The White Trilogy: A White Arrest, Taming the Alien, The McDead (31 page)

BOOK: The White Trilogy: A White Arrest, Taming the Alien, The McDead
12.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘I can only hope you’re kidding. Tell you what, I’ll feast on the others—you have the condoms.’

He took his glass and before he drank, Spiro said, ‘
Aspro pato.

‘Whatever.’ Knocked it back, gasped and said, ‘Paint off a fucking gate...

‘You like?’

Brant wiped his mouth, bit on a stale cracker, said, ‘Let’s cut the crap, boyo, and drop the Greek lesson ... OK? You came to me pal offering yer help if I could help you with some problems. I delivered, you haven’t been shut down so, let’s hear it. You’re a snitch, so snitch.’

Now Spiro was the offended party, whined, ‘Meester Brant, ah ... I thought we were friends. Friends do each other a
leetle
favour.’

He was into it now and would have built to operatic outrage but Brant leant over, gave him an almighty wallop to the side of the head, said:

‘You’re not paying attention, Costos.’

‘It’s Spiro.’

‘See, now you’re listening. Who’s the main player these days?’

The main player had been Bill Preston. He was on sabbatical and various villains were vying for position. Spiro glanced round the empty restaurant, then said, ‘Tommy Logan. Like you, he is Irish, I think, but he has the mind of a Colombian.’

‘What’s that mean?’

‘Without mercy, no ... how you say...? boundaries ... is why he is top because he will do anything.’

‘Well now, I’d like to meet the bold Logan.’

‘Mister Brant, be careful, this man is crazy. He has no respect for police or for anybody.’

Brant poured some ouzo, said, ‘Let’s have some more turpentine, drink to Tommy Logan.’

‘Ah, you begin to like the ouzo.’

Brant leant over and Spiro cowered, but the sergeant only put his arm round the Greek’s shoulder, squeezed, said, ‘I like you Costis, you and yer shit-hole caff.’

Song for Guy

A
HANDFUL OF MOURNERS
at Tony Roberts’ funeral. The Chief Inspector, Brant, Falls, McDonald, and a wino who looked vaguely familiar, but Roberts couldn’t quite recall where from.

The vicar read, ‘Man is full of misery and has but a short time to live...

Brant nudged him, none too gently, said, ‘Jaysus, padre, something less depressing.’

The vicar said, ‘I say, do leave this to the proper authority. There are set rules and services.’

Brant gave him the look, asked, ‘Wanna be first in the hole?’

The padre looked for help but none was forthcoming, so he read an up tempo passage on light and salvation. Brant liked it fine.

A persistent drizzle was coming down, not an outright soaking but a steady wetting. As if it hadn’t the balls to just pour on bloody down. When the body had been lowered, Brant moved near to Roberts, asked, ‘All right, guv?’

‘What ... oh yes ... thanks ... listen, I, ahm ... don’t they usually have sandwiches for people after...?’

Brant smiled gently, a rare to rarest event, said, ‘I put a few quid behind the bar at The Roebuck, they do a lovely spread.’

‘Oh, do they?’

‘Well the owner’s a mick, knows about wakes. He’ll do us grand. I’ll leave you a moment, guv.’

Roberts turned, asked, ‘What will I say? I dunno what to say.’

‘Tell him goodbye, guv ... oh ... and that you’ll fix the fuck what done him ... OK?’

Only Roberts and the wino remained. Then it came to him—the wino outside Tony’s door. The man said, ‘Sorry for your trouble, he was a gent he was. Gave me a few quid now and again.’

Roberts reached for his wallet and the man was horrified. ‘I didn’t come here for beggin’.’

‘I know, I appreciate that, but for a last one with ... Tony ... would you humour me?’

The wino was indignant but not stupid, took the cash, said, ‘So long’s you know I didn’t come cos o’ that.’

Roberts nodded, stood alone for a moment then whispered, ‘Goodbye Tony, I’ll fix the fuck what done you ... OK, lad?’

Top dog

T
HERE’S A NEW BOOT
on the market. Heavy, thick-soled, menacing and highly impressive, called
Wehrmacht.
And, yeah, they pronounce it with a V and a tone. So, OK, it’s not actually called the Third Reich, but it’s implied. Could they give a fuck. Selling like designer sunglasses. Tommy Logan had a pair and he adored them. For good measure, he had the toes reinforced with steel. Kept them spit-shined and did those mothers gleam?

His real name was Tommy Nash but that was before. In the Scrubs, he’d drowned a guy in a toilet. Not an easy task. You have to truly want to kill somebody. Tommy did.

That evening in the recreation room, Johnny Logan won the Eurovision for the third time. The cons were allowed to watch. To be in the Eurovision three times is some awful sentence but to win it three times, that’s diabolical. One of the lifers said, ‘Hey Tommy, you know what?’

‘Yeah?’ Lots of hard in his answer fresh from the afternoon kill, he was bullet-proof.

‘You look like that guy—that winner.’

Tommy checked round, see if it was a piss-take. No. Lots of con heads nodding. Yeah, they could see it. Tommy heard the word WINNER. It sang to him.

Johnny Logan was tall, dark hair, and the face of a cherub. He sang like a tenor angel. Tommy was short with mousy hair and a baby face. But the fit was in.

Next day Tommy got a prison make-over. Had one of the cissies dye his hair black using polish and gel. Got it sleek and raven. After, he let the cissy go down and came quickly. A few minutes later he beat the cissy to pulp, shouting, ‘I hate fucking queers, man I just fucking hate ’em.’

On Tommy’s release he didn’t go back to north London. He headed south-east and became Tommy Logan, adopted a half-assed Irish accent and thought it passed for humour. To complete the transition, he got a heavy gold Claddagh ring and ordered bottles of Guinness in public. It worked for Daniel Day Lewis. His music of choice was Sinead O’Connor. He believed her to be openly psychotic. Her songs sang to him of

violence

pay-back

fuck you-all.

The current favourite was Troy, where her Dublin accent lashed full and lethal. Jaysus, he couldn’t get enough of it. To hear Tommy sing the chorus with Sinead was to understand Armageddon. When she grew her hair again, he was a tad disappointed. To complete his Irish accreditation, his weapon of choice was a hurley. The national sport in Ireland, apart from talking, is hurling. A cross between hockey and homicide.

A hurley is made from ash and about the length of a baseball bat. Twice as lethal as it’s much handier to swing. You get one in your hands, you want to swing like a lunatic.

Every year the All Ireland Final was broadcast to London and Tommy relished every murderous minute. He’d spotted a poster of the Mayo team at an Irish dance and had it away. The team looked like a hardened bunch. Tommy imagined getting them behind you in the yard at Wormwood Scrubs and shouting ‘Up yah, boy.’

Jeez, what a rush. During the televised final, regardless of who the teams actually were, Tommy would shout, ‘C’mon Mayo’.

While this would have been much appreciated in Mayo, it tended to confuse elsewhere. Tommy made his pile with crack cocaine. Got right into the very bases and wielded intimidation from the off. Knowing no limits, he grew into major league.

Bill Preston had been top of the south-east for a decade and when he took off, Tommy was next in line. His motto was:

The only good witness is a dead witness.

And his lack of jail time proved it. On the climb up, Tommy learned about care, caution, planning, and the best solicitors.

Front everything.

Hide

Hide

Hide

Start a company daily and muddle your tracks. A high profile led to heat and Tommy was beginning to appreciate the value of stealth. His one major weakness was his temper. He hadn’t yet learned to control it. Tony Roberts was proof of that.

Wake up

T
HE ROEBUCK HAD, AS
Brant predicted, laid on a ‘grand spread’. Mountains of sandwiches. Cocktail sausages, nicely burnt. Lashings of tea, soup and, of course, plenty of booze.

Roberts was holding a cup of tea; he hadn’t tasted it. Falls prepared a plate of food, brought it over. He shook his head, she urged, ‘They’re very good, sir, try one of those lads.’

‘No ... thank you.’

Brant came over, nodded to Falls, and she backed off. Brant took the tea from Roberts, put a glass there instead, said, ‘It’s Irish, kick like a bastard.’

‘OK, Tom.’

The others looked round.

Tom!

It never occurred to them Brant had a Christian name. His expression told them they best forget it. PC McDonald was a tall blond Scot. Falls might have felt an attraction if he wasn’t so ... smug. He was wolfing down food and she asked, ‘Missed breakfast?’

He gave her a glorious smile. It was a winner, he’d been told and often made women weak at the knees. She said, ‘You’re the rising star.’

Now he was modest, toned down the smile wattage, said, ‘I got lucky.’

‘Word has it you’ll get Brant’s stripes.’

‘Oh I dunno, would I be up to his rep’?’

Now Falls treated him to
her
smile. All teeth and absolutely no warmth, said, ‘You’ve got that right.’

He grabbed a napkin, carefully wiped his mouth, and she thought, Uh-oh, all the moves.

He touched her arm, said, ‘When we’re done here, I wonder would you like to come back to my place?’

‘When we’re
done
here—you mean scoffed the food, then we’ll scarper?’ He decided to play, prove he could be a fun guy, said, ‘Yeah ... sound good?’

She moved his hand away, asked, ‘And back there we’d do what exactly?’ The full smile now.

‘Oh, something will come up, eh?’

She looked full at his crotch, said, ‘If we waited for that to come up, we’d be here all week.’ And moved away.

McDonald considered following but then grabbed another sandwich, muttered, ‘Cold cunt.’

Brant and Roberts had moved to a table, a line of empty shot glasses on the counter. Roberts said, ‘God, that’s a strong drink.’

‘Aye, takes the edge off.’

They laughed at that notion. The drink hasn’t been invented that
keeps
the edge off. Still, they’d enjoy the reprise.

Brant asked, ‘What the medical examiner say, guv?’

Roberts had to shake himself, focus on where he was, said, ‘That he’d been beaten with a stick ... maybe a club, broke every bone in his body. A systematic beating was how he described it. Took a while. Took a while.’

They digested that, then Roberts asked, ‘What d’ya think, a baseball job?’

‘Could be a hurley, guv.’

Roberts nodded, then, ‘I know who did it.’

‘Jesus, guv, are you serious?’

‘Tony told me before he died.’

‘And you haven’t told anybody.’

Roberts raised an eyebrow, said, ‘I’m telling you.’ And he did.

When he was finished, Brant whistled, said, ‘This is what they call synchronicity, I think.’

‘What?’

‘Sting had a song about it ... well he would, wouldn’t he? You know, like coincidence.’

Roberts was lost, said, ‘I’m lost.’

Brant was almost excited. ‘Guv, I’ve a new informant and guess who he says is the new kid on the block?’

Now Roberts gave a bleak smile. ‘Mr Logan?’

‘Bingo!’

Roberts stood up, swayed and Brant asked, ‘We’re going to get him now?’

‘Oh no, that’s something I want to do properly. I want to savour it. I’m going to get some more of that Irish.’

Brant sat back, said, ‘That’s the spirit, guv.’

Private investigation

R
OSIE, A WPC, WAS
Falls’ best friend. When she heard of Falls’ new assignment, she snorted: ‘They had me on that.’

‘What?’ Rosie laughed.

‘Did the Super tell you he’d picked you specially.’

Falls was mortified, considered lying but thought, What the hell? Said, ‘Yeah, he gave me that whole crock.’

‘Set you up in Clapham?’

‘Uh-oh.’

‘Girl, they’re shitting you, when there were three victims, they weren’t sure he specifically targeted black women, so they put my white ass on the line. I hung out in clubs, pubs till my Jack said he’d get a divorce.’

‘Did you talk to the victims?’

‘Honey, they’re black ... are they gonna open up to a white girl—a white
po-lees
girl? Sure, where you been girl?’

As she spoke, she realised, and tried to counter, ‘Oh gawd, I mean ... I’m a stupid cow, I’m sorry.’

‘It’s OK. Anything else?’

‘Well, they got in a profiler ... just like the telly. He said the attacker was a white male in his thirties and that the violence would escalate. It has. He used the knife last time almost as if he were working up to a kill.’

She shuddered and said, ‘Don’t do it girl, say you’re not completely recovered.’

Falls gave her the look and Rosie said, ‘Please be extra careful.’

‘I will, I promise, so there.’

‘You know that rape is about hate, not sex.’

‘I read the report.’

‘Oh ... and here’s you lettin’ me prattle on. Then you know about the garlic.’

‘What?’

‘All the victims mentioned his breath stank of it.’

‘Gee, that should narrow it down. We can eliminate all young males with fresh breath.’

‘Of which, in the whole of London, there’s probably five.’

‘Five percent?’

‘No, just five.’

Falls thought about Brant, then asked, ‘Do I look different to you Rosie?’

‘You mean ... since?’

‘Yeah.’

‘A little quieter.’

‘Do I look ... mean?’

Rosie hugged her, said, ‘You always looked mean.’

Lodged

M
CDONALD WAS SUMMONED TO
the Super’s office. When he got inside, the Super came to shake his hand, did the Masonic bit. The Super sat and said, ‘Take a pew son.’

‘Thank you, sir.’

‘You set for bigger things?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘But we must be seen to go through the motions. Are you with me?’

‘Absolutely, sir, one hundred per cent.’

‘That’s the ticket. Did you know Scots are the back-bone of the force?’

He didn’t, said, ‘No, sir.’

‘Oh yes. Now the Irish are ... what’s the word, too...

BOOK: The White Trilogy: A White Arrest, Taming the Alien, The McDead
12.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Selby's Secret by Duncan Ball
Lost in a Royal Kiss by Vanessa Kelly
To the Hermitage by Malcolm Bradbury
Irene by Pierre Lemaitre
Weep Not Child by Ngũgĩ Wa Thiong'o
Get Lucky by Wesley, Nona
Hell to Heaven by Chan, Kylie