Authors: Bill James
Harpur did not budge again until Iles descended and came to stand over him. The ACC wore fine, Bowpark-Linden black lace-ups today. His trousers were long in the leg and swaddled the shoes generously. Harpur could examine them from his level, as he had examined the weeds and ring-pull and so on. âI wept to see life leaving you, Harpur; actually, copiously, unstintingly, audibly wept,' Iles said sweetly down at him.
âI didn't hear that, sir, only the bullets.' No tears dropped on Harpur's skin from Iles, but possibly on to his clothes.
âOnly the bullets. Only the bullets,' the ACC said. âOh, my God! Is life nothing but the pathfinder to death, Col?' His voice keened. He almost went sobwards.
Harpur didn't have an answer to the query and hoped it was the sort that contained its own reply, in this case, âPerhaps.' âYou can stand now, Col,' Iles said. But, obviously afraid he might get soiled, Iles didn't offer his hand to give Harpur a tug up. The ACC had on a beautifully tailored light grey overcoat that would mark. Harpur could see his shoes and lower trouser legs were already streaked. He must have felt glad of the coat while he waited in the unheated room to do the vengeance chore. âOthers use this short cut, Harpur. We don't want to draw attention - you lying there like rat-arsed.'
Harpur stood. âDid we learn anything new, sir?'
âPatience, Col. This is the kind of experience that must be mulled over and weighed. No rush into views and judgements. Did you get to feel you knew him? Did you sense your pulse gradually, irrecoverably subside? Yet you uttered no cry for help or of pain. Such courage, Col.'
âIt was quality gunmanship, sir,' Harpur replied. âEconomical. No splattering, frenzied automatic barrage, just the two expertly slotted single shots.'
âWell, yes,' Iles said.
âThose bullets definitely had my names on - Parry, Mallen, Carnation, Harpur,' Harpur said. âEach with the four, not split two and two.'
âYou carrying anything, Col?' Iles replied.
âFor this kind of operation, no.'
âWhich?'
âTurning over another force. The armoury would refuse to issue, most probably. Protocol's involved - carrying an undeclared firearm on to someone else's ground.'
âFuck protocol, Col.'
âYes, sir, butâ'
âProtocol, Col, is there to serve us, not mess us about.'
âBut now and then we have to abide byâ'
âProtocol, Col, is for flunkies and baggage men. You mean you couldn't browbeat that twerp in the armoury to issue, regardless of protocol, Col? Wallace Vayntor - an inspector?'
â
You
got something, sir?' Harpur replied.
Iles shrugged, meaning, Harpur knew, âOf course I fucking did, Col.' The Assistant Chief undid the buttons of his overcoat, reached in and fiddled about under his left arm. Soon, he produced a holster with shoulder harness and an automatic in the pouch. âIt's a Walther, not a Browning, but will have to do,' Iles said. âStrap it on, Harpur. We have to match Tom, or almost. We'll resume after the interval.'
âResume?'
âYou're not one to leave things incomplete, are you, Harpur? Thoroughness is your thing, isn't it? Not necessarily right, but thorough.'
âIncomplete in which sense, sir?'
âCulmination,' Iles said.
â“Culmination” in which sense?'
âDiscovery, and then what followed,' Iles said.
âA couple short-cutting from the Ritson mall came across the body lying there.'
âExactly, Col.'
âBy that time, he was dead.'
âOr dying,' Iles replied. âThese were good, brave people.'
âYes.'
âI'll do both voices,' Iles said.
â“Both voices” in which sense, sir?'
âI'll have to improvise their words as they approach the body on the ground, namely you as Parry/Mallen. What they said to each other didn't come out at the trial, did it? Not relevant, Harpur. Simply, the court wanted to hear how the officer was found - prone, hands and arms hidden beneath himself as if he'd been crawling and collapsed. Trousers knee-muddied, also suggesting a crawl, as did the blood track, in places a metre wide, moonshine on it, hence observable even in the dark.'
âA useless crawl,' Harpur said.
âIn many ways a perverse crawl, Col. More symbolism here? I think so.'
âIn which respect, sir?'
âOh, yes, emphatic symbolism.'
âThis is the thing with people of your staff rank, sir. They see beyond.'
âBeyond what?'
âThe immediate.'
Iles expounded patiently, mentor flavour. âWe have to ask how the immediate came to
be
the immediate, Col. What is its genesis? What was it pre-immediate? This is our concern.'
âTrue.'
âOur shot sergeant, he regards a house - even an unfinished house - as a place of safety, a place of security and shelter. That's an instinct with most of us. Home - it's our castle. Walls, a roof, doors, cat litter, locks. But here, on that night, the house he longed to reach can offer only the opposite of all those comforting qualities. It is no place of safety, it's a sniper's eyrie. It is no place of security but one retailing deep danger. It is no place of shelter, except for a brilliantly capable, murderous, handgun lad. It's not Parry/Mallen's castle, it's an enemy turret. Do we observe disintegration of our most lovingly held, property-owning values, Col? Social break down? Chaos is come again, Harpur?'
âYou produce some grand phrases, sir, despite standing out here in the symbolic, yet real, mud.'
âSo, yes, the crawl is in the full meaning of the term, absurd. It is an attempt at escape but an attempt that makes escape less likely, shortening the distance, should the killer fire again. But, of course, it is also an inspiring, stirring glimpse of the dogged, unquenchable human spirit. He might tell himself that to crawl, to move at all, signified life. He could still, somehow, get his body to do it. This is the final struggle, a doomed, hopeless struggle, but a positive, thumbs-up struggle, against annihilation, Col. In his fading mind he might hear a voice cry out, “Do not go gentle into that good night”, or “I was ever a fighter, so one fight more, the best and the last.”'
âOne he can't win.'
âWhen you're down there on the muck again, Col, post-crawl, post-more-or-less-everything bar snuffdom, I'd like you to have that kind of thought in place, just the same. Nobleness in defeat.'
â“On the muck again”?'
âWhat I meant about not leaving things unfinished,' Iles replied. âThe intervention of this couple brings a new, special element to the narrative. We have to include them and their reactions in our present recapping treatment, haven't we? I believe you'll accept, Col, that the dialogue I manufacture for them will be credible, likely, and as near to the actual as we can get. One of my flairs, Col, is quickly to know people through and through and, therefore, how they will articulate.'
âDid your mother mention that as remarkable in you, sir, at all?'
âEmpathy, even though I haven't yet met the couple,' Iles replied. âI can deduce from their actions what is their essence, Col. This is why I feel competent to do both their voices as they enter inadvertently and unbidden upon this crisis with their innocent mall carrier bags at five pence a go.'
âYou'll display a remarkable range of mouth-lips expressions tonight, sir. First the bullets, then a two-sided conversation.'
âWe know, don't we, that Tom was carrying a fully loaded Browning? The armament would have given the couple big worry, wouldn't it? Their testimony described the shock. They see someone laid out, inert, and think, maybe a drunk - a wino who squats in one of the to-be properties and hasn't quite made it back after a usual heavy night. Or maybe a stroke/heart attack for someone crossing the site. In their civically responsible way they come to the body and turn him over on to his back, maybe to give kiss-of-life, possibly expecting to see replenishment booze cans under the body.
âHowever, at this stage they get a view of his demolished face, and can tell this isn't just a piss artist or someone sick. The wound, blood and fragmentations would indicate the passage of high-velocity metal from close range. This is the first very unpleasant revelation. Then, they become conscious of the bulge near his armpit. They'd guess at once it was no abscess or roving goitre. They find he's tooled up. It confirms they'd farcically misread the situation earlier. They suspect - more than suspect - they understand they're into something very fucking hazardous and intemperate, Col. They'd think gang war, wouldn't they? Yes. They said so at the trial.
âOf course, they'd have no notion that he might be cop. They assumed a turf battle. Helping someone who took part in it could bring peril. But it doesn't stop them trying to assist him. These were fine people, Col. Kindly and responsible folk. I'm going to compose their dialogue as they see and then approach the body. Could you get down again, Harpur, and I'll as if discover you there - or, rather,
we'll
as if discover you there. We'll put our purchases from the Ritson on the ground and do what we can for you, admittedly not much. No alternative to my supplying both voices, is there, the man's and the woman's? It would ruin verisimilitude if you spoke one of the couple's words from the ground, taking two parts yourself - Tom and a shopper. They'd be discussing you as someone flat on the soil, but you'd be piping up as if you were one of them and standing, your actual voice coming, though, from below. Just lie there, destroyed, anonymous, would you, Col, please?'
H
arpur went to ground again and got another deeply intimate view of the can ring-pull, thrive-anywhere weeds, and so on. He lifted his eyes, though, and watched the ACC walk off the site - walk off the site as simply Desmond Iles, an Assistant Chief, married to Sarah, father of one - and then spin around and start to come back, now representing within his creative self the two shoppers who'd found Parry/Mallen's body on that bad night. He picked his way out and then in once more over a flattened section of fence.
On his return he walked with a different rhythm from that familiar cheetah-like, easy, muscular stride, a conqueror's amble. Now, he held both arms stiff down against his coat, as though carrying bagged purchases from the Ritson mall shops, most probably food for the week, as well as other domestic items such as bleach, bog paper and shampoo. These imaginary loads affected his balance a little -
their
balance a little
-
when negotiating the wrecked fence and he took it gingerly, on the couple's behalf. If he fell it would be three people falling, a tripartite disaster. Harpur thought he could see a tolerant, wryish smile on the ACC's features, saying that, if you took forbidden short-cuts over uncleared ground, you'd better expect snags. Perhaps it also said that, if you took forbidden short-cuts over uncleared ground, you'd better expect to come across a deceased - a violently deceased, for instance - Col Harpur prone as Parry/Mallen.
Once on the site again, Iles looked ahead for most of the time, sorting out a safe route for the three of them - that is, Iles himself, plus the two Ritson customers, now played by the Assistant Chief in this evening performance of his own impromptu production. Flair? The word was made for him. Occasionally, he turned his head slightly left, to indicate a conversation with his - or her - partner. Then, after a few steps like that, he gazed forward again, navigating, and in a while angled his head slightly right. This would be the partner replying, of course.
They seemed to have quite a lively, talky-talky relationship, Harpur thought. Speech wasn't backed up by vigorous gesturing, however, because of the goods they both carried, or would have carried if they were real and present there, on site, instead of just Iles acting as them both. They
had
been real and present and very involved there, on site, during that murder night, and this was what mattered to Iles, as he devotedly dummied for both. Harpur could see his lips moving at these moments, but the distance was too great as yet to eavesdrop, or even to know which sex Iles might be in at a particular point, the man or the woman shopper. Gender-switches wouldn't bother Iles. He'd had some practice lately feminizing his voice when he lampooned Maud for supposedly chatting up Harpur. Again, flair - he embodied the word.
Occasionally, the man, or woman - whichever Iles might be
at the moment - would laugh at something supposedly said between them. This was a louder sound, one that Harpur
could
pick up where he lay shot dead. Cheerfulness would be credible for the couple at these early moments, before they spotted the body. Possibly they'd had a successful session at the Ritson shops, taking advantage of special offers and discounts, stocking up very efficiently, negating inflation. It seemed to Harpur that most of the laughs - high-toned, bubbly, tickled-pink - came from the woman. The man appeared to be an entertaining, witty fellow, not just a packhorse for mall goods.
Harpur didn't understand where Iles had got this notion from. The court transcript showed both shoppers answering lawyers' questions about discovery of Parry/Mallen in a plain, forthright way. The laughter might be Iles's invention, to give them both some individuality, the he-figure a comedian, the she with a ready sense of humour. This was one-man theatre - one man playing two. Characterization counted. Harpur could imagine the kind of dating ad that brought these two together: âMan with good sense of humour (jokesmith) would like to meet woman with good sense of humour (enthusiastic guffawer).' He wondered whether Iles's style of acting would be what was known in the theatre and Hollywood as The Method. Iles's Method was to nab both shoppers' parts for himself and cast Harpur as a carcass. This, too, was flair of a kind - the âfuck you, Harpur' kind.