I felt I knew him, had known him about as well as anyone ever had, he had opened up to me, even if for his own reasons and hardly the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And he’d got under my skin.
If I thought about it, I didn’t really know why, or even what I would do with the knowledge as and when I ever found it. But it wasn’t for the rag. It was personal. It was between us. Me and Damage’s leering ghost that I couldn’t seem to shake off and who’s baleful influence seemed to have taken over my whole damn life and brought me to the straits I was in now.
‘No, not for the paper. It’s just for me. It’s just I want to know.’ ‘Like I said, why? What’s it to you?’
He seemed to find that funny.
‘So you want to find out who killed Damage?’
‘Yeah. Much good it’ll do me now. Why, are you going to tell me?’ He seemed to find that even funnier.
‘Oh?’
‘Well, you want to find out who killed Damage right?’
‘Yeah.’
‘Not so far,’ I admitted.
‘No, you need to ask why he was killed. Then you’ll know who killed him.’ ‘Cui bono?’
‘You what?’
‘Cui bono, who benefited?’
‘Maybe. Or who thought they would win out of it.’
Whenever people looked to see who had done something, they always looked to see who had done well out of it. But that wasn’t really the point as far as I could see. Life wasn’t always that neat. No one was ever really in charge of all the variables, or really knew what everyone else was up to or how they would react to events, so no one could ever really guarantee that they would end up coming out on top from whatever it was they had started.
No, to see who was behind something you didn’t need to look for who had actually benefited, as they may just have been the luckiest or best at reacting. Instead, you had to look at who thought they would be in the best position to benefit before the deed was done.
But since that meant understanding people’s mindsets, how they read the political landscape, their relative powers, prospects, alliances, opportunities, trusts, supporters, enemies and threats, from the outside and a year on, I still didn’t see how that would help me.
Unless. It was worth a try.
‘So then Bung, you tell me then, why was he killed?’
‘Well now…’
‘I thought Wibble told you to tell me everything?’
‘Yeah, well he did. But there’s everything and everything, and anyway, I guess things may have changed a bit now, don’t you?’ he said nodding at the grille of the cell door.
‘Maybe,’ I conceded.
He grunted a snort at that one.
‘God loves a tryer,’ he said, ‘anyway, I didn’t come to talk about Damage.’ ‘No?’
‘No, I came to ask you an important question.’
‘Oh really? What’s that then?’ I said.
‘I’m going to ring for an order. D’you fancy a pizza?’
It was after another takeaway when I heard a mobile phone ring again in the other room. It was a call on mine again, I was sure of it. He was getting good use out of it. I was just wondering who it was who would be calling on my phone that Wibble would want to speak to? And if it was for Wibble, why didn’t they call Wibble direct on his?
‘Hi. See the show?
‘Well I told you it would be worth watching.
‘Yes. Are they meeting?
‘No? What d’you mean no?’
‘Christ almighty, why not?
‘Laying fucking low! Fuck. Wankers.
‘No, no I don’t know. Hang on a minute, I need to think.’
Then the door into the hallway banged open as he strode through and stopped outside my cell, staring in at me. Like I was going to give him some inspiration for whatever the hell his little problem was. He stood, his glare fixed on me for a moment as if I was something he could attack just to vent his frustration. Then, as suddenly as he had come, he swung on his heel and marched off back into the main room.
‘If they aren’t going to do it themselves, then we need to do it for them. ‘We need to organise a joint meeting, the top guys, both packs. ‘Yes you. You’ve done it before haven’t you?’
Whoever it was on the other end didn’t seem keen on this.
‘The usual.’
There was some urgent negotiation.
‘Will they trust you?
‘No of course I fucking don’t. I trust you to like the dosh that’s all. ‘OK then. You come to us and we’ll get it planned.
‘Yeah that’s the place. Same as before.
‘Right, see you in what, an hour?
‘No, make it an hour.
‘Yes, see you then.’
Wibble hung up with no goodbyes.
*
There was another call. Again it was on my phone. Wibble picked it up.
I had taken some comfort from the fact that Wibble had been using my phone and using it here. As I understood it, the cops could trace quite accurately where a phone had been used by triangulating the strength of the signals recorded at the three closest receiving stations. So if I did disappear, the cops would use this to trace back where calls had been made on my phone which would lead them straight here. And I had two assumptions about that. Firstly, I guessed Wibble and The Brethren, or at least the Freemen, wouldn’t want this place investigated too much. Christ alone knew what had gone on up here over the years. And secondly I guessed that Wibble and The Brethren were savvy enough about mobiles and what they could do to know that.
‘OK.
‘OK.
‘Yeah, right.
‘See you then.’
Wibble wasn’t much of a conversationalist when he didn’t want to be. ‘Is it him?’ I heard Bung ask.
‘Yeah. He’s coming round, wants to collect. Should be an hour or so.’ ‘OK,’ Bung said, ‘I’ll be ready, I’ve got the stuff.’
‘D’you want to get him back in here?’
‘Yeah, might as well. He’ll want to see this.’
‘You sure about that?’
Wibble laughed. ‘No, not really.’
‘OK,’ shrugged Bung, sounding unconvinced as I suddenly realised they were talking about me.
‘Right,’ Wibble said, appearing back at the grille to my cell bearing the roll of silver gaffa tape, ‘now we’ve got a visitor coming so we need to get ready.’
‘What?’
‘Doesn’t matter,’ I got out, before the tape went on.
‘Is it him?’
‘Should be, go see,’ said Wibble.
I heard Bung’s footsteps as he walked over to the door to check.
‘Yeah it’s him,’ he said, as I heard the clang of the bolts being slammed back, before the buzz of the electronic door release and the click of the outer door lock opening.
*
Jesus Christ! I started in shock, I recognised that voice.
‘Hi there Iain, how are you doing mate?’ it asked in a friendly fashion as I heard him walk towards where I sat.
And then I heard Bob say to Wibble, ‘It’s OK, I tried to recruit him once, to tout on your lot, but he turned me down. Journalistic ethics or something he said. Got very hoity toity about it, the little wanker.’
‘Don’t look so surprised, mate,’ he said as he set the briefcase he was carrying down on the floor in front of me, ‘it’s just business. We share an interest here, Wibble and me. Just keeping the Queen’s peace here mate. And other things.’
‘To the safe house? Yes, sure.’
‘Good, hand’em over then.’
‘I’ll need to get them back…’
‘Well I guess there wouldn’t be much point afterwards would there?’ ‘No, not really.’
I heard a jingle as Bob pulled out a bunch of keys.
‘No I don’t need them, give ’em to Bung here,’ Wibble said. ‘Alarm code?’ Bung asked.
‘Four… Five… Seven…One…’ he said slowly.
‘OK Bung?’ asked Wibble.
‘Yeah,’ he said, ‘Four…Five…Seven… One… right?’
Bob nodded.
But they were ignoring me for the moment.
‘D’you want me to make the call now?’ asked Bob.
‘Might as well.’
‘Right then, will do.’
It had been Bob all along I realised as they talked. He was the missing piece of the jigsaw. He had been the one that had set me up. It was obvious that he’d had my mobile tapped and texts intercepted.
The answer was they couldn’t, not unless either the whole thing was a trap from the get go, which from Danny’s demeanour at our meeting I didn’t believe for a moment; or they had caught and tortured it out of Danny, but then there was no way he would have been driving that van and obeying orders the way he had been. No, the only answer was they had been monitoring my phone, it wouldn’t be easy but I wouldn’t put it past them to have ways and means of doing it; or, last but most likely in my book, someone had listened in for them.
*
Bob was calling the Mohawks I realised. It had to be.
‘Hi.
‘Yes, it’s me.
‘I need to see you. We need to meet. We need to get a grip on this before it gets completely out of control and nobody, not me, not you, not them want that. It’s just bad business.
‘Well whatever, whether you want to shut it down or take it all the way you need me right? I can either be your channel to talk or your feed of information you ain’t going to get anywhere else, so whichever way you want to play it you still need to do a deal with me don’t you?
‘No,’ he growled angrily at an objection.
‘It’s my fucking rules or it’s nothing. You want to meet me or not? ‘Yes?
‘Well then we meet where I want to meet.
‘Don’t give me that crap, we’ve all got too much riding on this. ‘I don’t care. Just do it. You’re both going to be there? Right.
‘Hey, no way! You wanted me to help didn’t you? I passed your message on before, I can do it again, who else have you got that can do that for you? You need me.
‘Oh and don’t forget! It’s one of the Firm’s safe houses so it’s bugged. So keep it quiet when you’re inside and we’ll talk out back when I get there.