by Lee Weeks
‘Yeah. He’s gone down the seedy route; ripping tourists off in clip joints.’
‘There’s no doubt Digger could do it. I’ve been looking into Martingale. Whatever Martingale does he does for a price and for fame. He sponsors so many good causes. He has funds going for research into just about every known disease. But Martingale doesn’t do anything if no one’s watching. He’s devoted his life to writing papers.’
‘But his personal life?’
‘You guessed it . . . something had to give and that was it. He’s had two failed marriages; both times lasted months rather than years. He still has no shortage of women . . . he’s been linked to quite a few, but he never takes it to the next level with them. He’s in love with his work and maybe himself. Most of his decisions in life have been driven by financial gain. He was offered permanent teaching positions in most of the leading hospitals; he turned them down. He keeps his hand in with the NHS, maybe doing one or two high-profile operations a year, but most of the time he’s delegating and not doing.’
‘What about his whereabouts? What’s his address for most of the year?’
‘He is seasonal. He likes his springs here. He likes to show orchids and there are shows all over the country. The biggest, most prestigious happen in March. He has to come here from Christmas to get them ready. When he’s here he lives in his mother’s old home in Hampstead. It wasn’t where he grew up. He spent most of his life living abroad when his father was in the army.’
‘You asked if Digger knew Martingale? The answer is yes, they were seen around in the Sixties although they didn’t really move in the same circles for long. Martingale would have probably gone into Cain’s. It wasn’t quite as seedy then.’
Carmichael thanked Micky and hung up. He went into the office and dragged out the old abandoned mattress and pulled it down to the far wall of the club. He propped it up and pinned five pieces of paper on it: one in each corner and one in the centre. He drew a circle on each then went behind the bar, pulled out his rifle and switched on the night vision. He took a shot at each target in turn, working his way round the four corners, and finally he took a shot at the centre circle. Then he walked over to see how he’d scored. He was dead centre on four out of five. The bottom left was a millimetre off. For the four he’d hit he drew smaller circles an inch away from the first ones. For the fifth he’d have to wait till he got it right. Carmichael walked back to the bar and looked back at the laptop.
He went back to see what Ebony had been writing:
The more I listen to people talk about Carmichael, the more confused I am. I have to stay with my own impressions. I believe he is someone who served his country, served his family to the best of his ability. If he failed in either it would have eaten him up. If he failed he wouldn’t want to live with himself. But mental illness turns some people into monsters . . . could my mum have killed if she hadn’t been really sick? Not herself? She says she can’t remember doing it . . . can she? I saw her that day. I saw the monster she became. She says she doesn’t remember. A moment of madness is one thing. But watching someone bleed to death on the kitchen floor while you calmly make tea? And Mum lies. I have heard her make up stories all my life. She’s an expert liar. Carmichael lied to me . . . has he lied to himself? Is he like my mother? Is he a monster?
By the end of the night the mattress was peppered with holes.
Chapter 23
The next morning Carter walked into the Intel office. ‘Is the surveillance on Cain’s in place, Robbo?’
‘No . . . not yet . . . I’m waiting to hear. The problem is the property was put up for sale and is under offer and the buyers aren’t going to let us in there.’
‘Fuck . . . is there anywhere else we can use? We can’t afford to wait any longer. If Sonny gets wind of things he’ll be gone. Soon Blackdown Barn will be all over the news and Chichester will know that his treasure didn’t stay buried. Realistically, Robbo . . . how long . . . any hope?’
‘Realistically? Too long.’
‘Right . . . decision made . . . we’ll do the heavy-handed approach instead.’ He phoned Ebony. She was in the warehouse looking at the rest of the Carmichael exhibits and organizing for them to be shipped back to Fletcher House.
‘Meet me in Soho.’
Carter parked the car in the underground car park. He emerged up on ground level, pulled up the collar on his coat and waited by the paying kiosk for Ebony. He sent a text to Cabrina.
‘Can’t bear the thought of Christmas without you.’
Ebony found Carter scrolling through his messages. He put his phone away when he realized she was there. They walked along the water-logged pavement where the melting snow had turned into dirty slush. They stopped at the Crystal Blue: the clip joint next to Cain’s that Digger also owned but didn’t admit to. It was part of the same building, connected by an entrance behind the bar at Cain’s.
An ageing Thai woman dressed in an elf’s costume stood in the doorway. She huddled by an electric heater in the entrance before stepping back out onto the street and trying to coax someone in.
‘You wanna see me dance? Five pounds.’ Her teeth chattered with the cold.
‘Is Santa in?’ Carter asked.
Two men appeared behind him. One did the talking. The other stared.
‘Two hundred for two drinks. Two hundred more to see her dance.’
‘A lovely girl like that . . . too cheap. Do you take plastic?’ Carter opened his wallet and took out his warrant card. ‘Is Digger here?’
The man spoke in Russian to his silent friend and then left to deliver the message. He returned a few moments later.
‘Come with me . . .’
They followed him next door into Cain’s. Three women were practising their Xmas-themed strip on the podium when Carter and Ebony were led to Digger’s table. He was sitting on the edge of the dance floor at one of the tables framed by velvet curtains. Ebony had a quick glance around the club. She’d heard of it, of course, but never been inside. She was surprised to see how jaded it looked. The women carried on dancing to ‘Santa Baby’.
Digger watched them walk across towards him. He kept his eyes on Carter. He was trying to get the measure of him by his walk, his demeanour. He could see the glint of gold on his fingers. Carter looked down at Digger and smiled:
‘Mr Cain?’
Digger returned his smile. ‘Detective?’
‘I’m Sergeant Carter and this is DC Willis.’
Digger leant back to get a better view of Ebony. He smiled at her. She didn’t smile back.
‘Know him?’ Carter showed him the photo of Sonny taken outside Cain’s.
Digger took the photo.
‘No, sorry.’
Ebony walked across to a woman washing glasses behind the bar. Digger nodded across to Ray the barman to stay with her.
‘Do you know this man?’ She showed her a photo of Sonny. The woman looked across at Ray. Then she shook her head. Her face was grey: waxy, sweaty. ‘ID?’ Her bones stuck out of her narrow shoulders. ‘I need to see your ID,’ Ebony repeated.
Ray came to stand very close. ‘I look after it for her.’
Ebony turned to face him. ‘And what about you . . . some ID?’
Ray smiled. ‘Sure . . . Miss . . . it’s in the office. Don’t keep it on me, you understand; I’m as British as you are, of course.’
The woman returned to washing glasses, head down. Ebony glanced towards the table and Carter. He was still talking to Digger. Digger’s attention was elsewhere.
‘Get it now.’
Ray went through the door at the end of the bar. Ebony waited a few moments and then she followed. Ahead of her was an old part of the building, the paint on the walls peeling from the damp. She tried the handle of the first door on her left. Inside, a woman was changing. She froze when she saw Ebony. Ebony stepped inside the room and let the door close silently behind her.
‘Your name?’
‘Tanya.’
‘T
his man, Tanya?’ She held up the photo of Sonny. ‘You know him?’
For a few seconds Tanya hesitated then she gave a small nod.
‘Here?’
‘Yes. He was here last night. He’s here most nights.’
There was the sound of a door closing further down the corridor and then approaching footsteps. Ebony stepped back out into the corridor.
Ray looked past her into the dressing room.
‘You need a warrant to search.’
‘Just looking for the toilet, got lost . . . Got the ID?’ She took it off him and looked at his first and then the woman’s and gave it back. ‘Thanks . . .’ She followed him back out into the club. Carter was ready to leave. He was wrapping up:
‘We know you know him, Digger. Shall I tell you why? Because he is one of the biggest traffickers of women in the UK – one of the last of the Brits to still be running a racket with the Albanians and the Romanians.’
Digger swept his arm around towards the stage and the three women.
‘As you can see, my dancers are locals.’
Carter looked at the dancers. ‘Keep it that way. We’ll be here tomorrow and every day after that, Digger, until you start remembering who and where Sonny is. We’ll be putting a squad car outside your club twenty-four seven just to reassure your punters that the police care. Here’s my card. You phone when you have a sudden urge to save your business.’
Back on the street they passed the porno elf, who was shovelling noodles into her mouth from a takeaway box. She scowled at them.
‘I found one of the girls backstage who recognized Sonny,’ Ebony said as they walked back to the car. ‘She said he was here last night.’
‘By now he’ll know we’re after him. Digger will have seen to that. Digger won’t like us going in there. He won’t like the extra police activity affecting business. These are lean times. He may be keen to distance himself from Sonny. He certainly won’t want him in his club. Sonny will do one of two things – go underground or brazen it out.’
Chapter 24
At eight that evening Carmichael parked his Jag behind a red Ferrari outside the small cocktail bar off Islington Green. This bar was new to him but Islington Green was the same as it had always been. Across the road from where he parked, there was the same fruit and veg shop that he and Louise had made special trips to. He was amazed at how whole areas of London had changed since he’d been away, while other places hadn’t even changed shopkeepers.
It was a tiny bar, like sitting in someone’s front room. There were a few friends at one of the tables and a couple at another. The mood was dark and intimate. As he walked in he saw Sonny, his broad thighs perched on the edge of a bar stool.
‘What you having?’ Sonny asked.
‘A single malt. Thanks for agreeing to show me round . . . appreciated.’
Sonny grunted. He wasn’t happy. Since the police visit earlier, Digger had ordered him to hang fire on bringing any more girls in for a few weeks and told him to stay out of Cain’s. Digger was hoping the new man Hart would discreetly take a few of the girls off his hands.
When the drinks arrived they moved to one of the tables and sat across from one another.
‘So . . . where did you come from, Hart? Did some checking. You seem to have arrived here out of thin air. You got some high-up friends – but most of them are dead.’ He made a sound like laughter and his eyes narrowed like a cat’s as he studied Carmichael. When Sonny blinked his eyes shut a little too long it was as if they became stuck for a fraction of a second. ‘You spent some time in South America? What was your business out there?’
Carmichael smiled into his whisky. ‘Staying alive. What does anyone do out there? Same business the world over . . . make money.’
Sonny sat back and studied Carmichael. ‘You buy a brand-new car like that?’ He gestured towards the Jag outside. ‘You must have made a lot of money. There’s a lot about you which looks good on paper but doesn’t really add up – like the fact you walk like a Para . . . you got Sandhurst on your CV?’
Carmichael smiled. ‘It’s a good guess but it’s not right . . . airforce, not Marines.’ Carmichael was about to see how Micky’s story would stand up to scrutiny. ‘You want to know how? I’m going to level with you, Sonny, because I think maybe we can do business better that way. I was in the airforce straight from school; got my pilot’s licence there, learned to fly a helicopter and just about anything in the air. But by the time I was thirty I was sick of it; realized there was more to life than serving queen and country and I could earn a lot more doing commercial work. For a time I worked in the Pacific, tracking tuna, then I went off travelling, went to join an old girlfriend in South America. Then she disappeared on me. I went looking and found out that she’d been acquired by some local cartel. I joined forces with the men I needed to get her back. I found my skills were sought after. Started making a name for myself transporting people in and out of trouble; I’m a good shot, I can handle myself. I’m discreet, hard-working.’
Sonny couldn’t hide the admiration on his face:
‘Did you get her back?’
‘Yes. But, you know what? Love’s a fickle thing and I have to say it didn’t feel the same. Shortly after that she disappeared for good.’ He watched Sonny’s reaction. Sonny laughed.
‘It’s a good story, Hart. Let’s hope it’s true, for your sake. You want to see what Digger was talking about? Let’s go.’
So far so good; well done, Micky, thought Carmichael.
They drove down towards Finsbury Park in Sonny’s red Ferrari and stopped on a street with once-elegant Victorian semi-detached and terraced houses. Now the big houses had been subdivided so many times they had become warrens for prostitutes and pushers. After they parked up, Sonny called three lads over and paid them twenty quid to both look after the car and leave it alone.
Sonny led the way across the street and in through a wrought-iron gate to a house second from the end. They had to step over a pile of rubbish at the foot of the steps leading to the front door. As they walked up the steps a dog went ballistic in the basement flat trying to get out to rip them to shreds. Sonny rang the bell to the ground-floor flat.
They heard the sound of keys in the door. A sickly-looking mixed-race lad answered the door. He had big ears, bad skin and his head was too small to be shaved the way it was.
‘You wanna clean up outside, Tyrone; we’ll be attracting vermin,’ Sonny said to the boy. He shuffled nervously in front of them; his clothes were baggy, the crotch of his jeans between his knees, as he led the way inside.
‘Yes, boss. Sorry, boss . . . it’s the foxes. They got clever, worked out how to open the rubbish box.’ Tyrone looked at Carmichael.
‘Yeah, well clean it up before the neighbours complain and you get a visit from the filth.’
‘It’s all good, boss.’ He punctuated his speech with sniffs from his cocaine-wrecked nose.
Sonny slapped him on the back. ‘Course, Tyrone.’ Snot erupted bubbling out of both nostrils and was retrieved by a sleeve. ‘Of course it is . . . This is Mr Hart. He’s come to look at the merchandise. Tyrone here is the manager. I bring the girls in and Tyrone looks after them for Digger. Plus he earns a bit on the side for his friends, which he thinks I don’t know about.’
Tyrone turned and raised the free arm as a greeting – the other one still wiping away snot. He did his best to look happy to see them. He didn’t look quite so happy with the news that Sonny knew he let his friends have a special deal with the girls.
‘Show us then,’ Sonny ordered.
Inside the windowless rooms girls stared out at them. Four to a room they waited in their underwear to be chosen. Carmichael thought they looked at him the way his sheep did when they were waiting for slaughter. He recognized the young country girl Anna from Digger’s club. Her eyes lingered on his. He thought about Sophie.
‘Do you want to choose some girls, boss?’ Tyrone asked. Sonny looked at Carmichael. He shook his head in a
nswer.
Sonny led the way back towards the front of the flat and into a room on the left. A screen showing porn was on in the corner of the room. The room had an aroma of sickly sweet perfume and sex. There was a Florida-style cocktail bar in the corner. There were two sofas, and a coffee table between them.
Sonny went across to the bar and poured Carmichael a large whisky and handed it to him. The porno moaning in the background rose and fell.
‘You interested in these girls?’ Sonny asked.
Carmichael shrugged. ‘Maybe. I was looking for top quality. Not sure these fit the bill.’
Sonny looked momentarily put out but recovered fast. ‘You tell me what you need and I’ll get it special order.’
‘Sounds promising. You’re an ambitious man, Sonny . . . You purely about supply? You’re not interested in having your own club?’
He shook his head. ‘I like what I do. I want to hang onto my head. Don’t want to have it kicked in. I know what I’m good at. At the moment . . . If I could I would take over some of the routes from the fucking Turks and Albanians.’
‘. . . it’s just Digger you supply? And Digger makes arrangements to sell the girls on?’
‘Yeah . . . like I said . . . I’m up against it with the fucking Turks and Albanians. I have to keep my hand around their throats otherwise they’d have me.’
‘So what? You just waiting for that day?’
‘No. But it’s a hard business to trust in. I want to take over a couple of the big routes. Most of the contacts from the old days have gone. At the moment I don’t step on too many toes. I get left alone.’
‘So you need to stamp on some heads, not toes.’ The room had become charged. Sonny was beginning to get excited.
‘If I had the backing . . .’
‘I might consider investing in your business.’
Sonny crashed his glass against Carmichael’s and beamed. Carmichael stood and downed his drink, ready to leave.