Authors: Rupert Thomson
Debbie eyed him from the corner of the lift.
âWhat about it?' Neil said.
âAll's well that ends well,' Jimmy said. âShakespeare didn't say that. He wrote it. It's the title of a play, for Christ's sake.'
âNot his special subject,' Debbie said. And then, with a faint sneer, âNot his field of expertise.'
Neil watched the numbers declining as if they told of his own personal downfall. âSo what is?'
âI think we all know the answer to that one,' Debbie said.
âDo we?' Neil said.
That evening Jimmy parked his car on Mornington Terrace and walked north, following the wall that separates the road from the railway cut. He had always been struck by the colour of the bricks, an unusual purple-grey, and the subtle sheen they had, the kind of iridescence that you find on coal. From behind the wall came the clink and rattle of trains picking their way over sets of points. He was thinking about the lunch he'd had with Richard Herring. When their coffee arrived, Richard had leaned over the table with that serious look he would sometimes, and rather self-consciously, adopt. âThere
have been some stories going round,' he said. âAbout your company.'
Jimmy nodded. âYes, I know.'
âPretty bizarre.' Richard was watching him closely.
âI know.'
âNothing in it, I suppose?'
âRichard,' Jimmy said. Then, when Richard's face didn't alter, he said, âOf course not. Totally without foundation. In fact, there's a press conference tomorrow. Connor's going to make a statement.'
âYou seem uneasy â'
âI'm not uneasy, Richard. I'm just bored with the whole subject. I've been hearing nothing else for days.'
A silence fell.
Richard finished his coffee, setting the cup down on its saucer so carefully that it didn't make a sound. Eyes still lowered, he said, âYou won't be needing any more of those invoices, I take it.'
It suddenly occurred to Jimmy that Richard might be taping the conversation and, though he instantly dismissed the thought as paranoid, he decided not to say anything else.
At last Richard sat back and, reaching for his napkin, dabbed his mouth. âIt's all right, Jimmy,' he said, laughing. âI won't tell.'
You've just lost the account, Jimmy thought. Not today. Not tomorrow either. But you've lost it.
He passed the house with the four motor bikes in its front garden. The window on the second floor was closed. Nobody home. At the end of the road he turned right, into Delancey Street. It had been a strange day, a day that had raised as many questions as it had answered. Halfway through the afternoon, for instance, Tony Ruddle had stopped him in the corridor and said, âYou know what I decided while I was away?'
Jimmy had no idea, of course.
A wide smile from Ruddle, which revealed his chaotic
library of teeth. âI decided,' he said, âto let you dig your own grave.'
When Jimmy asked him what he meant by that, Ruddle wouldn't answer. He just stood there, nodding and smiling, as if he was listening to a joke inside his head.
Walking more quickly now, Jimmy turned right again, making his way back towards his flat. He no longer paid too much attention to what Ruddle said. It was just hot air, bile, spleen; it had no consequence, no meaning. All the same, it could unsettle you.
Looking up, he saw a door open further down the street. Two people stepped out on to the pavement. They were in the middle of an argument. The man was balding, his skin-tight T-shirt highlighting a weightlifter's chest. The woman was wearing sunglasses. With her low-cut scarlet dress, her muscular tanned legs and her frizzy hair, she had a Spanish look. The man strode on ahead, ignoring her. She kept shouting at him, though; you could almost see her words bouncing off the nape of his neck, his shoulderblades. Her breasts shook as she walked.
A strange day altogether. Provocative, somehow. Incomplete. And yet the threats, such as they were, seemed empty, and the most important news was good.
Later that night Jimmy lay on his sofa with the TV on and a vodka-and-tonic in his hand. He had just started watching the first American football game of the season, which he had videoed the week before, when the doorbell rang. For a moment he didn't move. The bell rang again. He looked at his watch. Ten-forty-five. Marco, he thought. Or Zane. Sighing, he put his drink down and stood up.
When he opened the front door, Karen Paley was standing on the pavement, her back half-turned. She had been about to leave.
âKaren,' he said.
She stared at him, almost as if she didn't know him. âAre you busy?' she said.
âNo, I'm not busy.'
In his living-room she stood by the window, looking out into the garden. He asked if he could get her anything. She shook her head. The whites of her eyes looked too white, somehow, as though she had been crying. It occurred to him that maybe she had told her husband, and there had been a fight. Behind her, the San Francisco 49ers were moving upfield. Elegant, remorseless.
âI'm sorry to turn up like this,' she said.
âThat's all right.'
âIt's just â something happened â¦'
He sat on the arm of the sofa, looking up at her. The tempting top lip, the blonde hair tucked behind her ear. He waited.
âI didn't think anything of it at the time,' she said. âBut later â I don't know â¦'
âWhat happened?' He reached for his vodka. On the TV he saw a wide receiver leap high into the floodlit air and fold a spinning ball into his chest.
âThere were dead people in the swimming-pool â¦'
Still staring out into the darkness, Karen told him that when she arrived for training that morning, there were TV cameras on the steps outside the baths. She thought it was funny. So did the other girls. It seemed as if the TV people were there for them, as if they'd become famous overnight. So they played to the cameras, waving and blowing kisses ⦠Later, she heard that a woman had hidden in the changing-rooms until the pool closed and then, sometime during the night, she had drowned her two small children, then she had drowned herself. The bodies had been found that morning.
Karen turned to him with tears shining on her face. âI've been thinking about it all day,' she said, âbut this evening it got worse. Somehow, I didn't want to be alone.'
âWhere's your husband?'
âIn America somewhere. Houston, I think.'
âHe's getting closer then.'
She smiled through her tears. âYou think I'm stupid.'
âNo.'
âMaybe I should go.' She looked round for the backpack she had brought with her.
âKaren,' he said, âit's all right. You can stay.'
She seemed restless, though, so he took her out and showed her the neighbourhood â the Hotel Splendide on the corner, the statue of Cobden on its scrubby patch of grass, the house where the bald man and the Spanish-looking woman lived. They stood on the railway bridge and listened to the trains. The red light on the Post Office Tower blinked in the distance. The sky was the colour of beer.
âOur troubles are over,' he said. He wanted to hear the words out loud, see how they sounded. He wanted to believe in them.
Karen was looking at him oddly.
âIt's just something someone said today.' He took her hand. He could feel the knob of bone on the outside of her wrist. His little finger touched against it as they walked.
Later, when they reached his flat, she had a bath. At one-thirty they went to bed, the flicker of a black-and-white movie on TV.
âDo you mind just holding me?' she said.
He smiled. âOf course not.'
âStrange place you've got,' she murmured.
âEveryone says that.'
âNo, I like it.'
Soon her breathing deepened and she was asleep. He looked down at her, what he could see of her â some green-blonde hair, one half-closed hand â and found himself remembering something Bridget had said to him a few months back.
Why can't you be nice to me? Why can't you just be nice?
*
Journalists from many of the country's leading newspapers and two of its TV stations attended the press conference that was held the following morning, but Raleigh Connor showed no signs of nervousness as he stepped up to the microphone. He began by mentioning a colleague of his who had worked in Washington for many years. If you want a friend in Washington, his colleague had told him, buy a dog. Connor waited until the laughter died away. In London it's even worse, he went on. You bring your dog, they put it in quarantine for six months. This time laughter burst towards the ceiling like a shout. Standing at the side of the room with Neil Bowes, Jimmy saw that Connor already had his audience exactly where he wanted them. It was only in private that Connor slipped up, became human â even, sometimes, a figure of fun; in public he was seamless, infallible. At that moment Neil Bowes nudged Jimmy in the ribs. Jimmy realised he had not been listening.
â⦠so it's with great reluctance and considerable regret,' Connor was saying, âthat we, as a company, have accepted Tony Ruddle's resignation. For almost eleven years now Tony has been â¦'
So that was what Ruddle had been talking about the other day. Jimmy glanced at Neil, who raised an eyebrow.
âDid you know?' Jimmy whispered.
Neil shook his head.
â⦠and we'd like to take this opportunity to wish him well in his new life â¦'
Before Jimmy could start speculating on the effect this might have on his career, Connor paused significantly. When he began again, his voice had dropped a register, acquired new gravity.
âThere have been certain rumours circulating in the industry during the past few weeks,' he said, âcertain allegations of impropriety and wrongdoing â¦'
A hush descended on the room.
âObviously I don't intend to dignify these allegations with any kind of response,' Connor said, his eyes moving slowly along the rows of journalists. âThe whole idea, as I understand it, is repugnant and unethical. The whole idea's absurd, in fact. All I can say is, if the competition are resorting to this kind of mud-slinging, then they must be pretty worried â¦'
One or two people chuckled.
âAll I can say is,' and Connor smiled down, âwe must be doing something right â¦'
Doing something right, Jimmy thought. Good line.
After his statement Connor took questions. The journalists were unusually benign; they seemed cowed by his performance, almost sycophantic. As Jimmy moved towards the back of the room, though, he noticed a young man rise up out of the audience. He was roughly Jimmy's age. With his smoke-grey RAF greatcoat and his hair tied back in a pony-tail, he looked more like a student than a member of the press.
âAt the back there,' Connor said.
âWhere's Glade Spencer?' the student said.
The room stirred like someone half-woken out of a deep sleep.
âI'm afraid I don't understand the question,' Connor said. âPerhaps I didn't hear it correctly â¦'
âYou heard,' the student muttered. But then he repeated the question, his voice louder now, a space between each word. âWhere's Glade Spencer?'
âI'm sorry,' Connor said. âI don't know anyone by that name.' He glanced towards the exit. Two security guards began to make their way along the edges of the room. One of them, Jimmy saw, was Bob.
The student was brandishing a folded newspaper. âGlade Spencer is one of the innocent people your company exploited,' he shouted. âYou exploited her, and now she's dead â'
Taking an arm each, the two guards steered him towards
the door. He was still shouting over his shoulder: a girl was dead, and ECSC UK were responsible. During the struggle he dropped his paper. Jimmy walked over and picked it up. In the background Connor was pointing out the dangers of rumour and gossip, how it brought âall kinds of people out of the woodwork'.
Once outside the room, Jimmy studied the paper. It had been folded in half, then folded again, which meant the top-right quarter of page nine faced upwards. A small article under the heading News in brief had a square drawn round it in black felt-tip.
Plunge couple mystery
The bodies of a man and a young woman were found on the Lincolnshire coast yesterday. Barker Dodds, 38, and Glade Spencer, 23, were last seen in the vicinity of the Humber Bridge on Monday evening. Police are appealing to anyone who might have information on the couple to come forward.
Jimmy had the curious feeling that this was something he already knew about â and yet the people's names and the location meant nothing to him. Then he remembered Karen's story of the night before â the bodies in the swimming-pool, the drownings â¦
After scanning the article again, he shook the newspaper out and looked for a date. It was five days old.
âWhat've you got there?' Neil said.
Jimmy showed Neil the paper. âThat guy who was shouting,
it belonged to him.' He waited until Neil had read the article. âYou think she was one of ours?'
âOne of ours?' Neil gave him an acidic glance. âWhat was your name for them? Ambassadors?' When Jimmy didn't answer, Neil shrugged. âI'll tell you what I think. I think this whole thing's going to blow up in our faces.' He paused. âBoom,' he said, then walked away.
Jimmy drove home slowly, thoughtfully, his jacket on the seat beside him, his shirtsleeves rolled. As he waited at a set of traffic-lights in Maida Vale he caught sight of a woman in a first-floor window, above a shop. She was leaning on the window-sill in a beige slip, the warm, gold light of early autumn colouring her hair, her shoulders. She looked like someone nothing bad could happen to. She looked immune. To his surprise, he found he envied her. For the last few hours he had had the sense that things were turning against him. He felt strangely unanchored. Adrift. His bones seemed to be floating inside his skin.