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Authors: Allan Guthrie

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BOOK: Two-Way Split
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Her lips twitched. "Not bad," she said.

"And might that be him?" He pointed to the framed photograph on the wall above her head. She didn't look, but she nodded. "Husband?" he asked her, then noticed that the fingers gripping her gun were free of jewellery. They had stopped shaking, but her knuckles were white as young bone. "Just a boyfriend?" he said. "Why don't you leave him?"

When she laughed again it was as if someone had wrapped her larynx in sandpaper. She said, "I tried that."

He lifted his eyebrows. "And you came back?"

"He didn't like it."

"Who cares what he likes or doesn't like?"

"If only it were that easy, Pearce." She gulped and lowered her hands. "As long as it involved me alone. As long as he didn't touch anyone else, I was prepared to take his best shot."

Gently, Pearce prised one of her fingers off the gun.

"This is nothing." Her hands fell apart and the gun slid onto the bed. She touched her bruised eye. "Compared to what he did to Becky."

"Your sister?" He picked up the gun. It was heavier than he'd anticipated.

Ailsa Lillie shook her head. Her eyes blazed. "Rebecca's my daughter."

He examined the weapon. Nickel, he guessed. CCCP engraved on the butt. "How old?"

"Eighteen." She paused, then added, "Old enough."

"For what?"

"A fractured cheekbone and a broken jaw."

"She doesn't live here?"

"You kidding? Becky left home when she was sixteen." She smiled and said, "She's a hairdresser."

"She his daughter?"

"No, thank God."

"This isn't loaded." He showed her the empty magazine.

"Christ, don't I know it."

He shoved the clip back in.

"After I'd paid for the gun," she said, "I didn't have enough money left to buy bullets. I didn't realise a box of ammo cost half as much as the gun."

"That's a hell of a mark-up." He looked at her and started laughing. She joined him and sounded as if she meant it. He said, "What's your boyfriend's name?"

"Why do you want to know?"

"You're in a mess, Ailsa. If you want out of it, here's what you do. Tell me his name and where I can find him."

She told him. "He's dangerous," she added.

"I'll be very careful." He handed her the gun. "Take that to whoever you bought it from and demand your money back. You won't get it all, so hold out for half. That's reasonable. Enough to be useful to you, but not too much for him to lose face. He'll see the sense in it if you point out that he can sell the gun again. Will you do that?"

She nodded.

He stood. "I'll be round tomorrow to pick up the money."

She grabbed his hand. "What are you going to do?"

He shrugged. "Have a word with your boyfriend. Tell him it's over. That you don't want to see him again." He slipped his fingers out of hers and rubbed his chin.

"He'll kill her." She clutched his hand again. "He'll kill Becky."

"She has nothing to worry about."

She didn't believe him. Creases lined her forehead and wrinkles erupted at both sides of her mouth.

"I promise you," he said, "neither you nor Becky will ever see him again."

Her forehead smoothed out once again and she looked almost pretty. "I owe your boss money. Why are you doing this? Why are you helping me? You some kind of vigilante or something?"

"Remember what I said?" He gazed down at her. "That I wanted to negotiate mutually acceptable repayment terms? Well, that's what we've been doing. I never meant to imply that I wanted to…" He made a circular motion with his hand. "All that, anyway. It's just business, Ailsa. You're an investment and I'm protecting you like I would any other investment."

She levelled the gun at him, closed her puffy eye and said, "I should shoot you for being such a crap liar."

He turned his back on her. "I'll see myself out."

"Hey," she said. "There's a big guy who works with Pete. His name's Tony. He's nice too. Like you. Say hi to him for me."

 

 

11:15 am

 

"Not now, Mum." Pearce hung up and turned off his mobile.

"Mothers, eh?"

The male voice registered as an anomaly, although he wasn't sure why. He couldn't think of a compelling reason why a sauna had to have a female receptionist, but that's what he'd expected. Maybe this guy doubled as a security guard. Pearce looked up. So much for that theory. You didn't see many security guards less than five feet tall. Behind the semi-circular counter Shortarse's face was a bag of tension. "Where's Pete?" Pearce asked him.

"Pete?" Shortarse's mouth stretched and slackened and stretched again. You couldn't tell if he'd just stubbed his toe, or if he was about to burst into hysterical laughter.

"How many Petes you got working here?"

Shortarse shrugged.

"Any of the girls called Pete, are they?"

Shortarse's lips twitched.

"Thompson," Pearce said with his eyes closed. "Thompson," he said again. He opened his eyes and stared. "I'd like to see Pete Thompson."

"Ah." Shortarse's head bobbed up and down. "Mr Thompson." His lips pulled tight and his jaws clenched and he said, "Got an appointment?" Pearce said nothing and the little man continued nodding his head. "You need an appointment to see Mr Thompson."

Pearce clipped his mobile onto his belt. A muscle tugged at his cheek.

"An appointment." Shortarse nodded hard and fast.

"Mind your head," Pearce told him. "All that shaking, it's liable to snap off."

Shortarse's face paled and his eyebrows lifted. His head was motionless as he picked up the phone on the desk, pressed a couple of numbers and said, "Tony, we got a funny boy out here." He dropped the receiver. It bounced out of the cradle and clattered onto the desk. Shortarse muttered as the dialling tone moaned at him from the upturned phone and he was picking it up again as a door at the rear of the corridor sprang open and a man burst out, stiff-armed and heavy.

The big man glowered at Pearce, twisting the knuckles of one hand against the palm of the other as he plodded along the short corridor. "Can I help you?" He was much taller than Pearce. Much wider, too. His jacket strangled his swaying arms. He stopped a couple of feet away and straightened his tie. Flat nose. Cauliflower ears. He looked nothing like the photograph of Ailsa's boyfriend.

"You must be Tony," Pearce said. "Nice to meet you."

"Never mind who I am. Who are you?"

"I'm looking for Pete."

"I didn't ask who you were looking for. I asked who you were."

"Five minutes. That's all."

Tony changed hands, twisting his knuckles as if he was sharpening them against the grindstone of his flattened palm. "
Pete
doesn't want to see you."

Pearce flexed his fingers. "I might have to insist."

Tony chuckled. "Okay," he said. "Insist."

Pearce said, "You're a bodybuilder, right?"

"Yeah."

"Which means if I stood still, you could probably pick me up."

Tony gave him an appraising look. "With one hand."

"Good," Pearce said. "Now, here's your problem."

Tony moved his weight from one foot to the other. After a while he said, "Go on."

"I don't intend standing still."

Tony sighed. "So why don't you walk right on past me, if you're such a hard man."

"I will," Pearce said. "But there's something I have to ask you first. I'm puzzled, you see." He gripped the lip of the reception desk with both hands. "Pete doesn't know who I am, right?" He let go of the desk and turned. "So how does he know he doesn't want to see me?"

 "Not my place to ask."

"Five minutes." Pearce slapped his hand on the desk.

"Don't hit the furniture."

"Five minutes," Pearce said, smacking the desk again.

"You hard of hearing?" Tony eyeballed Pearce. "Or are you just dim?"

"Everybody thinks I'm thick today. That's what Ailsa Lillie said."

"You know Ailsa?" Tony's eyes narrowed.

"She's why I'm here."

"Why didn't you say so?"

"I was having fun," Pearce said. "Actually, I have a message from Ailsa for Pete."

"I'll pass it on."

"I have to deliver it in person."

Tony shook his head and stopped rubbing his hands together. He turned and retraced his steps. The office door closed behind him with a bang.

Pearce looked at Shortarse. "Something amusing you?"

The little man cocked his head. His mouth was stretched into a definite grin. "What if it is?" he said.

The door opened again. Tony said, "You got your five minutes."

Pearce walked down the red-carpeted corridor and entered Thompson's office. Ailsa's boyfriend sat behind a huge desk fingering his moustache. He didn't get up to greet Pearce. Didn't even look at him.

Pearce followed Thompson's gaze. Opposite his desk a bank of monitors silently relayed the events taking place in some of the sauna's private rooms. Four of the screens were blank, but, despite the early hour, two others showed signs of activity.  Bottom left, a topless masseuse churned the fleshy lower back of an anonymous customer stretched out on a towel beside a Jacuzzi. On the next screen, the one Thompson couldn't take his eyes off, the masseuse was naked and on her knees, the customer's dick sliding in and out of her mouth. Somehow, she managed to look bored.

Pearce said, "Surprised you have punters already."

Thompson didn't look at him. "Been open half-an-hour."

Pearce looked at Tony, back at Thompson, back at the screen. He said, "Want me to wait till they're finished?"

Thompson swivelled in his chair. "Who the fuck are you?"

"I have a message." Pearce turned to face him. "From Ailsa."

"Yeah?" Thompson glanced at Tony and his lip curled. "Yeah?" he repeated.

"She never wants to see you again."

"Yeah?" Thompson's eyes were wide. They grew wider. "Yeah? She doesn't, eh?"

"If you go anywhere near her or her daughter I'll do much worse than I'm going to do now."

"Yeah?" Thompson started to laugh. Suddenly he stopped. "What do you mean by that?"

Pearce turned to Tony and said, "You can leave if you want."

Tony said, "Why would I want to do that?"

BOOK: Two-Way Split
2.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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