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‘That’s no problem,’ he said. ‘But you’re a real comrade, Michael. I shan’t forget this. I’m really in the shit this time, because the man in the iron lung is bound to smell a rat once he knows I’m back.’

‘He’ll never know.’

‘That’s what you think. His snoops already know I left Beirut. Moggerhanger’s man got me to the plane without ’em knowing, but they’ll start looking for me by tomorrow, though I’m sure nobody tailed me here.’

‘When they know you’re back without reporting to them, they’re going to suspect me more than ever. It’s a very awkward moment.’

‘I’m afraid it is, lad,’ he said, looking at me with those sad eyes that at times permeated his whole spirit. Without his briefcase and smart clothes, his good haircut and stylish hat, and after his time in the sink-hole, he looked very subdued, already hunted and dodging from hedge to hedge. ‘Why don’t you come to the station with me?’ he said. ‘I’ve got a couple of revolvers and some ammo. Two’s better than one when you’re on the run. We could hold ’em off a treat if ever they find us. Believe me, it’ll be the wisest thing in the end.’

I saw the sense of it: ‘Can’t. I’ve got too many things to wind up here. I’ll see you in a month, though.’

‘I hope so,’ he said, as the doorbell rang. ‘Don’t say I didn’t warn you.’

I managed a smile, and helped him with his luggage: ‘I shan’t.’

I was sorry to see him go. He took some of my courage, though I kept enough of it to phone headquarters in a very jocular mood, to which Stanley reacted beautifully. I wanted to put my foot down as a brake and stop things tilting along so fast, but that would only draw unnecessary suspicion on me, so I had to learn to roll with it, and look out for myself as I went along. The tell-tale bead of sweat could be my ruin, a stray hair in my nose, a shoelace about to come undone. I had to be careful not to lose too much weight in case anyone should imagine I was afraid of the thin ice under me.

Stanley said it was business as usual. I was to be on a plane the day after tomorrow, late afternoon, so as to give Pindarry and Cottapilly time to get off first to Switzerland. After that there’d be a week’s rest. I said I’d get there at three o’clock, but Stanley told me to make it an early lunch that day, and get to headquarters at two for loading. ‘I’m ready for anything,’ I said. ‘The firm seems to be looking up these days.’

‘Our clients have confidence in us,’ he said with a laugh, and hung up in the middle of another.

At seven I walked over the river and made for the Blaskin pad. Pearl opened the door, and showed no surprise on her small face, made even smaller by short hair that came in a fringe over her forehead, so that she looked more like some TV river-bank animal than ever.

Gilbert looked at me: ‘What the hell do you want? I thought you were stuck for ever in that city of sin, Nottingham. Didn’t I last see you dropping off the train there? Not that I remember much. I was so drunk.’ He wore a plum-coloured dressing-gown and had a cigarette in his wide mouth. He had no hair to go grey on his pink bald head, so his face had taken over that role. ‘Sit down and get some alcohol.’

‘You don’t look good,’ I told him, throwing down my coat. Pearl curled up on the rug at his feet, and I thought she was going to take off his carpet slippers and start kissing his toes. But she merely nestled her cheek on them.

‘I’ve had a few upsets,’ he admitted, his head right back and canon-mouths of smoke going up at the ceiling.

‘June?’

‘Right,’ he laughed. ‘She couldn’t take it, I suppose, so she ran off with that phoney poet called Ron Delph. That’s one way to get rid of her.’

‘Poor, poor Gilbert,’ said Pearl. ‘He hadn’t eaten for days, and he was lying near the gas stove when I found him, trying to turn the taps on, drunk and crying.’

He jerked forward, and lifted her face sharply with his feet: ‘That’s your sorry tale, you lying bitch. Don’t re-write my history, you Kremlin-faced pug, or I’ll throw you out of that window and down into the dustbins.’

‘Naughty Gilbert,’ she said, looking as if she were about to cry. ‘You’re such a novelist, my love.’

‘To hell with that,’ he said. ‘You are, not me, with your sycophantic thesis. Those that live by the novel shall die by the fucking novel, you trollop. Remember that, or your life won’t be worth living.’

‘Does this go on all the time?’ I asked, hoping to stop them.

‘Only when you’re here, or somebody else is.’

He smiled: ‘We’re like two lovebirds in a cage when we’re on our own, aren’t we, pet?’

‘Yes,’ she said, her cheek back on his foot.

‘She’s trying to drive me crazy,’ he said, ‘but I’ll get her first.’

‘I’m glad to see you so happy,’ I said. ‘How’s The History of Carnage?’

‘Bloody. I’d only done fifty pages when I cut my finger slicing a lemon. So I threw it aside. I’m back on the novel now. It’s going very well, the best thing I can remember doing, in fact. Thank God I got rid of that whore June. She went on to Ron Delph, the Concrete Poet. Too much sand in him, I expect. God’s a bloody awful builder.’

‘She had a kid by him when she was eighteen,’ I said. ‘Maybe they’ll get married now.’

He walked to the door and back again: ‘She never told me whose kid it was. Never mind, one more down the chute.’

‘Don’t get depressed about it,’ said Pearl soothingly.

He poured half a pint of whisky and held it up to the light: ‘Piss. But hot piss. If I drink whisky, I’m just plain randy — and it doesn’t take long to get it over with, does it Pearl Barley? Go and make us some black coffee for Christ’s sake. When I drink vodka I get brutal, and take my pleasure that way, so I can’t say whether it’s enjoyed by both parties because it depends who I’m with. Best of all is when I drink champagne, because then it goes on for hours.’ He gulped his whisky. Pearl shook her head and went to make coffee. ‘You know what, Michael?’

‘What?’ I said, watching him.

‘I should have been born without a penis. Not only would I have been a happy man, but there’d have been lots of happier women in the world as well. As soon as the doctor pulled me out of my mother he should have told the nurse to chop off my cock. It’s not fair to man or beast. It’s the curse of mankind, sex. If a man goes with a woman ten years older than himself he’s humping his mother. If he goes with a girl younger than himself he’s raping his daughter. If he pansies after a young man he’s buggering his son. If he keeps pets he’s a bit of a sod. If he gets off with an older man he’s being bummed by his father. Hallelujah! If he gets a woman of the same age he’s perverse because he’s normal. The only answer is to be indiscriminate, hump into what hole you can get and as the mood takes you.’

He fell silent, but I knew it wouldn’t be for long, so I asked him if he’d ever been in love. His bald head wrinkled. ‘Love? Way back in the swampy mists of time, I vaguely remember it. Adolescent infatuation. There was nothing between that and a lifelong attack of satyriasis which is still going on only because I can’t stop breathing.’

‘Or boasting,’ I couldn’t help saying.

He looked hard at me. ‘Don’t be impertinent, sonny boy.’

‘You were in Nottingham during the war, weren’t you?’ I said.

‘Stop me drinking, Michael.’

‘Why the hell should I?’

He sent his glass splintering against the wall. ‘I’ll stop myself. What mercy can one expect from the hungry generation? I was the hungry generation twenty years ago, and I haven’t stopped being hungry. The trouble is that I don’t see why I should. But another hungry generation is coming up on me, and I don’t like it.’