Despite himself, Jamal can’t resist Haversham Park. His best memories come from that footy field down on Hoxton Bridge Road. He can see the kids out there training under the floodlights, while the wind carries the old guy’s threats from across the field. Nothing has changed after all.
In the stands he recognizes Robbie Tannous, with a few less pounds on him, and Alfie with a few pounds more. And the rest of the lads. Boys he knew as a kid, now grown men. Davie Kennedy. Charbel Bechara. The Ayoub cousins, whom he could never tell apart. They stand up when he arrives and he realizes they’re here tonight for him.
Robbie wordlessly embraces him. Alfie calls, “Jimmy,” in that singsong voice Jamal and the boys always used to greet one another. One by one the lads step forward to shake his hand.
Alfie takes out an envelope, a wad of bulging notes. “For you.”
Jamal stares at them all. Sees the guilt on their faces. He shakes his head. “I don’t need that. I’m doing fine over there.”
“It’s legit,” one of the Ayoub cousins says.
“It’s clean, brother,” Robbie says. “For Noor’s kid. If they arrest little Violette, you make sure she’s got the best to take care of her.”
Jamal’s overwhelmed, not wanting to insult them with a refusal. So he mumbles a thanks and takes the envelope. Beyond his childhood circle he can see his coach. Even when Jamal was a kid, Bill looked ancient.
“He’s getting old and tired of the little tossers coming through, yeah,” Robbie says.
“Bigger tossers than us?” Jamal asks.
“If you want to meet tossers you should see some of the kids I’m teaching.”
Jamal makes his way towards Bill. It would be disrespectful to let the old guy come to him. He tries not to think of father figures because that will remind him of his own father, Louis. And what he did. But Bill had been a father figure. He was his coach since he was a kid. He came to Jamal’s house when he was six and told his parents their son had a gift. There are times in Calais when Jamal finds himself threatening the kids he coaches with words that came out of Bill’s mouth.
They don’t speak for a while. Just watch the younger lads warm up. Alfie is shouting out some inane advice and his brother is telling him to shut up.
“I thought they weren’t letting you back in,” Bill finally says.
Jamal shrugs. “They’ve changed the rules for a couple of days.”
Bill doesn’t ask why.
“Any of them good?” Jamal asks.
“Lazy lot. No one says they want to play football anymore. Everyone wants to be a star.”
“You used to say the exact same thing about us, boss.”
That seems to lighten the mood slightly.
“What are you doing with yourself over there?”
“Bit of this and that. Training some of the local kids.”
“Any of ’em good?”
“Doesn’t really matter. Most are migrants. They just disappear after a while.”
Bill blows his whistle and walks towards the players and Jamal follows. It’s the smell of the grass. The neighborhood. It’s watching Bill’s bandy legs as he walks. It’s remembering the nights Noor and Etienne would walk down to watch him practice, and how Layla would be trailing them because she had been after Davie Kennedy with a vengeance. How they’d go to the chippy on the way home.
When training is over, Jamal runs that field with his Brackenham lads and a bunch of fourteen-year-olds. He can feel the Tannous brothers at his heels, just like the old days. They were never able to catch him back then. Jamal had never been as invincible as he was at fourteen.
The younger lads approach to taunt Alfie, who’s lying on the ground panting.
“The boss says you was even better than Rooney,” one of them says to Jamal.
“Yeah, better-looking.”
And then it’s time to go, and without saying good-bye he turns to walk away. Because he knows he shouldn’t have come. Nostalgia is a weakness.
“Jimmy lad?”
The old guy is close behind. Jamal stops and waits.
“People around here talk more now,” Bill says in a low voice. “It’s not that they’ve forgotten the dead, but some people…some people say the coppers shouldn’t have gone for the whole family. Some’d bet their life you had nothing to do with it.”
“Would you?”
Bill’s eyes are watery with age and emotion. “My opinion’s not worth much.”
“It’s worth everything.”
The old guy gives a smile. “Then I’d bet my life.”
Layla is in her bedroom when he gets back. The door is open so he takes a step inside. There isn’t much in the room apart from the bed, a print on the wall, and a dresser, but it all speaks of class. The Bayat sisters always liked beautiful things and they can spot a bargain from across a marketplace. Jocelyn taught Layla to be frugal but to choose well, the approach she took when she chose Ali Shahbazi to marry. It was her only way out of the council estates. Layla’s way out was her brains.
She looks up from where she’s sitting on the bed. Her eyes are swollen, as if she’s been bawling all afternoon. Beside her is a cardboard box of stuff that she’s sorting through.
“Did you go down to Haversham Park?”
He nods. “No one speaks normally,” he says. “It’s always a whisper. Noor’s name. Etienne’s. Now Violette’s. They’ve all become a whisper. Am I one?”
“You’re the greatest whisper of them all,” she says. “It’s human nature. You make people feel good about their lives. Because whatever they’ve experienced, it can’t be worse than what happened to Jimmy Sarraf.”
“I don’t want my niece to be a whisper.”
He takes the envelope of money from his pocket and holds it up. “Alfie and the lads. Can you get it back to them somehow?”
She gets off the bed. “That Brackenham lot don’t part with their money too easy. If they’ve given it to you, they mean you to have it.” She brushes past him.
“Are you okay?” he asks.
“Rough day,” is all she says.
He follows her into the kitchenette, where she puts on the kettle.
“Do you know the guy who owns the Algerian restaurant on the corner?” she asks.
“No, but he’s watching me.”
“His name is Bilal Lelouche and he stopped me tonight because he’s one of the hundreds of people who know you’re staying with me.”
She doesn’t seem happy about that fact.
“He asked if you could drop in for supper. He knew Noor and Etienne, apparently.”
Jamal gives a shake of his head. It sounds like a setup.
“I’ve never heard anything bad said about him,” she says. “Great restaurant. People come from all over to eat there.”
“No clean clothes.”
“I’ll find you something.”
“No thanks.”
He hadn’t meant it to sound judgmental. He just doesn’t want to be wearing some other guy’s clothing.
“I’ve got some stuff of Ali’s that Jocelyn wants me to give to a Brackenham charity,” she says.
He has no excuse now. “Will you come with me?” he asks.
The restaurant is packed but there’s a table set for them down the back. Jamal and Layla exchange a look and follow the waiter. The moment they sit down the food comes, and doesn’t stop coming for the next hour.
“Love the French,” Jamal says, wolfing down the best kefta he’s ever eaten. “Hate their food.”
Layla laughs and it’s a good laugh to hear, and even better to see. “My favorite treat is a French restaurant,” she says.
“Hate the food with a passion,” he says.
With a meal this good, there’s no room for being polite. It’s the survival of the fastest and Layla likes her food as much as he does. There’s less room for talk too, which is fine, because he has to accept that they’re strangers now. She’s guarded and it makes him tense; he wants to be anything but. When he brings up her work she dodges the subject. Asks about his instead. He tells her about the gym, and working at one of the bars downtown.
“As a bouncer?” she asks, soaking up the last of the chakchouka with her pita bread.
“Not a bouncer.”
“You work behind the bar?” she says.
“Who said I was working behind the bar?”
He reaches over and finishes the eggplant dip on her plate. They eye each other. The old Jimmy and Layla always ate from each other’s plates. There was an intimacy to it.
“You’re not a bouncer and you’re not behind the bar,” she says, trying to work it out. “So you’re running the place?”
“Not running the place.”
By ten thirty Bilal Lelouche still hasn’t come over for a chat, and Jamal is surprised when a waiter puts the bill on the table. Not that he’s complaining, but Layla made it sound as if the meal was on the house. She reaches for the bill before he can and takes out her purse.
“Put it away,” he says gruffly.
“We’ll go halves,” she says, looking at the bill, and her expression changes at once. Her eyes meet his as she hands it over.
Breakfast tomorrow 9 a.m. Lette Le-Hyphen and a friend.
For most of the short walk home it’s like old times and Layla and Jamal argue about whose plan has worked best.
“Lette Le-Hyphen found out I was on Facebook.”
“Yes, but through my message to Gigi.”
Inside her building, Layla reaches for the stairwell light. The moment it’s illuminated, they hear a sound further up the stairs. Instinct has him taking her hand.
“Stay here,” he whispers.
“Who’s there?” Layla calls out.
A young blonde looks down at them from the stair rail. Layla leads him up to her flat, where the woman, dressed in a suit, stands holding a plastic Marks & Spencer bag. Layla lets go of his hand.
“Some of the things you left behind,” the woman says, holding out the bag. “Toiletries and stuff from the ladies’ room.”
When Layla takes the bag she seems surprised by the weight of it. The two exchange a look Jamal can’t read before the woman heads down the stairs.
“You shouldn’t have lasted this long typing,” Layla calls out after her. “You’re better than being the next Vera. That’s what I meant back then. So next time someone gives you advice, listen to them.”
There’s no response and Layla clutches the bag to her.
“What was all that about?” he asks, his heart sinking because he understands now. The reason she was in her room crying. The carton on her bed.
She doesn’t respond. Jamal takes the keys from her and wordlessly opens the door.
Inside he sits at the piano, tinkering. Layla disappears into her bedroom and when she returns she seems composed. She comes to sit on the bench beside him and tries to remember the beginning of “Für Elise.” He takes her hand and guides her through it. When they were younger he’d be rough, jabbing her fingers against the keys. Tonight he lets his linger over hers. He plays the opening strands of Clapton’s “Layla.” He used to play it to her back when life made sense. Back when Layla Bayat could have had him on his knees begging for the rest of his life.
“Any requests?” he asks.
She looks at him and then suddenly laughs. “No way. Are you the piano man at that bar?”
Playing the piano and playing football. They were the two things that held his life together in Calais.
“Just on weekends. All my mother’s nagging paid off in a strange way.”
“Whereas my mother brings up the waste of money every time we have a family get-together.”
“Your mother was too tough on you,” he says quietly. “I could easily hate her for that, but then she went and nursed my mother while she died, didn’t she?” He concentrates on the keys because he can’t bear thinking of Aziza Sarraf dying without her family.
“They were a strange pair, our mothers,” she murmurs.
And then their eyes lock and he realizes they’ve both avoided that for the past twenty-four hours, with one of them looking away just in time. But not now.
She reaches across and touches the scar above his eye, a souvenir from Belmarsh. And the rest is inevitable. Has been from the moment he stood outside her door waiting for her to come home. One minute they’re at the piano, the next they’re in the bedroom, hardly making it to the bed. And all through the night a harmony of cries and skin against skin cutting through the stillness. Beyond exhaustion but they can’t stop. She’s crying real tears. He’s crying himself. Because what Ortley has given them is a tease. A glimpse of what could have been. In Calais it’s easier to pretend he isn’t sick at heart for home. For Layla. She doesn’t just remind him of who he was back then, but of who he wanted to be. Thought he would be. If he was a selfish man he’d beg her to cross the Channel with him, but he knows it would be a fake life for her. She’s been second-best all her life, had told him that often enough. He can’t stomach being responsible for her having a second-best future.