Looking for Trouble (10 page)

Read Looking for Trouble Online

Authors: Cath Staincliffe

Harry didn’t reply. Silence is consent.

I got up and shifted my lounger round, following the sun. Asked Harry about his work and lay, eyes half-closed, as he entertained me with tales of skulduggery in the world of journalism.

 

Maddie and I stayed for tea, enjoying a huge mixed salad, chips and veggie-burgers in the open air, It was after seven when I strapped a flagging Maddie onto the bike seat and pedalled home. She nodded off on the way. I woke her for a wee then put her to bed, grime and all.

I read the Sunday papers then ferreted out my library book. It was overdue. A crime story set on a cruise ship in the ‘thirties. I couldn’t concentrate. The mannered dialogue was too much effort and I found I didn’t really care whodunnit or why. I scanned the television page. ‘Twelve Angry Men.’ I’d seen it twice but it still gripped me.

On my way to bed, I sorted out clothes for the funeral. My only black clothes were heavy winter ones and the smoke-drenched dress I’d worn to Barney’s. Colour didn’t matter really. It was hardly going to be a big, formal affair. I found some lightweight navy trousers and a green sweatshirt. Casual but clean.

I’d not heard from JB’s friend. Would I be the only mourner? I’d hardly known him. Surely, he’d have lots of friends? She would let them know, wouldn’t she? He deserved that.

If they did turn up, would they talk to me? Maybe they all thought I’d been responsible for his death. But why? What had she meant?

I fell asleep defending myself against a charge of murder, not knowing what the case against me was. Only that I was innocent. Innocent.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN
 

 

‘I’ll give you a lift back to town?’

She hesitated. She’d be bloody daft to refuse. It was pissing down. Her pink cotton jacket and mini skirt were already sodden. Funeral weather. It fitted perfectly with the miserable rite we’d both witnessed. A few generalised platitudes from a cleric and JB laid to rest in the public grave. I still called him JB, though officially we’d just buried Philip Hargreaves. Dead and gone. But not forgotten. Not yet.

‘Alright.’

I bundled Digger into the back seat. Got in the driver’s seat and opened the passenger door. She climbed in. Her bare legs were mottled with cold. Water dripped from the lank strands of hair onto her shoulders. I wanted to towel her dry and put some warm clothes on her.

‘I’m glad you came,’ I said. ‘Someone who knew him.’

‘I wasn’t going to,’ she said. She coughed. Pulled a squashed packet of Benson and Hedges from her pocket. Opened it and took out a disposable lighter and a cigarette.

I opened my window. I didn’t know which was worse, the second-hand fag smoke or the wet dog stench steaming off Digger.

‘Why weren’t you going to come?’

She shrugged and looked away out of the window. Her hand was trembling. I don’t think it was just the cold.

‘What did you mean, the other day, about it being my fault?’

‘Nothing. I were just upset, right.’ She was a lousy liar.

‘I don’t know your name.’

‘Leanne.’

‘I’d like to talk, Leanne.’

‘What’s the point?’ She blew a stream of smoke straight ahead.

‘Things I want to know.’

‘I don’t know anything.’ Defensive. ‘I don’t know anything, right?’ Wrong.

‘Let’s get out of here.’ I started the engine. ‘Find somewhere to dry off. I’ll buy you a meal.’

‘Not in town.’

‘What?’

‘Someone might see us.’ She was paranoid. Perhaps with good reason. If JB’s overdose had not been self-administered.

‘Would they know who I was?’ I asked her.

‘Maybe. I dunno. I can’t think right when I’m hungry.’

‘Better get you some food then.’ She grinned, then it was gone. ‘Do you like Indian food?’

‘Yeah. Anything.’

 

A handful of the curry houses in Rusholme open in the afternoon. The rest don’t bother. Trade is slack in the daytime, brisk at night. The old Shezan was open. Empty, but open. We wouldn’t be hustled to eat up and move on.

‘There’s a Kentucky Chicken there,’ said Leanne.

‘That’s just a take-away. Come on.’

 

I held back on the questions till Leanne had got through a plateful of bhajis and samosas and well into her Prawn Dansak.

‘About JB,’ I began.

‘It’s over, right.’ She glared at me.

‘No, it isn’t. I want to know what happened to him. Don’t you?’

‘No.’ Vehemently. She set her jaw. Blinked rapidly.

‘You’re frightened. He didn’t kill himself, did he? You know that. He told me he didn’t take drugs. I don’t think he lied to me. Was he in trouble?’

‘Not till you poked your nose in.’

‘I was trying to trace someone, a runaway...’

‘Martin Hobbs, he told me. He was playing detective and all, wasn’t he? Next news, he’s dead.’

‘When did you see him last?’

‘I dunno...erm...Thursday morning.’ I could see from her eyes that she was working out the right answer. She broke up pieces of naan and dropped them into the remains of her meal.

‘Did he use drugs?’

She shook her head. ‘No, never.’

‘Why are you frightened, Leanne, what is it?’ She wriggled in her seat, sighed theatrically and cast her eyes from side to side, looking for escape. She looked tired, unwell. Her skin was a pasty white, she had a cold sore and chapped lips.

‘Tell me what you know.’ I raised my voice and the waiter, reading his paper in the corner, glanced over. ‘Please,’ I said quietly. ‘You were his friend, he helped you out didn’t he? Whatever happened may tie up with what he was doing for me. I want to know. He’d want me to know. Don’t you think you owe him that, at least?’

She poured salt onto the table, pushed it into a little heap, drew a circle in it.

‘Just another dead junkie,’ I said, ‘that’s what the police reckon, who gives a fuck? You happy with that, are you?’

‘Shut up. Why you so fucking interested anyway? Fancied him, didn’t you?’

How the hell did she know? My cheeks burned. It wasn’t the curry.

‘Don’t change the subject. Stop pissing around,’ I was riled now, ‘and tell me.’

‘Can’t fucking make me.’ She was all defiance, chin up, eyes hard.

I sighed. ‘Please, Leanne.’

Silence. She traced shapes in the salt. At last, she began to speak, reluctantly, in a slow monotone.

JB had talked to her about trying to find Martin. She knew him a bit; they’d both been dossing at the squat. JB had hung around outside the clubs on the Wednesday night looking for people he knew. He’d got a couple of strange reactions, people overly nervous about his questions, but no information at all. On the Thursday morning everything had been as usual, though JB slept in after his late night. Leanne was out selling. She returned to the squat about two-thirty. She’d just entered the cellar when she heard footsteps she didn’t recognise on the stairs. She hid. The man passed her and went out of the cellar door, leaving it ajar. She knew who he was, a right bastard. She went up to the flat and found JB He was dead. She ran away, slept out that night. Didn’t return until she heard about JB on the grapevine.

‘Why? Why on earth didn’t you report it?’

‘He was dead, wasn’t he? What’s the point?’ Defensive.

‘This man?’ I asked.

That look of fear. ‘He’s bad news. Smiley, dunno his real name. He’s a right bastard. JB knew him, told me to keep well clear of him. He’s done a lot of time in Strangeways.’

‘What for?’

‘You name it – drugs, porno stuff. I’m not gonna grass him up, no way.’

‘But he probably did it. The police would protect you.’

‘No they fucking wouldn’t.’ She leant forward, spoke urgently. ‘They’ll put me back in care, that’s what they’d do, right?’

‘You’re not sixteen? How old? Fourteen, fifteen?’

‘Thirteen, but it doesn’t matter see, I’m not doing another day in care, not for you, not for anyone.’ She leant back, searched for her cigarettes. Lit one. Leant forward again. ‘And don’t try dragging me into all this, right, ‘cos I never saw anything, right? Never met you.’

‘What’s he look like?’

‘You don’t want to know,’

‘Leanne...’

She shrugged. ‘I dunno. Always smiling, got a scar see, he grassed on someone, they didn’t like it.’ She drew her finger across her face in a large crescent.

‘Tall, short, black, white, how old?’

‘White, getting on a bit, I dunno. I’m off.’ She pushed back her chair.

‘D’you need some bus-fare?’

‘S’alright, I got some.’

I held out one of my cards.

‘No, ta.’ She handed it back.

‘Just in case.’

She smiled. ‘I never seen you. What would I be doing with that?’

‘I’m in the Yellow Pages,’ I called, as she walked out. ‘Kilkenny.’

 

I asked for the bill. Went and waited at the counter while the waiter added it up. Rummaged in my bag for my purse. Gone. Thirty quid. The little sod. Library tickets, Leisure Pass. Luckily, I keep my cheque book and card in a separate pocket. She’d not got that. I wondered how she’d spend the money. Clothes, food, booze, drugs? It wouldn’t go far. And then she’d be back in the doorways, begging to get by. Oh, well. It was probably a fair price for what she’d told me. Only this wasn’t a case; there was no client paying the expenses. If I wanted the truth, I’d have to pay for it. At that time, I’d no idea how much the whole business was going to cost me.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN
 

 

I was late getting to school. Mortal sin. I found Maddie sitting with her teacher in the empty classroom.

‘I’m so sorry,’ I gushed. ‘The traffic was awful.’ Mrs Cummings looked relieved; Maddie burst into tears. Guilt.

‘Why didn’t you come?’ she repeated time and again in between sobs, as we drove to collect Tom. I’d tried to hug her but she’d shoved me away. She needed more time to be angry, to hate me for abandoning her. My explanations and apologies were irrelevant. The deed had been done.

The nursery stays open till six to cater for working parents, so my being half an hour later than usual was neither here nor there. Tom had been on his Castlefield Museum trip and was full of chatter about trains with smoke coming out of them.

 

Maddie headed straight for the television and sought comfort in Alvin and the Chipmunks. Tom joined her. I took them in some biscuits and milkshake then got myself a cup of tea.

 

So now I knew. JB hadn’t been a user. Smiley had killed him. Found some way to stick a needle in his arm and pump him full of heroin. Oh, I was jumping to conclusions, but it wasn’t much of a jump. Now I had a whole new crop of questions. They all began with why. Why was asking after a runaway such a threat to Smiley? After all, I’d seen Martin myself. He wasn’t dead or anything.

Maybe he was mixed up with the drug cartels or starring in porno films. Interest in Martin might turn up information that jeopardised others. Worth killing to keep under wraps. But JB hadn’t found anything out anyway, as far as I knew.

I’d have to go to the police. What’s the point, as Leanne would say? All I had was hearsay. Impossible to prove without Leanne’s co-operation. And running counter to the official version of events. Nevertheless, I’d have to tell them what I’d heard. There was no way I was going to pursue some nutter like Smiley. Way out of my league. Still, it wouldn’t hurt to know a bit more about him. I rang Harry.

‘Sal, you’ve saved me!’

‘From?’

‘Repetitive Strain Injury. I’ve been glued to the screen all bloody day. I forget to take breaks. They’re addictive, you know.’ I didn’t. My funds didn’t stretch to a typewriter, let alone a word-processor. It was high on my list of things I’d get when-my-boat-comes-in.

‘An article?’ I asked.

‘Guardian. Selling off Salford – poorest city in the land. Dockland development for the rich, no-go areas for the poor.’

‘I get the picture.’

‘So, is this a social call?’

‘No, business. I want to find out about someone, well, he’s a gangster by all accounts.’ Harry made a murmur of surprise.

‘He was seen leaving JB’s flat the day he died.’

‘How was the funeral?’

‘Deadly.’

Harry laughed.

Maddie came out of the lounge and thrust her empty cup in my face. I nodded and pointed to the phone. She went off whining.

‘I’m not up to date on the criminal fraternity,’ said Harry, ‘but I know a man who is. What’s this bloke’s name?’

‘Don’t know. Nickname’s Smiley. Got a scar either side of his mouth. He’s done time, into heavy stuff, drugs, pornography. That’s all I know.’

‘See what I can do. No rush, is there?’

‘No. Curiosity really. I’m not about to rustle up a posse.’

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