Authors: Anthony Frewin
Unless what? Spit it out.
âUnless you are prepared to give us a little help.'
Help. Such a little word! Help. Four letters only but what treachery can hide behind it. Help.
âA little help.'
âYeah, a little help.'
âWhat sort of help do you have in mind?'
They look at each other and swap knowing smirks.
âThere's a friend of yours we're interested in. A smart chap. Got himself into a bit of bother lately. Very dodgy case. A lot of unwholesomeness.'
âUnwholesomeness?' A bizarre word in this context.
âYou know, drugs, perversion, pornography ⦠little innocent white girls being forced to suck big black men's cocks and getting a mouthful of sperm. Stuff like
that
.'
âYeah, we've seen the photographs. Black men's jism all over their pretty, innocent faces.'
âAnd in their hair.'
âPutting on little spectacles like this for his friends. You know the sort of thing. Fair enough. But then hidden cameras. A bit of blackmail. Very nasty.'
âWho are you two talking about?' I had a pretty good idea who they were talking about but I wasn't going to say the name.
âYou know who we are talking about.'
âTell me.'
âYou tell him, Donald.'
âWard. Dr Stephen Ward.'
âI've been reading about him in the papers,' I said, like I was unconsciously distancing myself from him.
âNow it seems that nice Dr Ward gave you something to look after a little while back. Something very important.'
âHe did?'
âHe did. And you can save yourself a lot of bother by telling us where it is.'
âWhere what is?'
âYou know. Now, where is it?'
âI don't know what you're talking about.'
âYou are going to be sent down for so fucking long they're going to throw away the key, lad. You've fucking had it all right. Sergeant!'
Â
Ninety laps. Ninety-one laps. Ninety-two laps. I'm
concentrating
on doing a mile. There's too much going on here to confront it head on. I can only look at it obliquely. Ninety-three laps.
Ninety-four
laps. But how did they know about Stephen giving me something? How? Stephen must have told somebody who told them. But who? Ninety-five laps. Ninety-six laps. Why would he tell someone? And who? It's useless thinking about this. I don't know who Stephen's friends are, do I? Is there some police or security spy in his camp or what? Ninety-seven laps. Who did I tell? I didn't. I didn't tell anyone ⦠but Veronica. Veronica knows. Would she tell anyone? No, she wouldn't. But I don't know what pressure could have been put on her. I guess they know what's in the suitcase. I don't. If ever I get out of here I'll take a peek all right.
Where was I? Ninety-something. Ninety-five.
Ninety-six
. Ninety-seven. Ninety-eight. Ninety-nine. One hundred. Made it. Only another fifty to go and I've done a mile.
Â
If anxiety served any positive purpose I'd immerse myself in it. I'm prone to it if I don't keep a grip on myself. I have to block it out. I've got to keep aware of the source of it, but only through my peripheral vision. What is going to be is going to be.
Today, straight after breakfast, I did two miles non-stop. Pretty good going. Now I'm doing an A to Z of places in England and I'm stuck on Q. P was for Preston. But what's Q for? U always follows Q so it would be a place spelt
Qu-something
. Qu-? Quentin? Is there a place called Quentin? No, I don't think so.
Fuck it.
Sonny.
Sonny?
Where's Sonny? The cops didn't seem to know anything about him. Perhaps he's still hiding in the woods, living the life of a wild man? Living on berries and rabbits?
Now the big question here is, how did the police get on to us? Us? Sonny and/or me? They could have been on to him
or
me. Me seems more likely now in the light of the Stephen business. Me. I've been half-thinking of this always as some drugs operation that has Sonny in its sights. But no. Perhaps not. It was about
me
,
not him. Sonny was just delivering me up.
Had they been following us out of London? If so, why didn't they apprehend us earlier? Why wait until we've stopped? Easier, I guess. Why didn't they make sure they had Sonny? Perhaps they just fucked up? Just one big
fuckup
. Cox and his mate seem a couple of prize wankers. And who were those other blokes at the railway station?
I hear the key going into the lock and the bolts being thrown. I look up. The door swings open and there's a young copper there in shirtsleeves. Blond. Smiling. Looks a regular sort.
âPurdom?'
âUh-huh.'
âOn your bike. You're free to go.'
âFree to go? Walk out of here?'
âThat's right.'
âThis some trick or something?'
âNo. I've just been told to release you.'
âWhy?'
âThey don't tell me more than I need to know.'
âDoes this mean I'm not being charged?'
âMust do. Come on. I got to clear the room out before the next guest arrives.'
âRight.'
I followed the copper down a couple of corridors and up some flights of steps and through a couple of doors and
before I knew where I was I was out on the street, standing on Savile Row looking up at the West End Central building.
âNice day,' I said to the copper.
âA beauty.'
âAren't you supposed to tell me not to get into trouble again or something?'
âNot me. I'm an acting gaoler not a sermoniser.'
âSee you around.'
âWho knows?'
A bright sunny day with a cool breeze. Cars and traffic and black cabs. Women in summer dresses and tourists by the cartload. A bright sunny day, all right. But what day? What day of the week?
I asked some civil servant type what day it was. He looked at me like I was a loony, said Wednesday and then hurried off. Wednesday, 10 July 1963. I've been in there for four days. Since Sunday. Jesus fucking Christ!
Â
I walked across to Regent Street and then down to Brewer Street and along to the Snax Bar. Charlie was there with a couple of the part-timers.
âWhere you been?' he said. âThe old man's been looking for you.'
âWhen's he back?'
âTonight some time.'
âTell him I'll be here tomorrow.'
âWill do.'
âYou seen Sonny at all?'
âNot for about a week. Why?'
I gave Charlie an abbreviated version of events since last Saturday. I told him everything except the Stephen stuff. He looked after me incredulously. I told him not to pass it on to Mr Calabrese, he might get worried, might think I'm not a fit person to look after the shop. Charlie's cool.
I sat down with a coffee and two rounds of corned beef sandwiches. White bread never tasted better.
âOK, Tim. What do you do now?'
âKeep my head down and hope nobody notices me.'
âIf you ever learn that trick tell me how.'
âI will. Can you lend me a fiver? I've got no cash on me.'
âSure.'
I walked down Wardour Street and along Old Compton Street looking for a cab. None about. I finally picked one up near the top of Charing Cross Road. I told the driver Bayswater, Porchester Road. But I changed my mind and decided to go to Sonny's place instead. Ladbroke Grove, just up past the station. See what that black dude has got to say for himself. Quiz him about a few things. See if he knows something I don't.
As the cab sped down Oxford Street I kept thinking about last Saturday night, about us stopping and about Sonny going for a leak. He'd seemed a bit nervous that evening. He says he wants to take a leak. He disappears into the woods and he's gone a long time. Where is he now? Perhaps I'll soon find out. Perhaps he'll tell me he had no choice but to set me up?
The cab dropped me on the corner, a few doors down from Sonny's place. I gave the cabby a two-bob tip. A couple of little black kids were playing on the pavement and when they saw me coming they stopped and stared at me,
suspicious
like. I went down the steps to the basement. The door was ajar. I pushed it open and called Sonny's name.
A slim black woman in her twenties appeared in the corridor. She was dressed in a cutaway housecoat that showed the upper reaches of her tits. Her lips were bright red. Her eyes were made up in thick layers. Great big eyes. Shining saucers. She was sexy all right.
She looked me up and down, very disdainfully. She exaggerated the disdain in her face. She wanted whitey to know she was most disdainful. Mightily disdainful.
âWe not open now. You come back tonight.'
So, Sonny was now using his place as a knocking shop. The lad's lust for money stops at nothing.
âI don't want any business. I want to see Sonny.'
âSonny not here.'
âWhen is he due back?'
âWe don't know.'
âHave you seen him today?'
âNo Sonny today.'
âWhen did you last see him?'
âWho are you?'
âTim. Timmy. I'm an old friend of Sonny's.'
âA real friend?'
âA real friend, yes. I've been around here stacks of times. Smoked a lot of dope with him. Lent him money.' I could have added that I'd shot dirty pictures and a porno movie here too, but an inner voice told me to keep my big mouth shut.
âYou know where he is?'
âDo I know where he is? I'm asking you where he is.'
âYou come in.'
She led me through the flat to the room at the back that opens on to the garden. She took a lighted cigarette from the ashtray that she had left. On the table there was a copy of the
Gleaner
,
she'd been reading about the homeland where the sun shone every day and where you could smoke as much
ganja
as you liked and nobody said nothing.
She sat down at the table. I loafed down on the old threadbare sofa.
âWhere Sonny then?' she asked. She puffed away at her cigarette and stared at me quizzically. In the position she was sitting I could see more of her breasts now. Big full breasts.
âYou tell me when you last saw him.'
âHe here Saturday morning. He say he going out for a few hours. Back at night. He don't come back.'
âSo, you haven't seen him since then?'
âNo Sonny since then.'
âHas anybody else seen him since then that you know about?'
âNobody see him. You know where he is now?'
âNo, I don't. I saw him on Saturday too ⦠last.'
âWhere you go?'
âJust in Soho. We had a drink together.' I didn't think it was a good idea to say anything more to her. Loose talk loses lives, as I think they used to say.
âHe said he was going to a party. Did he say anything about that to you?'
âParty? Don't know about party.'
âYeah. A party in Hitchin ⦠near Hitchin. Have you ever heard of the place?'
âI only know London.'
So old Sonny hasn't been home since Saturday. Unusual. So, where is he, then? He could still be in the wood, in which case he's probably dead (but how?). He could be in police custody, but what for? Drugs? If they've got him for that they would have turned this tip over to see what else they could find.
âHave any police been here since Saturday? Any at all?'
âNo police here.'
It doesn't seem the police have got him then ⦠unless, of course, Sonny is sitting there in silence refusing to cooperate. Is that likely? Is that possible? No. Sonny loves talking. He can't stop talking. He'd be trying to talk himself up a deal. Anything the police wanted to know would come tumbling out.
So what does that leave? Sonny lying low? Keeping out of the way until it all blows over? (Until what blows over? Me?) But why? I believe her, whatever her name is.
âWhat is your name?'
âShamay.'
She's telling the truth is Shamay. She hasn't seen him since Saturday.
Sonny is a homebody. If he hasn't been home for four or five days something's up. Something's not quite kosher. But what? Am I going to come up with any answers? Do I want to? Do I really care about this, about the Stephen business? About what happened to me? About what's
going on? Yeah, I suppose I do, but for no noble reason. Just idle curiosity, I guess. Intellectual inquisitiveness. That's all. There's yesterday's truth, today's truth, tomorrow's truth. Some things you never find out about.
âYou live here with Sonny?'
âYes. Me and Susanna. We live here. Work for Sonny.'
âBusiness good?'
âWe're busy. You want some business?'
âAnother time, perhaps,' I said.
âYou want cup of tea?'
âNo. No thanks. I better be going.'
âYou come and see me again some time?'
âYeah.'
âYou let me know about Sonny?'
âIf I find out I will.'
Sonny, that dumb fucker.
âHas anyone else been around asking about Sonny?' This question just came out, popped out straight from my unconscious. The first thing I knew about it was when it was on my lips. Why did I ask it? Indeed, why didn't I ask it earlier?
âFew days ago gentleman come here and ask about Sonny. Nice gentleman.'
âWho was he?'
âJust a gentleman.'
âA copper?'
âNot policeman.'
âWhat was his name?'
âDidn't ask name. He not say. He same age as your father be. He say Sonny not show up. Sonny supposed to.'
âShow up where?'
âDon't know.'
âWhen was this?'
âBeginning of week he call here. Monday.'
âYou'd never seen him before?'