remember him. This was taken a while ago, eh? But it’s him
for sure.’
AnneMarie pulled her fingers through her hair. `He had
the wrong idea.’ She took a thin strand in her mouth and
chewed on it gently.
Chris straightened in his seat. `I put him straight. AnneMarie, there’s cake left if you’re hungry.’
`It helps me think. Do you want to tell him about it or will I?’
Chris sipped his tea. `There’s nothing much to tell, is
there? It happened. It’s inevitable. You’ve been warned often enough. Anyway,’ he addressed himself to Derek and I, `this
bloke came a few times, no problem. Then he asked if he
could photograph AnneMarie in private, on his own. He
asked me because I’m the front of house. Like AnneMarie
said, she never talks to them. Well, I told him no and he went
away peaceful enough. That’s all there is to it. He tried his luck and didn’t get anywhere. The only strange thing was the amount of money he offered. It was a lot.’
`How much?’
`Let’s just say too much just to photograph someone and
enough to tempt madam here.’
AnneMarie looked defiant. `I only said that perhaps you
could be in the next room.’
`He didn’t want that. The man was quite specific. He
wanted to photograph you, alone in the house. He specifically stated alone. Aye, that’d be right. I told him to sling his
hook.’
AnneMarie looked down at her cup. `You think you know
everything, Christian, but I’m not stupid. I’ve looked after myself for a long time now.’
`I’m not denying that, but part of the reason you do okay is because you’re a bright girl.’
She rolled her eyes towards the ceiling. `I’m twenty-seven,
I’ve got a masters degree in fine art and I’m trying to complete a postgraduate in’
`Aye, like I said, you’re a clever girl. But you’re no physical match against a man.’
Well, that’s why you’re here.’
`Aye, and. the day that you start letting punters in to
photograph you on your own, that’s when I know, degree or
no degree, you’ve lost it.’
`Point taken.’ She turned to me. `Will you show me the
pictures, the pictures of the other girl?’
I looked at Chris. He shrugged.
`Don’t look at him, look at me.’
I slipped the photographs from the pile and gave them to
her. AnneMarie looked through them silently, threading a
strand of hair anxiously between her fingers. Chris held out his hand and she passed them to him reluctantly.
`Jesus Christ!’ The big man’s face distorted in distress.
`Can you understand what I’ve been going on about now??
‘You’ve made your point.’
Chris raised his voice. He was holding onto his temper,
just. `I don’t see how you can say that when we go through
this charade every week. Do you want to end up like this
lassie?
He held the photograph close to her face, so close the focus must have blurred. His hand trembled. I tensed myself for
movement, unsure of what might happen next.
`Look at her, AnneMarie, look. Jesus wept. She’s dead.’
He placed his face in his hands. `I can’t be here twenty-four hours a day. What you’re doing isn’t safe. Don’t you read the papers? Listen to the news? Even the girls turning tricks on the street don’t invite punters into their home and they’re getting picked off, one by one.’
`It’s fine, Christian. It pays well and nothing’s going to
happen. Rilke’s just told us the man’s dead. He’s no going to come after me now.’ She ran her fingers through her hair
again. `Anyway it might be make-up. She could be acting.
People have strange fancies.’
Christian raised his face from his hands.
`Strange fancies, that’s one phrase for it. Admit it, AnneMarie, you enjoy it as much as they do, you get a kick out of
it. You like the attention, posing away up there, showing
them everything you’ve got.’
Derek and I sat at the table forgotten.
`Why don’t you just get it over with and call me a whore.
You get your cut of the wages of sin. You’re not so moral
when you’re opening the door and taking the money.’
Christian sounded defeated. `If it wasn’t me it would be
someone else. At least this way I get to keep an eye on you.
Christ knows what Mum would say if she knew.’
I looked at Derek and he nodded, mouthing, `Brother and
sister.’ A faint smile played around his lips. Embarrassed or enjoying himself? I couldn’t tell.
`The only way Mum would find out is if you were to tell
her.’
`Or if you end up on a slab like this lassie.’
`You worry too much.’ She leant across the table towards
him and took his hand. `I wish I could convince you.’
`You’ll never convince me.’
`I’m the one in control. I don’t fuck anyone. No one slips
a teener down my knickers. No one touches me. I don’t do a
striptease. I pose. I make them wait while I go through a whole fashion show. I give them winter wear, day dresses, evening
gowns, the lot. It’s only after I’ve modelled the swimwear
that I take my clothes off.’ She laughed. `Then the cameras go wild.’
AnneMarie had returned the Polaroids to me at the door. `A
.
souvenir.’
She’d given Christian a kiss on the cheek, then handed him
his jacket, pushing him out gently, saying, `Aye, aye,’ to his warnings of `Put the chain on … Look through the peephole before you open the door to anyone … Remember training
tomorrow night.’
He’d stood on the landing until he heard the chain pressed
home, then followed us down the stairs.
`Christ, I worry about that lassie. Why can she no be
happy acting in your daft films? He patted Derek on the
shoulder. `No offence, like. I enjoy your movies. Listen,’ he
turned to me, `you find out anything, you let me know.’ He
slipped his hand into his pocket and handed me a fold of
notes. `Sorry about earlier. Just a bit of fun.’ I counted four tens and looked at him. `Well, you did use a roll of film.’
I folded twenty of the money Christian had returned into a
small square and palmed it to Derek along with my business
card asking, `Will you phone me if you hear anything
interesting?)
‘Sure.’ He held on to the card and gave me back the
money. `Owe me one.’
`I’ll look forward to you collecting.’
He smiled, said, `See you around,’ and walked into the
night without giving me his phone number.
I looked at Christian. He sighed, `I’m going to have bad
dreams tonight.’
I patted him on the shoulder and left him standing there, a
big man, looking up towards the stars, towards a slim
silhouette, moving against the light at a third-floor window.
Darkling I listen; and, for many a time
I have been half in love with easeful Death, Call ‘d him soft names in many a mused rhyme, To take into the air my quiet breath.
John Keats, `Ode to a Nightingale’
LATER THAT EVENING I stretched myself across Rose’s
Emperor-size bed, playing with the glass of wine she had
given me, holding it up to the light, watching the flame
through the ruby filter and beyond it Rose’s reflection, bathed in the dim glow of the trembling offertory candles.
`So good for the complexion.’
It was restful watching Rose metamorphose into herself.
She sat at her dressing table shrine, slightly flushed from her bath, her damp hair piled high on her head. I was conscious of a pride that heterosexual men must feel. I was going out on
the town with a beautiful woman. It was just a shame about
where we were going.
I watched as she felt among the jumble of cosmetics,
finding the desired potion without moving her gaze, combining lotions and powders with the skill of the apothecary. She
leant towards the cloudy glass, hung with old evening gloves and beads and pat-patted a powder puff that might once have
belonged to jean Harlow, sprinkling fine flurries of dust that seemed to hang gold and heavy in the air before diffusing over the landscape of her dressing table, settling on vials, jars, bracelets, peacock feathers, bottles of half-used perfume and petrified nail polish, stones, seashells, photographs, lacquered boxes tumbled with jewellery, all of it already coated with the dust of years. The light reflected off the bronze embroidered chrysanthemums on the shattered silk of her Chinese robe.
She caught my gaze and her reflection smiled back at mine. An artist’s model/whore from Montmartre, one hundred years
ago.
`I’m looking forward to this, Rilke. Thanks for inviting
me.’ I grunted like a ten-year-married husband and lifted a
magazine that had been making its way across the floor to that stoorie netherworld beneath Rose’s bed, where tissues, lost
wine glasses, forgotten paperbacks and other things best
forgot reigned. `It’ll be fun. It’s good for us to go out
occasionally away from work. We don’t do it often enough.’ I flicked through the glossed pages watching half-naked, skinny girls pass by, a starved parade.
`At the risk of sounding ungentlemanly, I didn’t invite you, Rose.’
She lit a cigarette. Two red tips glowed a crimson warning,
as she and the woman in the mirror inhaled. She narrowed her eyes and squinted at me through the smoke.
`You think Les and me don’t get on and it’s true, we don’t
always see eye to eye, but you know, deep down, I admire
Leslie. He’s true to himself. Even if his taste isn’t quite what I would choose.’ She selected a small cut-glass pot and
smoothed balm round her eyes. `I mean,’ she shut her left
eye, `the last time I saw him,’ and began applying a slate-grey tint, `he was way overdressed.’ She turned round to face me, checking for offence.
`You look a bit peculiar yourself right now,’ I said.
She fluttered her eyes comically and returned to her
mirror; balancing her eye-shadow, lining her lids with soft, dark kohl, curling her lashes, then coating them with thick, black mascara; concentrating on her art, but concentrating on the words she was saying to me as well.
`I’m never sure if he’s just making fun of women.’ She
sucked in her cheeks and applied her blush; for a second I
could see the skull beneath her skin. `For all that Leslie
dresses like a woman, I don’t know that he likes them.’
`If you don’t like him, don’t come.’
She retrieved a slim brush with a long tapered handle that
had fallen behind a line of perfume bottles. A dark shadow
danced across the wall.
`There’s no need to be like that. I’m just trying to
explain why I never feel comfortable with Les.’ She began
to load the brush with lipstick. `It’s nothing to do with the way he dresses, although obviously I think he could do
better,’ and began to paint on her trademark scarlet mouth.
`It’s more the way he looks at me sometimes, as if I’ve
stolen something that should be his.’ She blotted her lips
with a scrap of tissue, then scrutinised her reflection one last time. Satisfied, she stood up, dropping her robe, revealing
black lace-topped stockings, black silk cami-knickers and
black underwired brassiere, and began to flick through the
dresses in her wardrobe.
`Rose.’
`What?’
`Have you no modesty??
‘What’s it to you?
The taxi driver kept sneaking looks at Rose in his rearview
mirror. I turned and looked at her myself. Sure enough, she
had crossed her legs high on the thigh, showing a glimpse of white flesh at the top of her lacy holdups.
`You’re distracting that man from his job.’
She leaned conspiratorially against me. I smelt her perfume, Chanel No. 5 laced with cigarettes and red wine.
`Stop being such a spoilsport. It’s the only fun taxi drivers get, looking up women’s skirts - well, that and couples having it off in the back of their cabs.’ I gave her a sideways look and she winked at me. I wondered how many glasses of wine she had
drunk before I’d arrived. `They’re all voyeurs. It warps you driving a cab, boredom and depravity, nothing in between.
They end up like Travis Bickle.’ She leaned forward again and started to talk to the driver, asking him if he had seen the movie Taxi Driver. I knew where this was leading. The taxi driver game, invented by Rose, the object of which is to coax the driver into repeating lines from the film, specifically `You looking at me? You looking at me?’ `Well, I don’t see anybody else here, do you?
We slipped through a fluorescent white tunnel, then
climbed high over the city on the curving expressway; the
River Clyde oil-black and still beneath us, a backdrop to the reflected lights of the city; the white squares of late-night office work; traffic signals drifting red, amber, green, necklaces of car
headlamps halting then moving in their sway; the Renfrew
Ferry illuminated at its permanent mooring; scarlet neon sign of the Daily Record offices suspended in the dark sky to our right. The driver was repeating his lines as if they were
something clever. He had diverted his gaze towards Rose’s
bosoms, which quivered gently with the motion of the cab.
On the radio a Marilyn Monroe sound-alike whispered an
invitation to an Indian restaurant, where, her voice intimated, she would fuck and then feed you.
Why not make your way
To our buffet?
Take your feet
To the end of Argyle Street
I stretched back into the shadows and watched the driver
watching Rose, his eyes glancing between her reflection in