling the air like a flailing worm. Des let him work out an angle. He
looked out of a small window and got a view of a swimming pool.

‘Maybe, and without conceding anything, maybe I should buy these photos from you, these and any others there might be. A worthwhile sum that reflects their collector’s
value?’

‘Yeh, that’s interesting. And what is the going rate for collectable porn?’

‘Shall we say . . . two thousand?’

‘Mmmm, that’s not bad for a few prints.’

‘Well, you look like a man who could do with a few extra bob. It’s a grubby business at the sharp end, making ends meet. I’ve been there myself a long time ago.’

‘Well, I guess it’s an option I should keep under review . . .’

And Des did see the possibilities. A bit of bargaining and he could make it five. Almost half a year’s pay and a chance to bugger off to a sun-soaked island. Pearl on the beach drinking
spiced wine. But that thought became alarming. Pearl was a dream. The job, he knew, was his only reality.

‘. . . But keep under review only along with all the other aspects of this case.’

‘I’m sure there is nothing else I can contribute.’

‘Well, it would be nice to know how you met Claudette. I presume someone set it up for you. The nice Mr Constanza maybe, or was it Gary Marlow? And it would be nice to know who did the
blackmailing and who said they’d sort it out for you?’

‘There’s nothing more I can say.’

‘Maybe I’m getting a bit too complicated. Maybe it was just you, Mr Wainwright, who bumped off Claudette and Mary Holmes?’

The big businessman and Euro bête noire stood abruptly. His umber eyes spat contempt as he went over to the door and pressed a buzzer. Then he turned, his face more ashen but his eyes
exuding cold power.

‘This is the last time we meet, Mr McGinlay. Any further interaction you might wish, deal with my lawyer. Just take your filthy dross and bugger off!’

Des rose too and stashed the photos away. He realized then that it would be sensible if he got copies made.

‘It’s up to you, Mr Wainwright. Help me and I’ll see if I can keep it all quiet. Go with your procurer and the whole world will know what a dirty fucker you are. A dirty fucker
who’d kill to keep his reputation clean.’

Des walked out of the room, just as several men came down the hall to usher him out.

‘I’ll give you a day to come up with a reply,’ he called back defiantly.

And so Des left the sanctuary of wealth and went back to the city. A sliver of fear pierced him as he drove and it made his heart flutter. He realized his knees were shaking.
Jesus. Who knows
what a guy like that could do?
Then he looked out and saw gentle hills in the distance, viridian-washed beneath charcoal skies. It seemed a lifetime since he’d seen such things. They
didn’t mean anything.

* * *

The Jag and the Bentley were parked carelessly on the grass space at the end of an unmetalled lane. Two men stood by the cars, their hands thrust in pockets, their shoulders hunched
against an unseasonable chill wind. The lane ended abruptly at a ten-foot chain-link fence. Behind this there was a long, squat line of lights that marked the end of the airport runway. In the
distance, the terminus could be seen and behind its white tower, the whole enormous spread of the city.

‘Bit fucking dramatic, ennit, coming up here? Jesus, these sort of places give me the creeps.’

‘Well, Ross, the situation demands extreme caution.’

‘Huh, any bleeding snooper with binoculars could watch us. It took me ages to find the place.’

‘I used to own a section of this land and made a million plus selling it.’

‘Most people reminisce about their sexual conquests.’

‘Yes, well maybe I should’ve stuck to land deals. We have a deeply serious situation on hand.’

Sir Martin Wainwright leaned back onto the bonnet of his Jaguar and looked over at a jet airliner being hauled to a far-off terminus. He clenched his teeth and then told Ross Constanza about a
certain private eye.

‘Oh no . . .’ Ross groaned and ground his foot into the turf. He wished he hadn’t. The turf was squelchy. It seemed indicative of the sinking feeling in his gut. He looked
sideways at Wainwright. Dark-eyed and cold; dangerously so, and not to be underestimated. ‘I did hear of someone snuffling around, but he didn’t seem to be getting anywhere.’

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