Read Angel on the Inside Online
Authors: Mike Ripley
Tags: #fiction, #series, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #gangster, #stalking, #welsh, #secretive, #mystery, #private, #detective, #humour, #crime, #funny, #amusing
âBit of a stunner, but fair play, I'd never asked.'
âSo you took her on trust, and now you're thinking that trust's been broken?'
âThat's a bit sexist isn't it?' I argued. âI mean, it sounds as if I inspected the goods but didn't find anything wrong until I got her home from the shop. What was I supposed to do? Demand a warranty? Relationships don't come with warranties, in my experience.'
âIt doesn't sound as if her ex-husband's did. Didn't she know what he was like?'
âShe must have. You can't live with somebody, sleep with somebody, and not get to know them at least, you know, in passing.'
âYou seem to have managed it.'
âHey â that's out of order. We're talking an entirely different scenario here.'
âConvince me.'
I was determined not to lose my temper. I clasped my hands together behind my head and leaned back to stretch out on the black leather upholstery.
âWhether she knew he was a villain before he was arrested, I don't know. Once he went inside, she divorced him. Far as she was concerned, end of story, new chapter, new life.'
âBut not for him.'
ââCourse not. Bit of a bummer being slammed up in the first place, then to get the Dear John letter from her solicitor â could push anyone over the edge.'
âSo he sits and festers in prison and then when he gets out, he â he does what?'
âHe finds Amy â finds where she works, where she lives. He stalks her, in fact.'
âAnd she knew about this?'
âEr ... yes,' I said slowly, knowing what was coming.
âAnd still she didn't mention him?'
Now that had worried me. I had discovered, almost by accident, that Amy had taken out a restraining order on Keith Flowers, supposedly to keep him away from where she worked and where we lived. It hadn't been a success.
âNo, she didn't.'
âSo she could have warned you but didn't. Is that it?'
âI wouldn't put it like that.'
âI would. So would most people. You feel â what? Betrayed?'
I said nothing to that.
âThen he turns up at this archaeology dig thing you're on and he pulls a gun. Did he say why?'
âWe didn't exactly have time to chat,' I snorted. I'd been too busy trying to run him over with a bulldozer.
âBut what was he going to do? Abduct Amy and drive off into the sunset?'
âIt was the middle of the night.'
âWhatever. What was his plan?'
âI don't know.'
âDoes Amy?'
âI don't know. If she does, she hasn't said.'
âNo wonder you feel threatened.'
âWho said I felt threatened?'
âYou must do. She's obviously holding back, keeping you out of the loop. Well, isn't she?'
âI suppose so, yes.'
âAnd that doesn't worry you?'
âOf course it bleedin' worries me. That's why I'm telling you all this.'
Something dawned on me.
I slid off the leather seat, put my feet on the garage floor and ducked out of the back of the BMW.
âDuncan, you're a fucking car mechanic. Why
am
I telling you all this?'
Â
Â
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Â
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Duncan the Drunken probably was the best car mechanic in the world, but as a psychiatrist he was pants. He had charged me £150 (cash) to go to a police pound in Suffolk with a flat-back and bring Amy's BMW home to his lock-up garage and workshop in Hackney. He hadn't charged me anything for psychiatric advice, but I knew it would cost me in the long run.
The car was encrusted with mud, had cracks in most of the windows, enough scratches down the near-side to make you think Freddy Krueger had been trying to break into it, a bulldozer-blade imprint on the off-side and two buckled frames where the paramedics had popped the doors in order to remove the unconscious Keith Flowers. I suspected that the petrol tank was ruptured and the engine had seized when the exhaust filled with dirt. (You had to be there.)
Duncan walked around it three or four times, hands in pockets, sucking in air over his teeth and shaking his head. After the fifth circuit, he puffed his cheeks and exhaled loudly.
âInsurance job?' he asked.
âProbably not,' I said carefully. âAmy doesn't want it back. She thinks it's going for scrap.'
His eyebrows shot up at that, so high he almost had a hairline again.
âBad associations, huh? So she just casts off the past and leaves you wondering ...'
âDuncan, shut it. Can you fix it?'
âSure I can, but it'll cost you lots of squids.'
âWork out an estimate and let me know. A proper one as well, not the usual back-of-a-fag-packet job.'
He pretended to look hurt at that, but I headed for the garage doors.
âI thought we might patch it up, flog it and split the take,' I said over my shoulder.
âNice one, Angel,' Duncan said to my back. âThat's more like the Angel I know. See, therapy does work.'
âJust fix the fucking car, Duncan.'
Â
As I was in the neighbourhood â though if you drive a black Austin Fairway cab, anywhere in London is in the neighbourhood â I decided to call round to Stuart Street and see if anyone was home who fancied a chat rather than psychotherapy. Not that I have anything against psychiatrists
per se
. I have always held to the maxim that a problem shared is two people losing sleep, which is good because you no longer feel alone, but there's a time and a place for everything. I was in Hackney. That wasn't the place. And as I had a full tank of diesel in Armstrong II, no job to go to, didn't have to wear a tie and the pubs would be opening in five minutes, this wasn't the time.
It was, however, the perfect time for me to arrive, if not in the nick of time, then right on cue to sort out the horror and chaos that had engulfed Number 9 Stuart Street that morning. Not that the place was a smoking ruin, or had fallen into a fissure in the Earth, or had been drowned in a giant chemical spill or anything. It was worse than that.
As soon as I turned Armstrong II into the road, I was transfixed â hypnotised â by the sight that greeted me. There on the pavement outside the open door of Number 9 was my downstairs neighbour Fenella, arms aloft, jumping frantically into the air as if trying to block an invisible and considerably taller attacking basketball player. The sight was arresting because she was wearing pyjamas â knee-length shorts and top patterned with large green frog designs â under a belted pink satin dressing gown which she was having trouble keeping closed. On her feet were furry slippers in the shape of panda heads and on her back was a small bag made out of a furry monkey toy with long arms to form the straps. A vampire monkey from the way the head was pressing into the back of her neck. To top it all, she wore a hat, a battered brown canvas hat with embroidered flowers; a hat that people wore at Glastonbury Festivals when they were making an ironic post-modernist comment about the proceedings (or maybe just taking the piss); a hat Paddington Bear would have shunned as uncool.
As all my attempts at lip-reading have ended in disappointment, or a slap in the face, I couldn't tell what she was shouting over the throb of Armstrong's engine. But shouting she was, and getting very agitated about something. Dressed the way she was, it was a sight that would have frightened the horses, had there been any around, and it seemed to have cleared the street of innocent civilians. It was a sight that would have made even someone as courageous as the late, great Queen Mum think twice about visiting the East End.
I drew up to the kerb in front of her and killed the engine. At last I could hear her, even without opening the windows.
âHelp! Help!' she was yelling. Then, clocking Armstrong II: âTaxi!'
âFenella, it's me!' I shouted from inside the cab.
âWell, it's about time!' she screamed as soon as she focused on me.
Whatever was wrong, nick of time wasn't going to cut it for Fenella this morning. I hear she has the same problem with Superman as well.
âWhat's happening, dudette?' I asked cheerfully, stepping out onto the pavement until Fenella slippered her way up to me and her panda feet were nose to toe with my trainers. I tried not to look down at them, but they were hypnotic.
âDidn't you get my message?' she said in a voice that could have opened the prosecution at Nuremburg.
âWhat message?'
âThe one I left on your mobile phone, the one you said was for emergencies only.'
Ah. The mobile phone that was switched off and locked in Armstrong's glove compartment.
âNo I didn't. You must've dialled the wrong number.'
âWell when you didn't call back,' she said huffily, hands on hips, âI dialled 999, but
they
wouldn't come either.'
âWho wouldn't?'
âThe ambulance people.'
âIs somebody hurt?'
A frenetic split-screen of images fast-forwarded across my brain. Lisabeth slipping in the shower and unable to get up. Inverness Doogie drunk and running amok with a meat cleaver. Miranda, late for work, going arse over elbow down the stairs from Flat 4. Mr Goodson, his secret life as a bank robber finally revealed, gunshot and bloodied, holed up in his room waiting for the final assault from armed police. Lisabeth in the shower again.
âIsn't it obvious?'
âNo, Fenella, actually it isn't. What happened?'
âI phoned for an ambulance but they wouldn't come. So I came out here to try and grab a taxi.'
âI think I'm up to speed on that bit. Why wouldn't they send an ambulance?'
âThey said they don't send them for cats.'
I hit the front door with my shoulder and took the stairs three at a time.
Â
âHe ... was ... eating ... something ... and ... it ... disagreed with him,' panted Fenella as she caught up with me on the landing that lead to Flat 3 â my flat.
âFood poisoning?' I scoffed. âThat's not possible. That cat's got a 5-Alarm Chilli stomach. His digestive juices could cut through metal. In fact, I think that's where they got the idea for the
Alien
monster.'
âNo, I meant he was eating some
thing
. Something that was still alive. And I think it was fighting back. It hurt him.'
I pinned Fenella to the wall by her shoulders, but my hands slipped on the satin of her dressing gown and there was a moment there when it could have been embarrassing for me and probably a first for her. I clasped my hands as if in prayer, if only to keep them out of mischief.
âLook, Fenella, sweetie, just please tell me what you think you saw,' I pleaded.
âHe was howling; that's what woke me the second time. It wasn't his usual “Let me in” or “Let me out” howl. It wasn't his usual “I've killed wildlife come and see” howl. I know those. This one was really sad, a piteous, tragic sort of a howl. And really, really loud. So I came out to see what was the matter and he was here.'
âWhere?'
âHere on the landing, walking backwards in a funny way and howling, all the time howling.'
âYes, yes, I got the howling bit.'
âAnd then I realised he was limping and he was dragging something in his teeth, shaking his head as if he was trying to kill it, and then he went through the cat flap. Backwards. I've never seen him do that before. It was horrible. The thing he was biting. It was long and brown ... I thought it might be a fox. Are there foxes in Hackney?'
That would be just typical of Hackney. With the Government trying to ban hunting with hounds they must have thought they were safe here. Nobody had said anything about cats. But it was a moot point. There probably were more foxes in London now than there were in the countryside, where they didn't have to hunt â and be hunted â but just help themselves to the rubbish bins. And whilst I fancied Springsteen's chances against most things, his motto being âFour legs â potential snack; two legs â open target', even a soft townie fox wouldn't go down without a fight.
âI don't think it was a fox, Fenella,' I said reassuringly, having checked there was neither blood nor fur on the wall she was leaning against. âHow did he get in this morning?'
âI left your kitchen window open as usual,' she insisted. âHe must have used that, as he didn't come in the front door.'
âWell, he wouldn't have come through there with a fox in his teeth,' I said confidently.
âI don't know how he gets in and out of that window anyway,' Fenella said, almost to herself. âIt's two floors straight down to the garden. At his age.'