Sitting on his bed in the boarding house, Ray toyed with the. 38 and forced himself to wipe Jimmy from his mind. Jimmy was getting a cheap box in some pissy pauper’s grave and Angie was, no doubt, living it large. Sure, she’d got clean away. The whole of the police force was out looking for him and there wasn’t a minor villain who wouldn’t sell him out.
Ray had two objectives:
One, find and kill Angie;
Two, get Jimmy’s share of the cash.
He had Angie’s cellphone number and hadn’t yet called. She’d have kept the phone as she wanted the money too. The one sure thing about her, she worshipped cash and when she felt she was owed, she’d do whatever it took to get it.
He’d be calling her.
Brant was visiting Porter Nash.
They’d kept him in hospital until his blood levels settled. He was sitting in the corridor, sneaking a cig — hadn’t yet applied the patches as he’d been instructed. Brant was dressed in a dark navy suit, police federation tie (stolen) and heavy, handmade Italian shoes. He looked like a mafioso, had a cig in the corner of his mouth and had been cautioned twice by staff. Porter was glad to see him. They’d forged the most unlikely of friendships and it was a mystery to them both. But they didn’t sweat it and just figured it was beyond analysis. Brant handed over a book, said:
‘Thought you’d need some reading.’
Porter sighed, he knew it would be Ed McBain — with Brant it always was. Sure enough, a fat hardback with the title Fat Ollie’s Book.
Brant said:
‘It’s a cracker. Fat Ollie writes a novel and it gets stolen shit, all you’d need to know about writing is in there.’
Porter put the book aside, said:
‘I appreciate it.’
Brant stubbed the cig on the floor and Porter tried not to notice, asked:
‘What’s the news on McDonald?’
‘He’s still in intensive care, head shot, you know, tricky number.’
‘Will he make it?’
‘I think he’ll live, but will he make it? I doubt it.’
This was Brant at his cryptic best and Porter knew better than to go there. Porter was aware of the detestation Brant felt for McDonald but he’d never like to have a cop hit, no matter how big an asshole he was.
Brant asked:
‘So, what’s the deal with this diabetes gig? You going to be shooting up like some sort of civilian junkie?’
Porter didn’t rise to the bait, said:
‘I have type two, which means I’m on tablets for the foreseeable future. You want to know the hardest bit?’
Brant looked vaguely bored, said:
‘If you want to tell me.’
‘Salt.’
‘That’s it?’
Porter could have told him of all the dietary changes, the new regime of health, the constant blood checks, the fear, but Brant wasn’t the type to give a whole lot of attention to this. So, he said:
‘I love salt, in fact I adore it, cover everything with it and now, no more. I can’t taste my food now, isn’t that a bitch?’
Brant was staring at a nurse’s legs and said:
‘What’s a bitch is we can’t get a line on Ray. He’s gone to ground and believe me, we’ve pulled out all the stops; what we have got is a chick who used to hang with the brothers, but gee, guess what? She’s gone to ground too.’
Porter knew now that Ray was the guy he’d been on the phone with and he wanted this guy so bad, he could — as the Yanks say — taste it. He wanted Ray in his hands, up close and real personal; he tried to rein in the rage that had reared up — the doctors had emphasised that stress was perilous to his condition.
He took a deep breath and saw that Brant was smiling, asked:
‘What?’
Brant peeled the wrapper off a Juicy Fruit, split it in half and offered a wedge. Porter shook his head and Brant said:
‘You’ve got a hard-on for this guy, no offence to your orientation by the way, but you want this guy so bad, you need to step back, cool off, ‘cos all you’re going to get is fucked. You can’t get them when you’re het up; trust me, I’ve been down that road.’
Porter Nash’s rage moved up a notch and he felt a twinge in his chest, he snarled:
‘Gimme a cig.’
‘Whoa, buddy, where did those famous manners go?’
He took out the pack of Weights, only available in the West End, and gave one over, if grudgingly. Lit him up with a battered Zippo that had the logo ‘1968’ stamped on it.
It still made Brant smile when he recalled how he’d nicked it.
A passing porter stopped. Demanded:
‘What are you people thinking of?’
He pointed his finger at the plethora of ‘No Smoking’ signs, and Brant said:
‘What I’m thinking is… will I sink my shoe in your hole or will I let my ranking officer do the honours?’
The porter took off quick.
Porter Nash looked at Brant, asked:
‘I need your word.’
‘Depends, old pal.’
‘When you get a line on Ray, you give me a bell.’
Brant seemed to consider, then:
‘What’s the barter?’
‘Excuse me?’
Brant laughed, he enjoyed this, said:
‘You’re my mate, no question, even if you’re a fag, but how I work is, I do something for you, you owe me, got it?’
Porter Nash nodded; he got it.
Big time.
25
Falls and Andrews were called to a domestic. The husband had been beating on the wife for two hours. The disturbance was at a block of flats in Meadow Road. Falls cautioned:
‘Follow my lead on this, these can get nasty very fast.’
Andrews nodded but Falls was uneasy about the gung-ho expression she was wearing. She emphasised:
‘I’m serious, watch the woman.’
‘Isn’t she the one who got beaten?’
‘Yes, but if you decide to cuff hubby, they suddenly have a change of heart.’
Falls banged on the door and it was opened by a small boy; he looked petrified.
Andrews asked:
‘Can we come in?’
‘Dunno.’
‘We’ll just be a minute.’
‘But Dad is beating on Mum and he doesn’t like to be bothered.’
Falls moved him outside, said:
‘You wait here, we’ll only be a minute.’
They ventured slowly in, the sound of a woman crying in their ears. Turned into a sitting room, a scene of chaos. A TV had a hole in the screen and every stick of furniture was smashed. A woman was huddled in the corner, weeping. They heard the toilet flush and then the man appeared, zipping up his flies. He was small, about five four, dressed in a raggedy T-shirt, dirty jeans and barefoot. He was wiping his mouth and seemed unfazed by them, asked:
‘What you cunts want?’
Falls walked over and turned as if to address Andrews, used her elbow to hit him in the stomach. He went down with a whimper. Andrews was about to speak when the woman launched and landed on her back, sinking her teeth into Andrews’ neck. The joint screaming and howling would have put a banshee to shame.
Falls marched over and pulled her baton, lashed the woman on the skull. You get a biter, you can’t fuck around; it’s not the time for negotiation. Let the stick do the therapy.
The woman fell off like a downed Man-U prima donna. Andrews, in shock, was sobbing. The man on the floor began to sit up so Falls gave him a tap to the side of the head and finished his song.
She got out her radio, shouted:
‘We’ve got an officer down, two perps in need of aid and SEND SOME FUCKING BACK-UP!’
She moved into the kitchen, spotted an open bottle of scotch, brought it out, tilted it to Andrews’ neck, and poured. If Andrews had howled before, it was nothing to the cry of anguish she gave now. Falls tried not to think of Rosie, her best friend, who’d been bitten by a junkie and after Aids testing, took her own life.
The booze revived Andrews and she managed to complain:
‘What were you thinking, that hurt more than the bite?’
Falls was seriously angry, pulled Andrews round, said: