Read Angel on the Inside Online
Authors: Mike Ripley
Tags: #fiction, #series, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #gangster, #stalking, #welsh, #secretive, #mystery, #private, #detective, #humour, #crime, #funny, #amusing
âWhat happened to your face?' she said, still with her back to me.
Then I realised she could see me reflected in the chrome of the giant toaster we have but never use. (American friends have always laughed at us for putting toast under the grill instead of using the toaster, but how the hell else do you stop the cheese falling off?)
âI was born with it,' I said with a stage sigh. âWhat happened to your leg?'
She straightened up, but for a moment I thought she was stopping herself from rubbing her right knee. It was just an impression and maybe I imagined it.
âCramp, arthritis, rheumatism, I don't know. Just driving all that way with the pedal to the metal. I must be getting old.'
âTake the weight off, deary. You should look after yourself at your age,' I said, pulling one of the high stools (which are really naff) from under the âbreakfast bar' (even naffer) that had come with the house, or so Amy had said, and that we'd never had the opportunity to throw away or even at somebody.
Amy kicked the stool out of her way, and if we'd been in a western, the shooting would have started then. Instead she came up to me and gently put her fingers on my forehead.
âDid somebody hit you?' she asked, examining the bruise. Like she was a doctor!
âNo,' I said honestly. After all, I had hit some
thing
. Pointing out that it had been one of London's premier tourist attractions might have broken the spell.
âTell me who did this and I'll rip her liver out. How's that for a deal?'
âI was at a hen party â¦'
She flicked her fingers dismissively in front of my eyes and turned away to finish making the coffee.
âThen you're on your own there, son.'
I came up behind her and put my arms around her waist, and I have to admit that while I had dismissed her jibes about getting old, I had the treasonable thought that maybe she was getting, well, a bit plump. But then, only a bit. And maybe I was suddenly remembering Stella, who, whatever else had happened in her life, was still the same dress size as when I'd first met her.
âWould you believe I was hit by a toilet door in Gerry's Club? A door thrown open by a paranoid, naked male stripper who'd been hiding in there to get away from Stella Rudgard's hen night guests, who had allowed his act to last a full 15 seconds? And all this by 3.30 on a Friday afternoon?'
She considered this for a full minute, then started to pour coffee into mugs.
âSounds reasonable,' she said, and handed me a mug. âSo who's Stella Rudgard?'
She looked me in the eyes when she said it, and I was sure it was a genuine question. I mean, she's good, but then so am I.
âStella Rudgard as in Rudgard and Blugden, confidential enquiries. Our local private eyes, well, Shepherd's Bush anyway. You know them. I did a job for them once.'
âOh yes, right, got it now. Did I ever meet her?'
âProbably not. You'd remember if you had.'
âShe's not the dumpy one with the glasses who could get away with it if she wore lots of black and loose, at least a size bigger than she is, instead of squeezing into a size smaller than she is? And lower heels.'
âNo, that'd be Veronica, her partner.'
âSo who's this Stella getting married to then?'
Just when you think you're getting away with it, in comes the trick question.
âEr ... I'm not sure. I sort of forgot to ask, but it's bound to be in the papers today or tomorrow. He'll be rich if not famous.'
And if he was marrying Stella he would be famous, whether he wanted to be or not.
âSo you've been having a good time, then?'
âSo-so. How about you?'
âProductive, you might say. I think I've got a steal on the Next Big Thing in terms of designers. He's hooked, lined and almost signed up for some exclusive work. Drawback, of course, is he's Welsh, but he's young and innocent and that's how I like them.'
âThe hit of Welsh Fashion Week, was he?' I said in what I thought was a passable sing-song Welsh accent.
âChrist, no. That was the whole point of me going down there. I'd been tipped off about this kid â his name's Gwyn, by the way, 21 and bent as a nine-bob note â and when I saw his portfolio, I persuaded him to pull half his collection from the show.'
âThe good half, I presume, so that the opposition overlooked his potential,' I said.
âHey, you're good. You should be the detective, not this Stella person.'
Then she kissed the first and middle fingers of her right hand and placed them gently on my forehead, just above the bruise.
âPoor baby. Did you miss me?'
âHardly noticed you were gone. I mean, I've been the only man at a hen night in Soho, I've had a few drinks with Duncan the Drunken and some old friends up in Barking and I even popped over to Hackney to see how Springsteen was doing.'
She didn't flinch at the mention of Springsteen.
âStill spitting bile, invective and feathers in equal proportions, I trust?' she said.
âOh yes. And funnily enough, Duncan reckons that the BMW is repairable as long as we don't mind him welding the back half on to a the front half of a Vauxhall Vectra and selling it to Latvia.'
She held up a hand in the Stop! sign.
âI've told you, don't go there. The car's history, just let it go. Now what about Madrid?'
I did a double take at this jump in logic.
âMadrid? As in Spain, right?'
She reached for the coffee pot to pour us a refill. I hear Starbucks do the same.
âI
did
tell you,' she said in her not-to-be-messed-with voice. âI'm flying to Madrid on Monday afternoon, be there all week, back Friday night or Saturday morning, depending on how it pans out. It's a business trip but everybody knows the Spaniards don't do serious business after about one in the afternoon, so â lots of free time. Why don't you come along?'
âMe? Won't I cramp your style?'
âNot if you stay in bed until one o'clock. That shouldn't be a problem, should it?'
âI suppose ... if I set my mind to it ... with severe mental discipline ... Oh shit!'
I'd slapped myself on the forehead, forgetting it was still a sensitive area, so the âOh, shit' really was genuine.
âI've promised Dod â you remember Dod? He plays drums, trad jazz stuff, I've played with him before. He's a mate of Duncan's from Barking way. He's asked me to stand in for a few nights whilst his regular trumpet player goes in for a vasectomy or something. A few nights next week. Starting Monday.'
It was thin, I know, but the best I could do on the spur of the moment.
âI could tell him to find a sub, of course, but then I was his first choice, and it was kinda flattering in a way, as I haven't done much recently.'
âYou haven't played for ages!' she exclaimed, though I don't know why she was surprised. She was the one who'd banned me from rehearsing in Hampstead.
âI know that; you know that. Dod doesn't. Anyway, I was, like I said, flattered. Couldn't say no. I mean, this could be my big comeback.'
âComeback to
what
? You have to have
been
somewhere before you can make a comeback.'
âNot necessarily, think of ⦠Anyway, jazz never dies.'
âYour sort did, about 1930.'
âHey, that's not fair. There's nothing so potent as cheap live music, especially if the alternative is some spotty yoof giving himself carpol tunnel syndrome twisting two decks with vinyl on in opposite â¦'
The doorbell rang. Twice. It had to be the postman.
âLet me get that,' I said with a smile.
Â
Amy went shopping for the rest of the day. What is it they say about when the going gets tough?
Not that it had â got tough, that is. Oh yes, she'd ranted about there not being a damned thing in the house to eat and so she was going to the nearest Sainsbury's (once I'd given her directions) to stock up on decent stuff and she was definitely, quite definitely, going to make an effort to cook proper meals at regular times from now on. Well, just as soon as she got back from Madrid, that was. And when, two hours later, she'd returned and I'd help her unload the Freelander and put things away, including fresh vegetables in a special rack that I'd found in one of the kitchen units, she'd grabbed a high-energy muesli bar for lunch and announced that she just had to go up the West End and buy a few essentials for her trip to Madrid. And had Armstrong been parked in the drive all morning?
I had lied about that and told her a friend had driven him home from Gerry's Club, whereas in fact I'd called a mini-cab as soon as she'd left for Sainsbury's and tooled it down to Soho to rescue him.
Armstrong was back and in pride of place outside the house, annoying the neighbours.
Amy was back and out shopping.
All seemed right with the world.
She got back about six, loaded down with bags that read like a phone book of designers. Naturally, despite her best intentions, she was too shattered to actually start the new regime of wholesome cooking right now, so I did the decent thing and offered to nip out for a take-away Indian.
I picked up a couple of packs of Kingfisher lager and rented a video on the way back.
It turned out to be an almost perfect Saturday night, especially when Amy suggested we make it an early one, which we did, although she turned the lights off and insisted they stay off as soon as we got to the bedroom.
Which was unusual for her.
Â
I'd had plenty of solo time (as we're supposed to call it these days) while she was shopping to open what the postman had brought, recorded delivery, for me and I had managed to keep out of Amy's sightline.
It was an official visiting order allowing me, nay, inviting me, to attend HM Prison Belmarsh to visit with prisoner Malcolm Fisher at times that were convenient to the said prison.
Spider had told me to expect one, but I was impressed how quickly it had arrived. Now all I had to do was check in with Spider and then wait for the phone call.
From prisoner Malcolm Fisher.
Mr Creosote.
I still hadn't a clue who he was, but I had a nasty feeling he might be Welsh.
Â
I had phoned St Chad's whilst Amy was out shopping. If Warden Roberts answered, I was supposed to say I was Spider's nephew and put a handkerchief over the mouthpiece to disguise my voice. Thankfully that didn't have to happen, as whoever picked up the phone just grunted and then yelled âSpider!' so loud I could hear the echoes down the line.
When he came on, I told Spider that the visiting order had arrived, and he said I was to meet him Sunday morning at 11.00 in St Chad's Park. He would be walking Warden Roberts' dog along the footpath by the playground near the north entrance.
Before I could ask if he'd be wearing a wire or if I should check the trees for snipers, he hung up on me.
Part of my grand plan seemed to be coming together at last. Problem was, I couldn't really remember what the plan was, and then I remembered my notes, which were still on the floor of Armstrong.
While Amy was out, it seemed a good idea to get my filing system collated, or at least out of sight, as even Amy might wonder why the front of the cab was littered with inky napkins. As it happened, the first one I picked up was the sheet that said âGUN', and I had an idea that I might be able to do something about that, even on a Saturday afternoon.
I didn't think much of my chances of getting hold of DI Hood, unless the Met really was dishing out the overtime, but Keith Flowers had been arrested in Suffolk, and the police there might just have more time on their hands.
I got lucky. A very nice receptionist at the Suffolk police headquarters at Martlesham near Ispwich put me through to CID without any hassle, and the phone was picked up by a female Detective Constable called Priestley with a broad Suffolk accent.
I gave her my name and said I was ringing in connection with a car insurance claim, citing the reference number the cops had given me for that very purpose, resulting from a crime incident. I told her I knew that charges were pending against a certain Keith Flowers and no doubt it would all come out in court, but what I needed, or rather the nit-picking insurance company needed (and she knew exactly how annoying they could be), were details of the weapon used by Flowers. What sort of details? Well, I didn't rightly know. I supposed they wanted to be sure I wasn't just embellishing my claim, or just checking that it was a real gun not a toy, something like that. They hadn't been terribly clear, but then insurance companies were never clear when it came to paying out, only when collecting their premiums. That, she said, was something I could say again.