Read The Price of Butcher's Meat Online
Authors: Reginald Hill
He stared at us unblinkinglyâout of the kind of face movie animators dream up for ogres.
His mouth twisted in a snarlâ& he spoke.
It took a moment to register that in fact the snarl was a smileâ& the words he spoke werent a threatâbut a greeting.
He saidâhow do folksâwhat fettle?â
Now he moved round the side of the car. He walked slowlyâlike a bear that would have preferred to be on all foursârather than upright. He gave Tom & Maryâstill paralyzed by the shockâa friendly nod in passing. Then he took hold of the rear doorâ& pulled it openâ& looked in at me.
âhow do lassâhe saidâheading for the village?â
I noddedânot trusting myself to speak.
âgrandâhe saidâroom for a little un?â
&âwithout waiting for an answerâhe pulled himself in alongside me.
Up to this pointâId thought he was wearing a garishly striped summer shirt & a casual woolen jacketâbut now I saw him clearlyâ& I thoughtâoh shit!
He was dressed in pajamas & a dressing gown. On his left foot was a leather slipper. His right foot was bare. There were leaves clinging to him & thorns sticking into him. His face bled through a few light scratches.
But looking at him more closelyâas I had no choice but to doâI realized hed suffered more physical damage than could be explained merely by pushing through a hedgeâ& rolling down the bank into the road.
There was a lot of himâbut a kind of pallor & the looseness of the skin on that broad face suggested that there used to be a lot more. Your nurses eye would probably have done a full diagnosis in half a secâbut even I could see enough to work out hed recently been very ill.
An escaped loonyâI thought! Then I recalled the gate mans phone call. This had to be the
convie
whod gone missingâa bit of a reliefâthough not much!
He saidâyoull know me again luvâ
I realized Id been staring.
I saidâyesâsorryâhelloâIm Charlotte Heywoodâ
Automatically I offered my hand. Good manners never hurt anyoneâremember dad drumming that into us? Then hed head out across the fieldsâto chase some
daft bugger
off his landâwith his shotgun!
The escaped convie took itâ& held it in a surprisingly gentle grip.
âglad to meet youâhe saidâAndy Dealâ
âTom Parker. My wife Maryâsaid Tomâare you all right?â
âgrandâhe repliedânifty bit of driving that luv. Lot of women I know would have run me overâwhile they were still looking for the brakeâ
Somehow it came out as a genuine compliment.
Maryâreassuredâgave him a smile & started the car again.
I realized the man was still holding my hand. He peered into my face & saidâHeywoodâthas not one of Stompy Heywoods brood out at Willingdenâare you?â
âSteve Heywoods my fatherâI saidâbut Ive never heard him called Stompyâ
âthats likely cos tha never got in his way at the bottom of a loose scrum. AyeâI thought I could see a likenessâ
Being told I resembled dad wasnt the biggest compliment Id ever had! I dontâdo I? Answer yesâ& Ill publish details of your steamy affair all over the internet!
I snatched my hand freeâ& gave him a glowerâ& he grinned as if this confirmed his identification.
Ahead of us a banner stretched high across the roadâ& inscribed
WELCOME TO SANDYTOWNâHOME OF THE HEALTHY HOLIDAY
âtold us we were now entering the village. Except it wasnt a villageâmore a small town. Usually when you go back to places you recall as a kidâeverything seems to have
shrunk
âcould impress you with the physiological explanation for this phenomenonâbut I wont! Sandytown was differentâvery much bigger than I recalledâlooking prosperous tooâour route took us past several shopsâa small supermarket doing good businessâan art & craft galleryâa working potteryâa jolly caféâa Thai takeawayâ& a seafood restaurant called Mobys!
The cobbled streets were clean & litter freeâthe buildings freshly painted & well kept. Distantly I could see bathers sporting in the dark blue waves of the seaâ& holidaymakers taking thier ease in deck chairs set on the golden sand. Posters everywhere showing an outline map of York-shireâwith a big cross on the coastâ& the legendâ
SANDYTOWN IS OUR TOWNâLETS PUT IT ON THE MAP!
âwhile across the main street hung a banner reading
FESTIVAL OF HEALTHâAUGUST BANK HOLIDAY
.
Maybe the Headbanger didnt bring us here at allâbut found some rundown shantytown to put us off family trips forever!
Tom Parkerâclearly delighted at these signs of activityâgave a running commentary on each individual attractionâ& occasionally leant out of the open window to greet pedestriansâas Mary drove us slowly along.
âright luvâthis ull do meâsaid Mr Deal suddenly.
I looked out & saw an old freshly whitewashed building displaying a sign which read
THE HOPE & ANCHORâLICENSEE A. HOLLIS
. One of the pig family?âI wondered. Mary pulled in. Deal leaned forward & saidâThanks for the lift luv. Sorry if I scared you back there. Lost me footing. Lost me bloody slipper too. Not to worry. I dont doubt Prince bloody Charming ull come looking for me. Tomâtha seems to be a local lad in good standing. I daresay tha gets on well with them up at the Avalon?â
âyes indeedâsaid TomâI know Dr Feldenhammer very wellâoften visitâ
Wrong answerâI thought. You cant survive as a student for 3 years without getting a nose for a touch!
âgrand. Thing isâIm staying up there for a couple of nightsâ& I seem to have come out without me wallet. So if you could sub me a fiverâbetter still 10âIll leave it with old Fester for you to collect next time you call inâright?â
It would have taken a lot harder man than Tom Parker to refuse.
The money was passed overâ20 in the end I noticedâ& Mr Deal got out.
He turned & saidâthanks for the liftâmissusâ& for the loanâTomâ
For the first time Tom Parker got a real look at himâfull lengthâstanding by the open doorâin his pajamasâwith one bare foot. It was clearly a shockâ& I think that inside he was bidding a fond farewell to his 20 quidâbut he still managed that beaming smile as he saidâour pleasureâour very great pleasureâgoodbyeâ
Now the man turned his gaze on me.
âbye luvâhe saidâremember me to your dadâ
âbye Mr DealâI said.
He moistened his lips & leaned forward. For a dreadful second I thought he was going to kiss me!
â
Dee Ell
âhe said very distinctlyâget that straightâelse thall niver go to heaven.
Dee Ell.
Cheersâ
He turned & limped into the pub.
âoh dearâsaid TomâI doubt if theyll serve himâlooking like thatâ
I saidâwould you refuse to serve him Tom?â
He glanced round at meâthen he smiled.
âyou knowâI dont believe I would!âhe saidâbut the further adventures of Mr
Dee Ell
are no concern of ours! Maryâdrive on. Lets get home & see the children!â
Which is what we did.
Minnie has just burst in again to tell me lunch is readyâknocking at doors must come late on the Parker curriculum! Better go. Watch this space for more exciting news from sunny Sandytown!
& dont forget that pic!
Â
Love
Charley xx
There! What do you think of that, Mildred?
I did it!
Jumped the gun, surprised myself even, and now I'm in disgrace, quacks tut-tutting and feeding me pills, matron's bosom heaving like Moby Dick in a hurricane, Cap on the phone, spitting blood, and calling me a stupid infantile prat, and saying the only clothes she'll be bringing me's a change of nappies!
But it were worth it.
I think.
Can't say it's done me a lot of good, but. To tell truth, I'm feeling a lot worse now than when I arrived here!
And I can't even take credit for putting together a cunning plan.
In fact, there were no plan at all.
Today the weather were so nice, they suggested I have my lunch outside. The grub's pretty good, all fresh local stuff nicely cooked, but they don't exactly pile your plate up. When I asked if I could have a pint of ale to wash it down, the lass serving me said, “Couple of days, maybe, Mr. Dalziel. You're still on assessment. No alcohol till your diet sheet's been finalized, that's the rule.”
She smiled as she said it, a real smile, nowt made up about it. I smiled back. Weren't her fault, and she was a nice lass with a lovely bum which I admired as she walked away. But it did piss me off a bit, specially as I looked around the terrace where I was sitting and saw half a dozen old farts at another table supping vino and wearing real clothes, like they were on holiday on the Costa Saga.
But sod it, I thought. No reason not being dressed for dinner should
stop me taking a stroll around to explore the place. They've started me on physio with Tony down in this little gym. Queer as a clockwork orange, but he knows his stuff, and though I'm still a long way off Olympic qualifying, I'm feeling a lot lisher than when I came.
I checked there were no one looking, then stood up and went down the steps from the terrace with a lot of care. Didn't fancy breaking me other leg!
Once on the lawn, I just meant to have a bit of a wander, but I'm still best in a straight line and as I'd got up a fair head of speed, I just kept going with the house at my back till I found myself plowing through some shrubbery.
Here I stopped and checked back. The house were out of sight. That would get the buggers worrying, I thought. Bit childish, mebbe. But if they're going to treat me like a kid, I might as well enjoy myself like one!
So on I went till finally I came up against the boundary hedge. Thick and thorny. Good for keeping intruders out. And prisoners in!
I wandered along it for a while. I were beginning to feel knackered now and I was just thinking of setting off back when I spotted this gap.
Not a gap really. Just the point where two sections of hedge met but without getting all intertwined.
I heard a car go by on the road. The road that led into Sandytown.
The road to freedom.
I felt a sudden urge to take a look at it.
And why not? I thought. I'm not a prisoner! And my dressing gown's one of the thick old tweedy kind, none of them flimsy cotton kimonos or whatever they call them.
So I took a bit of a run, or mebbe a slow trot's nearer the mark, and got my shoulder into the breach.
Before my spot of bother I'd have walked through here, no trouble. But it turned out to be narrower than it looked and for a moment I thought mebbe I was going to get stuck and end up shouting for help.
Didn't fancy that, so I gave one last heave and burst through onto the roadside verge.
Except it weren't the kind of verge I expected, nice and flat and grassy. Instead it were a steep bank that fell away to the tarmac about twenty feet below.
No way of stopping. All I could do was try to remember all I'd learnt about falling, and curl up tight and try to roll. It were sod's law that there should be a car coming down the hill exactly at that moment. I had time to think, Whatever hitting the tarmac don't break, the collision will take care of!
Then I was under the front wheels and waiting for the pain.
When it didn't come, or at least not so much as you get shaving with a lady's razor, I slowly got up.
No sudden agony, no broken bones. I'd lost a slipper and my stick, but I were alive and didn't feel much worse than I'd felt thirty seconds earlier.
If we look closely we can see God's purpose in everything, my old mate Father Joe Kerrigan once told me.
I looked closely.
Here was a road leading down to Sandytown, which had to have a pub, and I was leaning up against a car.
Joe were right. Suddenly I saw God's purpose!
They were nice folk in the car. Real friendly. I sat in the back with this lass. Could have been thirteen, could have been thirty, hard to tell these days. Turned out I knew her dad. Played rugger against him way back when I were turning out for MY Police. He were a farmer and used to play like he were plowing a clarty field. Couldn't see much point to having players behind the scrum. Reckoned all they were good for was wearing tutus and running up and down the touchline, screaming don't touch me, you brute! We had a lot in common, me and Stompy.
They dropped me at this pub. The Hope and Anchor. I didn't have any money with me. Likely I could have talked the landlord into giving me tick, but this guy Tom in the car volunteered to sub me twenty quid,
so no need to turn on the charm. I went into the pub. The main bar were full of trippers eating sarnies and chicken tikka and such. On the other side of the entrance passage were a snug, half a dozen tables, only one of 'em occupied by a couple of old boys supping pints. I went in there, put the twenty on the bar, and said, “Pint of tha best, landlord.”
Don't expect he gets many customers in their sleeping kit, but to give him his due, he never hesitated. Not for a second. Drew me a pint, set it down.
I took the glass, put it to my lips, and drank. Didn't mean to be a hog but somehow when I set it down, it were empty.
“You'll need another then,” he said with a friendly smile.
I was really warming to this man.
“Aye, and I'll have a scotch to keep it company,” I said. “And a packet of pork scratchings.”
I nodded at the old boys, who nodded back as I took my drinks over to a table in a shady corner. When a landlord treats me right, I try not to offend his customers.
I nibbled my scratchings, sipped my scotch, gulped my beer, and took in my surroundings. Nice room, lots of oak paneling, no telly or Muzak, bright poster above the bar advertising some Festival of Health over the Bank Holiday. With medicine like this, I thought, it couldn't fail! And for perhaps the first time since that bloody house in Mill Street blew up, I felt perfectly happy.
It didn't last long. Rarely does. According to Father Joe, that's 'cos God likes to keep us on the jump.
Certainly kept me on the jump here.
Hardly had time to savor the moment when the barroom door opened and a man in a wheelchair came rolling through.
He halted just inside the door in the one shaft of sunlight coming through the window. His head were shaven so smooth the light bounced off it, giving him a kind of halo. His gaze ran round the room till it landed on me.
Perhaps there was summat in the Sandytown air that stopped people
showing surprise. The landlord had kept a perfectly straight face when a slightly bleeding man wearing jimjams and one slipper came into his pub.
Now the wheelchair man went one better. His face actually lit up with pleasure at the sight of me, as though I owed him money and we'd arranged to meet and settle up.
“Mr. Dalziel!” he exclaimed, driving the wheelchair toward me. “Of all the gin joints in all the world, you had to walk into mine! How very nice to see you again.”
I did a double take. Couldn't believe my eyes. Or mebbe I didn't want to believe them.
“Bloody hell,” I said. “It's Franny Roote. I thought you must be dead!”