Authors: Anthony Quinn
The diary was there on the table. Freya stared at it as though she couldn't believe her eyes, or her ears. âYou read Nancy's diary?' Her voice sounded almost horror-struck.
âNo, no,
she
read a few things out â most of them from Oxford days.'
Nancy looked a little sheepish at her surrendering this privacy. âHe pestered me, and I gave in.'
âTrue. I've always been madly fascinated to know what she writes in there.'
Freya smiled, despite her feeling of exclusion. Why had Nancy never favoured her with a recital from the diary? âAnything about me there?'
âLoads â so I gather,' said Robert. âBut she won't read those bits out.'
An uneasy pause followed. Nobody seemed to have anything to say for a moment. Freya took down a bottle of gin from the cupboard and poured herself a couple of fingers. âAnyone else?'
Nancy began to clear the table while Robert leaned back and sipped his beer. Freya took a chair and began rolling a cigarette: it wasn't the first time recently she felt she had interrupted a scene of domestic contentment. The lovebirds. There was no hint that she was unwelcome â it was her flat, really; she had found it and asked Nancy to move in â but the dynamic had changed.
Standing at the sink, Nancy looked over. âJoss rang, by the way â something about the party he wanted to ask you.'
Robert widened his eyes humorously. âAh, Gerty at thirty! Are you all set?'
Freya shook her head. âThe party's all Joss's idea. I don't know why he's so keen to have one.'
âOh, Freya,' said Nancy, protesting, âyou
do
know. It's because he loves you.'
No, she thought; it's because he's afraid to lose me, which isn't the same thing. She took a swallow of gin to drown the unworthy thought, and it burned all the way down her throat.
âSo who's coming?'
âEvery-bloody-one,' sighed Freya. âAll my family, including two grandparents; a load of journos, people from
Frame
like Elspeth and Fosh, and a few Oxford people â Ginny, Alex maybe â'
Robert sat up. âAlex? Alex McAndrew? I didn't know you were still in touch.'
âWe weren't, for years,' said Freya. Nancy had her back turned, but she must have been listening. âI ran into him by accident a while ago.'
âChrist. McAndrew ⦠what's he up to now?'
Freya hesitated a moment. âCivil Service,' she said vaguely. From beneath her brow she watched Robert digest this news. Before he could ask anything else she came up with an emergency diversion. âNat Fane's coming, of course.'
That did the trick: Robert wrinkled his nose as though a week-old herring had been wafted in front of him. âOh, I might have known. Will he be wearing his cape and kid gloves?'
âNot sure. I can ask him for you, if you like,' replied Freya.
âHa ha,' he deadpanned. âWell, despite that, I'm looking forward to it. You must introduce me to your mother. I'm good with people's parents, you know.'
âThat's true, actually,' said Nancy over her shoulder.
âIn that case, perhaps you could do us all a favour and keep her away from my stepmother. The last thing I need is them butting heads.'
âConsider it done,' said Robert, who was now giving Freya an odd look. âAre you all right, by the way? You look awfully uncomfortable on that chair.'
âI've just got a sore back,' she said. Back
side
would have been more accurate, where she felt bands of pain fiercely aglow; but she preferred not to mention this for dignity's sake. She also feared that Nancy might make an inspired connection between a bruised derrière and her attendance at Nat's dinner last weekend.
The dishes done, Nancy dried her hands and asked Robert if he would like another beer. My God, thought Freya, what next â fetching his slippers? They had begun to talk about what sort of day they'd had, Nancy at her publisher's, Robert at the paper. It was strange, listening to them, how comfortably domesticated they had become. It had never been like that with her and Joss. Perhaps, she thought, that was the problem.
The meeting had been arranged in an Italian cafe on Earlham Street, off Shaftesbury Avenue. Freya had never set foot in the place, though she had walked past it dozens of times before. They sat on a tan-coloured vinyl banquette; each Formica-topped table was supplied with an ashtray and two plastic bottles of sauce, one red, one yellow. It was an hour after the lunch rush, the air still fusty with the smell of fried food. Jerry Dicks had taken a sidelong look at what they were eating at the next table.
âThe stuff people put in their gobs,' he muttered. âMake yer sick.'
The waitress set down a pot of tea between them. Jerry, regarding it indifferently, lit a Senior Service and exhaled through his nostrils. He had already given Freya his instructions. She was not to reveal that she worked for a newspaper. She was not to reveal any personal connection to Alex. If Sewell was to ask her anything she was to reply as briefly as possible. On no account was she to engage him in any conversation relating to his work. From Jerry's warning tone it had become hard to imagine Sewell as anything other than a monster in human form.
When a man of nondescript appearance with a bulbous nose and inch-thick spectacles seated himself on the bench next to Jerry she assumed that Sewell had sent a minion, an errand-runner from the underworld. He was of an age with Jerry but without his puckish demeanour. His face, though pitted and pouchy, hadn't anything rebarbative or sinister or even mildly unpleasant in it. There were no handshakes offered. The two of them instantly fell into a low mumbling sort of talk, from which she nonetheless gathered that the man in front of her was Vernon Sewell himself. The expectation had been of a gorgon; the reality was a Pooterish nonentity in an ill-fitting suit. After repeated glances across the table he gave a little sideways nod at her.
âWho's this?' he asked. His voice was tidied-up cockney.
Jerry, refusing to rouse himself to an introduction, said, âAn associate. No one you need bother with.'
âAn associate. So what does she do?' He still wasn't looking at her.
âWhat does she
do
? Ah. Matter of fact she's a rat-catcher. Useful to have around the place.'
Sewell curled his lip in disdain. âAlways the joker.' He did look at her now. âWho are you again?'
Freya said, in her politest voice, âAs Jerry said: I deal with rats. And other vermin.'
At that he held her gaze, and then laughed. Not receiving a straight answer was part and parcel of his world: what did it matter to him who she was? The laugh had exposed his pale receding gums. Jerry, reverting to business, asked him if he'd brought the âstuff', as discussed. Sewell leaned down to his briefcase and withdrew from it a bulky envelope; he pushed it across the table to Jerry, who opened it and, without removing the photographs, flicked through them like a teller counting out banknotes. As his examination continued, Sewell waited; after a while, perhaps unnerved by Jerry's silent auditing, he began drumming his fingers on the edge of the table.
âI'm sorry to let this lot go,' he said. âThe mark was playin' along quietly enough, hundred at a time.'
Without looking up Jerry said, âLast I heard you had him up to
three
hundred.'
âWell ⦠I charge in instalments, like. Some of 'em have bunce put aside for a rainy day. I know when they're shammin'. This one, though, told me he couldn't pay â and I'm startin' to think he was â'
Jerry was hardly listening. Unable to hold her tongue Freya said, âDo you know why?'
Sewell gave a little start at the interruption. âWhat?'
âDo you know why he couldn't pay â your
mark
? Because he gave most of what he earned to his mother, who's a widow. There wasn't any left over to pay off a slag like you.'
Jerry was staring at her. This was not part of the plan. Sewell, incredulous, was also staring at her. âJerry. What's goin' on? Your rat-catcher has got some front talkin' to me like that â'
Jerry may have been angry with her, but he had also scented mischief. âI dunno, Vern. A widowed mother â have to say, shame on you.'
Realising he would get no change out of Jerry, Sewell turned to her. âWhat's your game? You this poof 's intended or summink?'
âVern, Vern,' murmured Jerry.
But Freya's blood was up now. âNo, nothing like that. I'm just someone interested to know what a thieving, crawling, blackmailing
fucker
has got on my friend.'
Sewell made a sound like air escaping from a balloon. âNow you're hurtin' me feelings. Jerry, I'm disappointed in you â' He rose, gathering about him his shredded dignity, but Jerry grabbed his sleeve.
âVern, before you go, the negs.
The negs
.'
Sewell shook him off angrily. âYou can fuckin' whistle for 'em! I'm not dealin' with you â or your tart.'
He was gone. The door of the cafe slammed in his wake. Jerry was shaking his head.
âThat's torn it. I tell you to keep yer trap shut and instead you start givin' him lip.'
âI couldn't help it, sorry â'
âIt's your friend who's gonna be sorry. Before it was touch and go. Now it's odds-on Vern'll shop him just for the hell of it.'
Freya stared at the leaves floating at the bottom of her teacup. So much for the acquisition of tact. If Jerry was right, she had just signed Alex's arrest warrant. And yet they had come so close to yanking him out of the fire ⦠She looked at Jerry smoking, cigarette held inside his palm, old-lag style. An instinct prompted her to ask, âHave you ever been in prison?'
Jerry squinted at her. âNot that I recall. Why?'
She shrugged. âDo you ever think that Vern might blackmail you? I mean, he knows that you're â'
âOne of them,' supplied Jerry, with a snort. âVern's the type to sniff out a weakness. But with me he wouldn't dare. He knows I've got enough to put
him
away. 'Slike we got a pistol at each other's head.'
The clank and hum of the cafe intervened for a moment.
âHe wasn't what I was expecting,' she said presently.
Jerry frowned. âVern? What â thought he'd have horns an' a curly tail?'
âJust not someone so ⦠insignificant. You'd pass him in the street without looking. I remember at Nuremberg, the Nazis in the courtroom, how ordinary they looked â'
âHold on a minute. Vern's a wrong'un, but he ain't a fuckin' war criminal.'
Freya considered. âAll I mean is, it's disconcerting. Impossible to, you know, “find the mind's construction in the face”.' When Jerry returned a puzzled look, she said, â
Macbeth
.'
âOh. Shakespeare,' said Jerry, his tone indicating a weary disdain. His gods were from the music hall, not from drama.
âIf he goes to prison â Alex â it'll be the end of him.'
Jerry twisted his features into an expression of cool nonchalance. What else did she expect? âAs long as Vern's got the negatives, your friend is never gonna be safe. Either he keeps payin' or it's off to Pentonville.'
Freya looked past Jerry's shoulder through the window, at the street and its bunched traffic rumbling on unanswerably. It was the sound of London, oblivious to her failure, oblivious to everything but its own hurry.
Sitting at an open window high above the street Freya gazed on the buses and cabs honking, growling, along the Strand. Pedestrians and window-gazers were reduced to toy figures toddling along the pavement. The sky was a careless blue expanse on which flossy clouds were lazing. Outside on the ledge a pigeon strutted in Napoleonic style, chest out, its tiny piercing eyes scanning this way and that.
On the single bed her mother's suitcase yawned open. An evening dress had already been taken out and hung on the back of the door. A moment later Freya heard footsteps approach the door and Cora entered, drying her hands on a towel.
âWell, the bathroom is reasonably clean,' she reported.
âYou could have had one en suite at the Savoy,' said Freya.
Cora laughed. âI'm not made of money, darling. This place will do perfectly.'
Freya felt the crêpe de Chine of the dress between her fingers. She was unaccountably touched by the effort her mother had made in coming up to town for the night, party outfit in tow. They decided to have tea down in the residents' lounge. Reclining on one of the scallop-backed plush sofas Cora watched her daughter roll a cigarette.
âI recall certain painter friends of Stephen's who rolled their own â usually the very poorest.'
âWould you like me to make you one?'
Cora shook her head in refusal, but continued to watch mesmerised as Freya filled and rolled the paper, then sealed the edges with the tip of her tongue.
âNow while I remember â' She took a card from her handbag and passed it across the table; inside it was a cheque for a sum that made Freya blink in astonishment. âI couldn't
imagine
what you might want, so â¦'
âMum, really, this is â I thought you just said you weren't made of money?'
âWell, I'm hardly a pauper!'
Freya leaned over to kiss her, and mumbled her thanks.
ââ and anyway you'll need a bit extra for when you settle down,' her mother continued, eyeing her over the teacup.
âWho said anything about settling down?'
Cora gave her a level stare. âYou know, when I was thirty, I'd been married seven years and had had two children. It doesn't seem to me wildly out of the question that one day Joss is going to â well â'
âPlease don't get your hopes up.'
Her mother tilted her head in an appraising way. âMay I ask you something, darling? Do you and Joss ever, you know â' she lowered her voice â â
share a bed
?'