‘I’M REALLY SORRY we couldn’t stay up in the flat a bit longer.’ He was lying. Lying was easy for David. This time it was to cover up the fact that, despite feeling as randy as hell, he hadn’t wanted to hang around and have to confront Sonia. Not yet, anyway. The game he’d been playing with her was getting interesting. All over again. Thanks to the arrival of Angel. ‘But we’d never have got this table otherwise.’ He flashed her one of his smiles. ‘Everything all right?’
‘It’s lovely.’ Angie nodded, eager to please, although she couldn’t imagine how anyone could have found it anything other than all right. This was a lot more than all right. It was fantastic. Here they were, in a romantic booth by the window, in a West End restaurant, with everyone who walked by looking in and wishing they were sitting there instead. It made her feel like a celebrity, a pop star or someone.
The fact that when they had arrived at Stefano’s they had been the only customers and so would hardly have been fighting for a table – the owner had opened up early after David had called him – hadn’t occurred to Angie. All she knew was that David was amazing. He was rich, suave – suave! she would never have believed she’d have met anyone she could use that word about – and, at the flat, he had been really nice to her. He hadn’t tried to push her into doing anything. Not to get his hand up her skirt as Martin had done, not to maul or grapple with her. He had just kissed her.
Just.
That was a bit like saying the Beatles were just a pop group. And he had apologized for almost getting carried away, and had said they had better leave soon or he couldn’t be held responsible for his actions. Then he had told her how really attractive she was, how difficult it was for a man to resist her …
Angie wriggled in her seat as the tingling sensations in her body came flooding back.
If anything, and this was confusing to admit even to herself, she would have liked David to have gone further. A lot further. And not just to please him, as she had been willing to do with Martin, but because her body was telling her that it was what she wanted more than anything. More than she had ever thought possible.
She felt herself blush.
‘I’ve got stuff to see to later.’ David looked at his watch and smiled. ‘But don’t worry, I’ll drop you off first. Staying at your nan’s?’
She became suddenly interested in the bowl of pale yellow roses that stood between them. ‘No, not tonight. I’ve got work in the morning, so I’m going straight home.’
‘To your mum and dad’s?’
‘Mum’s.’ She raised her eyes for a brief moment then returned to her study of the flowers. ‘I’ve not got a dad.’
‘I lost my mum and my dad, both of them, by the time I was twenty. Still miss them. I sometimes wonder what would have happened if they were still around.’ He rolled his eyes and tutted at himself. ‘Hark at me going on like an old woman. So, Angel, where do you and your mum live?’
Angie didn’t much like the idea of telling this man, who lived in such grandeur, that she came from a sprawling housing estate in Essex; an estate full of displaced cockneys who couldn’t wait for Saturday to come, so they could get away from the place and go shopping ‘up home’ in the Roman Road street market, or to the terraces at Upton Park to cheer on their team, West Ham. Where wouldn’t sound too horrible?
David said his own roots were in the East End.
‘Poplar. I live in Poplar. Not far from Nan’s. Walking distance.’
‘So I can drop you off where I dropped you the other night. Is that what you’re saying?’
It was as if he could read her mind. Was she that obvious? ‘Yeah. If you don’t mind.’
‘How could I mind? It just means we’ve got plenty of time to enjoy a nice glass of bubbly and some of Stefano’s grub before we have to go. You’ll love his food. Top notch, it is. Now, let’s see what we can have.’
Angie sat silently, watching, as David chatted easily with Stefano: asking him first about his wife and children, then about what champagne they might like, then they discussed things that were listed in the menu, and finally Stefano explained to David a list of what he called the ‘specials’.
By the time Stefano left them to think about what they fancied eating, Angie was panicking so badly, she was seriously considering replaying the nausea scene she had acted out that morning for Janet Shanks. Especially as the restaurant was now filling up with early, pre-theatre diners, who were so confident and loud, so full of themselves and their own importance, that they terrified her.
Angie might have looked all grown-up in her fashionable suit, she might even be acting all grown-up, sitting in a restaurant opposite a sophisticated, older man, but she didn’t feel grown-up. She felt like the scared little girl who used to spend all that time alone, curled up in her bed, knowing her mum had gone out yet again and wouldn’t be back for hours.
‘David,’ she began, not quite knowing how she would finish the sentence.
He looked up from the menu with a ready smile. God, this made him feel good. Almost like a kid again. ‘Decided yet?’
She dropped her chin, unable to face him. ‘I don’t really understand what the food is.’ Her voice was about to crack, but she had to carry on. ‘I’ve not been anywhere like this before. And all these people. They’re so, you know …’
He reached across the table and lifted her chin with his finger. There were tears in her eyes. He could hardly credit it. The birds he usually came across were so slick, so composed, so ready to grab whatever was on offer, and here he was with a genuine innocent. It was bloody marvellous. Made him feel all protective. Something he hadn’t felt for years.
‘What do you like eating?’ he asked. ‘You can have anything you like. Stefano’ll be only too pleased to make it for you.’
‘What do you think?’
‘How about steak and chips? That always goes down well.’
She nodded.
‘I’ll get him to make it a bit special for us, eh? Few mushrooms and that.’
She nodded again. ‘And will you help me with these, please?’ She pointed tentatively at the array of cutlery set out before her.
‘Angel.’ He swept all the knives and forks and spoons to one side and took her hand. ‘Let me tell you something. Till I was twenty-three years of age I had never been inside a gaff like this. Wouldn’t have known a bottle of wine from a bottle of light ale. I used to pass these places and think to myself – one day. Then a mate of mine said to me – I don’t understand you, Dave, you’ve got just as much money as all them in there, don’t you think your dough’s as good as theirs or something? So, you know what I did?’
She shook her head.
‘I came in here and said – I want to speak to the owner. Stefano came over to me, and I said to him – Here’s thirty quid. Me and Bobby here want a meal. We don’t know nothing about grub like your’n, so we need you to help us. And he did. And I’ve been coming here ever since. Plenty of other places as well, of course. Places that think they’re chic’ – he said the word with such contempt that, for a moment, Angie flinched – ‘Well, let me tell you something else. You, Angel, are as good as anyone in here. Better, because you’re not a phoney. You don’t pretend. You are who you are. Got it?’
Angie stared down at the pure white cloth. She wanted to say, but I’m not. I’m no dolly bird, I’m just Squirt, a frightened kid from Dagenham, who wishes she could get up and run away. But he was being so kind. ‘Yeah. I’ve got it.’
‘Good. Now I’m going to make you a promise, Angel. I like you. I like you a lot. And I’m going to teach you all the things that Stefano taught me.’ He squeezed her hand harder. ‘And lots of other things as well.’
Angie didn’t know why but somehow he had made everything seem all right again. Just like he had when they had gone into the club in Westbourne Grove.
‘I’d like that,’ she said, lifting her chin and meeting his gaze. ‘I know I’ve got a lot to learn.’
‘All the better, Angel. All the better. Self-knowledge, see.’
He turned her hand over and looked at the marcasite watch her grandmother had given her for her birthday.
She gazed down at it. Was it really only six weeks ago?
‘That’s a nice watch. A boyfriend get it for you, did he?’
‘Yeah. That’s right.’ Why had she lied? She knew why: to come over as all experienced. ‘A boyfriend.’
‘I’m not surprised. I fancy spoiling you myself. That’s why I’m taking you shopping.’
‘Shopping?’
‘Yeah. Tomorrow.’
‘I can’t. I’ve already taken today off. I’ve got to go to work or I’ll get in trouble.’
David snorted loudly. ‘This is a first. A bird preferring to go to work rather than be taken out shopping? You really get to me, do you know that, Angel? You’re a real one-off.’
‘I didn’t mean to be rude.’
‘Don’t get all upset.’ There was laughter in his voice, but it wasn’t cruel. ‘I don’t think you’re rude. I think you’re a really nice girl. And it doesn’t matter. We can go on Saturday.’
Vi pulled back her bedroom curtains and watched Angie stride easily along the front path. Then, as her daughter bent forward to open the gate, Vi saw her already short skirt ride up to show almost the full length of her firm, young legs.
Vi raked her fingers through her unbrushed hair. If only she was seventeen again. It wasn’t fair.
She let go of the curtain, plonked down on the bed, and lit her first cigarette of the day, drawing the smoke deep into her lungs.
She had heard Angie come in last night, it was gone eleven – a good quarter of an hour after Nick had left – and yet there she was this morning as fresh as a bloody daisy.
God, she hated getting old.
Angie stood waiting for someone to open the Murrays’ front door. Unsurprisingly, it was Tilly. She was holding a fork in her hand as if it were a magic wand and she was the good fairy in the pantomime.
‘Morning, Mrs Murray. Don’t suppose Jackie’s ready yet?’
‘You’re a bit early for that, love. But come in.’
‘It’s such a lovely morning, I woke up all raring to go.’
‘Good to hear you so cheerful. Let’s just hope it’s catching. Go up and see if you can make that girl of mine get a move on.’
Angie pointed to the little paved area of the garden under the front room window, where Martin’s scooter was usually parked.
‘Martin up and out all early as well?’
‘No,’ said Tilly, heading down the passage towards the kitchen, where she was frying enough bacon and sausages to feed half the street, but which was intended solely for Stan, her defiantly slim husband. ‘He phoned last night. Tea-time it was. To say he was staying with a friend of his from college. Had to get some work done. I just hope he gets a decent breakfast down him. I know what you youngsters are like.’
What Tilly didn’t know about her own particular youngster was that his breakfast that morning consisted of nothing more than sex with Jill Walker, followed by a cigarette and a cup of black, instant coffee.
Remembering to buy milk hadn’t been the first thing on either Jill or Martin’s mind.
*
With only a little coaxing and cajoling, Angie had Jackie out of the house and on the way to the station a good ten minutes before they really needed to leave. Not only was Angie bursting with all the things she had to say about her day playing hooky from work with David Fuller, Jackie was as eager to hear them.
‘So you didn’t think it was as good as the Canvas Club then?’
‘Good? It was a total grot hole. Terrible. But David said all the stars go there. Can you imagine?’ She shielded her mouth with her hand as though the streets of Dagenham were teeming with spies, and dropped her voice to a low whisper. ‘Apparently, even a member of the Royal Family goes there.’
Jackie had no such concerns. ‘No!’ she shrieked.
‘Yes,’ Angie continued, all wide-eyed and breathy. ‘And – you won’t credit this, Jack, I’m telling you – she, she likes girls. If you know what I mean.’
Jackie was momentarily lost for words, then she gasped, ‘No! What, like that Kay at school?’
If it hadn’t been for Angie wrenching her backwards, Jackie, completely distracted by such juicy gossip, would have stepped straight into the Woodward Road, right in the path of a passing 62 bus.
‘Not exactly like Kay,’ Angie said, looking for a gap in the traffic. ‘She likes blokes as well.’
‘I don’t know what to say.’
‘Nor did I when he told me. But the music was brilliant. Ska.’ Angie shoved Jackie across the road to the safety of the far pavement, and they began climbing the little hill up to Becontree station.
‘Sing us one of the songs then,’ Jackie demanded, her old bossiness with Angie not quite forgotten. ‘Go on. How did they go?’
Angie pulled a face. ‘I knew you’d say that. I did try to learn one for you, but they’re sort of hard to understand. You must have to be used to the accents. But they’re great for dancing to. Honest, Jack, you wouldn’t be able to sit still if you heard one.’
Ordinarily, Jackie would have felt more than a touch narked, being excluded from something as important as the music that the magazines were saying was going to be the Next Big Thing, but this morning there were too many other things for her to hear about for her to start throwing tantrums.
‘What else did you do? Where did you go after he’d had the meeting with the bloke?’
Angie shrugged up her shoulders and sucked in her lips in anticipation. She had been saving this bit. ‘He took me to his flat. In Mayfair.’
This time Jackie stopped dead without any need for any arm dragging on Angie’s part. ‘Angela Knight. You went to his flat? Don’t tell me you and him …’
Angie pushed Jackie towards the ticket barrier, while doing a very passable impression of looking absolutely mortified. ‘No we did not, thank you very much. What do you take me for? He had to drop something off. Some keys. For his housekeeper. Then we went to Stefano’s.’
They both began fumbling around in their bags for their season tickets.
‘What’s that then?’ The casual reference to ‘housekeepers’ and ‘Mayfair’ would, ordinarily, have supplied enough material to have kept Jackie questioning Angie closely for hours on end, but this was all so appetizing, she hardly knew where to start. ‘This Stefano’s? Another club is it?’
‘No. It’s an Italian restaurant.’ Angie smiled pleasantly at the ticket inspector. ‘We had champagne. He’s taking me there again. On Saturday. For …’ She hesitated, wondering what the word would sound like coming out of her mouth. ‘… lunch.’
Instead of the mocking reaction she had expected from her friend – hark at you, lunch – Jackie blinked slowly, like a cheap ventriloquist’s dummy, and said simply, ‘So you won’t be coming shopping with me on Saturday?’ She had kind of assumed that Angie’s big day out, her mad adventure with an older man, was going to be a one-off. OK, they’d probably go to the Canvas Club again some time, in a few months maybe, but as for Angie seeing that bloke again …
‘You don’t mind do you, Jack?’
‘And how about Saturday night?’
‘I’m not sure yet. I’ve got to phone him.’
‘Angie—’
‘Angel.’
‘What?’
‘That’s what he calls me: Angel. Good, eh?’
‘Yeah,’ Jackie said flatly. ‘Great.’
Angie walked over to the changing-rooms in Solar, a King’s Road boutique that she and Jackie wouldn’t have been brave enough even to enter a matter of weeks ago, with a pile of dresses slung over her arm, a cerise floppy hat with holes punched in the brim perched on her head, and a turquoise feather boa draped round her neck. David had insisted she try them all on. He was very persuasive.
As the curtain fell behind her, Angie’s eyes widened. Instead of the individual cubicles she had been expecting, what she saw was a communal changing area.
Communal.
She had heard they existed, of course, but she had never actually been in one. And she wasn’t sure she liked it. No. Wrong. She knew she didn’t like it at all.
The room was full of young women, all in varying stages of undress, and all totally uninhibited. She buried herself away in the corner and turned her back on them, as if her not seeing them would somehow make her invisible, would spare her blushes.
It was a vain hope.
Slowly, she slipped out of her dusty-pink minidress, folding it and putting it on top of her shoes – anything to avoid eye contact with the other girls – then pulled on the simple white shift.
‘That looks absolutely gear. Really fabulous on you,’ yipped a plummy-voiced, rather sturdy brunette, who Angie hadn’t even noticed in the crowd. ‘You are so lucky.’ She brayed a whinnying, horse-like laugh. ‘Wish I had a figure like yours, I’d buy up the whole ruddy shop.’
Angie raised her eyes and looked at herself in the mirror. Her nan had always said she had a good figure. And Martin had certainly seemed to have approved of her. And that student – that horrible student – and now David.
Maybe she was OK.
Maybe she was better than OK.
She turned to the girl and looked directly at her. ‘Thanks,’ she said. ‘But do you think it’s short enough?’
‘How are you doing, Angel?’ David, standing outside Solar, with his arms filled with bags and packages, had spotted a cab at the traffic lights.
Angie didn’t hesitate. ‘I’m so tired. After that really nice …’ she paused for just a beat ‘… lunch. Then doing all this shopping. I don’t know if I’ve got the energy to try on anything else.’
He looked relieved. ‘I’m glad you said that. Look, it’s nearly five. How about if we go and have a drink?’
‘Smashing.’
‘I know a nice little hotel. Not far from here. We could have an early dinner.’ He shoved half the bags under one arm, put two fingers in his mouth, gave a piercing whistle and showed out to the cab driver.
‘A hotel,’ said Angie softly, panicking about how she would handle being in yet another new, and no doubt scary, type of place. ‘That’ll be nice.’
Sonia strolled aimlessly along Kensington High Street, deep in thought, barely registering the existence of the regular crowd of Saturday browsers, window shoppers and tourists who moved around her in shoals, like small fry avoiding predators.
She didn’t notice any of them, that is, until she saw one particular young woman – a uniformed nanny who was pushing a high-wheeled, coach-built Silver Cross pram in the direction of Kensington Gardens.
It was as if a light suddenly came on in Sonia’s head, as if she now knew what she had always wanted to do with her life, but had simply never realized it before. Up until now she had been happy – well, driven, more than happy – to have nice things, to go to nice places, and to live the life she had believed, truly believed, she had wanted. But now she knew she had just been passing the time, playing around, living half a life.
What Sonia really wanted, what she had to have, was Mikey’s baby.
She lay back on the rumpled pillows, her sweat-covered body tangled in the sheets, with a smile of blissful satisfaction. Not only sex in the afternoon with Mikey, but in the flat, when David could turn up at any moment. And she hadn’t put in her cap.
It couldn’t get a lot better than this.
Mikey stroked his hand over her taut, flat belly. ‘Sonia, you are—’
‘Insatiable?’ She stretched lazily.
‘I think that’s the word.’
‘That’s a big word,’ she purred suggestively.
He raised an eyebrow, patted her belly as if it was a pet dog, and rolled over on to his back. ‘You don’t just love me for the size of the words I know, do you, darling? Cos I don’t know very many.’
‘Mikey, I just love you.’ She opened her eyes and propped herself up on her elbows. ‘And I want to have your baby.’
He turned on to his side so his back was to her and yawned. Here we go. ‘Course you do.’
‘I mean it, Mikey. I want us to go away together.’
‘Yeah. So do I, darling.’
‘You did like my little present?’
Mikey frowned. ‘Present?’
‘The keys.’
‘Oh yeah. Lovely.’
‘Did it work? Pressing them into the Plasticine?’
‘It had better.’
‘And will …’ She gently pulled him round by the shoulder until he was looking at her. ‘Will having those keys mean we’ll be able to get enough money to go away?’
Mikey looked at her blankly.
‘You said you wanted to. You do, don’t you, Mikey?’
‘Course I do.’ Mikey blasted her with a smile. ‘Come here.’ He put his arms around her and pulled her on top of him.
As he closed his eyes, he could see his future: him on a white, sandy beach, a glass of bubbles in one hand, and the little blonde sort who worked in the Coffee Bongo in Greek Street in the other. And that’s exactly what he would have, just as soon as he’d creamed off enough of Sonia’s old man’s takings.
Within a quarter of an hour, Mikey was up, washed and gone. He had work to do, he had explained to a blissful-looking Sonia. What he hadn’t explained was that he wanted to be out of there before Fuller turned up, which he might well do at any minute, to get ready for his usual Saturday-night tour round his businesses.
Sonia, all smiles and pecky little kisses, had assured Mikey that she understood how busy he was, how she knew he was only doing it all for their sake, and that she had to make some telephone calls anyway.
It had made Mikey feel a bit queasy, a woman of her age acting all lovey-dovey. She was probably going to call her mates, to tell them what she’d been doing all afternoon. Just like a bloody teenager. But he hadn’t said anything. It wouldn’t have been right: being honest after schtupping a bird. Mikey considered himself a gentleman like that.
She picked up the telephone twice before she actually dialled, and had almost finished the cigarette she had lit before she eventually allowed the connection to be made.
Then, when the number answered, Sonia had to swallow hard before she could speak, and, when she did so, it was in a broad, Dudley accent.
‘Sorry I’ve not called, Mum. I’ve been really busy. You know how it is. Did you get the money I sent you?’
She paused while her mother answered.
‘Good. Look, Mum, I wanted you to know I might be going away for a while, but I’ll be in touch.’
Another pause.
‘No, nothing to worry about. Honest. Bye, Mum.’
She put down the receiver and closed her eyes. Nothing to worry about.
Not so long as David didn’t find out.
When the taxi had dropped them outside the hotel in the discreet side-street, it looked so pretty that Angie forgot to be scared. Instead, she was enchanted by the window boxes full of scarlet flowers and glossy green leaves that glowed against the white stucco walls in the bright summer afternoon sunlight.
‘They do a nice little meal in here,’ said David, bumping her back to reality.
Angie looked crestfallen. ‘If it’s all right with you,’ she still felt shy about using his name, ‘I’m still really full.’
‘I suppose it is a bit early to eat. And we did have plenty at lunch-time.’ This was good. Exactly how it was meant to go. ‘We could just have a drink.’
‘Please.’
David nodded for her to go in through the revolving doors that were being steadied by a uniformed man with grey handlebar moustaches, and stepped in after her.
‘Don’t much fancy sitting listening to all them old crows over there,’ he said, raising his chin at the tables of middle-aged and elderly women who were tucking into the hotel’s lavish afternoon teas. ‘How about somewhere private?’
Angie could have clapped with relief. The hotel might have been very pretty, but the women who were patronizing it, groomed to within an inch of their glittering lives, looked terrifying. ‘I’d like that.’
‘Hang on, I’ll see what I can do.’
Within moments, Angie had been escorted to the lift and whisked up to the fourth floor, and was now standing outside a door marked 405.
‘Private room,’ said David with a wink.
‘Show me what you look like in some of that new gear,’ said David, handing her a glass of champagne, and one of the bags from Solar. He was enjoying himself. It was a long time since he had had to be so encouraging with a bird. They usually saw his motor, or his wallet, or realized who he was, and they had their drawers off before he was even ready for them.
‘Where can I get changed?’ Angie asked, looking around. Not having been in a hotel before, she had no idea that she was standing in what was described in the tastefully glossy brochure as a ‘well-appointed suite, complete with dressing-room and two full bathrooms’.
‘Not shy, are you?’ David stood up and took the glass and bag from her. Then he turned her slowly round so that her back was to him, and, even more slowly, began to lower the zip on her dress.
Angie closed her eyes. She wanted this.
But she didn’t.
She didn’t know what she wanted.
He bent his head and breathed into her neck, then whispered into her ear, ‘You are so beautiful. My little Angel.’
It was what she wanted. Exactly what she wanted.
She turned to face him, closed her eyes and stood on tip toes.
He kissed her, just as he had kissed her when they had been in his flat, then he lifted her into his arms as if she weighed nothing and carried her over to the bed.
As he undressed her, he kissed her again, gently, pressing his lips against her mouth, her throat, her shoulders, then – she could hardly breathe – her breasts.
She was naked, and he was looking down at her, smiling with approval. ‘You’re lovely,’ he said, pulling off his clothes and tossing them on the floor.
Angie knew she was blushing, but she didn’t care. This man’s approval was what she wanted. Although she couldn’t bring herself to look anywhere other than at his face.
Not yet. She was still far too shy for that.
But, as he stretched out on the bed beside her, and ran his hand up and down her thigh, she knew there was something she had to be really brave about.
‘There’s something I’ve got to say,’ she whispered.
‘Not your prayers, I hope, Angel.’
Unable to face him, Angie turned over, only to see herself staring back from the huge dressing table mirror. Come on, Angie, tell him. Tell him now.
‘David,’ she began. ‘You remember what I said when you took me to the restaurant?’
He frowned. Christ, what had she said? She wasn’t hinting she had a dose, was she? ‘You told me lots of things,’ he said cautiously.
‘About it being new to me, and me not knowing what I was supposed to be doing.’
‘Yeah.’
‘Well, this is sort of new as well.’
‘New?’
‘Yeah. I’ve never …’
A look of realization slowly spread over David’s face. ‘You mean you’ve never?’ His words came out in a mixture of disbelief, spluttering and amazement. ‘With anyone?’
She nodded, embarrassed by her own innocence.
‘I don’t suppose you’re on the Pill then?’
She shook her head. ‘No.’
David twisted round and was on his feet and pulling on his trousers in a single, fluid movement. ‘Get dressed,’ he said firmly.
She turned over and faced him, forgetting her embarrassment. ‘David, please. I didn’t mean to spoil everything. Don’t let’s go yet. It’s only early.’ She glanced desperately at her watch. ‘Five o’clock. That’s all. And I want to. I really want to.’
He angled his head so that he was looking at her over his shoulder. ‘You’ve not spoiled anything, Angel. Nothing at all. You get yourself dressed and I’ll drop you round your nan’s.’
Resigned to her own stupidity, Angie did as she was told.
‘I’m going to make an appointment for you to see a friend of mine. Get you sorted out.’ He winked. ‘And don’t you worry yourself. We can continue with this education of yours at our leisure.’
And what leisure it was going to be. It was almost unbelievable. David could hardly keep the grin off his chops. He had found himself a real-life, genuine virgin.
Just wait till he told Bobby.
‘Here,’ he said, handing her one of the two cigarettes he had just lit from a single match. ‘Calm your nerves.’
Angie took it from him and began to smoke. She didn’t like to mention that was something else she had never done before.
David had just stepped inside one of his East End snooker clubs, off Shoreditch High Street, where he was meeting Bobby and Mad Albert Roper. The plan being that the three of them were going to collect a very large interest payment on a loan that Lukey Gold, a more than averagely stupid, mug punter had actually thought he could get away with not handing over.
Despite it being almost twenty minutes since he had left Angel in Poplar, David was still grinning – she was a virgin! – but when he saw the expression on Bobby’s face, as he stood alone, by one of the tables, filling a thick, fisherman’s sock with billiard balls – a favoured weapon of his – thoughts of Angel couldn’t have been further from David’s mind.
He stepped into the low pool of yellow light illuminating the green baize table and spoke to Bobby in a low, guarded voice. ‘What is it?’
Bobby looked over his shoulder, making sure no one could hear. ‘Albert’s had a tug.’
‘Not already?’
‘Yeah. Whole crowd of coppers burst in on him. When he was doing the business with a brass.’
‘They what?’
‘There was murders apparently. Did him for a list of charges long as your arm. Not even one or two, just to hold him. Some of them went back years. Tried to collar him for the lot.’
‘Fuck me, Bob, he’s only just got out. Where they holding him?’
‘They ain’t. He was lucky. The bird he was with, that Christina—’
‘The old tom who works the pitch opposite the Canvas?’
‘That’s her.’
David was taken aback. ‘Lucky? You sure?’
‘I know. She’s almost as potty as Albert. And pissed as a fart as usual. Can’t see how even Mad Albert could fancy—’
‘Yeah, all right, Bob. Get on with it.’
‘Well, she’s grabbed this box of matches and she’s only set light to the net curtains.’
David couldn’t help himself. He started laughing. ‘She what?’
‘Truth. Then she threw a bottle of Scotch on it and the whole lot went up. Heavy curtains and all. Like bonfire night. Then they’ve fell down, on the bed like, and the eiderdown’s gone up. Bloody nuthouse by the sound of it. And while they’re all fannying around trying to put the flames out, Mad Albert’s gone and jumped out the window.’
‘But she’s … What? Two floors up?’
‘Three. But he was so pissed, he was sort-of relaxed. Landed with hardly a scratch, and had it away on his toes like a fucking greyhound.’
‘How about the tom?’
‘Down the nick.’
‘I’ll get hold of Marshall. He’ll sort her out. Where’s Albert now?’
‘He turned up at the Blue Moon. And, as luck would have it, I was over there checking the drink stocks.’
‘And now?’
‘I took him over my brother’s and he drove him down his caravan. In Suffolk it is. Right hole. So fucking quiet. But it’s safe. For now, anyway.’
‘You did well, Bob.’ David thought for a moment, then took the sock from Bobby’s hand and poured the billiard balls out on to the green baize. He picked one up and sent it spinning into the far pocket. ‘I’d better go and see Marshall right away. Sooner Christina’s out the better. Don’t know what Mad Albert might have said to her.’
‘You can trust Albert, Dave.’
‘Bob, he’s only been out a few weeks after eight years. And if Christina was pouring Scotch down both their throats, who knows what’s been said?’
‘See what you mean.’
David jerked his head for Bobby to follow him. ‘Come on. Lukey Gold’s in luck tonight.’
‘You ain’t gonna let him get away with it, are you, Dave?’
‘Don’t be silly, Bob.’
‘You want me to take someone else go over there with me?’
‘And have me missing out on all the fun? No. I’ll pay him a visit another night.’