The Crime Tsar (18 page)

Read The Crime Tsar Online

Authors: Nichola McAuliffe

BOOK: The Crime Tsar
3.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Lucy was laughing out loud when she felt it. At first she thought it was an accident. Then it became more pressing. Shackleton had put his foot between her ankles. Still listening she turned her body slightly towards him under the pretext of attentiveness. With the help of the alcohol she found the courage to take his leg between her own. She squeezed hard and felt his response, a quick vibration reminiscent of the quick, light rhythm of his love-making. He continued to talk fluently.

The Gnome was delighted. He started to tell a story about one of his parliamentary colleagues that named names and revealed sexual predilections usually reserved for the more lurid pages of top-shelf magazines.

While Lucy held Tom Shackleton's thigh between her legs Robert MacIntyre had managed to rest the fingers of his left hand between the legs of Tom's wife. Hidden by the tablecloth they stroked and probed through the heavy silk of Jenni's designer trousers. With wine dulling her revulsion she squirmed appreciatively and crossed her legs lightly.

At eleven o'clock MacIntyre's driver had been waiting half an hour. But MacIntyre seemed in no hurry.

‘So tell me about you, Lucy?'

‘Well, I … there's nothing to say really. I clean a bit –'

She was astonished when Jenni interrupted.

‘Lucy is an incredibly talented artist. She makes stained glass. I'm going to ask her to make us a window. Don't you think so, Tom?'

Tom nodded, smiling at Jenni, for all the world as if they'd discussed this idea.

Mrs Shackleton had surprised MacIntyre. He had her down as a twenty-four-carat bitch but now he suspected she was only gold-plated. Interesting … But he could see it would be easy to be magnanimous towards Lucy; she was lead, poor woman, striving to keep up with the glittering Shackletons.

An intriguing evening.

Sometime before midnight the Gnome said he really must go and stood up from the table. Jenni had prepared for them to move into the sitting room but the conversation had been too fluid to interrupt.

Jenni, rising, was pleased. It had been a success.

‘Goodnight, Lucy.' MacIntyre took her hand. ‘Here's my card – I wonder if you'd give my secretary a ring, I'm sure my wife would love to commission a piece from you.'

‘But I don't really do anything any more.' Lucy took refuge in inadequacy.

He pulled her down towards him and whispered, ‘Don't let yourself disappear, Lucy.'

At midnight the front door opened and the Home Secretary-in-waiting could be seen kissing his hostess goodnight. In the beam of the security light the driver saw him squeeze her breast. His host, standing the other side, didn't.

‘Goodnight, Tom, and thanks again for this evening. Jenni? Terrific. And I'll see you tomorrow.'

She looked surprised.

‘We've got a bit of unfinished business.'

Her mind was still a blank. The wine.

‘The interview.'

It was as if her brain had stalled and now revved into motion again.

‘Of course, Robbie. I'm so sorry. What time?'

‘Oh, as early as you like, at my office.'

The office, the House of Commons. My office, the flat off Russell Square.

‘I'm sure I've got plenty more to tell you,' he said, getting into the car.

‘I'm sure you have,' replied Jenni, blowing him a kiss.

She'd get what she wanted tomorrow. And he knew he would too.

When Tom and Jenni went back into the house Lucy was starting to clear up.

‘Leave that, Lucy, you can do it tomorrow. Have another drink. Look, there's some champagne left.'

‘No thanks, Jenni. I'd better go home. See Gary's all right. Thank you so much for tonight.'

‘I'll see you across.'

Tom walked to the front door abruptly and opened it, standing on the step.

Lucy was confused and began to say her no it's all rights when Jenni whispered to her, ‘He wants to go out so he can let off. You know … he always does it. Dreadful stink. I won't allow it in the house.'

‘Oh … right.'

Jenni laughed and gave Shackleton a sort of slap on the arm, rather as one would a smelly but loved old dog.

Lucy didn't know what else to say. She picked up her coat, air-kissed Jenni and went.

Tom walked beside her with four feet of electric air between them:

‘I never thought flatulence would come in handy,' he said.

Lucy giggled.

‘Back door or front?'

Lucy looked at him.

‘Oh, back, I think.'

To get there they had to walk down a narrow alleyway lined with high bushes. It was lit by a single old-fashioned lamp-post. The wall of the next house was blind; no windows overlooked them. Now they were unobserved, both felt shy. He walked with his hands behind his back. They walked as slowly as possible without stopping.

Lucy wished she had put some breath-fresheners in her bag. Her fingers searched through the debris in her pockets for an old mint. They came into contact with a tube of lip-conditioner, guaranteed to soften and add shine, but she could see no way of applying it without drawing attention to the action. Besides, if he did kiss her she didn't think he'd appreciate being smothered in strawberry-flavoured Vaseline. She licked her lips. A bit dry. She licked them again. The conversation between them had ground to a halt. They were now awkward with each other.

‘Are your hands all right now, Tom?'

It was the only thing Lucy could think of to say that didn't include: Tom, please kiss me, take off all my clothes and do all those things I've been thinking about since …

‘Yes. Thank you.'

‘Smell the jasmine. It's lovely, isn't it?'

Lucy could hear herself and wished she could just shut up and be silent and mysterious. Make him speak.

Tom, on the other hand, was wishing he could speak. He started to tell her about the policing strategy he intended to implement in the deprived estates in his county. He knew Jenni would say, ‘Do stop droning on, Tom – Lucy doesn't want to hear all that.'

But he couldn't stop himself. He didn't know what else to say. He wanted to be alone with this woman but not in this situation. Not in any situation that required talk. He looked at her to see if she'd
glazed over with boredom. It was a look that haunted him from his adolescence.

But she was gazing up at him as if he was speaking poetry. She looked soft and defenceless. She wasn't threatening or judgemental. He stopped. She stopped, still looking at him trustingly, her mouth a little open.

‘I'm sorry about … what happened.'

Lucy was confused. He should have kissed her by now.

‘Sorry?'

‘In the study … I'm sorry. It was … a mistake.'

Lucy couldn't believe what she was hearing. The best, most exhilarating five minutes of her recent life dismissed as a mistake?

‘I didn't think it was a mistake.'

She sounded reasonable, as if she was talking about having the wrong newspaper delivered. She didn't want to sound reasonable, she wanted to turn into some Mediterranean harpy, screaming at him that he couldn't dismiss her as a mistake.

‘I'm very fond of you.'

She offered him the words like a child offering a bunch of wilting daisies.

‘Me too.'

Me too? What did that mean? Me too? Tom felt a fool. He winced, ready for the verbal onslaught. But there wasn't one. Lucy was still looking up at him as if he was Gabriel come with glad tidings. Now he was completely at sea. He was prepared for the sharp clever rebuke but not for this adoration. Lucy hadn't known what he meant by me too either but she was in a precious moment, not one for semantics.

‘I'd better go.' Tom said it, but didn't move.

‘Yes, Jenni will be wondering where you are.'

‘No. I don't think so.'

There was a pause. It was the moment for him to kiss her, it was the violins moment when ‘The End' comes up in a heart on the screen.

‘Goodnight then,' Lucy said.

She looked away, searching in her bag for her key.

Had he been dismissed? He didn't know what to do. He just stood there, confused.

‘Yes. Goodnight.'

Lucy found her key but kept her eyes down because they were full of tears.

‘Are you all right?'

Lucy couldn't reply. She was now rooting in her bag for a tissue that hadn't been reduced to a rock-like ball by overuse. Her nose was running now and she daren't look up at him. She found the remains of a piece of kitchen roll and blew her nose.

‘Fine. I'm fine.'

She looked up again, this time trying to smile through a mask of dimpled floral paper. Her eye make-up was smudged and wet. She looked about twelve. She put away the damp rag of paper.

‘It's just … it wasn't a mistake to me. I … wanted it … to happen.'

And then he kissed her. He kissed her not because he was overcome with desire but because he didn't know what else to do. It was a gentle kiss, careful. The first kiss since finding they shared affection. He loved the cosiness of her, the softness. The way she let him be in control. With Jenni he was clumsy. He had always felt she marked him out of ten and he never got past five. The kiss came to an end.

‘I'd like to try it again. What happened. In the study.'

Lucy spoke with her face to his chest, his arms round her. She couldn't look up at him in case he said no with that gently implacable tone she'd heard him use before. The tone that implied regret but no possibility of change.

‘Me too.' Me too again. ‘Yes … Lucy, I'm sorry. I've got to go. But I have to see you again. I don't know how. But …'

He'd run out of words. She saw him struggling, unsure.

‘It's all right. I understand.'

They stood close together for another couple of minutes. He stroked her hair and she held him with her arms around his waist, her hands flat on his back absorbing his warmth.

‘Right.' He pulled away from her. ‘Goodnight. Take care.'

‘Take care … Tom.'

He turned away and walked quickly back to the road. She watched him go, happier than she'd ever been in her life.

Tom didn't stop until he got to the gates of his house. He wasn't thinking about Lucy. The gentle meandering daydreams of Lucy he'd been enjoying while he stood with her had been brutally replaced. Instead of her trusting gaze he was seeing the sewn-up eyes of the
African woman. He opened his eyes but he could still see them. The fear he'd felt sitting with the three … what? What were they? The three weird council tenants?

He saw the lights were off in the house. Jenni would have gone to bed. It took her an hour to take off her make-up and apply all the gels and creams that kept her so perfect. He was never welcome while she completed this ritual. He wanted to talk. But didn't know how. He knew he could talk to Lucy but sex was in the way now. He couldn't go back and ask for a cup of coffee.

And Jenni never really listened. He hadn't told her the details of his encounter with the women though he'd wanted to. His memory of it was patchy, like trying to recall a dream. He could see the sewn-up eyes again. He tried to look away but they were inside his own eyes, projected on to his lids when he closed them. Fear became anger as he opened the garage and got into the four-wheel drive. The spare keys were in their hiding place. He started it and drove, a little too fast, to the outskirts of the Flamborough Estate.

He parked by the pub and turned off the lights. At first he thought the women weren't there. Then he saw them. This time there were no candles, no deckchairs. The door was closed. He didn't know why he was there arid was about to re-start the car when the door opened and the fat one stood there. She was lit from behind and he couldn't see her face, but he heard her call.

‘Thomas. Welcome back. Come in, come in. We been expectin' you.'

Why didn't he just pretend he didn't hear? Why didn't he go home? He opened the car door and went over. She was beaming, massively welcoming.

‘Come in! Come in!'

He went into the flat, unable to stop himself. The hall was lit by a pink bulb hanging in the centre of a pink, tasselled shade. The walls were covered in calendars. Tom could see some with forties blondes, on tiptoe, smiling over bikinied shoulders, and others showing ladies in bustles. Some of flowers and several of dewy-eyed kittens. One, even older than the others, declared itself ‘A present from Norway'. But time had faded the year, making it look like 1400 and something.

He was bundled into the front room before he could look closer.
The other two women were sitting, either side of the coal-effect electric fire. The two bars were on, below them the black coal moulded and painted into a plastic orange cover, behind which glowed a 40-watt bulb over which a small propeller turned, supposedly giving the impression of a glowing, living fire. The flickering light moved across the two black faces, giving them expression where there was none.

‘See, Thomas has come back to visit us. Sit down, Thomas. Sit.'

The chairs either side of the fire were elaborate armchairs of red-and-gold-fringed velvet. On the backs and arms were antimacassars of long-necked African heads. Tom sat on the matching settee. All around the room there were cheap souvenirs from all over the world. ‘A present from Kampala', ‘Greetings from Beijing', and ‘Hello from Dublin'. As his eyes got used to the gloom he saw the sewn-up eyes watching him. Again the fear. He looked away. It was oppressively hot. The thin one offered him a glass of sarsaparilla. He didn't want to but he took it.

‘So what is it you want, Thomas?'

He felt silly.

‘I don't know. I don't know why I'm here.'

‘Look into the fire, Thomas. Look …'

He looked and saw the propeller move over the bulb. Nothing more.

‘Look, I don't believe in all this fortune telling.'

He stopped. In the fire he saw himself in uniform. But it wasn't his force's insignia on the hat or buttons. It was London's. He saw his triumph, felt the satisfaction, saw the recognition, the admiration in people's eyes. He felt happiness. It was better than anything he'd felt before.

Other books

Circles by Marilyn Sachs
Again (Time for Love Book 3) by Miranda P. Charles
Hoops by Patricia McLinn
The Man Who Killed by Fraser Nixon
Romancing a Stranger by Shady Grace
Left Behind by Jayton Young
Death in the Pines by Thom Hartmann
Galveston by Suzanne Morris