Authors: Mike Ripley
Tags: #london, #1980, #80s, #thatcherism, #jazz, #music, #fiction, #series, #revenge, #drama, #romance, #lust, #mike ripley, #angel, #comic crime, #novel, #crime writers, #comedy, #fresh blood, #lovejoy, #critic, #birmingham post, #essex book festival, #death, #murder, #animal rights
Lisabeth fixed Binky with her best laser-beam stare. Fenella's a tall girl and was once probably very self-conscious about her height until flat shoes came back, and although I don't think I'm a foot fetishist, I reckon the Princess of Wales has got a lot to answer for on that score. She still had a pretty eccentric idea of casual clothes, though, and at the moment was wearing a light blue cotton dress and a darker blue blazer. It looked suspiciously like her old school uniform.
âIt's not what she's done,' said Lisabeth primly. âIt's her ⦠her ... attitude.'
She made it sound like a disease, and a contagious one.
âOne of those
men
â that one â' she indicated a perfectly harmless-looking bloke in a snappy suit â âasked her if she worked in some restaurant called School Dinners, and she giggled and has been talking to him ever since. Look out, they're coming over.'
âDon't worry,' I whispered, âI'll get rid of him. Fenella love, where've you been hiding all my life?'
Fenella sat down on the sofa next to me, not Lisabeth, and smiled sweetly over the top of her glass.
âI wasn't born for most of it, Angel.'
âVery good, Fenella darling; you've been keeping up the postal course in witty put-downs, I see.'
âBut Angel â' she blushed â âyou're always saying you taught me everything I know.'
âWell, not
everything,
Binky.' She went from red to scarlet. On my other side, Lisabeth snorted loudly. âAnyway, who's your friend?'
The guy who had been chatting her up came over with a glass of wine for her.
âAngel, this is Alec Reynolds. He's in the City.'
I nodded to him and poured myself another glass. I realised I was well down the bottle and I still hadn't got to Beeby yet. I wondered if anybody fancied an exhibition of orange-juggling.
âDid I ever tell you my plan for making my fortune in the City?' I asked Fenella, ignoring Alec.
âWhich one?'
âThe Fish and Chips empire.' She frowned and Alec leaned forward, so I pressed on. âIt's easy, really. You just work on the basis that everybody in the City has more money than sense, novelty commands a premium price, and they all get hungry. So, what I plan to do is start up a fish and chip shop â or better still, a mobile one in a van â that serves cod and chips wrapped in the
Financial Times.
You could do a deal with the paper and get over-run copies cheap in the morning after the main deliveries have gone, and you could even specialise. Say, rock salmon comes in the commodities page, plaice is wrapped in the oil section.'
âYou could do afternoon fry-ups in the
Racing Post
,'
said Alec, catching on. âAnd take-home suppers in the TV pages of the last edition of the
Standard
.'
âExactly, and you could charge ten pounds a go in the City and get away with it. And you'd get tons of publicity, and within six months some restaurant or pub would offer to buy you out.'
âAnd would you sell?' asked Alec.
âOf course, just before the novelty wore off. Remember, there are 13 million mugs in London and they all need to come just the once to make my fortune.'
Alec laughed, and Fenella smiled uncertainly, not sure if I was serious. Lisabeth snorted again. Obviously Alec was getting too friendly.
âWhat would you do with your millions then, eh? I'm sure my firm could put together an attractive portfolio for you,' Alec offered.
I waved him away magnanimously and poured myself another drink. The bottle seemed empty.
âI have my own sources, old boy. I'd do some short term trading, keep my ear to the ground for good buys. Maybe I'll dabble in something like â ooh, say, Capricorn Travel. You know, buy when it's cheap and then ...'
I had been showing off, and honestly didn't expect the reaction I got.
It wasn't so much that Alec's expression changed from amusement to one akin to chronic indigestion, or that his fingers whitened around his glass so that I felt sure he would snap it in half. What really threw me was Salome's scream.
She had been standing right behind me and obviously listening in.
âWhat did you say?' she'd yelled.
âEh? What ...?'
She'd almost given me a heart attack, but she was the one clutching her hands to her mouth.
âHow did you know?' she shouted. âHow?'
Then she ran from the room into the kitchen, and the door slammed behind her. Frank charged after her, looking daggers at me as he passed.
âWhat have I said?' I asked nobody in particular, and nobody answered.
Me and my big mouth. I should have kept it well zippered.
It would have avoided a lot of aggro for Salome and Alec and several others, notably me.
It also meant I never got to find out why Beeby was called Beeby.
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I surfaced next morning with a really Gothic hangover. All the classic symptoms were there: the overflowing ashtray mouth, the dreaded Whirling Pits where the sense of balance ought to be and the steam-hammer thumping behind the eyes as if somebody was pounding my head against the wall.
I opened an eye and saw that Lisabeth had me by the hair and was pounding my head against the wall.
âOi! Florence Nightingale! Take it easy will you!'
âWake up, Angel!'
âLeave it out. Just go easy on the violence, okay? Christ, I think you've loosened my brain.'
âSo that's what was rattling. Now will you wake up?'
I opened one eye again. She was still there. If she'd handed me the Temperance Pledge I'd have signed it on the spot. Lisabeth could collect a lot of signatures this way.
âOrwight, orwight. I'm awake.'
âBoth eyes, please.'
âHappy now?' She didn't look any better in stereo.
âGood. Now get out of that pit and come and talk to Salome.'
âWho? What? What for?'
âGet up.' Thump. âAnd talk to Salome.' Thump. âBefore she goes to work.' Thump.
I caught her wrist with both hands. God, she was strong. It didn't even slow her down. Thump. God, I was weak.
âOkay, okay, I'm up.'
I flung back the duvet and swung my legs out of bed. Lisabeth saw I was naked and dropped me like a hot brick. She didn't actually scream but there was a definite sharp intake of breath.
âWe'll be in the living-room until you're decent,' she said with as much dignity as she could muster while fixing her eyes on the ceiling.
âYou could have a long wait,' I yelled after her.
I padded into the bathroom to soak my head under the bath taps, hitting myself this time, but by now I was probably punch drunk. I brushed my teeth â carefully â and although they felt loose, they all seemed to be there.
I remembered that after Salome had thrown her wobbler at the party, I'd been taken out to sit on the stairs with Lisabeth acting as my minder. I must have slipped away from her at some point as I distinctly remember nipping downstairs to my flatlet to get the bottle of poteen Werewolf had brought me from Ireland. I even remember laughing about the label â a piece of lined paper stuck on with Sellotape on which was written âKerry Dew' in green crayon. They probably didn't allow sharp objects in the place it was made.
To be honest, that was about all I remembered. I just hoped I had managed to put down a couple of pints of water before I fell into my pit, to combat dehydration, otherwise I was going to feel terrible later on. (Getting drunk costs me a fortune in bottled mineral water ever since I found out that tap water in London has been recycled five times.)
I put a towel around my stomach â I don't possess a dressing-gown â and jogged from the bathroom to the kitchenette. Two-and-a-half seconds. Good, my times were improving.
I found an unopened tetrapack of orange juice in the fridge, hiding behind a stick of celery. It took me a few more seconds to bite the corner off and drink. Aagh, lifesaver. The man who put OJ into those things deserves a medal, but if he hasn't got one, he's probably rich enough not to worry about it.
There was nothing else I could think of to delay me. Breakfast was out of the question in my state, not that I've ever been wild about celery. So I hitched my towel tighter and clutched my OJ like a gunslinger's .45 as I strode into the living-room.
âHi there, Sal, my love, popped home for lunch?' I breezed in and parked myself on the sofa next to her.
I'd just assumed she was back from the office because she had her city slicker gear on: a suit jacket in grey and red squares so wide at the shoulder that Robert Mitchum could have acted in it; short, tight matching skirt; black stockings with red seams; and really high-heeled black shoes with a single silver star on the back of just the left one.
âI haven't gone to work yet, Angel. I was worried, and Lisabeth said you wouldn't mind a chat.'
I looked at my watch. Jesus Christ, but it wasn't even seven o'clock. Never mind, stay charming and make sure the towel doesn't slip.
âAnytime, Sal, as long as you let me say how smart you're looking, and I particularly like the really dangerous shoes.'
Salome tugged the hem of her skirt down a micron or two.
âWell ... thank you. But the shoes aren't dangerous.'
âYou don't know what I'm thinking,' I leered.
âThat's enough of that,' said Lisabeth. If I'd been wearing trousers she would probably have smacked the backs of my legs. âSalome is worried.'
âThen tell all, Salome. You know what they say, A Trouble Shared ... is two people losing sleep.' I buried my face in the OJ carton.
Salome licked her lips and leaned forward. I wished she wouldn't do that when I was wearing only a towel.
âDo you remember what you said about Capricorn Travel last night, when you were talking to Alec?' Her eyes widened in hope. Lisabeth's widened out of sheer nosiness.
âTo be honest, Sal darling, I can't remember last night, let alone Capricorn Travel or Alec. Alec who? Do I owe him money?'
âAngel!' snapped Lisabeth. âBe serious.'
I shook my head to clear some of the pebbles in there. They just moved position a bit.
âOkay, okay, it's all coming back to me now. Yes, there was this guy at the party ... no, earlier, at the pub. He had a particularly nasty turn of phrase that I didn't want ... Beeby. What happened to Beeby?'
âShe left with one of Frank's friends,' said Salome, almost apologetically.
âA musician?' I must have sounded worried, because it startled her.
âNo,' she said thoughtfully. âAlthough Wallace has done some contract work for CBS and EMI. Why?'
âOh, nothing. Skip it.' Wallace, eh? I wonder what his friends called him.
âWell, get on with it,' Lisabeth shouted angrily. She probably wasn't shouting, but it felt like it.
As quickly as I could, I told them about the Chinless Wonder and the guy he called Simon or Si and how I'd noticed him because of his mouthy attitude and devotion to the Eichmann school of racial harmony.
âI just remembered that stuff about Capricorn Travel. They talked about the shit hitting the fan today and tipping somebody off to pull out his stake. Later on, when we got back here, I was just being lippy and showing off. I don't know what it means, for Christ's sake. Is it serious? Don't tell me, it's serious, isn't it?'
Salome reached out and put a hand on mine. Lisabeth scowled.
âWe could be talking unemployment, Angel. I work with Alec, and he knows you know something only I or he could have known.'
âBut ...'
âHe's got to mention it today at the office and yours truly gets it in the neck. Then it's goodbye yellow brick road.'
âAnd goodbye new place in Limehouse?'
ââFraid so. We couldn't afford it just on Frank's salary. Yet.'
âDoes he know?'
âHe knows something's wrong, but not what exactly, and not how bad it is. You see, Capricorn Travel is one of mine. One of my companies. I'm the sector analyst and they're my particular tip â or they were â and our company are their brokers and ...'
Her big eyes misted over and she swallowed hard to lock off the tears.
There was only one thing for it.
âListen, love, is there anything I can do to help?'
As soon as I'd said it I wished I'd bitten my tongue.
âWell, actually, there could be.'
Bitten clean through.
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