Angel on the Inside (3 page)

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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

BOOK: Angel on the Inside
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‘What do you mean by that?' I snapped, then immediately raised my hands in apology. ‘Sorry, I know you're only trying to help. So where is he now?'

‘Under your bed,' she said, drawing her dressing gown tighter. ‘Growling. He's still got that thing in between his teeth and he won't come out.'

‘Did you ring the vet, the one on Homerton High Street? I left you the number.'

Fenella flushed as pink as her satin dressing gown.

‘They've banned me from going round there any more.'

I wasn't surprised. I knew they had warned her several times about taking dead, half-chewed birds and rodents round there in the hope that they could revive them after Springsteen had finished with them.

‘That's why I rang for an ambulance,' she said sheepishly. ‘I couldn't think of anything else to do. He's obviously in pain and the only thing I've got is aspirin and even if I could get one into him I remembered what you said.'

‘Well done. Never give a cat aspirin, they just can't handle it. It kills them,' I said, though I wasn't too worried. Springsteen would have had her hand off before he'd take an aspirin from it. ‘I'll go and see how he is. You go into the kitchen and get the bottle of brandy that's on top of the fridge.'

She rankled a bit at that.

‘So aspirins can be fatal, but you don't mind pouring bandy down his throat?'

‘Who said anything about
his
throat?'

 

Springsteen wasn't going to come out so I had to push the bed away from over him. His growling dropped a half-tone to a sort of sinister hiss and his eyes burned into me like a chestnut vendor's coals whilst his tail did that slow-time flick from side to side that tells you the clock's ticking. It was nice to be recognised.

‘It's not a fox,' I said over my shoulder.

‘Well it looked like one,' said Fenella from the kitchen. ‘Is this it? It says something ending in
Romana
. Is that brandy?'

‘It'll do.'

Springsteen did indeed have something long and brown hanging from his jaw. Something long and limp, like a pelt – until you got close, that is. In my case, I was still a good six feet away from where he lay on his side, which was quite close enough, even though I could see that his right front leg was twisted at an unnatural angle.

The brown pelt was soaked with drool near his mouth and trailed off like a flattened snakeskin to his side, about four inches wide and some 15 inches long. I guessed it had stuck over his teeth and without the use of his right paw he couldn't dislodge it.

I felt a gentle tap on my right temple. It was Fenella, knocking a bottle against my skull. I relieved her of it, took a swig and handed it back. Although Springsteen, concentrating his stare on me, wasn't moving or looking likely to move suddenly, she had positioned herself strategically behind me. She was learning.

‘That's gross,' she said. ‘Whatever it is. Whatever it was. What is it?'

‘Well, from this distance, without forensic examination, I'd say Mist or maybe American Tan or possibly Chiffon and probably about 60 denier.'

She leaned forward to get a better look.

‘You mean that's a nylon stocking?' she said as she focused, oblivious to Springsteen's malevolent stare swinging full-beam on to her.

‘Or one half of a pair of tights,' I said reasonably.

Fenella straightened up as if she had a spring in her.

‘You mean
he's eaten a whole girl
?'

‘That's my boy,' I said. It seemed to soothe him, as he stopped growling at me.

I put my head back so I could whisper into Fenella's ear.

‘Go and get me a couple of towels out of the airing cupboard.'

‘You haven't got an airing cupboard,' she hissed back.

‘Your airing cupboard. Big fluffy ones. They don't have to be new ones. In fact old ones that you wouldn't mind not seeing again might be an idea. When you come back, hang them over your shoulder, like you were going to have a shower. You know, casual. Give them to me quick when I say.'

‘Right.'

She made to go, then leaned in so she could whisper in my ear.

‘Why my towels?'

‘Because Doogie and Miranda are at work and I can't ask Mr Goodson, can I?' I argued, putting some urgency into my whispering. Gibberish though it was, it was enough.

‘Oh, I see. Sure, fine. On my way.'

As she backed out of the room, I moved carefully closer to Springsteen, crouching down until I was on my knees an arm's length away from him. The growls were coming in short bursts now as if his heart (if he had one) wasn't quite in it.
The tail lashing
became more pronounced and I could feel the thump as each beat hit the floorboards. It sounded to be in 9/8 time. Dave Brubeck can play in that too. At least his ears weren't flexed back. If you ever see that happen head-on, you're too close to the cat, and with a cat like Springsteen, it could just be the last thing you ever see.

‘You been in the wars, old son?' I said soothingly, tipping the bottle of Italian brandy so that the liquid soaked the finger tips of my left hand. Then I took a swig for myself before putting the bottle down on the floor.

I held my fingers out towards his nose and got them close enough so that his nose went into full wrinkle and his head went on one side and his mouth drooped open.

‘You really should pick on someone your own size, you know. I mean, it's not that you're getting too old for a bit of playful homicide, but you've got to learn to pace yourself a bit more. Ripping women's tights off with your teeth is a young man's game; take my word for it.'

The brandy and the inane chat distracted him enough for me to get my right hand on the length of material hanging from his mouth. Keeping well away from his right side and the injured leg, I worked the nylon up and over his back teeth until I felt it go slack and could gently pull it out, trying to be as delicate as a surgeon operating on a private patient.

‘That's Chiffon,' said Fenella behind me, making me flinch.

Springsteen, who hadn't indicated in any way that she was padding up behind me – pretending to be befuddled by the brandy fumes – took the opportunity, now I was distracted, to lash out with his left paw and rake me across the back of my hand. It wasn't a severe clawing; he couldn't get the angle right from the way he was lying to protect his right leg. There were only two tracks of blood.

‘Oooh, did that hurt?'

I looked up at her and bit my tongue.

‘I'm going to hang a bell on you if you insist on wearing those slippers,' I growled.

‘I was only saying you were right,' she said, all innocence. ‘That shade of tights is called Chiffon. Lisabeth has some airing in the bathroom.'

Now there was an image I didn't want to dwell upon.

With my back to Springsteen I zipped up my leather jacket to the collar then said: ‘Just throw me the towels.'

At least she'd remembered them and had at least three large fluffy beach-size ones draped around her neck. One was the official
Star Wars – The Phantom Menace
souvenir beach towel. I didn't ask; life's too short.

‘Now?'

‘Now.'

She bent her head and flipped the towels off her neck. I caught them and in one fluid movement, because I knew I wouldn't get a second chance, turned and flung them over Springsteen, rolling him into them as if I was trying to smother a fire. I grabbed the bundle, hugged it to my chest and got to my feet.

‘Now what?' Fenella asked, a look of absolute horror at what I had just done on her face, which had gone a whiter shade of grey.

‘Run!'

It was all that needed saying.

We thundered out of the flat and down the stairs, making so much noise I could hardly hear the Satanic growling coming from inside the bundle of towels I clutched to my chest.

‘Get the door!' I panted, allowing Fenella to overtake me and jump the last few steps, her Panda slippers skidding on the fake wooden flooring.

Somewhat ungainly, she righted herself in time to whip the door open so I could barrel my way by her, yelling ‘Car keys!' as I did.

‘Where are they?'

‘Trouser pocket,' I said, halting at Armstrong's side.

Her hand plunged into my trouser pocket and groped for the keys. There wasn't time for this. My bundle of towels was shape-shifting alarmingly, the growling was definitely getting louder and I distinctly heard the ripping of material.

‘No Fenella,' I said reluctantly. ‘They're in the other pocket.'

 

I let Springsteen have the whole of the back of the cab to himself. It wouldn't have been fair to let Fenella ride locked in there with him, so I told her to get the bus round to Homerton High Street and meet me at the vet's surgery. I also suggested she might put some clothes on.

Getting him out of Armstrong actually went smoother than I could have hoped. I parked on double yellow lines outside the surgery's front door and for a second considered writing a ‘Vet On Call' note to stick in the windscreen – which never fails with policemen and parking wardens. Then I remembered I had a black London cab and thought, to hell with it, I can park anywhere.

In Armstrong's boot I found an old pair of oil-stained black leather gloves and pulled them on. I could have done with the gauntlets they use to handle nuclear fuel rods, but these would have to do. Then I made a point of appearing in the offside passenger window before sinking down out of sight and crab-walking like a demented Cossack round the back of the cab to get to the nearside door as quietly as I could. At least a dozen good citizens of Hackney passed me on the pavement. Not one said anything or even gave me a second glance. That's why I love the place.

Then it was take a deep breath, whip the door open and play the roll-the-cat-in the towel game again – although one of the towels I noticed was now in two pieces – keeping low and turning my face away just in case.

A rising howl of primeval pain split the air, but nobody came to my aid.

I think it was the howl that made Springsteen relax for a second, thinking he had scored a vital hit. That was all the time I needed to mummify him in towelling, for I was past caring about the blood. I was just grateful he'd missed my left eyeball.

Then I was kicking the door shut and running towards the surgery with my bundle clutched to my leather jacket, yelling: ‘Coming through! Gangway! Emergency! Clear a path! Trauma case!'

An elderly lady with an ancient Jack Russell was just leaving the surgery as I charged up to the door. Both of them looked as if they could have done with hip replacements, but both were nimble enough to get out of my way and she even held the door open for me, a startled expression on her face.

I shouted ‘Thanks' over my shoulder and burst into the waiting room, where all eyes turned towards me. For a moment I thought they were going to dare me to jump the queue, but nobody said anything. There must have been 20 people in there and at least the same number of animals, which made about 39 eyes, allowing for the caged parrot with one eye bandaged up. The parrot looked pretty depressed, probably sick of pirate jokes from other parrots, but if he had any sense he would keep his beak shut, as I simply wasn't in the mood.

I had to walk between two rows of chairs, knees and animals to get to the reception desk, where a buxom young blonde was making notes, a phone clamped to her right ear. She looked up and stared at me as well, disturbed by the fact that the surgery had gone totally silent. Well, silent apart from a constant one-bass-note growling that was coming from my chest area. I think that, plus the fact that I could feel blood running down the side of my face, gave the impression that perhaps I did deserve to jump the queue after all.

A middle-aged woman with long curly red hair, wearing a Barbour and green wellies (in Hackney?) gave me a limp smile and reigned in a long-haired Golden Labrador so I could squeeze by. A couple of cats in plastic carrying boxes with wire grilles for doors scuttered as far back into them as they could get. A ten-year-old girl with two small, gerbil-sized boxes with air holes and the words ‘Sparky' and ‘Millie' crayoned on them, bunched up her knees and covered them protectively with her arms. A shaven-headed man with tattoos on his neck and knuckles tightened his grip on the lead of a pit bull as the dog shrank backwards under his chair. ‘Steady, Laydee, steady,' he said, a look of doubt on his face.

I reached the reception desk and rested my towel bundle, still keeping a firm grip.

‘I need a vet,' I said, deadly serious.

The young blonde put down the phone and gave me a killer smile. The name tag on her starched white medical smock said ‘Amber' and I didn't need contact lenses to read it. I was close enough to feel the static.

‘I bet you do,' she said with an Australian twang. ‘But animals come first here.'

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