Authors: Leslie Thomas
She smiled more softly. âNo, people don't seem to move away very much from here,' she said. âIt's very homely and friendly, really.'
T
hat night Dangerous went out with Mod and got seriously drunk at The Babe in Arms. Mod was at his most loquacious and informative, extemporizing on the poisoned arrows used, he said, by certain tribes in Upper India, the sexual taboos of the first period Incas and the history of tramcars in Liverpool. On their stumbling way home to Mrs Fulljames's house they found a horse walking morosely along the street. They recognized it as belonging to a local scrap merchant. Mod said they ought to inform the police so he reported it to Dangerous, who took brief notes. They eventually tied the horse to the doorknocker of a neighbouring house and went home to bed.
The following day Davies went to seek out Dave Boot. The sex emporium was not difficult to locate. It was called âThe Garden of Ooo-la-la'. There was a large sticker across the window announcing: âSale'. Davies, who had never visited such an establishment, inspected it with ever-ascending eyebrows. A willowy youth was swaying behind the counter, moving to muted music. Davies approached him. âWhat's in the sale?' he inquired.
âEverything, love,' replied the youth. âAbsolutely everything. Depends what your requirements are really, don't it.'
âI'm not, sure what they are,' said Davies.
âOoooo, you lads do get yourself in a state, don't you,' marvelled the assistant. âHow about a Japanese tickler, slightly shop soiled.'
âAre the rubber women in the sale?' inquired Davies.
âSome of the older models are,' shrugged the boy. âThey perish.'
âWhere's Dave Boot?' asked Davies.
The youth's aloof expression sharpened with the hardness in Davies' voice. âDave Bootâ¦ah, Mr Boot. He's doing something at the disco.'
âDetective Constable Davies,' said Dangerous, showing his card. âGet him, eh?'
The young man brushed his hair away from his fair eyes and dithered with the telephone. Davies wandered to the back of the shop and, on impulse, slid through a curtain into the back room. He was intrigued to find a partly inflated rubber woman with an attached foot-pump lolling against a desk. Unable to resist it he repressed the pump and then let it go, then depressed it, and continued with the sequence, watching to his fascination as the woman inflated to life before his eyes. She grew to full size, then to outsize and then to enormous proportions. Mesmerized, Davies could not stop. He went on pumping. The woman grew fatter and fatter. Her eyes, her cheeks and her breasts all bulged hugely. He could hear the rubber creaking. He went on pumping. Her expanding backside knocked a chair over.
âStop!' The cry came through the door. A tall, thick man in a tight denim suit rushed forward and pulled out a valve in the buttocks. The woman shrivelled horrifyingly.
âIf she'd have exploded you'd have killed yourself,' said the man. âStupid bloody thing to do.'
Davies' was gazing sadly at the collapsing rubber figure. âNow I know what God feels like,' he said. He turned and smiled without warmth. âNice place you've got here.'
âWe fill a need,' sniffed the man. âWhat did you want?'
âI'm Detective Constable Davies.'
âYes, Tarquin said. I'm Dave Boot. What was it?'
âCan I sit down? I'm puffed out after that pumping.'
Boot picked up the chair which the woman had knocked down. Davies sat on it gratefully and Boot sat behind the desk. The youth Tarquin came through the curtain and asked if they would require coffee. Boot was going to send him away but Davies said he would like some and smiled his advanced thanks.
âRight, two,' said Boot at the head issuing through the curtain.
âBut don't stir it with your finger,' Davies called after him.
Boot grimaced. âI'm pretty busy,' he said. âWhat did you want?'
âMe too,' said Davies amiably. âEver so busy. I wanted you to tell me about Celia Norris.'
White astonishment flew into Boot's face. âCeliaâ¦Celia Norris?' He got it out eventually. âChrist, that was years ago.'
âYou still remember, don't you?'
âYes, yes. But whyâ¦why now?'
âThere's never any particular season.'
âYes, butâ¦aw come on. What is all this? The police went through it all at the time. Christ, hours of it. They cleared me. They had nothingâ¦'
âI didn't say you
did
anything,' Davies pointed out quietly. âI only asked you if you remembered. Nobody's come to arrest you.'
âI shouldn't bloody well think so, either,' said Boot, his skin hardening. âI think I want my solicitor along here. I can't afford trouble. I'm a businessman.'
âSo I see,' said Davies looking down at the deflated rubber woman.
âAnd there's nothing you can touch me for here, either,' said Boot, following his glance. âNothing. It's all legal. Anyway, I'll call my solicitor.'
âCall him if you like,' offered Davies with more confidence than he felt. âBut you'll be wasting your money. Nobody's putting any pressure on you, Mr Boot. We've reopened the case of Celia Norris and I've got the job of checking on people who made statements at the time. That's all there is to it.'
Boot subsided. âAll right then, if that's all it is. But what difference it makes, Christ knows. I told them everything at the time.'
Tarquin came through the curtain, curiously knocking on it as though it were a door. He was carrying a cardboard tray with two plastic beakers of coffee. He smiled wanly at Davies. âThere, Inspector, that's yours.' Davies and Boot took the beakers. The youth backed out. âI didn't stir it,' he smiled. âNot with my finger, anyway.'
Davies stared into the swirling coffee and wondered what he had stirred it with. He put it untouched on the table.
âYou remember the night when it happened, I take it,' he said, leaning towards Boot. âWhen she went off and vanished.'
âWell, of course I remember it. It was bloody years ago thoughâ¦how long?'
âTwenty-five,' Davies told him.
âYes, well, I mean. Twenty-five. It's not like it was yesterday. But I remember it all right. I'm not likely to forget it, am I?'
âI'm hoping you might remember bits now that didn't seem important at the time, now you've had a while to turn it over in your mind.'
Boot glanced at him under his puffy lids. âAll I knew I told then,' he grunted. âEvery single thing. God, I went over it enough with them.'
Davies nodded. âI've seen your statement,' he said. âYou saw her at the youth club, she went off on her bike and that was that. You didn't know she was missing until one of her friends told you some days later.'
âThat's how it was. Exactly. I said it then and I say it again now.'
Davies mused. He picked up the coffee absentmindedly and took a sip. Horror rolled across his face as he realized what he had done. Boot laughed sarcastically. âDon't worry about the coffee. He probably just stirred it with a Japanese tickler.'
Davies grimaced. He pushed the beaker out of reach across the table so that he would not be moved to pick it up again. Then he leaned again towards Boot, confidingly. âStatements are just sort of catalogues of fact, see. I did this at such and such a time, and then I did that. They're not very filling, if you know what I mean, Mr Boot. A lot of bones and not much meat. They never tell you how people
feel
. I want to find out that. How they
felt
about Celia Norris. How did you feel about her?'
âFeel?' Boot shrugged and spread his hands. âNothing. Nothing at all. She was just a kid at the youth club.'
âYou didn't fancy her then?'
Boot glared. âSod off, I'm going to get my solicitor. Like I said. I should have before.'
âDon't bother,' reassured Davies. âI'm going now. I only wanted to have a look at you. Just let me ask you one more thing before I'm off.'
Boot sulked and said nothing but Davies pretended not to notice.
âHow would you have described her behaviour, Celia's, sexually? She was seventeen. Do you think she was a virgin?'
Surprisingly, Boot thought about it. âI don't know about her virginity, I'm sure. They used to keep it longer it those days, didn't they.'
âSo I understand.'
âYes, so do I. But they were all full of it. You know⦠flirty.'
âFlirty,' smiled Davies. âAh, Mr Boot, that's a lovely old-fashioned word, I think I'll write that down.' He took out his notebook carefully, while Boot watched impatiently, and wrote down âflirty' in capital letters and with great care. He stood back and considered it as though it were some prize etching. âFlirty,' he repeated. âLovely.'
âWell, she was,' said Boot, unhappy that he had said anything, but somehow drawn to continue. âWe used to say they were PTs didn't we, Mr Davies? Prick teasers.'
âDid we!' exploded Davies. âDid
we
now? And why should we say that? Prick teasers. Just a minute, I want to write that down too.' Boot swallowed heavily as Davies wrote the words painstakingly beneath the word âflirty'. He regarded the phrase as he had regarded the single word. âMy goodness,' he said mildly. âThat takes you back, doesn't it, Mr Boot? It really takes you back.'
âNot me, personally,' muttered Boot. âIt was just a saying at the time. You must know that.'
âFlirty prick teasers,' mused Davies rubbing his chin. âCelia Norris.'
âYes,' said Boot stubbornly. âCelia Norris.'
âAnd why would you say that about her?'
âBecause I've got eyes,' said Boot desperately. âI could see what she was like, couldn't I? She had a boyfriend thereâ¦'
âBill Lind,' prompted Davies. âGood old Bill Lind.'
Boot stared at him hard. âThat's him. That poor bugger used to go crazy. But they were all the same, those girls. Today at least, they're honest. They
give
something.'
âDo they?' asked Davies, his eyebrows ascending.
âSurely even you know that. The kids now are more straightforward about sex and that. They don't have the frustrations we used to have.'
âDidn't we just, Mr Boot,' said Davies. He looked again at the three words he had written, studying them as though he thought they might be an anagram.
âFlirty old Celia Norris,' he grinned.
âFlirty Celia Norris,' nodded Boot savagely.
âAnd Ena Brown,' said Davies. âFlirty Ena Brown?' There was no vestige of colour in Boot's face now.
âEna Brown,' he muttered. âHer as well.'
At The Babe in Arms a representative of the Spanish Tourist Office was making a presentation to the rough woman who had broken her ankle while dancing to âViva España'. It was followed by a similar presentation from the juke box company. The ceremony was attended by press representatives and embryo celebrities who had come to try and get their pictures in the newspapers. The landlord beamed on the scene.
Davies and Mod left the bar early and in disgust, for the evening meal at âBali Hi', Furtman Gardens. âI think I would prefer the silence of that lonely room to the false glamour we witnessed back there,' said Mod sorrowfully as they walked down Furtman Gardens. âVanity, vanity, all is vanity and publicity.'
âCommerce,' corrected Davies. He had been telling Mod about his visit to Dave Boot. âCan you imagine a shop like
that
? Floor to ceiling with sexual fantasy.'
âAnd he probably does very nicely from it too,' nodded Mod âThey say that in Arabia there are men who sell
shade
to pilgrims walking that hot road to Mecca. They put up an awning or rent a bit of wall and they charge people to stand in the shade for a few minutes. It's supply and demand.'
At âBali Hi' they found a new lodger established at the table, an Indian, Mr Patel, who was soon engaged by Mod who asked about tribal customs of the North-West Frontier about which Mr Patel knew nothing since he came from Tottenham. Thin Minnie Banks squeaked girlishly at the error but Mr Smeeton, on this evening disguised as a harlequin, showed renewed interest.
âOne of my acts is a sort of conjuring extravaganza,' he said. âI wouldn't mind a bloke in a turban to be Gilly-Gilly, the funny assistant. Would that interest you?'
Mr Patel politely refused the offer on the grounds that he was busy with his job as a lecturer in Metallurgy and he did not possess a turban anyway. He apologized that he knew nothing of the tribal customs on the North-West Frontier.
This was digested in uncomfortable silence. Doris knocked her fork on the floor and they all jumped. Davies said diplomatically: âI think the tribal customs of North West London are probably a good deal more primitive.'
âHe's a detective,' said Mr Smeeton caustically, nodding his harlequin head towards Davies. âBut he's no bloody good. Not from what we hear, anyway.'