Read Angel City Online

Authors: Mike Ripley

Tags: #london, #1990, #90s, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #homeless, #sad, #misery, #flotsam, #crime, #gay scene, #Dungeons and Dragons, #fantasy, #violence, #wizard, #wand, #poor, #broke, #skint

Angel City (6 page)

BOOK: Angel City
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Nobody was interested.

 

We left the van almost exactly where we had picked it up and Tigger pocketed the keys. Back in Armstrong, he cut me my wages and did the same trick he did every night, producing a folded envelope already stamped to put his share in.

‘Where to? Lincoln's Inn again?' I asked.

‘Not tonight, driver. Tonight we're going downmarket. Take me to the Strand.'

I started the engine and shook my head.

‘You're not dooring it are you?'

‘Variety is the spice of life,' he chirped.

‘And the source of diseases,' I said.

Unlike Lincoln's Inn, where some of the tent dwellers had been there so long they received Reader's Digest mail shots, the area around the Strand and up into the Aldwych was strictly transient. You were ‘dooring' if you found an unoccupied doorway in which to fit yourself and your cardboard box or sleeping bag. The students at the London School of Economics called it ‘their' cardboard city, but what do they know? They tried to organise a protest when the streetcleaning wagons came round at 5.00 am to squirt the pavement and shop fronts with jets of icy water, but 5.00 am is a pretty unrealistic time for a student. And in any case, the doorway population had moved out. Some went into Covent Garden and risked a night sheltering up against St Paul's church – the actors' church, used mostly for showbiz memorial services where actors lie through their teeth about other, dead, actors. Not that the church is a problem; it's a very nice church. It's just that it has been adopted by the most aggressive set of winos in London, who regard any passing tourist as fair game for a bit of begging-with-menaces, and they didn't like newcomers on their patch.

Others would have cut up into Lincoln's Inn Fields and tried to crash the settlement there, either the permanent sites around the park railings where they have to chain their tents down and they use bright orange survival bags strung over the railings as windbreaks, or the no-man's-land in the middle around the folly, or pagoda, or whatever the hell it's supposed to be. They would only have done that if really desperate, as the normal admission fee is a bottle. To defend their territory, the residents of the folly use old oranges, rescued from the backdoors of restaurants, tied in plastic carrier bags. They use them like demented gauchos throwing bolas, and they hurt like stink when they hit. Look on the bright side. They haven't got guns. Yet.

The third migratory route would have been across the Hungerford footbridge to take their chance among the concrete of the South Bank. From there they could look over the river and see the mother of all Parliaments working late into the night. The government said there were less than a thousand people living rough on the streets of London. They also said the recession was over, inflation was coming down, beef was safe to eat and we had a Caring Society.

Whichever way the doorway people had gone, the exodus had not lasted long. Within a couple of months they were drifting back and cardboard boxes (especially from big electronic gear) were at a premium again.

‘I suppose you want me to stop at a postbox,' I said.

‘If you wouldn't mind, driver,' he answered, putting his feet up on the glass partition behind my head. ‘I'll have to be more careful. I'm getting set in my ways.'

Then I felt him looking at me as he said: ‘Or maybe you're just more observant than most.'

I shrugged. ‘So what's the big deal? You don't want to carry a roll of notes with you if you're going to be dooring it down the Strand, that stands to reason. So you post it to your Swiss bank account. None of my business.'

‘You've never wondered about it? Go on, I'll say you have.'

‘The only thing I've wondered about you, Tigger, is why you have to irritate people so much. It's not some breakaway Hare Krishna philosophy is it? Are you doing a degree in getting on people's tits?'

‘Well, that's a reaction of sorts, I suppose,' he said cheerily. ‘Most people I've done driving jobs with have decked me by the second one, or gone all high and mighty about my personal life.'

‘You amaze me,' I said drily.

‘Oh, Mr Angel,' he camped it up, putting his hands on his heart, ‘I thought you didn't care. Worse still, I thought you hadn't noticed me.'

‘That would be difficult, Tigger, though I'm sure there are drugs around these days that could help.'

‘Why, Mr Cool, you can be so cutting. And you should be friends with Tigger, because Tigger will be famous one day.'

‘Promise you won't forget the little people, won't you?'

I stopped near a postbox and watched him in the mirror again. He thought about something then got out, leaving Armstrong's door open so I couldn't drive off, posted his wages envelope and scurried back in.

‘Home, James, to another night under the stars. And don't look so disapproving, Mr Angel. I can tell you are, even from here.'

‘You're mistaking disapproval for total disinterest,' I said over my shoulder.

‘Aw, come off it.'

He loomed in my mirror to take the drop-seat behind me.

I felt his hand on my shoulder.

‘We have a lot in common, you and me, Angel.'

I wondered if this was a come-on and, if it was, how I could best hurt his feelings without losing the driving job.

‘Apart from a need for cash money and the oxygen in this cab, not a lot,' I said.

‘Oh yes we do. Brothers in arms, that's what we are, bucking the system in our own different ways. Living life to the full.'

‘Well you might be, but given the state of my finances, I'm living life to the tenth or thereabouts.'

‘Stop moaning, you old tart! Admit it, if you were my age you'd be living the same life. We're both committedly irresponsible.'

‘No we're not. Well, I'm not,' I argued.

‘Oh, my mistake,' he trilled. ‘I'd forgotten about the house and two-point-four kids out in the suburbs, and the day job, and the mortgage, and this must be the company's Ford Escort I'm riding in. Get real.'

‘What is this, Tigger? You going in for psychiatry at night school or something? Get a life, but not mine.'

He laughed.

‘See, exactly my point. You're a professional sidestepper, just like me, except you even sidestep admitting it to yourself.'

‘Was there a special sort of glue on that envelope you posted back there, or is it a full moon tonight?'

‘Cheap shot, Angel. I've thought about this, and to be really free, you can't afford to be responsible for anyone or anything. The minute you start to give a shit about what you do or what people think of you, you're no longer a free agent.'

‘Must be a rough life,' I said.

And a short one, as it turned out.

 

The weekend at Stuart Street crawled by in a succession of futile arguments with Lisabeth and Fenella and only a minor piece of sabotage to the plans of Doogie and Miranda.

Doogie's move back to Scotland had been prompted by the offer of a job as top chef in a posh hotel-cum-leisure complex on the banks of some loch or other. The actual location was a historic Scottish family house, fortified against the natural elements, the English, the Scots, and the Scots who always fought for the English (like the Armstrongs). It had survived those four apocalyptic horsemen only to fall to the fifth: tourism.

For Doogie, it was a plum job. It offered a limited working season, lots of under-chefs under him, and he could vote Scots Nationalist at the election without having to spoil his ballot paper as he did in Hackney.

All I had done was point out to Miranda that it would be difficult for her to continue her career in local journalism up there owing (a) to the lack of newspapers, and (b) the illiteracy rate among Highland cattle. She had thought about this and, for a moment, seemed to be putting a brave face on things. Then I suggested – just suggested, mind – that there would always be lots of openings for staff in a new hotel-cum-leisure complex, such as waitresses, chambermaids, kitchen staff even. And you couldn't have a more understanding boss than Doogie, could you?

It was at this point she decided Doogie ought to stay in on Saturday night so they could have a ‘relationship assessment'. I don't know how it went, and I didn't like to pry, but Doogie didn't speak to me for three days, and even then I don't suppose you could call ‘Turn the fookin' music down!' yelled down the stairs, polite social conversation.

By Sunday evening, Lisabeth and Fenella weren't talking either. Well, certainly not to me and probably not to each other.

They were still plotting a move to Glastonbury as a centre of ley lines and the Earth's sacred and spiritual linear forces. Lisabeth had found a book in the local library that seemed to substantiate this theory by referring to
Feng-shui
, one of the ancient Chinese beliefs similar to the basic philosophical principle of Taoism, which regards the Earth as a living thing through which life-force flows on ‘dragon paths'. The
Feng-shui
practitioner would build his house or tomb along these flow lines to ensure the best vibes, just like an acupuncturist knew exactly which flow line to tap with his needles.

I upset them first by reminding them that their last experiment with acupuncture had cost them a fortune in Elastoplasts. Then I pretended to understand what they were on about and conned them into wasting Saturday morning in the library looking through guide books trying to find pubs called the Green Dragon, which would be good pubs because they were bound to have been sited on ley lines.

While they were out, I left a message near the communal wall-phone telling them to ring the number of the nearest Chinese take-away as their
Feng-shui
was ready and did they want noodles or plain rice?

I even managed to give the mysterious Mr Goodson the hump, though I didn't intend to.

Mr Goodson keeps himself to himself, doesn't drink, smoke or indulge in illegal substances and doesn't play loud music. In all other respects, he's a perfect housemate. We rarely see him during the week and never at weekends, so maybe I over-reacted when I saw him letting himself out of the front door as I emerged on the Sunday morning to collect my milk.

It was still some ungodly hour, say about ten o'clock, and I hadn't expected to meet anyone on the stairs, so I was wearing just a towel scooped up off the bathroom floor, and to be honest, was still half asleep. So when I yelled a cheerful, neighbourly greeting, it actually came out as: ‘Good son, Mr Morning.'

He gurgled something from the back of his throat, nodded in my general direction and hurried out the door. He was wearing a knee-length duffel coat of the sort you only see these days on historical newsreels of Ban the Bomb marches – and you only see them when a Socialist politician or archbishop snuffs it. He was carrying a huge sports bag over his shoulder, and though it said CICA in big letters, it didn't fool me into thinking he was off to do something athletic. Maybe he was doing a moonlight flit or just deserting the sinking ship like everybody else seemed to be.

If he was, I wondered how long it would be before anyone noticed.

 

Monday morning involved two big decisions. The first was whether to hide in the bathroom until our esteemed landlord Nassim Nassim had been and gone, thus avoiding paying the rent. Again.

Given the mood of the rest of the house, any one of them was likely to grass me to Nassim, so I bit the bullet and clocked on with the dispatch company. By seven o'clock I was on Baker Street again, facing big decision two: whether to hang around Porter Street and use the McDonald's or defect across the street to the Burger King, which had put out tables and benches to try to win back trade. As Tony, the Beast from the East, was already sprawled out on one of the benches, that made it easy; I would wait until he wasn't looking, then nip into McDonald's.

Before I could, the radio squawked.

‘Oscar Seven, Oscar Seven. You out there?'

I started Armstrong's engine again before answering. ‘Oscar Seven. Am in West One, heavy traffic.'

The only thing moving on Baker Street was a Vulture refuse truck, its great iron jaws at the back gobbling up the black plastic sacks as the bin men hurled them in with unfailing accuracy.

‘Special request for you, Oscar Seven. Cash customer specified black cab for two passengers, West One area, soon as you can.'

It was too early in the day to tell if this was a wind-up or not, but some of the guys on Dispatch can get really warped after a quiet night on the switchboard.

‘Pick up and destination?'

‘Seymour Street, outside Barclays Bank.'

‘And where to, Dispatch?'

‘Passenger's name is O'Neil. Cash not account. ETA?'

They never tell you the destination, in case you pick up a better fare – like an airport –
en route
, so you always feel a right wally having to ask the customer: ‘Where to?'

BOOK: Angel City
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ads

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