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Authors: Graham Hurley

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BOOK: Nocturne
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The Queen

s was cavernous, a big, high-ceilinged pub with fading
curtains and worn upholstery. It was still busy for mid-afternoon and
there was a heavy Irish contingent at the bar. They were obviously
regulars, big-faced men with baggy jeans and wet eyes. It took me a
while to sort out Frankie and I only spotted him for certain when I
caught one of the Irish guys calling his name.

He was young, much younger than Witcher.. He was wearing black
leather trousers and a black shirt and I knew at once that he was gay.
You could tell by the way the men treated him, protective, roughly
affectionate, and you could tell as well that he didn

t care. At the riper
remarks, none of them hostile, he

d turn his back, and wiggle his bum,
and then play dainty-dainty with his hands when he circled the bar to
collect the empties.

I was sitting at a table in the
far
corner when he came for my glass.
I
moved my bag to let him wipe the table. He did it with a certain
deftness, the way a woman might, and I thought at once of Witcher

s
kitchen, how neat it was, and how pretty.

According to the clock behind the bar, it was twenty past four.


I

d like to buy you a drink,

I said.

When you

ve finished.


You would?

Frankie had a lovely smile.

I nodded at the empty chair he

d just tidied into the table.


Yes…

I said, giving him a
£5
note,


and bring another Pils for me.

Frankie joined me ten minutes later. In contrast to Witcher, he was a
story looking for a willing ear. By six o

clock, I knew where he lived,
where he came from, the clubs he liked best for dancing, and the pubs
he cruised when he was in the mood for a one-night stand. My only
problem was shutting him up.


There

s a man called Kevi
n Witcher,

I managed to say at last.


Kev?

he nodded,
ever eager.

Yeah, I know Kev. Double vodkas
and coke. No ice.


You know him well?


What do you mean?


Is he a friend of yours?


Might be, why?

For the first time, I could feel Frankie touch the brake. There might,
after all, be limits to this candour of his. He might even want to know
my name.

I extended a hand across the table. I

d already decided to tell him
more or less everything and three bottles of Pils confirmed what a
wonderful decision that was. This could go on all evening, I thought.
Maybe it will.


Julie,

I said,

Julie Emerson.

He touched my hand, giving it a playful little squeeze. I told him
about Gilbert, about the flat, and lastly about my brief call at
Denman

s Hill. Nothing I said seemed to surprise Frankie in the least
and I was beginning to wonder how much I really knew about life in
Inner London, when Frankie beckoned me forward across the table.
I

d been talking about Gilbert

s bruise and the fight he

d evidently had
with Witcher. Frankie was very theatrical. I could feel his breath on my
ear.


Kev and his candles,

he said.

That was probably what triggered it.

I remembered the line of candles on Kevin Witcher

s Welsh dresser.


How come?

I queried.


Easy. Kev loves candles. The bigger the better, them scented sort
preferably. It

s a real treat, really lovely, really nice, but you

ve got to
want it. He likes to light them afterwards and then he plays funny
music,
you know, classical stuff. Requiems. All sorts. Brilliant, if
you

re in the mood.

I was lost. Frankie could see it in my eyes and it made him laugh,
though not unkindly.
I decided to start with the obvious.


You see a lot of Kevin?


Most weeks, yeah.


You know he

s had some kind of accident?


Of course, that

s why he

s been off work so long.

He started to tell me about Witcher

s job. It seemed he was a civil
servant in Whitehall.


But this accident,

I kept saying.

What happened?

Frankie was enjoying himself now, refusing to give me a straight
answer. He

d sussed where I was coming from, what it was I really
wanted to know, and he was determined to string the conversation out
until either my patience gave out or we were both blind drunk. After
six, at Frankie

s insistence, I

d switched to shorts - vodka and coke, no
ice - and now I sat back, sprawled in the chair, listening to Frankie

s
plans to launch himself into the world of film-making. This bit of the
conversation was my own fault. I

d let slip what I did for a living,
knowin
g at once it was a mistake. Fran
kie was bursting with ideas. He
had access to a word processor. All he needed
was a name, and an
address, an
d he knew, he just
knew
that he

d be heading for the big
time. The people he

d met. The stories he could tell. The strokes some
guys would pull to get inside those amazing leather loons.

At last, gone nine, I managed to pin him down. The pub was a blur
of bodies around us. The sheer volume of noise made ordinary
conversation impossible.


Kevin Witcher

s arm,

I shouted.

Who broke it?

Frankie was blowing kisses at someone behind me. I grabbed his
hand, hauling him towards me, repeating the question. Frankie
frowned, the way you do when you

ve forgotten a detail or two.


That bloke,

he said.

The one you mentioned.


Gilbert?


Yeah, him.


Gilbert
broke his arm?


Yeah,

he nodded vigorously.

And the rest, too.

We were listening to heavy metal now. I couldn

t hear a thing.


What rest?

I
yelled.

Frankie

s hands began to pat various parts of his body. I pulled him
closer, my ear practically in his mouth.


Plus his ribs,

he was saying,

and his kidneys. And a couple of
teeth. Kev told me about the X-rays. Real make-over. Geezer must
have known what he was about.


Gilbert
?’
I shouted again.


Yeah.


Gilbert beat him up?


Yeah.

I collapsed back in my chair. I

m probably slow on the uptake but
there wasn

t enough vodka in the world to blanket the implications of
what this boy was telling me. Gilbert, if I was to believe him, wasn

t
just mad but violent too. So violent, he

d put the previous occupant of
3
1
Napier Road in hospital.

A question occurred to me. Frankie was on his feet, swaying with
the music, his arm round a blond youth with a pony tail. I beckoned
him down. My time was nearly up.


Why?

I
mouthed.


Why what?


Why did Gilbert do it?

Frankie gazed at me for a moment and I saw the faraway look in his
eye. Then he blinked.


Kevin can be a dickhead,

he grinned.

Candles aren

t everyone

s
cup of tea.

Candles? I woke up on Sunday morning with another blinding
headache, half convinced I was back in Bournemouth. That last year,
I

d lived in a bedsit about half a mile from the university. It was seedy
in the extreme but I was passionately in love with a lecturer from the
College of Art and Design and our snatched nights together blinded
me to the damp-stained wallpaper and ever-dripping taps. He was
married, of course, and it all ended in tears but there were Sunday
mornings exactly like thi
s when we

d awake to find the wine-stained
duvet
puddled with sunshine, and our mouths tasting of ashes, and we

d
prove beyond doubt that no hangover on earth could survive a head-
shattering orgasm and an hour or so of cosy oblivion afterwards.

That option, alas, was no longer on offer and by the time I

d found
my dressing gown and inspected my pale face in the bathroom mirror I
realised that one of the feelings I was trying to keep at bay was
loneliness. The pub that night had been full of people who knew each
other, laughed a lot, got pissed together. Why was I always too busy to
have any of that?

The ding-dong of the front door chimes came an hour or so later.
Three Nurofens and a pot of coffee had taken the edge off the
headache but the rather bleak feeling that came with it was definitely
in for the day. I opened the door to find Brendan standing in the
sunshine. He was wearing a pair of shorts and a T-shirt. We were a
week or so into early spring, but even so he was making a very brave
fashion statement indeed.


Borrowed it for the weekend. Thought you

d do the honours.

He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. His Mercedes stood at the
kerbside. Lashed to a brand new roofrack was a sailboard. I began to
laugh.


You want to go windsurfing? In February?

BOOK: Nocturne
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