Seeing she’d hurt Shirley, Dolly decided to backtrack. ‘If you sew up the mouth hole completely and the eye holes a little bit, it’ll be fine, Shirley. Dye the other ones black and we’ve got ourselves the first bit of our outfit. But the jumpsuits are no good, I’m afraid. We need overalls, like I said. Once you’ve bought the right ones, cut the labels out and burn them so they can’t be traced after we dump them.’
Shirley knew this was Dolly’s way of apologizing. ‘What about the plimsolls?’ she asked.
‘Dye them black and they’ll do fine.’ Dolly lit a cigarette. ‘Come and sit down, both of you. I didn’t ask you here to talk about jumpsuits and plimsolls.’ As Dolly finished speaking, the kettle clicked off and Linda went to fill the teapot. ‘Leave it!’ Dolly bellowed.
In her rush to join Shirley and Dolly seated on the crates, Linda tripped over Wolf and kicked his backside to move him out of her way. Dolly gave her a nasty look and called Wolf over to sit next to her. She opened her bag and pulled out her notebook.
‘We got problems,’ Dolly started. ‘I’ll go through ’em one at a time, but most important, I’ve been thinking about what I read in the ledgers and I reckon Harry used four men in the raid, not three.’
‘Four?’ Linda repeated. She and Shirley looked confused.
‘Four men and one of them got away. Leaving Joe, Terry and Harry to fend for themselves.’ Linda and Shirley were riveted by what Dolly was telling them. She continued. ‘This fourth man must have been called in from the outside, to drive. He must have driven the truck up front. Now there’s been nothing about him in the papers, nothing at all. That means the law either haven’t figured it out yet, which I doubt, or they’re after him.’
‘They won’t be the only ones!’ Linda shouted, leaping to her feet, red-faced with anger. ‘The bastard!’
‘Linda,’ Dolly said gently, trying to calm things down again.
‘No! I’ve got a right to speak. If he left my Joe burning to death... if he could have saved them and didn’t, I’ll kill him, Dolly, I swear I will.’
Again, Dolly tried to calm Linda. She was a hothead, after all, simply reacting in the only way she knew how.
Linda was having none of it. ‘I’ll kill him! You might not care about your man, Dolly Rawlins, but—’
Dolly was on her feet and at Linda so fast she didn’t even get to finish her sentence. The heavy slap to the side of her face knocked her sideways.
‘Don’t you ever suggest I don’t care!’ Dolly growled. ‘I saw how much you cared this afternoon, so stop with the hysterics, sit down and shut up!’
Linda slowly sat back down, holding her stinging cheek and trying to keep back the tears of grief, pain and embarrassment.
Shirley was frozen to the spot, trembling. God, Dolly has a temper! She’d never seen her fly off the handle like that before and could hardly believe it. And here was Dolly, sitting back smoking and checking over her notes as if nothing had happened.
From beneath her mop of black hair, Linda quietly spoke, ‘Why is it I’m always in the wrong?’ she asked in a trembling voice.
Dolly took a huge drag of her cigarette before replying. ‘Because you’re twenty-six and I’m forty-six and I’m the one paying the bills.’ She looked at Shirley, who was white-faced with shock. ‘Finish off making the tea, would you, Shirl?’ she asked. Shirley went off to the kitchen without a word.
Dolly looked at Linda’s red cheek, where her four finger marks were clearly visible. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I shouldn’t have done that.’ Linda got up and moved away from Dolly before she said something they’d all regret. Dolly didn’t care about Linda’s mood and continued as though her brief apology had solved all their problems. ‘You know what this means, though, don’t you? It means we’ll have to get someone else in.’
‘Not a man,’ Shirley piped up from the kitchen. ‘If we bring a fella in, half of London will know what we’re up to.’
‘Preferably not a man, no. There’s no one in the ledgers I know well enough to trust, so I’ll have to think on it. But we might need to put the date of the job back to give us time to find the right woman.’
‘Jesus Christ,’ Linda said impatiently. ‘If all we need is another woman, I’ll find one.’
‘I’ll find her,’ Dolly said defiantly. There was no way anyone else was going to make a choice as important as that.
‘You’re the boss.’ Linda sneered.
‘And if you don’t like it, you know what you can do! You can go back to bed with that bit of rough trade. I bet he’s a right keeper and, if he’s not, well, I’m sure there’ll be another one along in a minute.’
Coming out of the kitchen, Shirley had no idea what Dolly meant and certainly wasn’t going to ask. Linda stepped toward Dolly with furious eyes, clearly at breaking point. Shirley stepped quickly in front of her with a cup of tea, forcing Linda to stop dead. Unable to ignore the pleading in Shirley’s eyes, Linda took her tea and moved away from Dolly again. Shirley sat down in between them.
‘You said we had “problems” — plural,’ said Shirley, waving away Dolly’s horrible cigarette smoke.
‘The Fisher brothers are coming on heavy and they’re not going to let up. They’ve already started on me, ripping my place apart and next time it’ll be my face. Then they’ll start on you two.’ It was one thing for the widows to have a go at each other, but the Fishers were a different matter altogether. This news changed everything. Linda could walk away from Dolly if she became too much of a pain and Dolly would let her. Tony Fisher, on the other hand, would tear you apart just for turning your back on him. ‘The Fishers want Harry’s ledgers and they’re not taking no for an answer. This fourth man, whoever he was — well, I don’t think he’ll show his face round here again. I reckon he took off weeks ago.’ Dolly stared at Linda and saw the hatred in her eyes for the coward who left her Joe to die such a slow and painful death. She spoke with total sincerity. ‘We’ll get him, Linda, and he’ll get what’s coming to him, but for the moment it’s good that no one can find him.’
Linda broke the gaze first, looking down at the dirty concrete floor before Dolly could see the tears welling up in her eyes.
‘We’re going to pull a raid and I don’t want any of us getting hurt,’ Dolly went on. ‘We’re not big strong fellas, we’re women. But we’ve got to start thinking like men. Boxer Davis works for the Fishers now and I’ll put money on the fact that he’s round there spilling the beans. And when they hear what he’s got to say, they’ll lay off.’
A self-satisfied smirk came over Dolly’s face and, as they waited for her to speak again, Shirley was suddenly reminded of being back in the sauna and learning about the raid for the first time. Whatever Dolly said next, Shirley knew she’d be stunned by it. She was right.
‘I’ve told Boxer that the fourth man, the one that got away, was Harry. Boxer believes that Harry’s alive and when he tells the Fishers, they’ll believe Harry’s got the ledgers. This is the best way to protect us right now. Harry was the only person round here who could keep the Fishers in check cos of what he had on them, so we need Harry to be alive again.’
‘How can you be sure Boxer will tell them?’ Shirley asked.
‘He’ll talk. He always did, especially with a drink inside him. I gave him one of Harry’s suit jackets and two hundred quid so, drunk or sober, he’ll be feeling invincible.’ Dolly finished her tea and handed her mug to Shirley. ‘I’ll be back in touch as soon as I’ve come up with the other member of the team.’ Dolly opened her handbag, took out a bit of folded paper and handed it to Linda. ‘That’s a safe number for you both to call me on — it’s an unlisted line at the convent I volunteer at. You can leave a message there anytime and they’ll contact me. Memorize it, then burn it.’ Without another word, Dolly scooped up Wolf and left.