Authors: Simon Mason
Singh nodded. âHe has a history of violence, we just discovered.'
âMe too. There's a lot against him, seems to me. If I were you I'd bring him in.'
âYou don't need to tell me what to do. But I doubt he's Chloe's killer. His alibi checks out. He was drinking with a friend in a pub that evening. Besides, there isn't as much against him as you think.'
âWhat about all the stuff I just told you?'
âHearsay. Conjecture. Not even circumstantial. You didn't see him steal the shoes. You didn't see him watching Chloe. You didn't see him in Chloe's garden. What we need is direct evidence.'
âWell, I've got pretty direct evidence of his violence against me. You should see my shoulder.'
Singh looked at him. âI don't think you realize. It's not as easy as that.'
âHe attacked me. You saw him!'
âI saw a man on a moped wearing a varsity jacket and a blue helmet. I never saw his face. I didn't have time to check his number-plate. I doubt a court would accept my evidence as corroboration of Naylor's identity. And what about your own evidence? It's not as strong as you think.'
âCome on, man!
I
definitely saw him!'
âCould you identify him for a court of law?'
âCourse.'
âAfter he reappeared in Fulton Plaza, did he ever take off his helmet so you could see his face?'
âNo, butâ'
âDid you have a chance to get a clear view of his number-plate again after he came out from under the arcade?'
âCourse not, I was too busy running.'
âA court of law requires proof beyond reasonable doubt. If Naylor's smart he'll go home, dispose of his varsity jacket and get himself another helmet.'
Garvie was quiet. âI'd at least get him in,' he said. âHe knows something. He was watching. If he's not the killer, he might know who the killer is.'
Singh took his time; he put his hands together and rested his chin on his knuckles.
âI'll do a deal with you,' he said at last.
âA
deal?
'
âI thought you liked deals. I'll question Naylor again. I'll even do my best to bring charges against him for assault on you. So long as you promise me now not to involve yourself in any of this ever again. Not ever.'
Garvie scowled.
âListen to me,' Singh said. âDon't you see? You've done exactly what I hoped you wouldn't do. Got yourself into trouble. Dangerous trouble. And when you get into trouble
I
get into trouble.'
Garvie folded his arms. âAnd if I don't agree? You going to put one of those tags on me and send me off to a correction facility?'
âI don't think that will be necessary. I told you, I talked to your mother on the phone earlier. She told me about her new job opportunity in Barbados. I think all I'd have to do is have a word with her.'
Garvie scowled again, more deeply.
âIs it a deal?'
In the silence the clock on the desk clicked: 01:30. Garvie's shoulders slumped. Suddenly he felt tireder than he'd ever felt before. He looked at Singh holding out his knuckles, and with a sigh he reached out and reluctantly touched them with his own.
He took a scrap of paper out of his pocket and scribbled on it and passed it to Singh.
The policeman frowned. âWhat's this?'
âMy direct line. When you get stuck you might need help.'
Singh controlled himself. âGo along the corridor to the end office. A constable's waiting for you there. He'll drive you home. And remember!'
Garvie turned in the doorway.
âYou need to watch your step. I didn't want anyone developing a grudge against you â least of all a man with psychopathic tendencies. He's violent and he's done a bit of breaking and entering. I don't think it would be hard for him to find out where you live.' He hesitated, glancing at Garvie with sudden feeling. âI don't want you coming to harm.'
Garvie looked back at him. âYeah, well. I don't want you coming to harm, either, man. Anyway, it's not Naylor I've got to worry about.'
Singh raised his eyebrows.
âI promised my mum I'd be back at ten and you've gone and made me late.'
Before Singh could react, the phone on his desk rang, and as he answered it Garvie left his office and went down the corridor to where the young policeman was waiting for him. The last thing he heard Singh say was, âYes, Chief. I didn't know you were still in the building. No, no, I'm on my own. I'll come up now.'
IN THE EARLY
hours of Saturday morning the ring road was finally quiet. Five Mile slept peacefully under a cloud-heavy night sky, still and dark. In Eastwick Gardens the only light showing was the wall-light above the lobby door. Everyone was asleep.
Not quite everyone. There was a slight noise in the stairwell. A soft noise, creeping and purposeful. It slid, like a shadow slides, up the stairs, through a door and along the lightless hallway of the top floor. Something metal gave a quiet chink and a shape formed in the shadow of a doorway. For some time there was no other sound, but the silence seemed to thicken with a sort of tension, with some invisible effort of strength. There was a sharp click and a hiss of breath suddenly released. Then the door of Flat 12 soundlessly opened and closed, leaving the hallway empty again.
Inside the still flat there was a shadowy hint of movement in the dark living room where there had been none before. A new sound, very low, like the breath of someone keeping quiet, blurring the silence. Soft footsteps of someone feeling his way forward. A shadow moving towards a room where a boy slept.
The living-room lights came on suddenly like a whiteout of sheet lightning, revealing Garvie's mother standing in the doorway of her bedroom and Garvie frozen in a creeping position halfway to his room. Both looked at their watches at exactly the same time.
âLet's talk about this,' Garvie's mother said. âRight now.'
Location: kitchen at 12 Eastwick Gardens; formica-topped table covered with estate agents' brochures; wipe-clean chairs; sugar bowl; sauce bottle; empty coffee mug.
Aspect of interviewer: thunder-faced; dressing-gown-wrapped; dangerous.
Aspect of interviewee: exhausted; cute; badly bruised.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Ten o'clock I telephoned your friend. Called Smudge. Not a clue what I was talking about. Half past ten I get a pure nonsense message from you saying you're still at Smudge's. So then I call your other so-called friends, the burglar Felix Fricker, the drug-dealer Alex Robinson. Nothing. No trace of Garvie Smith. At eleven o'clock I phone the police. Missing persons hotline. Put through at last to a policeman already familiar with the name of Garvie Smith. Half an hour later he calls me back. Garvie Smith has turned up at the police station. There's been a, quote, slight disturbance, unquote. No need to worry. Look at me. Am I worried?
GARVIE SMITH:
Yes, Mum.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Have you ever seen me so angry?
GARVIE SMITH:
No, Mum.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
You haven't seen nothing yet.
GARVIE SMITH:
Mum, I'm very tired. Can we talk about this in the morning?
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
You think you're going to live to see the morning? Let's have your explanation.
[
Silence
]
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
You can do better than that.
GARVIE SMITH:
All right. I wasn't at Smudge's. I wasn't revising differential calculus.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
I'd worked that out already. What were you doing?
GARVIE SMITH:
I was out.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Out where? Out with who?
GARVIE SMITH:
You're not going to like this.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
That's the first thing you said I'm agreeing with. Out with who?
GARVIE SMITH:
With Alex.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
You were right. I don't like it. If you're out with Alex Robinson I know what you were doing. And I don't like that, either.
GARVIE SMITH:
I know. I'm trying to stop. It's just, it's hard to resist, Mum. But I am trying, I promise. I don't want it to affect my performance in my exams.
[
Silence
]
GARVIE SMITH:
Sorry, Mum. Sorry for worrying you.
[
Silence
]
GARVIE SMITH:
Well, thanks for listening. I'm really tired, so I think I'll justâ
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Sit down. You haven't told me yet how you got that dirty great bruise on your head.
GARVIE SMITH:
Oh. That. It's funny, I can't really remember. Doesn't actually hurt. Much.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Or how you ended up at the police station. The last place you'd go near if you were smoking puff.
GARVIE SMITH:
Well, it was Alex, really. Stop and search, you know. But I went in to keep him company.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Or about the, quote, slight disturbance, unquote.
GARVIE SMITH:
Well, that, I didn't have anything to do with. Alex got a bit narked and the coppers didn't like it. Handbags, really. Very slight, quote, unquote.
[
long silence
]
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
This isn't anything to do with Chloe Dow, is it?
GARVIE SMITH
[
shocked
]
:
No, course not.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Interfering, like that inspector said? Getting into trouble?
GARVIE SMITH:
No, no. Nothing like that.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
We have a deal. Remember?
GARVIE SMITH:
You won't take that job unless I do badly in my exams.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Well, the deal's off.
GARVIE SMITH:
What?
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
I was formally offered the job yesterday.
GARVIE SMITH:
But Mum!
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
No need to congratulate me. I've got four weeks to accept it. No longer. Which means you've got four weeks to impress me. Look here. What do you see?
GARVIE SMITH:
Brochures.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Estate agent left them today. I'm all ready to put this place on the market. Step out of line once more â just once â and that For Sale sign goes up, but straight away. You hear me?
GARVIE SMITH:
Yes, Mum.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Whatever you've been doing, it's over now. Understand?
GARVIE SMITH:
Yes, Mum.
GARVIE
'
S MOTHER:
Go to bed now. You'll be up bright and early. To revise.
GARVIE WAS WAITING
at Bottom Gate when Smudge arrived for school on Monday morning. Hands jammed in his trouser pockets, hood up, shoulders hunched, he leaned against the railings, thinking. He was thinking how comfortable it would be to have a memory lapse now and then. Unfortunately, he remembered everything.
Her pale face blurred by crying, for instance, the damp-breath sound of her voice as it trailed into silence. That disconcerting beige smear on her throat. Worst of all, the wet gleam sliding in her eyes. Once again, in his memory, she looked at him silently for something he could never give her. What was it? Money? Help? Or something they'd lost a year ago and couldn't forget?
Singh might or might not have the right idea about her having arranged to meet someone up at Pike Pond. But he hadn't seen what Garvie had. The point wasn't just that she intended to go up to Pike Pond. The point was that she seemed desperate to get there.
Something had gone wrong for Chloe. Garvie didn't know what but he knew when: on Thursday night. And he knew where to look for it: at Imperium.
Thinking of the casino brought another memory into his mind, another girl's face â shockingly pretty, with humorously cool grey eyes and a smiling mouth and dimples like punch-lines in a joke he'd never heard before.
A voice reached him.
âMy man Sherlock! Bit early for you, innit? Here, what you done to your face?'
Garvie ignored him. âGot any smokes, Smudge?'
âRun out?'
âMine are all a bit bent.'
He threw the cigarette into the corner of his mouth with his old ease and lit up.
âHad your mum on the blower on Friday,' Smudge said.
Garvie glanced at him. âOh yeah? What about?'
âNo idea, mate. Made no sense to me. Something about couscous, sounded like. Bizarre.'
â
Couscous
, Smudge?'
âYeah.'
âCouldn't have been
calculus
, could it? Differential calculus.'
Smudge shook his head. âNah, wasn't that. I don't even know what that is.' He scratched. âEat that stuff over your place, do you? Couscous.'
âWell, Smudge, we don't exactly eat it.'
âNo?'
âNo. We smoke it.'
âReally?' Smudge looked impressed. âWhat's it like?'
But he never found out because a call came from down the lane, and they both turned to see Jessica Walker stalking towards them in regulation school uniform and non-regulation strappy wedge sandals. They watched her approach.