The Devil's Home on Leave (Factory 2) Page 6
That was what the court couldn’t swallow – the nonchalant bearing of the prisoner, also the cold-blooded element in the killing itself – done, as it was, in the dark, deliberately, silently, from behind, and with a piano wire, a garrotting.
Ten years, he drew. But he did just seven – a model prisoner.
Then, when he got out, the records went blank.
He disappeared from Britain.
Well worth a visit, that one, I thought. Yes, really worth it, if the man was around.
Worth it on principle. He was still only an idea I had for the plastic bags, but it was his commando-style past, the fact he’d done bird for murder and for attempted murder and above all, his invariably unusual choice of weapon – that was what made his name stick with me. More than that, people like McGruder are worth paying a call on from time to time anyway, if they’re around. Casual, like. They’re the ones with the violence forever tight inside them. They’re the ones, well, you’d be just plain silly not to watch them.
13
I went back to Earlsfield, and in the night I had a rotten dream. A man the colour of death in a white suit came up to me in the West End out of a side street and offered me his love.
I had other problems in the dream. A man had been knocked down by a car at the bottom of Wardour Street and he was screaming where he lay on the tarmac in the night glare.
I had hired a taxi to drive myself; it was one of those old Beardmores they stopped using back in the Fifties. But I was going to cab it, take it to one of those big West End hotels where they scrape the shit off your voice as soon as you speak. The cab had a roof that folded down at the back like a child’s pram so that you could look at the park, and I’d rented it from some South London villains. I saw them laughing as I drove it away. The exhaust had gone, I didn’t like its clutch and it had helical gears. I didn’t like the sound of its motor either, and it was all wrong for the Eighties traffic around me. But I had to pick some strangers up at their hotel; for some reason I was desperate to pick them up. Well, I couldn’t find anywhere to park near their Piccadilly hotel, so I parked up on the rank west of Bond Street, and then started out on foot to look for these people among the night crowds eating hamburgers from the fast-food joints off Piccadilly Circus. It was hot and I was sweating; I could smell the meat frying and the spray-on onion. But I couldn’t get my bearings because, although I know the whole area like my hand, in the dream the streets kept fanning away into places I’d never seen before. In the end I got sick with anxiety over finding these people and I thought, shit, after all, I’d be better off back on wheels. So I ran back for my old banger where I’d left it, but a cabby told me as I went looking that the law had towed it away and that there was a ton to pay in fines. And all the time it was raining, bloody raining. They say it’s bad luck to dream of rain; they say it foretells death when you dream of water.
Next I was going up the path of my parents’ house in Welling, like I used to when I was coming back from school, and there I saw my father leaning exhausted against the neighbour’s fence, favouring his left side. He still wore the suit he had died in and his trilby hat; the hat had fallen over one ear. He was completely rotten and dead. He smelled, and the places that death had eaten in his face showed through in a way that ought never to be seen. I said: ‘Father, dear God, whatever’s the matter? What are you doing here?’ He couldn’t answer at first, and I knew his disease was hurting him. ‘I’m lost,’ he said, ‘I’ve got lost somehow. It’s a bloody disease, this is.’ They sometimes take tumours out of them bigger than cricket balls; they took one like that out of him. So he searched my face earnestly for pity, and I went up to him on the path and took him in my arms and comforted him as best I could. But he just sighed and turned into a garden bird; then he put on his old golfing cap. Wings spread out through his coat and he fluttered up into the air, and as he went away I told him I would care for him for ever. But he couldn’t speak, only look tenderly at me from the other world. ‘Take the rain out of the names on our graves up at the church,’ he said gently, ‘with your forefinger; you’ll be sure to, won’t you, son?’ Other people watched us from chairs high up on a terrace; they too were dead.
I awoke and lay for a long while in the dark, thinking about what I had dreamed, remembering how my father had been a smalltime draper in Welling, and how my mother had had ideas of clothing us above the other children in the street and how he had been hard on my sister and me, moralizing and punishing us, though he nearly broke himself financially, what with his subscription to the golf club and sending us to grammar school.
And yet he hadn’t had a bad death in his own home, considering the cancer that ate him away. I was up in Chelsea; I had just got onto the CID when he died. He was found by my sister who was looking after him; he was in his armchair in the sitting room, gazing at his favourite picture, a reproduction oil of a cottage garden that hung over the fireplace. The trouble being in his lungs, his heart had finished by collapsing, the doctor said; he had this terrible cough. Yet only the day before, my sister Julie said, he seemed to have almost mastered it and appeared much better reciting some of Shakespeare’s lines out of Henry V and standing up from his armchair in his shirt-tails to do it, and delivering himself of a vile great yellow stool on the cushion, of which he was ashamed and shouted for it to be taken away, of course. My sister and the doctor wanted him to go into hospital, but he wouldn’t: ‘I’ve paid for my home,’ he told her, ‘and I’ll die in it, my dear girl, as I’ve lived in it.’ He was very fond of Julie; she married a man in the sports gear business and they’ve done well, with a house out by Oxford on a mortgage. I like to go down there at times; we listen to music in the evenings and get on well together. She used to wash my father at the end and make his bed, and, in caring for him, looked at the penis which had made her for the first time; he used to take the end of it between his old fingers before he got too bad and squash it eagerly, winking at her; it was strange, she said to me after the funeral, how right to the end he still had the lean buttocks and big, heavy prick of a man in his prime. ‘Good-looking to the end,’ my sister said proudly after the funeral. ‘That’s what a wartime commission in the army did for him.’
As for my mother, she’d been dead already very many years – of boredom, I think, really.
14
No, I shouldn’t have married Edie. Through Dahlia’s end, through the loss of her reason, she dealt me a double blow that changed me into a man with a sparse emotional map: much harder, the peaceful places and the civilized building in me had gone, leaving just main roads to a few goals through bleak, mountainous country, roads carried frequently on precipitous lips that I don’t care to look over often.
Why can’t Edie die? And why do I have to be faced with these plastic bags just now? There are times, I don’t know if they come to everyone, when I feel that the future is beyond my strength: too much horror to deal with and no help to turn to. My flaw now is that I feel half a murderer myself because of what Edie did. No wonder I understand murder.
It was different when I was a young police officer, before I married. I remember central London as it was then, before things got so bad: people, tough in adversity, with nothing to offer but the music in them which they played on mouth-organs at street corners or else they just sang.
I felt like a berk amongst them at first, in my uniform with its bright buttons and the helmet over my nose. Still, I began to understand them after a while. I watched them on day-shift and on night-shift, playing to the walls of their inner silence. Most coppers, unfortunately, don’t listen; it would make some of them more human if they did.
The office crowds would be leaving for home still, when I came on in the evening, or else making for the pubs. Men trailed their rags, like the sound of an old man sleeping, towards St Martin-in-the-Fields, feeling for money for a bottle; they would sit out and drink it in the dusk, sitting on the benches in Trafalgar Square. Some were mad, some pretended they were, others wished they wer
e. Once your youth has raced away from you, you can see it better when you look back, closing your eyes at night; I still smell the warm summer chestnut leaves in the parks, the hot dust of the pavements on my beat, and the fumes of traffic halted at the top of Sloane Street or Hyde Park – people going to parties by cab moving through Eaton Square in the evening, the windows down at the back, the girls in expensive dresses and the young men, their eyes as red as their overdrafts, toasting passers-by with champagne as they were transported to Belgrave Square. Then there were the street accidents – later the violence in the same warm evenings south of the river, the big bottle-and-razor fights between mods and rockers; maybe the first time you ever had to show courage was walking between them, alone, to stop it. My first inspector was maimed like that, a broken bottle across his right eye; Clarkie, we called him, a straight bloke.
There used to be a man we called Blind Jamie who stood at the corner of Villiers Street in the Strand. Some of them carry white sticks to help trade along, but he really was blind; you could see where he’d been hit in the face by shrapnel at Monte Cassino. When he turned his face up out of the dark to the street lamps, something he did at times to see if his sight might he returning, you could see the shrapnel they couldn’t get out shining in his cheeks. He wore a cap to cover his bruised features and sold the fruit his mates brought up for him from Essex and arranged on his barrow: ‘It’s amazing, you know,’ he said to me one evening, ‘the way the birds trample on me, literally trample on me for my apples. All the girlies love my apples – best apples in London, I always say; I get all my regulars queuing for them.’
Well, he’s dead now, worsted by a block of matter inside him; he died in Guy’s Hospital in the public ward, turned on his side towards the wall.
Life seems poorer without men like him, with their courage; I admire courage and self-respect. I’ve known others freeze to death in the winter; I’ve found them, covered with snow in a doorway, mistaken for a sack of coke. I’ve seen them also, clean and ready for a chat in the queue, waiting outside the office in Beechcroft Road to collect their giro from the DHSS.
I got up and tried to read, to shake off my memories and dreams. I picked up a book. But it made no difference; the book lasted far too long, like a government, and was full of stuff that could have been left out – I suppose to make it thicker-looking and more impressive on the shelves.
I dropped it on the floor. I gave up the idea of sleep. Instead I got a can of cold beer out of the fridge and drank it slowly, thinking and looking at the wall. It was ten past three. I thought about my man in the army. I thought about him all the time, no matter what else I was thinking of. I hadn’t an address for him yet, but I was sure I’d turn him up all right. I tried hard, but I couldn’t think of anyone else who would fit the plastic bags so well. I didn’t really need any more files, though I had had some up during the day. I could see all the known villains, big, small, or mediocre; in the dead of night like this I could parade them all before my eyes. Parade. It always came back to the army. My instinct, like a compass, kept swinging round to find north no matter what I did, no matter how I argued it. Finally I got up, trod on my beer can and put it in the garbage; then I went and looked out of the window onto Acacia Circus. It was what passes for peaceful in 1984 – that is, quietly threatening. I found myself thinking of when I was small. The second war was just over and my father, who had left the Fire Service to join the Engineers, used to hum a tune that was popular then:
‘We’ll meet again
Don’t know where, don’t know when,
But I know we’ll meet again
Some sunny day …’
It marked your childhood, the war, even though I was only four when it ended. My mother told me I was born during an air raid; it brought me on, she said, the bombs did. I used to listen to them both as they recalled goodbyes in uniform, a hurried kiss in the blackout, the tail-lamp of a taxi disappearing in the dark, a hand waving from a troopship, and then the telegrams (‘deeply regret … you’ll be glad to know … died like a man’).
When the telegram for his brother came my father, who was on leave, said: ‘Christ, what else could he have died like?’
My father had become part of a bomb disposal squad for landmines; quite unexpected people did remarkable things then.
Long ago one December night, when I was on the beat in Euston Road with another officer, a woman came up to me in the fog with the glow of King’s Cross station behind her and said: ‘Could you help me, please?’
‘What’s the matter?’ I said. She was crying. ‘Look, cheer up.’
‘No, I’m afraid I can’t,’ she said, ‘my heart’s broken.’ I looked at her and her expression struck me like ice in the stomach.
‘His name’s Clive Masters,’ she said, ‘he’s shot himself. We’d had a few words and I went out to calm down, and when I came back he’d shot himself. It’s just opposite – forty, Argyle Crescent, would you go? I’m afraid I can’t. I’m afraid my life’s over now.’
‘Come on, it’s never that bad.’
‘Don’t you really understand?’ she said.
The city roared softly in the night.
My partner and I had separated, but he came up presently and I said look after her while I go and see. The house was all bedsitters and the landlord and I went to the room. The gas fire there was going out because there was no more money in the meter. There was the unmade bed, and there was the body on it – a small body it looked too, with the blood on the bedding and the white unshaven face and a silly two-two pistol on the floor. Well, we got the usual mob round to the place – lab, fingerprints, a detective-inspector. At last a squad car came and I was going to see her into it and carry on with my duty when she looked at me with eyes that I shall always remember, they were so dark blue, and said: ‘You’ll come with me, won’t you?’ and the inspector said yes, it was OK. Going back she told me she had wanted to be an actress and I said well, you will be, but she said no, not now, where are we going? I said to the station for a cup of tea, and then we’ll put you to bed there. In a cell? she said and I said no, in the duty room. Whereupon she was silent with me in the back except that once she cried out oh, Clive, come back, come back! Then she looked at me again and said, what am I going to do now? What would you do now, if you were me? Well, it was no good, I was young, I didn’t know and couldn’t tell her, and I still don’t know what I would have done if I’d been her. Then we got back to Tottenham Court Road and she went away with the inspector to make a statement and I didn’t see her any more.
‘Not all fun in this job, is it, sonny?’ said the duty sergeant. ‘Well, piss off then, you’ve got a report to make on it; I want it at nine sharp.’
I heard her cry from one of the interrogation rooms: ‘Oh, when may I love somebody, please?’
‘But that’s from Noël Coward!’ said a young copper who was standing nearby. ‘Private Lives, that is. Fancy!’
‘What do you think you’re in?’ said the duty sergeant. ‘Amateur dramatics or something?’
‘That’s right!’ said the young constable eagerly. ‘I’m playing the lead in The Doll’s House over at Finsbury Park Saturday night at the Grand; it’s going to run right over Christmas. Why don’t you come and bring the missis, sarge? Tickets are only five bob.’ He babbled happily on: ‘Now that’s really sad, The Doll’s House. I play the husband, see, and I just can’t believe it at the end there, when the girl says she’s going to leave me – I’ve been blind and uncaring all my life, see?’
‘That don’t surprise me at all,’ the sergeant said.
I went down the room to where I couldn’t hear them so well, but he followed me and went on: ‘Yes, a real tragedy, the lines just speak themselves. Norwegian feller wrote it, geezer called Ibsen. That’s right, Norwegian – same as that maniac we caught up north that time who interfered with all those young men and buried them in his garden.’
I was very angry and stood with my back to him thinking of some
lines I remembered from Coward myself: ‘I’ll leave you never, love you for ever.’
Private Lives.
15
For all his supposedly outstanding service record, this man I was getting interested in had killed Corporal Dick Brownlow in a cowardly and brutal manner, garrotting him at two in the morning as he came out of the latrines at Saighton Camp, Chester, where both men were on an unarmed combat course. It was established at the trial that the two had never got on and that my man, while acting-sergeant because most of the course were on weekend leave, had gone out of his way to fuck Brownlow about, because it had been asserted by witnesses that Brownlow had suggested more than once that my bloke was a murdering queer. Various witnesses had proposed a grudge fight. But my man hadn’t waited for that; he killed Brownlow stone dead in the dark, took the body to his car, drove to a canal and dumped the body in it. When the SIB came down my bloke denied any involvement, po-faced, even after it became obvious that, apart from motive, he was the only soldier who couldn’t establish his whereabouts for two in the morning. Brownlow was done with a piece of piano wire, and a witness from another unit stated that he had seen the suspect taking one out of a piano that was being broken up by four defaulters with a pair of cutters. Two of Brownlow’s hairs were also found in the boot of the suspect’s car. When they arrested him he just shrugged and went away with them in handcuffs, politely smiling.
Yes, he conducted his own defence, speaking always in a quiet, restrained manner with a trace of Ulster in his speech.
He was as guilty as a man can be. The jury unanimously found him guilty and the judge said: ‘Because of your military record I shall mitigate the sentence I would have imposed and send you to prison for ten years, with the recommendation that you do every day of it. Take him down.’