Dangerous (29 page)

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Authors: Jessie Keane

BOOK: Dangerous
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Cautiously she went out and down a couple of the stairs and peered over. There were fist fights going on, men hurling punches, women running, shrieking in fear. Clara’s heart seemed to stop in her chest. At the middle of the scene was a big bald man swinging left and right with brass knuckledusters, his hands red with blood right up to his wrists.

Shit.

It was Fulton Sears. He’d made that laughable proposal, and then vanished. She’d posted a glowing reference to his home address, and then heard no more.

But now he was back. And he was wrecking her club.

Limp with fear, Clara crept back up the stairs, trying to be invisible – but to her horror he looked up and saw her there. He was
grinning
, wallowing in this bloodbath like a hippo in the mud. Clara went back into the office and slammed the door closed. Instinctively she fumbled for a bolt or latch, but there was no lock on the inside of the door – why would there be?

So instead she jammed one of the chairs up under the handle and stood there, watching it, panting with fright. Then she snatched up the phone and dialled 999, all the while her eyes fastened to the handle, waiting for it to turn, for that monster to try to get in at her.

She could hear Toby’s voice saying
Whatever happens in the clubs, we don’t ever call the police. We never involve the Bill, not even the ones on the payroll. We sort things out ourselves
.

Clara paused for a long moment. Then she slammed the phone back onto its cradle. Looked around for a weapon, anything, to defend herself. Sears had gone crazy, there was no telling what he might do.

There was nothing.

Sweating, trembling, all she could do was stand there, listening to the chaos downstairs and waiting for the handle to turn. How long would a chair hold him? Not long. She stood there, staring, unable to look away.

Oh God, please help me
, she thought, her heart hammering in her chest.

The noise downstairs seemed to be fading. She could hear only men’s voices now, shouting, no more screams. Groaning, did she hear groaning? She thought she did. And . . . oh sweet Jesus, she could hear someone coming up the stairs. She could hear
him
, moving stealthily, creeping up the stairs. Her eyes were riveted to the handle. To the door. To the chair. She couldn’t move, she couldn’t even breathe.

The handle was turning.

Slowly, excruciatingly slowly, it was starting to turn.

With a desperate cry Clara flung herself forward, put her full weight against the flimsy barrier of the chair. Her chest was tight with fear. She was right up against the door, she could almost
feel
him there, right there, on the other side of it.

The handle continued to turn. She could feel his weight go against it, felt it shuddering through the wood. The chair bucked beneath her. He was going to get in here. He was going to get her.

She waited, sweat trickling down her temples, sliding down her back. She could smell her own fear. If he got in here . . .

There was no
if
about it.

He was going to.

A faint, deep-throated chuckle. She had laughed at him and now he was laughing at her. He knew she was in here and he was mocking her. She waited, watched the handle; he would come in soon, he would burst in here and kill her or hurt her, do something horrible, something awful to her. She could picture him on the other side of that door, barrelchested, bloodstained, sadistic and out for revenge.

Oh God, please help me
, she thought in desperation.

There came a ferocious kick at the door.

Clara flinched.

Then another.

Jesus, God, help, please help . . .

Then another kick. Door and chair flew inward, and Fulton Sears burst through into the room.

Sears didn’t speak. He just stood there, breathing heavily. Christ, he was ugly. And she could smell the pungency of his sweat, stale and reeking – disgusting.

Clara froze. That was what Toby had always told her to do, and now she heard his voice in her head, clear as a bell.

If they’re unarmed, let them come to you. They’ll grab you from the front. Let them.

But she hadn’t realized the amount of willpower it would take to do that. She stood still, rock-still, and this leering, stinking monster came at her like a bear,
rushed
at her – and grabbed the front of her clothes, sank his fists around the costly cloth, yanked her in toward him, yanked her right off her feet.

Clara saw blackheads all over his nose, his wet repulsive mouth, smelled his foul breath, she was enveloped in his stench. They were eye to eye for seconds. And then slowly an expression of puzzlement came over Sears’s face. His dark bloodshot eyes, which had been glaring into hers, dropped to look at his fists.

There was blood streaming from his hands, dripping down over Clara’s jacket.

‘Uh?’ It was a grunt almost, a sound of bewilderment, that came from his mouth.

On Sears’s right hand, his thumb detached itself and tumbled to the carpet as the razor in her lapel bit cleanly through it and cut it off.
Booby traps
, she thought.
Thanks, Toby
.

Sears unclenched his hands automatically and stared at the deep, heavily bleeding cuts. A finger peeled off one hand and dropped to the floor. Then Clara shoved her knee hard into his groin and he doubled forward with a shout.

Clara ran. She stumbled past Sears and flew out the office door, falling over the chair, righting herself, throwing herself full-pelt down the stairs. She raced across the main body of the club, where people were still fighting, still throwing punches and chairs and bottles, and then someone grabbed her arm and she was dragged to a halt.

‘Bastard! Let go, let go!’ she shrieked, crazy with fear, and then she looked, and saw that it was Henry, her brother.

Their eyes locked. Clara was panting as if she’d run a mile. So was Henry. His fists were red, bruised, bloody. His face was flushed with exertion. Would he let her go? She didn’t think so. He would hold her here until Sears recovered himself and came down and finished her off.

‘Henry—’ she started.

He let go of her arm.

Clara stared at his face for a second longer, then she turned and ran, out of the club, out into the night and away.

73

It turned out that Sears and his bully-boys had a busy Saturday night all round. As well as the Carmelo, they’d hit the Oak, the Paradise, and the CityBeat, taking in a gang of rockers to flatten the mods drinking in there with bike chains and knives. Half of the clubs had been decimated in one massive hit.

When she got back to the Heart of Oak early on Sunday morning, it was to find it in a similar state of devastation. Exhausted, wrung out with anxiety, she locked the doors (luckily the locks were still intact, they were about the only thing that was), then she crawled upstairs to the flat beside the office, which was untouched. She shoved one couch in front of the door and sprawled out on the other, and was asleep in minutes. If Sears’s lot came and burned the whole damned thing to the ground, she’d die in it. And she was getting to the point where she was past caring one way or the other.

Her gloom increased on Monday, when only one of the staff turned up for work – porky little Jan, who seemed to have adopted Clara as her best mate.

‘Where is everyone?’ Clara asked her. She was downstairs in the decimated body of the club, trying to sweep some of the mess up with a broom. It was like fighting the tide, it seemed to achieve nothing.

‘They won’t come back,’ said Jan. ‘Bloody great warning off Sears? They won’t come back after that.’

Clara looked at Jan in exasperation. She was telling her she had no staff. No muscle. No nothing. That she was truly alone, trying to clear up all this crap, without assistance.

‘Then why are
you
here?’ she asked.

‘Came in to see how you’re coping.’

‘Oh, bloody fucking marvellous. Three of my clubs down the Swannee, and no staff to get them back up.’

‘Nobody’s going to work these clubs, not after Sears made his feelings plain. Everyone’s shit-scared that he’s going to come back in and beat them senseless. Toby’s dead and everyone knows you can’t handle the situation. You’d best just pack up, get out.’

Clara stared at her. She thought of confronting Sears last night in her office, and shuddered at the memory. But she had done him damage. She was glad of that. She thought of Henry down in the club, catching her arm. For a moment, she had thought he was going to betray her totally; but he hadn’t.

‘You don’t understand,’ she told Jan. ‘I’ve lost my house. I’ve lost the income from three clubs. I can’t
afford
to get out.’

Jan gave a snort. ‘You can’t afford not to. He’ll see you off any way he can, you know. He’ll walk right over you. Well, he has already, hasn’t he.’ Jan gave a nod of affirmation. ‘Listen to me, Clara. Just
listen
. The sensible thing to do now? Go. While you still got legs.’

‘What does that mean?’ asked Clara.

Jan leaned in and said with ghoulish relish: ‘He chopped the foot off a bloke over in Greek Street when he refused to pay out. Right off,
crunch
! Just like that. Left the poor bloke with a stump. He’s on disability now, he’s fucked.’

Oh shit
, thought Clara.

74

A few days later, a bleak cold windy day well suited to her mood, she did a tour of the three clubs that had been hit. There was no one there in any of them – only wreckage, only carnage. Bloodstains and smashed mirrors, wrecked chairs and upturned tables, all the optics drained and smashed, all the stock pinched, slivers of glass all over the place.

This was a fucking disaster.

She went on to the clubs that were still in operation. Or they
should
have been. Only there was no staff in any of them. No barmen, no bouncers, no hostesses, no singers or dancers, no bands. Not a bloody soul. clearly everyone had heard about what happened to the other cotton clubs and they were taking no chances.

She finished up outside the Juniper. She unlocked the shutters and pulled them up; unlocked the main doors. Then she walked in. The place was empty, echoing, devoid of life.

She stood there in the deserted club and thought of the horror she’d seen happening in the Carmelo, with the thwarted Sears standing gigantic and bald and powerful with his hands red with blood. Seeing Henry there, standing shoulder to shoulder with that horrible bastard, had chilled her right through to her soul. No one had died that night, but that had been more luck than anything.

If Toby’s and even Sal’s deaths were a warning to her to clear out, she was still too stubborn to take the hint. Then she thought of Jan, telling her about the man who’d been maimed for life. It had been so vicious an act that she felt sick just thinking about it. But along with the revulsion she could also feel fury like a fire deep in her belly, like those leaping flames that had enveloped her beautiful house and her dear, sweet husband.

All her life, men had caused her grief. Her father, abandoning her. Henry, cheating, stealing from her, appalling her with his mindless acts of cruelty, standing among Sears’s thugs trashing the Carmelo. Her own brother. Fucking
men
, thinking they could just plough through her like she was nothing. Then Sears with that fucking proposal. Marry me, or else. That cold, horrible chuckle on the other side of the door as Sears realized she was hiding from him, both of them knowing how easily, so easily, he could break down her flimsy defence and come in. But she’d marked him. Like a cornered cat, she’d lashed out and hit her mark, thanks to Toby and his tip on razored lapels. Anyone grabbed you by your coat, they cut themselves to ribbons. And it had worked.

Booby traps,
he’d told her. And thank God he had.

As she stood there amid the wreckage, she heard a noise behind her. She whirled round, her heart in her mouth, expecting to see
him
there, massive and menacing, come to get her. There was no one there. Only the main door, banging shut in the wind and then opening again with a low creak.

Now she was jumping at shadows. Sears had terrified her, she was expecting him everywhere.

Had she really come through so much, suffered and tried and endured, just to have it all snatched away from her? She had scaled the heights but was now in danger of slipping right back down the ladder of bad luck and ending up in a situation that filled her with horror – poor again, destitute. All of it gone. And she had worked so hard to get here,
so bloody hard
.

The thought of ever again landing up in an overcrowded slum filled her with sick dread. That
couldn’t
be allowed to happen. She flatly
refused
to contemplate such a future. She drew herself up, took a deep breath. No. She wouldn’t let it happen. Clara Dolan only ever played by her own rules, never by anyone else’s. Clara Dolan never stopped thinking, not for an instant, and she never let her heart rule her head. She told herself that, very firmly. It was the truth. She was cool and calculating, and she was going to stay that way.

The door banged open again, and she jumped.

Oh fuck this.

Sears thought he could just bulldoze over her, did he?

Well, she’d see about that. Clara left the empty club, closed it up again.

She had two things to do. And then they’d bloody well
see
, the whole sodding lot of them.

75

‘I want to report something,’ said Clara to the inspector, the same one who had come in asking about Sal’s murder, the fire, Toby’s death.

She’d gone to the police station and asked for him by name. Then she’d sat and waited with a drunk on one side and a prostitute bellowing about her innocence on the other, until he’d appeared and ushered her into a gloomy back office.

‘Report what?’ he’d asked, when they were both seated. He had a young fresh-faced PC with him, who produced a notebook and pencil and looked at her expectantly.

‘Fulton Sears ran the doors on my clubs. Since my husband Toby Cotton died, he’s taken it into his head that he’s going to marry me and take over. I wouldn’t play ball, so he wrecked three of them and I want you to charge him.’

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