Authors: Jo Carnegie
Powers had seen enough. âAll right Penny, let's get him out. By the look of it, he's stoned out of his mind.' He sighed, what with the missing body and now poshos on the funny fags, he wondered what this sodding place was going to throw up next.
Freddie caught the tail end of his sentence. âHang on, you're going to stone me?' he said indignantly. âThat's a bit much, I only had the bloody headlights off!'
Powers opened the driver's door and pulled Freddie out. âOw, what are you doing?' Freddie stood unsteadily as Penny leaned across him, pulling the keys out of the ignition and pocketing two Ripples in the process.
Powers shone a flashlight into Freddie's eyes, then leaned in and sniffed him, like a bloodhound. The sweet, heavy smell of marijuana was unmistakable on his clothing. Satisfied, Powers snapped the torch off, facing Freddie with an iron grip on his arm.
âYou're accompanying me down to the station, sunshine, on suspicion of driving whilst under the influence of Class B drugs.'
Freddie stared at him, uncomprehending. â
What?
'
Powers tightened his grip. âDon't make this worse for yourself. Penny, put this gentleman in the back of the car and mind his head while you do it. And no, you can't handcuff him.'
It was 1 a.m. before Angie turned up in her pyjamas and full-length wax jacket at Bedlington police station. She was in a state of shock, having been woken by a phone call informing her that her husband was being held in one of the cells.
âBut I don't understand, what's he done?' Angie wailed to the grumpy desk sergeant who was fantasizing about his warm bed. âFred's never been in trouble in his life. Oh, this must be some kind of horrible mistake!'
DS Powers appeared at the sergeant's shoulder. âAre you Angelica Fox-Titt, spouse of one Frederick Fox-Titt of the Maltings, Churchminster?'
âYes!' Angie cried. âWhere's Freddie? What's going on?'
âMadam, if you'll come this way,' said Powers ominously and led Angie through to one of the interview rooms.
âHe's done
what
?' asked an appalled Angie five minutes later. She was sitting next to her husband, who was slumped beside her, moaning slightly.
âSmoking drugs?
Freddie?
' She stared into her husband's face, finally recognizing the dopey expression and bloodshot eyes for what they really were. âOh Fred! In our house! With Archie there! What on earth were you thinking?'
Freddie was finally coming out of the stupor that had gripped him all evening. âDrugs? What are you going on about?' he cried. âI just got a bit peckish, that's all!'
DS Powers ignored him, leaning in towards Angie. âMrs Fox-Titt, can you remember when the
first signs of your husband's drug abuse started?'
âNow hang on a minuteâ' started Freddie.
âMood swings, irritability, secretive or out-of-character behaviour?' Powers continued.
Angie thought for a moment. âNone of these things!' she said desperately. âHe'd got a bit absent-minded recently, but I thought it was early onset dementia.'
âThanks very much!' Freddie said indignantly.
Powers wasn't giving up yet. âAny drugs paraphernalia stashed away in his sock drawer?' he persisted. âYou've never come across the smell of unfamiliar smoke in your home?'
Angie looked at Freddie. He shrugged, utterly confused. âI suppose the only smoke I've smelt is from my son Archie's incense candles,' she said apologetically.
âBloody things, they stink my study out,' grumbled Freddie.
âI have asked him to open his window and get a bit of fresh air in,' Angie told Freddie.
He rolled his eyes. âYou're all right darling, you can escape to your shop! I'm stuck at home with those hippy candles burning like funeral pyres all day long. I don't know why people like them, they give me a right bloody headache.'
Powers was watching this exchange with mounting interest. He fixed Freddie with a questioning eye. âMr Fox-Titt. You are categorically saying that you do not use marijuana, even though you are showing clear signs of being exposed to it?'
âI certainly don't!' said Freddie.
Powers and Penny looked at each other and then back at the Fox-Titts. âThis son of yours,
Archie, is it? How old is he?' asked the detective.
âSeventeen,' replied Angie impatiently. âBut I don't see what this has gotâ'
Powers cut her off. âAnd these funny smelling incense candles? How long has he been burning them in your house?'
Angie and Freddie looked at each other again, their minds frantically working overtime. Archie, their only child, who, in recent months, had become withdrawn, moody and unsociable. The light switch finally flicked on. Angie's face drained of colour and her eyes brimmed with tears. âMy baby!' she sobbed into her hands.
âThe little sod!' Freddie yelled. âI'm going to bloody kill him!'
The Fox-Titts left the police station at 3.04 a.m. Once he had established that Freddie was an unknowing victim of passive smoking, DS Powers had exercised his discretionary powers and released him without charge. The couple sat in silence as Angie drove home, and before she had pulled up outside the house Freddie was already opening his door. âOh Fred, can't this wait until tomorrow?' Angie pleaded. They were both so tired and overwrought, she didn't think she could handle a showdown with her son right now.
Freddie looked back at her, his mouth set in a straight line. âSorry, darling, it can't.'
Angie sighed: âOK, let me park the car. Let's do this together.'
Even hours later, they could detect the rank, sweet smell inside that had been perfuming their house for so many months. Incense candles,
their son had told them. I know better now, thought Freddie grimly.
As he walked up the stairs, Angie close behind him, the smell became stronger. Freddie was at Archie's door and turning the handle before he knew it. He fumbled for the switch along the wall and flicked it on. Harsh light flooded the room.
The room stank. Lying on his bed on top of the covers, face down and fully clothed, with the end of a gone-out joint in one dangling hand, was Archie. He was dribbling, a large pool of spit collecting next to his mouth on the duvet. Sitting on a bean bag in the corner was Tyrone, fast asleep, his head back and mouth open. Angie gasped, the place was a pit! Magazines, Rizla papers and empty beer cans were strewn everywhere, the remains of a takeaway pizza on the floor in front of them. In the middle of the chaos was a small clear plastic bag, half-full of what looked like dried herbs. Freddie scooped it up.
Neither boy stirred, then after a few moments Tyrone slowly opened one bleary eye. Trying to focus on Freddie and Angie, he yawned loudly. âWhat's with the light, man? Easy now!'
That was it. âAll right you two, up. UP!' roared Freddie. He went over and shook his son roughly by the shoulders. Archie moaned but didn't wake up. Freddie got a pint glass of half-drunk water that was sitting on the chest of drawers, and emptied it over his son's head.
It did the trick. Archie jumped up, awake now and in shock, his top soaking and hair plastered to his head. He stared indignantly at his father. âWhat are you doing? I'm all wet!' Suddenly aware of
Tyrone's presence, he sucked his teeth derisively at his parents and looked at his friend. âCheck out the olds. Aggro!'
âStop that bloody awful rap star act when we've given you a perfectly good education!' Freddie shouted.
Archie flinched. His dad was seriously het up. âWhat are you doing in here?' he asked, sounding sulky and slightly more contrite.
âWhat are
you
doing, more like,' thundered Freddie. âSmoking drugs in my house!' Archie's eyes widened momentarily and he scanned the room in panic. âLooking for this?' Freddie asked him, thrusting the bag in his face.
Flattened by his father's rare show of anger, Archie looked to his mother for support. But Angie bit her lip and turned away, disappointment and unhappiness in her eyes. Archie turned back to Freddie and spread his hands in a placating gesture. âDad, I can explain . . .'
âExplain what, exactly? The fact that you've been smoking drugs under my roof while your mother and I feed you, clothe you and send you to bloody college? I've just been pulled over by the police and very nearly arrested because I've been inhaling all the smoke that's stinking out the house.'
Tyrone whooped. âYou got pulled over by the Feds? Bruv, respect!' He went to high-five Freddie but was met by a look that could have curdled milk. He shrank back into the bean bag instead.
Freddie continued. âYou've put yourself at risk, me at risk, your mother at risk . . . I ought to bloody lynch you!'
âDad, I'm sorry!' pleaded Archie, on the verge of
tears now. âHonestly, I didn't mean to upset you and Mum.'
âIt's too late for that,' Freddie said ominously. âYou are grounded indefinitely.'
âYou can't do that!' howled Archie, âI'm seventeen!'
âI can, if I confiscate your car and stop your allowance. You'll get a lift to and from college and that's it. If you aren't back in your room by seven o'clock every night doing your homework, the car and allowance are gone for good. Understood?'
The fight had gone from Archie, and he nodded moodily just as a loud snore shattered the tense standoff in the room. They all turned to face the sleeping Tyrone. âI want him gone by morning, Archie,' Fred die told his son. âHe's been nothing but bloody trouble.' With that, suddenly exhausted by the last few hours, he ushered his wife from the room and they finally went to bed.
The next morning Fred die, worried the drugs might have seriously affected Archie's brain, phoned the college from his study to enquire how Archie's studies were going. He was horrified to hear his son hadn't been to a lesson in two months. âWe thought he'd left. A shame because he was a bright boy,' Archie's genial form tutor told him.
âI can assure you he hasn't,' Freddie informed him grimly. âHe'll be in first thing on Monday. I want every free hour of his timetable filled so he can catch up. Can you see to it?' The tutor gave his word he would and Freddie hung up. Sighing, he ran his hand over his face and thought about the morning's events. Tyrone had slunk out early,
Fred die had flushed the rest of the drugs down the downstairs loo, and Archie was still sulking in his bedroom, probably vowing never to speak to his parents again. Freddie leaned back in his big, leather desk chair and sighed again. Children, who'd have them? At least he wouldn't be putting on any more weight, now he'd stopped mindlessly shovelling down grilled Mars bar toasties. What had those two girls called it, âthe munchies'? Shuddering at the thought, Freddie vowed to go on a diet until Christmas.
ON SATURDAY, 31
October, the Jolly Boot put on a Hallowe'en party, âfancy dress optional'. Jack and Beryl had spent hours decking the pub out like a ghoulish grotto, and it looked fantastic. The ceiling was covered with midnight-blue sheets, dotted with hundreds of silver stars. Green and purple lights cast an eerie glow over the bar. Through one of Jack's old mates, who worked in a travelling theatre, they'd managed to secure a huge painted backdrop of Dracula's castle, sat high atop a craggy cliff, ferocious-looking wolves circling the wild land below. It was stretched across an entire wall, and Beryl had added her own touches, adorning it with rubber snakes and spiders. In one corner sat two large plastic buckets, waiting to be filled up with water for an apple-bobbing competition, a chalkboard hanging on the wall above to mark the contestants' results.
Much to Pierre's horror the normal menu had had to make way for Bat Burgers, Pumpkin Eye Pie and Scary Soup. He had thrown a hissy fit and refused to cook, complaining that if any of his fellow Michelin-starred friends heard about this, he would
be an industry laughing-stock. Jack, mindful of keeping his star attraction happy, had given Pierre the night off and pulled in his deputy head chef Sammy instead.
While her parents had been running around downstairs preparing for the party, Stacey Turner had been upstairs trying on her costume. A few of the local lads she fancied were coming tonight â but she also wanted to show that Jed Bantry
exactly
what he was missing out on. Stacey had decided to go as Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. Her blonde hair was covered by a waist-length, straight black wig and she'd spent an hour on each eye perfecting the Gothic, catlike make-up. Then there was the dress. Put simply, if Stacey had gone out in any town centre that night wearing it she would have been arrested for causing a public disturbance. Made of purple velvet, it was a long, floor-skimming creation that indecently hugged every overripe curve of her body. Two thigh-length slits either side gave a flash of her lacy black knickers every time she reached for a glass, but the
pièce de résistance
was the neckline. It was so low and plunging, a drop-jawed male could see a flash of a nipple if he waited long enough. Finally, just in the almost impossible event her chest wasn't getting enough attention, Stacey had added a long, blood-red pendant that nestled glittering in her cleavage like the Holy Grail. As she looked in the mirror in her bedroom for the umpteenth time, she felt very pleased with the outfit indeed.
Her father had other ideas. âBugger me, you are NOT wearing that!' he croaked in shock as she sashayed down at seven o'clock that night to start
behind the bar. Jack, in a pirate's hat and Beryl's eyeliner, was giving the bar a last wipe down. He was dressed as his namesake Jack Sparrow from
Pirates of the Caribbean
, while his wife, in a large pointy hat and swishing black gown, looked maturely delectable and witch-like.
âI
so
am!' said Stacey testily to her father. âWhat's wrong with it?'