by Rod Glenn
The young lad turned to him. Seeing the drunken man’s growing anger, he at once said, “Sorry, man. Didn’t mean to knock you, like.”
Even in his drunken state, Ron was easily capable of grabbing the lad by the scruff of his jacket. He yanked him towards him and snarled in his face, “Sorry isn’t good enough, you cheeky little prick.”
Both Duncan and John lunged for him, dragging them apart.
His eyes wide and his voice shaking with terror, the boy cried, “Get off us!”
“Ron!” Big Joe bellowed, discarding the half-filled pint. His voice silenced the entire pub in an instant. “Get off the laddie, NOW!” He rushed round to the other side of the bar to join Duncan and John who were struggling to free the frightened youth.
“Got nee respect!” Ron shouted, shaking him roughly. Spittle flew into the boy’s contorted face.
Big Joe reached them, puffing and panting. He grabbed Ron’s shoulder. Ron, reacting, rather than thinking, lashed out, catching Big Joe across the chin with his elbow. The blow brought tears to the landlord’s eyes, but he maintained his grip, and in a calm, sincere tone, said, “Ron, pal, it’s time fae yae tae get yourself away home tae Erika. She needs yae.” The last three words came out almost as a plea.
Bryce and Duncan both relaxed their grips of his arm and coat. The fury ebbed away, leaving Ron looking tired and dejected. He released the young lad, who immediately backed away to his two friends who had been observing nervously from a safe distance.
“Take him home,” Big Joe said, patting Ron gently on the shoulder. His chin was reddening from the blow, but he appeared not to notice. He glanced in the direction of the three lads. “I’ll get yae three laddies a drink on the hoose, eh?”
Duncan and John escorted Ron out of the Miller’s and down Main Street. They had walked only a few yards from the door when Ron stopped and turned to look at them. His eyes were wet with tears. His voice was heavy with emotion as he said, “I-I’m sorry.”
Duncan put a hand on his shoulder. “It’s okay, mate. We understand, honestly we do.” Bryce nodded earnestly.
Tears openly streamed down his cheeks as he looked at his two friends with a mixture of desperation and despair. “I just … where is she? What happened to my baby?” He thrust his hands to his face as his knees buckled under him. Making no attempt to stop himself, he dropped to the pavement heavily. Sobbing, he cried, “Mandy!”
Duncan instinctively bent to help him. Bryce shook his head and said quietly, “Nah, mate. Give him a sec.” Instead, they both placed a hand on each of his trembling shoulders as he sobbed uncontrollably for several minutes.
After the dinner party with John and Sally, which turned out to be a very enjoyable and drunken evening, Whitman and Lisa seemed to be accepted by the rest of the village as a couple. This amused Whitman and delighted Lisa. For Lisa, it was the most accepted she had ever felt. For Whitman, the settling into a relationship for the first time in years was a refreshing tonic. He felt at ease and composed … content even.
The majority of the villagers had come to accept him as part of the furniture, and his relationship with Lisa certainly helped cement that. The most notable exception being Miss Marple-meets-Bet Lynch. Tess Runckle was like a pitbull with a bone, refusing to give up on her theories and making no attempt to be discreet about them. Everyone and anyone to whom she spoke got the speech about Mister Murder (Dean Koontz at his best – shame about the film).
The sideways glances from Tess and some of her cronies, including that camp goon, Moe (Sloth to his friends … Hey you guys!), were really starting to get under his skin, despite his overall contentment.
He had decided, and Lisa, John and Big Joe all agreed, that the best course of action was to ignore it. She was the El Supremo of gossip, nay, the Goddess of Gossip, and everyone knew it. Who, apart from Sloth, would really take her seriously?
But still, it was irritating.
So, maybe he should go talk to her? Straighten things out once and for all. What harm could it do to put the old girl’s mind at ease? Yeah, maybe that was best; clear the air. Then they could drink to each other’s health (as long as it wasn’t Merlot. I am NOT drinking any fucking Merlot!). Aye, he could just see that happening … not.
No, he should just leave well enough alone. Let the sleeping bitch lie.
I’m a firestarter, twisted firestarter.
Despite the warm, still evening, Jimmy Coulson shivered and drew his crumpled long coat together. In the back of his mind, he knew that the shiver had nothing to do with feeling a sudden chill, but it was still a comfort factor. The dressings had gone from his face, but around his eyes looked as bruised as ever and his nose had set with a slight kink on the bridge. The doctor at the Minor Injuries Unit at Rothbury Community Hospital had offered to reset it, but he told him where to get off.
He walked purposefully down the road to Belmont Motors, his hands shoved deep into his pockets. He could see that the office light was still on and that Steve’s vaguely shabby-looking red Porsche 911 Carrera was still on the gravelled bit of waste ground that served as the car park to the side of the forecourt.
As he approached, he met James Falkirk, Steve’s salesman-come-assistant manager-come-dogsbody, and Paul Mason, the particularly greasy grease-monkey coming the other way.
“Alreet, Jimmy?” Paul said casually, talking through the rollie sticking out of the corner of his mouth. “Goin’ to see the boss?”
Jimmy sniffed his dribbling nose and merely nodded, lacking the inclination to enter into an inane conversation.
Paul jabbed a grimy thumb towards the office. “Y’nar where to find him.”
Jimmy muttered and walked past them.
“You look like shit, Jimmy,” James jokily called after him. “You get hit by a bus?”
“Get stuffed.”
James rolled his eyes and followed the bandy-legged Paul back to the village. “Freak.”
Jimmy continued up to the office, a single-story wooden semi-permanent portacabin, with cracked and peeling white paintwork. The light was on, but the blinds were drawn on the only window. He paused at the bottom of the two metal-rung steps, shivering ever so slightly. What sort of proposition did Steve have that would pay big bucks? It would solve his money problems, that’s for sure, so did it matter? Did he care? He needed a fix so goddamn badly.
At the fringe of the car park, a figure watched, squatting behind an unkempt hedgerow.
Wiping cold sweat from his brow, Jimmy pushed on up the steps and shoved the door open.
Steve was sat behind his desk with his trousers round his ankles and Janet Herring sat in his lap, her leather skirt hitched up to her waist and facing away from him. She was bouncing up and down on him, moaning softly. He had his eyes closed and his head tilted upwards.
“Shit, sorry, man!” Jimmy blurted out.
Steve’s eyes shot open and he turned to the intruder, startled and red-faced. “What the …?”
“Dipshit,” Janet snapped, immediately leaping off and smoothing her skirt down. Anger adequately concealed the burst of shame she suddenly felt.
Pulling his trousers and briefs up to cover his flagging excitement, Steve growled, “How many bastard times have I told you to knock first, Jimmy, you retard?” The fury in his voice was joined by a slight trembling in his hands as he finished zipping up his trousers.
Jimmy quickly averted his eyes, staring at the various dull mediocre achievements on the wall, including several football awards dating back to high school. “Sorry, Steve, man, I didn’t realise, mate, like. Just … needed to see you ’bout that job.”
While fixing his belt, Steve said in a more even tone, “It’s Mister Belmont to you, Gonzo, and I’m not your mate. Christ, it’s not enough that we’ve got Carol spying on us at every opportunity, now we’ve got stinky here too.”
As Janet straightened her blouse, muttering under her breath, Steve stormed over to the fidgeting Jimmy. He grabbed him by the collar and spun him roun
d to face him. Pulling him close, Steve sneered, “You ever do that again and I will cut your balls off and feed them to you. You got that, you stinking pile of pig shit?”
Arching his neck back to try to hold his face as far away from Steve’s as possible, Jimmy said quickly, “Yeah, Ste—I mean Mister Belmont. I understand, man, I’m sorry.” Steve tightened his grip around the young man’s neck, drawing the collar tight around his jugular. Gasping, Jimmy whispered hoarsely, “Please!”
“Steve!” Janet shouted, folding her arms across her chest.
After a quick glance at Janet’s stern expression, Steve shoved him back against the flimsy wall, shaking several of the framed awards. He turned back to Janet, his face still flushed, but his expression changing to rueful. “Sorry about this, babe. Me and Jimmy here have some business to attend to. Can we continue this later?”
Grabbing her jacket, Janet snapped, “No, it’s not alright, Steve. I’m sick of this shit. Larry will be back in an hour, so that’s fucked everything now, hasn’t it?” She snatched her Prada bag from the desk and stormed past them.
“Babe, I’ll make it up to you.”
“I’m sick of all this sneaking around.” She paused at the door and dropped her head to stare at the cheap lino floor. Tears started to well up.
Steve grabbed her and pulled her to him. “Sorry, babe – it’s not going to be for much longer, I promise.” Lifting her head gently, he said sincerely, “I’ll have the money soon enough and then we can get out of this hole once and for all and start over together.”
She sagged against him and slipped her arms around his waist.
He bent down to kiss her tenderly. At first she pulled away, but then returned it, hesitantly at first, then eagerly.
After she had departed, Steve wiped his lips and sat back down behind the desk. Jimmy shuffled across the floor after him, his head hanging down sheepishly.
“Okay, Jimmy. Here’s the deal.” Steve leaned back in his fake leather chair and put his hands behind his head. “I wanted to go over this at a more convenient time, but as you’re here and you’ve bollocksed up my evening, now’s as good a time as any.” Staring evenly at a young man who found it difficult to return his confident glare lifted his mood somewhat. He continued, his tone almost jovial. “You’re going to torch the lot for me, and it has to be an accident beyond all doubt – I can’t stress this enough, dimwit. Any sniff and we’re both fucked. In return I’ll give you enough blow to last you months. Plus, I’ll throw in five hundred quid to keep you in toasties and sugar puffs.” His smile had an almost predatory look to it.
With a glint of restored confidence, Jimmy rubbed his trembling hands together and asked sceptically, “What about a thou’?”
Steve sat forward purposefully and glared at him. “Don’t get smart, boy. This ain’t pissin’ eBay; there ain’t no bartering here. You take it or leave it.”
Nodding frantically, Jimmy quickly said, “Sure, okay, okay, you got it, Mister Belmont.” With his head still nodding involuntarily, he added, “I gotta take care of that Whitman wanker, too, like. I told you about that shit, yeah?”
Steve nodded. “Aye, whatever, as long as it doesn’t interfere with the lot, you got that?” Looking the scruffy junkie up and down with open disgust, he added, “Now, I’ll tell you when you’re going to do it, when the time is right, but for now I want you to revise your arson skills and work out exactly how you’re going to do it.”
Outside, the figure behind the hedge watched Janet Herring leave and walk back towards the village.
The sclera of two unblinking eyes appeared to burn through the twilight like white-hot metal. Grinding his teeth, Larry gripped the brambles at his feet in one hand and squeezed tightly on the thorns. A thin trickle of blood oozed between his clenched fingers and dripped amongst the weeds. His snorted breathing sounded feral.
A second figure, several feet inside the tree line, opposite the car lot, also observed Janet Herring leaving the portacabin. A trembling hand brought a cigarette up to thin, pursed lips. Carol Belmont drew in a shaky breath and blew out a cloud of blue-grey smoke into the still night air. Her wide eyes glowed with the embers from the tip of her cigarette.
Later that night, sat at his laptop, Whitman, too, eavesdropped on the exchange. He sat back in his chair as the sound file fell silent and rubbed his bearded chin, mulling over the development. Could it be used to his advantage? Possibly.
Day trip to Newcastle.
Steadily, Whitman and Lisa spent more and more time together. He had even been allowed to stay overnight at her flat. Haley had seemed nonplussed at his presence the next morning, but had just quietly taken her crayons and colouring book to the small plastic kitchen table and started colouring in farm animals.
The kitchen was cramped, with cheap council units and old battered appliances. The lino was cracked and peeling around the edges and toys and clutter littered the floor and every surface, but the place was clean. Lisa took pride in that.
Dressed in jeans and a crumpled Reservoir Dogs t-shirt, depicting the iconic scene of a prone Steve Buscemi and a looming Harvey Keitel, aiming pistols at each other, Whitman padded past the table in bare feet (careful to avoid stray plastic animals, a headless Barbie and several stuffed toys of all shapes, sizes and colours). He offered Haley a warm smile, but her look was distinctly noncommittal.
Lisa, dressed in Bagpuss cotton pyjamas, was standing at the kitchen worktop buttering toast.
Whitman walked up behind her and kissed her softly on the back of the neck.
“Hey,” she said smiling and turning to look at him. “Okay?” The question was clearly relating to the Walton’s family scene that he suddenly found himself in.
Whitman smiled and kissed her on the lips. “Sure, princess.” Swiping a piece of toast off the glass chopping board, he added, “Say, as it’s a day of rest, why don’t we take a trip to Newcastle and have a mooch around the Quayside.”
Leaning against the kitchen unit, Lisa mulled it over while biting into a piece of her toast. “Haven’t been down there for years and Haley’s never been.” She turned and half crouched to her daughter. “What do you think, angel? You wanna go to Newcastle for the day?” Whitman smiled at the way Lisa attempted to speak more clearly when addressing her daughter.
Haley carefully placed the crayon back into its carton and closed the colouring book. Looking at her mother, she said, “Sure, Mammy, that’ll be cool.”
Whitman swallowed the rest of his toast and clapped his hands together. “That’s settled then!”
The sunny morning drive through the countryside was pleasant, with light-hearted banter, intermingling with the occasional game of ‘punch buggy’ or ‘mini nip’. Haley sat belted into the back seat of the Daihatsu with a big grin on her face, her colouring book and pens splayed out around her. Every five minutes, she would point to a new wonder that caught her eye; three small grey wild rabbits munching happily on the grassy verge, sheep and cattle grazing in the fields, an immaculate sky blue 1957 Fordson tractor, making infuriatingly slow progress along the road ahead of them, the bottle-green, fast running waters of the River Coquet, with its mayflies and stoneflies buzzing above rippling water and along the overhanging wooded banks. Each new sight was a magical delight to the eyes of the small child.
Whitman could not help but smile as he caught her giddy expression in the rear view mirror. Glancing across to Lisa, he noted that she, too, held a similar look. She sensed his eyes upon her and turned to smile at him.
After a short stop in Rothbury for a cold drink in Harley’s, they crossed through the bustling seventeenth century village of Longframlington. Posters and bunting were still up from the annual Longframlington Show which had taken place only the day before. Driving leisurely through the village, Haley was quick to point out the Lion Trough Fountain as they cruised by. “Lion!” she exclaimed proudly.
“That’s right, angel,” Lisa said, turning in her seat to smile at her.
On
ce through ‘Longfram’, they joined the A1 southbound and headed towards Newcastle. After skirting around Morpeth, followed by Stannington, they took the Gosforth North exit, and drove through Gosforth High Street and past the Town Moors. Finally, around lunchtime, they drove into Newcastle City Centre.
Once they had located a car park on Dean Street, filled with trendy bars and bistros (and, remembered Whitman, the primary location for the jazz-fuelled northern film noir flick, Stormy Monday), they walked out into the sunshine onto the steep bank and headed down towards the Quayside. After strolling through the pedestrianised area of the Side, bustling mainly with tourists and students, they walked under the Tyne Bridge and onto the main stretch of Newcastle’s Quayside.
Haley, giggling and staring wide-eyed at the huge green bridge looming above them, skipped along in front of Whitman and Lisa, as they walked hand in hand. Ahead of them, the wide boulevard stretched out, with the white sleek arc of the Millennium Bridge crossing the gap between the ultra-modern Pitcher & Piano on the Newcastle side and the austere Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art on the Gateshead side. In between, next to the Baltic, was the mammoth glass and steel slug-looking Sage Gateshead Music Centre.
As they headed along towards the Millennium Bridge, Lisa slipped an arm around Whitman’s waist and squeezed him close. “Thanks for this, Han. I’ve never seen Haley’s eyes light up so much.”
Kissing her cheek, Whitman said, “My pleasure.”
“It’s good to get away from Haydon,” she added with the hint of a frown. “Can get a bit claustrophobic sometimes.”
Whitman nodded, but remained quiet. Instead, he gave her an encouraging squeeze.
As they passed a young Caucasian couple in shorts and t-shirts having their photo taken by an elderly oriental gent in a reverse cliché, Haley, still skipping, asked excitedly, “Can we cross the blendy-blidge, Mammy?”