It was the same question Helen had asked herself. Now she was standing in front of the man who knew the answer. Who looked as though he was itching to tell her.
âWell, thanks for the warning.'
âNot a warning.'
âWhatever.' She stared hard at him. She wanted to go inside, but not before he'd been the one to turn and walk away. Suddenly the light went off. They'd been virtually motionless for two minutes and the lamp had timed out. âTime to leave,' she said.
A few feet away from her in the darkness, Shepherd sighed, as though he'd been pushed into a corner. Given no choice but to reveal what he'd far rather have kept to himself.
âLook, if it helps, just tell yourself that he needed a bit more money coming in, what with a kid on the way. That he was doing it for you.'
âI don't believe you.'
âCome on, it's not like he's the first copper I've done business with. You telling me you've never known anybody find three kilos of coke and hand in two? Nobody who ever helped himself?'
Helen felt the sweat prickle and start to run. The key was warm and wet in her fist. âDid you ever give money to Paul?'
âNever had the chance, unfortunately, but we discussed the terms. He'd've done all right out of it, I can promise you that. You wouldn't have gone short of baby clothes.'
âFuck off!' she said.
âLanguage . . .'
She repeated it, and, after a few seconds, Shepherd did as he was told. His movement reactivated the security light, and Helen watched as he jogged back across the road to his car. Change jangling, digging for the remote. She heard him push the music up loud once he'd turned the ignition, and saw him look back at her, just before the light inside the car faded and he drove away.
Faster than he needed to.
Afterwards it took her a few seconds longer than normal to get inside. She stood at the door like a drunkard, the key tapping and scraping against the lock as she tried to steady the tremble in her hand.
Â
Mikey had started thinking about a visit to Linzi's while he'd been busy with Easy and Theo, and now, walking home from her place, he wondered why doing that kind of stuff made him so horny.
Linzi wasn't a whore, not really. She only took money from a couple of the boys, her favourite ones, and she certainly wasn't like any of those skanky bitches they'd visited earlier. She was sweet and knew what he liked. She said he looked nice without any clothes on, that she liked something to get hold of, and she always told him good stories about the others afterwards, when the spliff came out. Funny shit about how SnapZ had a tiny dick, or the way As If had cried once after she'd wanked him off.
Priceless . . .
He stopped thinking about why he'd gone. Decided that it didn't matter, that at the end of the day he couldn't think of a better way to spend some of the cash he'd made that night. They'd divided it up back at Easy's, then spun down to the Dirty South for a few drinks: bright blue Hypnotics all round. He'd cruised the main bar for an hour, shown some of the crew the pictures on his phone and flashed a few big notes around.
Until he'd felt like walking across to Linzi's place all the more.
Now, he was hungry . . .
It was only five minutes back to the estate, but he didn't want to risk waking his mum by rattling around in the kitchen, and then getting screamed at. He decided to cut over onto the main road, pick up something from one of the kebab places that stayed open late.
He turned the corner and saw the old man walking towards him; saw him look up and then drop his eyes to the pavement. He knew that he scared people like this. He pulled up his hood and dropped a shoulder to put a little more meat into the swagger; to put the terrors into the old boy.
One last buzz before bed.
He walked past, pushing the shoulder close, letting the poor fool think he had something coming. With his hood forward he never saw the old man's reaction. Never saw him stop a few feet on and reach into the pocket of his coat.
Mikey only realised what was going on when he heard his name called and turned around. A second or two before the gun was raised and the old man shot him in the face.
While Mikey was still dropping hard, the old man was turning and walking quickly away. Hands in his pockets. Still muttering about how the world was going mad.
Â
Javine smelled wonderful: cocoa-butter on her neck and something sweet and citrus in her hair. He pressed himself against her, hands roaming across her back and buttocks as she pushed her tongue into his mouth, but still he stayed soft beneath her fingers.
She moved her mouth away from his and whispered. âDon't you want to?'
âI'm tired.'
âYou don't seem tired.'
He untangled himself and rolled away. âSo how do I
seem
?'
There was an engine racing in the street below, voices raised.
âLike you want to fight.' She raised the pillow behind her. âLike you're
happier
having a fight.'
âYou're talking rubbish.'
âIt's been nearly a week.'
He let out a long, slow breath. âI'm working more, all right?'
âI know . . .'
âYou not happy with the extra money?'
âYeah, I'm happy.'
âSo stop having a go.'
Javine didn't say anything else, and soon the silence between them threatened to drown out the noise from the street. Theo was relieved when she turned her head at the whimper from the next room, and threw back the duvet.
He'd left the Dirty South before the others, content to leave them there taking the praise and milking it. He thought he'd slipped in quietly enough, but Javine had turned over, called out his name in the dark as he'd been getting undressed and talked herself awake.
Asked him how his night had been.
He'd come away from Easy's with four hundred pounds, knowing that the three of them had made at least a grand and a half. Maybe he'd been right. Maybe Easy was taking a slice in return for the part he'd played in moving him up; for giving him the break. Maybe Easy didn't think he'd
earned
a proper cut. He didn't know what Mikey's share had been, hadn't wanted to talk about it with him there.
But he'd find out tomorrow. Ask Easy what was going on.
He lay there and tried to concentrate on the money; to make it about the cash and the things it could buy. It was easier to do that than think about how he'd made it, and what he'd done to be in that position.
âBesides, kind of job we're doing tonight, that's the reason you shot into that bitch's car in the first place, isn't it?'
Thinking back a week, it felt like being scared of heights and jumping because that was the easiest way to stop being afraid.
âLift it up, man, lift that thing up high. Show her what you got
.'
âWhat she gettin'
.
â
Do it
. . .'
He still thought they could come crashing in at any moment. Easy could talk about how solid the crew was all he damn well wanted. Theo still froze at every siren; felt the slam of every door like a hammer coming down.
Javine came back in and got into bed. Slid across and said, âHe's fine.'
âThat's good . . .'
She lay her hand on his belly and her head on his chest, began to kiss it all the way down. Theo closed his eyes and willed himself to get hard. To forget the image of a knife and a ragged hole; of a bloody smear across shiny black gaffer tape.
Â
He'd put out some leftover chicken on a paper plate; watched when, an hour earlier, the dog fox had come loping across the lawn. It had stopped a few feet away from the food and sat down, wary. Then it had walked around to the other side of the plate and waited another few minutes before finally tucking into the free meal.
Nothing wrong with being careful, Frank had thought.
Now the garden was dark again, save for the dim lights in the beds, and Frank sat with a crossword in his lap and a glass of wine at his side. He preferred the cryptic puzzles, liked to time himself, but this one had him beaten all ends up. He couldn't get his brain into gear.
Clive had called a short time before. Brought him up to speed on the pub refit and on a bolshie site manager who had been causing him grief on a housing development up west. And the business in Lewisham.
Clive was good at what he did and always used people who were equally adept. Everything was in hand.
He looked up from the paper when Laura walked in. She was wearing jeans and a T-shirt, and her hair looked wet, as though she'd recently stepped out of the shower.
âYou missed the fox,' he said.
âI was watching from upstairs.' She walked across to the window and leaned against it. She looked at him, like she was waiting to be told something else, but after a few seconds he went back to the puzzle.
He glanced up again when he heard her crying. âWhat's the matter?'
âWhat did you do?'
He took off his glasses. âYou know, so why are you asking? You don't want to hear the details, do you?' She always knew. There was nothing he could keep from her, never had been. He'd known this conversation would happen from the moment he'd shown her the newspaper story a few days before.
She lifted her arm and pressed the sleeve of the T-shirt against her face. âIs that the end of it?'
He dropped the paper at his feet. âNot even close.'
âIt won't change what's happened, will it?'
âI know that.'
âIt won't help Paul.'
âMaybe it's helping me,' Frank said. âYou know what I'm like about letting people down.' That set her off again. âYou're the
only
one who knows what I'm like.'
She nodded and moved towards him.
Behind her, the motion lights came on in the garden, but Frank didn't take his eyes from hers. She was walking over, and she was leaning down to kiss him on the cheek, and that was more important than anything.
Â
The boys who hung around by the garages got to Mikey first. They'd heard the gunshot and knew the difference between that and a firework or a car backfiring. Most people on the estate did, of course, and there were already several police cars on their way, but the boys didn't know that.
They stood around the body, five of them, looking down. They took it in from all angles, as curious as any other ten- or eleven-year-old would be.
For two of them, it was the first one they'd seen up close.
Somebody said something about the chains, about how Mikey wasn't likely to miss them, and another boy started talking about where the wallet might be. But the boy they all listened to, the one marked out by Wave for better things down the line, told them to shut their stupid mouths and show the respect that was due.
Told them that was not the way things were done.
They heard the sirens then, and somebody shouting from the estate behind them. Before the last boy turned away, he nudged the toe of his trainer forward; dabbed it into the pool of blood that was still spreading behind Mikey's head and running towards the gutter.
âSticky,' he said.
PART THREE
WOLVES AND LEOPARDS
TWENTY
âI know we're not supposed to like these places,' Deering said. âI know it's trendy to slag them off because they're taking over the world or whatever. But I do like the coffee.' The funny, strangled laugh. âI
really
like the coffee . . .'
He was odd, no question, but Helen had decided that he wasn't quite the weirdo she'd marked him down as after the phone messages. Maybe the whole âGod bless' thing was just a verbal tick. Even if it wasn't, it didn't look like he'd be trying to persuade her to let Jesus into her life any time soon.
Helen was drinking tea. âI like the coffee too,' she said. âBut the baby isn't so keen. Starts jumping around like a lunatic.'
Deering had called that morning, after Helen had spent most of an unpleasant Friday and Saturday arguing with people: with Paul's mother, who refused even to talk about ârock' music at his funeral; with Jenny, who told her that they wouldn't be needing any of Paul's old clothes, but thanks for the offer; with her old man, who had taken umbrage at suggestions she'd made when he was struggling to put the cot together. Deering had asked if she fancied a coffee, and the idea of talking to a virtual stranger about it all, of getting things off her chest, sounded like a good one.
There was plenty to offload.
He'd picked her up just after ten, then driven down to the Starbucks near Brixton tube station. The place wasn't busy and Helen had made for a table in the window, thinking that she could people-watch if the conversation flagged. A quick coffee had turned into brunch, with toasted paninis and chocolate brownies that Deering had insisted on paying for, and when Helen saw that it was almost midday, she realised that they'd talked for nearly two hours without a break.
That
she'd
talked.
âI think your reactions to other people get more extreme,' Deering said. âAfter you lose somebody.' He twisted a button of the faded denim jacket he was wearing over a dark polo shirt.
Helen had been surprised at how much younger he appeared outside the workplace, even though he'd made no attempt to hide his premature baldness. She thought his accent was stronger too, and wondered if he subconsciously suppressed it when he was dealing with other technicians and police officers.
âYou're more likely to feel elated at any scrap of good news. Or to lose it with somebody when they annoy you.'