Wondering just how much a newspaper would pay for her story, Sandy hastily agreed.
‘You’d better fucking not,’ Swann hissed. ‘My missus would kill me.’
You should have thought about that earlier, Sandy thought. She was trying to remember the name of the guy who sold all the kiss-and-tell stories to the tabloids . . . Frank – Frank Something? The name wouldn’t come. No matter, Kelly would know. She probably had the number in her mobile already.
‘Your wife,’ Kelly enquired sweetly, ‘has she had the baby yet?’ Swann looked at the floor. ‘Next month,’ he mumbled. ‘On the ninth.’
‘Is that the due date?’ Sandy asked.
‘Suppose so,’ Swann yawned. ‘That’s when she’s booked in for the C-section.’
‘Oh.’ Feeling woozy, Sandy tried to smile at Swann as she headed towards the door. His robe had fallen open and she noticed that his penis had shrunk to the point where it was almost invisible. ‘Don’t worry,’ she cooed, nodding at Kelly, ‘only total slappers go to the papers. We’re not like that.’
Downstairs, Sandy began to feel better. Sitting in the Light Bar, she looked around, scanning the room carefully for a sign of any celebrities. Disappointed not to see any familiar faces, she sucked a mouthful of her Good Time Girl cocktail – Finlandia mango vodka blended with fresh mango and passion-fruit purées, passion-fruit syrup, and organic vanilla ice cream, served straight up.
‘A bit quiet in here, isn’t it?’ she said.
Kelly glanced towards the bar and shrugged. ‘It’s still early.’ She took a hit of her Cinnamon Mule – cinnamon infused with ten-cane rum, shaken with limes and fresh ginger and topped with ginger beer – and leaned towards her friend, lowering her voice slightly. ‘And we’ve just shagged Gavin Swann.’
You’ve just shagged him, Sandy thought tartly. I just gave him a bit of hand relief and let him stick his fingers up my arsehole. ‘How much did he give you?’
Kelly took another mouthful of her drink. ‘A grand.’
‘Nice.’
Kelly frowned. ‘It won’t even pay off my credit-card bill. And I owe my mum another five hundred for a phone bill she paid for me.’
Sandy wondered what had happened to her share but, knowing that it wasn’t worth the hassle to argue, she kept her mouth shut.
‘I’m sick of being bloody skint,’ Kelly moaned, plonking her glass down on the table so hard that Sandy was worried it might break.
Sandy gestured back towards the hotel lobby. ‘Maybe you could go back up and do him again.’
‘Don’t be stupid,’ Kelly laughed, ‘it’ll take him hours to be able to get it up again.’
‘He could take something.’
‘I don’t think so. Anyway, he’ll probably be asleep by now.’
Taking another sip of her cocktail, Sandy eyed her friend carefully. ‘Would you ever, like – you know – go to the papers?’
‘Nah. Gavin would go mad. His wife would kill him. You heard him, she’s something like eight-and-a-half months’ pregnant.’
‘She forgave him last time,’ Sandy pointed out. ‘When he was in the papers for shagging the secretary of his Singaporean fan club on a pre-season tour. And the time before that.’
‘I know,’ Kelly said, ‘but this time, with a kid on the way, you’d have thought . . .’
‘But you deserve something, don’t you?’ said Sandy, quickly changing tack.
‘I suppose.’
‘The papers deal with this kind of thing all the time. They would do it tastefully. And they’d pay. There’s that guy who sells all the stories.’
‘Frank Maxwell,’ Kelly said brightly. ‘I met him once. Seemed like a decent guy.’
‘We could give him a call.’
‘Maybe,’ said Kelly thoughtfully, as if the idea had never before crossed her mind. She gestured at a passing waiter, signalling for him to bring them a couple more cocktails. ‘Just to get his input.’
‘Makes sense,’ Sandy smiled, ‘to see what he thinks.’
EIGHTEEN
‘What do you think of Alice’s plan to give up dope?’
Carlyle scratched his chin . ‘You can only hope.’
‘I was thinking I might take her to Liberia.’
For a moment, Carlyle was thrown by the change of subject. ‘What?’
‘I need to go out there in a couple of months and thought it might be good for Alice to come along.’ Helen helped run a medical aid charity called Avalon. Set up by three British doctors back in the 1980s, it now worked in more than twenty countries around the world.
Images of child soldiers with AK47s and machetes flitted through Carlyle’s brain. ‘Is it safe?’
Helen gave an exasperated grunt. ‘Of course it’s safe. Liberia is one of Africa’s good news stories.’
All things are relative, he thought, waiting for the lecture to begin.
‘The numbers are improving, but it is still shocking. The maternal mortality rate is still among the highest in the world at 994 deaths per 100,000 births. In Britain it is twelve. The death rate for under-fives over there is fourteen per cent. In Britain it is nought point six per cent.’
Statistics, statistics, bloody statistics. ‘But it’s safe?’ he repeated.
‘I wouldn’t take her if it wasn’t.’
‘Have you spoken to her about it?’
‘Yeah. She seems quite up for it. Not least because it would mean a week out of school.’
‘How much is it going to cost?’
‘Not much. Just her flight, basically. Mine will be covered by work.’ She gave him a sly grin. ‘You can come too if you want.’
‘Mm, got to run.’ He gave her a kiss on the forehead, already moving for the door. ‘I’ll have a think about it.’
‘Welcome to London.’
Umar Sligo smiled but said nothing.
It was their first day together and the inspector was trying not to pre-judge his new colleague. The initial signs, however, were not promising. The new boy appeared young, good-looking and enthusiastic; just looking at him made Carlyle feel weary to his bones.
They were standing in the empty front room of a Georgian terraced house on Great Percy Street, just down from Kings Cross. On the bare wooden floorboards lay a machete and an empty can of Carlsberg lager. Under their feet, technicians were removing ‘skunk’ cannabis plants estimated to be worth more than a million pounds that had been found growing in the basement.
‘What I don’t understand,’ said Umar, ‘is how a Scotland Yard Deputy Assistant Commissioner can afford to have a place like this as an investment property?’
Carlyle thrust his hands in his pockets. ‘He’s got a rich wife apparently.’
‘Nice.’
‘He’s completely straight. Been on the job more than thirty years. Started off as a beat constable in Southwark. They live somewhere in Surrey now. The wife rented the place out through an online letting agent to a British man who provided proof of identity and bank details. The neighbours had complained about the noise, on and off, but the clincher was the £50,000 electricity bill.’
‘I bet he feels like a bit of a berk,’ Umar laughed.
‘The Deputy Assistant Commissioner?’ Carlyle asked. ‘Yeah, well, he should, shouldn’t he?’
‘Mm.’
‘It’s tough at the top,’ the inspector mused. ‘So they tell me.’
‘It’s not that uncommon, though. Police in England and Wales uncover about twenty cannabis factories every day, and last year officers and customs seized a million-and-a-half plants worth about two hundred million pounds.’
Carlyle gave his new sidekick a funny look. ‘Did you swallow a copy of the Economist or something?’
‘No,’ Umar said defensively. ‘It’s just one of those things you pick up.’
A uniform appeared from the hallway. ‘Inspector?’
Carlyle recognized the constable. ‘Lea!’ he grinned. ‘Good to see you back on duty. How’s the head wound?’
PC Lea smiled sheepishly and looked at the floor. ‘Fine, thank you. They took the stitches out last week.’