William agreed that this was the most likely place. “The Dog House,” he said. “That’s the pub they go to. How appropriate.”
He knew the way. Eddie took him there on his birthday each year—William paying, of course—so he knew where it was. Stevie went there as well, and on one occasion William had paid for his drinks too, and for the drinks of Stevie’s girlfriend, Poosie. He had ended up paying for everybody, in fact, and Eddie had said at the end of the evening, when he, William, had thanked him, “My pleasure, Dad. Any time.”
Marcia parked the van in a nearby street and they made their way to where the Dog House, with its large, welcoming windows, dominated a street corner. William glanced through the windows hoping to catch a glimpse of Eddie but the pub was busy and he could not see him.
“Now listen,” said Marcia as they went through the door, “don’t let him sweet-talk you in any way. He’s in the wrong, remember.”
William nodded grimly. But righteous anger is all very well when one is on one’s home ground; here at the Dog House he was on Eddie’s turf.
“See him?” asked Marcia, peering about the dimly lit bar.
William shook his head. “I’ll ask somebody,” he said.
He looked about him. Immediately to his left, a small group of people around a table had the air of being locals. He tapped one gently on the shoulder and the man looked up at him.
“You don’t know Eddie French, do you?”
“Yup. I know him.”
“Has he been in?”
The man looked at his fellow drinkers. “Anybody seen Eddie?”
“Yes,” said one. “He was in when I turned up. He went off a few minutes ago. Him and Stevie and that girl who hangs around with Stevie. They went off with that geezer who owns Diesel. I saw them going up the lane there—over there. See? That one. Few minutes ago.”
William turned to Marcia upon hearing this information. Diesel? Who, or what, was Diesel? And what would be going on in the lane?
69. Freddie de la Hay in Peril
“I DON’T LIKE the sound of this,” said Marcia.
“Nor do I,” muttered William. He wondered how well he knew his own son. Not very well, it appeared, what with the discovery of stolen property in his wardrobe and now finding him consorting in the pub with somebody who owned something called Diesel.
They walked swiftly and in silence a short distance up the road to the small lane that the man in the pub had indicated. It was a narrow one-way street, barely large enough to allow the passage of a vehicle, and not a very wide vehicle at that. On either side were shop windows—a barber’s, a cramped newsagent, an Indian restaurant from which an enticing smell of spices drifted.
“No sign of them,” said William, peering through the window of the restaurant to see if he could see Eddie and his friends within. “Is this the right place, do you think?”
Marcia had spotted an entrance further up to the right—the mouth of a close or a small courtyard, she thought. “Let’s take a look up there,” she said.
The entrance, a gangway between two buildings, was little more than a passage, dark even on this summer evening and slightly malodorous in an indefinable way. But as they entered it they heard sounds coming from the far end, and William stopped when he recognised Eddie’s laugh. He caught Marcia by the sleeve and pointed ahead.
“That’s them,” he whispered. “That was Eddie’s laugh.”
“Right,” Marcia whispered back. “Let’s go and see what they’re up to.” She had an idea already but hardly dared utter it. Now a barking sound drifted up the passage and she knew that she was right.
At the end of the passage, tucked away to one side, was something midway between a courtyard and a postage stamp of waste ground. As they came upon it, they saw Eddie to one side of the space, next to Stevie and Poosie, and on the other side was a thick-set man with a shaved head and a tattooed neck. And there was Freddie de la Hay, held at the collar by Stevie and facing a large white bull terrier that was, like its owner, extensively tattooed. As they came upon this scene, the bull terrier had just been released by his owner and was glaring at Freddie de la Hay, his teeth exposed in hostile rictus, emitting a low growling sound.
It was what Marcia had suspected—an organised dog fight.
“Eddie!” shouted William. “What on earth are you doing?”
Eddie spun round to face his father, staring at him speechlessly.
“What does it look like, mate?” shouted the thick-set man. “This is private business, innit? Get lost.”
The bull terrier looked briefly at William and snarled. This was Diesel.
“I said get lost!” shouted Diesel’s owner again. “Or shut up and watch.”
Stevie was busy with Freddie’s leash and collar, while Freddie stared in dread at Diesel and growled defensively.
“Eddie!” cried William again.
“Go back to the pub,” Eddie said. “We’ll come and see you later. We’re having some private fun.”
“Fun!” exclaimed William.
Stevie chose to intervene. “Yeah, fun, Mr. French,” he said. “A bit of innocent fun.”
“This is preposterous,” said William. “That’s my dog, for a start.”
“Listen, mate,” shouted the other man, “Diesel here is getting very irritated with you. So just shut your cake-hole …”
“Come on, Dad,” said Eddie. “This is just a bit of fun. Where’s your sense of humour?”
Poosie now looked at William. “Yes, don’t be so old!”
“Old!” exploded William. “Who’s old?”
“You,” said Poosie. “You’re acting seriously old.”
“Tart,” said Marcia.
Diesel now took a few steps forward. He was an extremely muscular dog and he walked a little as a drunken sailor might walk—swaying slightly from side to side. William looked in alarm at Freddie de la Hay, who had now been released by Stevie. “Chew him up, Freddie boy,” said Stevie. “Go for the jugular.”
In a moment of great clarity, William realised that anybody who got between the dogs would be in danger of being badly mauled—not by Freddie, of course, but by the mesomorphic Diesel. Yet he was in no doubt that if he did not intervene, this would be the end of Freddie de la Hay. Valiant though Freddie undoubtedly was, he would be no match for the steroid-fed Diesel, the worst sort of dog in terms of attitude.
William took a deep breath. Then, directing himself towards Diesel, he shouted in as stern a voice as he could manage, “Diesel!”
Diesel hesitated and looked towards William.
“Diesel!” William continued in stentorian tones. “Diesel, sit! Sit!”
For a moment Diesel looked confused, and then sat down firmly. He was well trained, like a Royal Marine, and when told to sit, he sat.
Diesel’s owner looked on in astonishment while William stepped firmly forward and snatched Freddie de la Hay’s leash from Stevie’s hand. Attaching it quickly to Freddie’s collar, he led the relieved dog back to Marcia, took her by the arm and walked at a fast pace down the passage.
Eddie shouted out something, as did Diesel’s owner, but neither William nor Marcia heard what it was, nor bothered to listen.
“Chutzpah!” said Marcia as they turned onto the lane. “William, you’re brilliant!”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said William. “It seemed the obvious thing to do.” He spoke casually but inside he was shaking with a mixture of relief, fear and sheer astonishment at his own performance. It could have ended quite differently, he thought. What if Diesel had ignored him or possibly not understood the way he spoke? Freddie could be dead by now if that had happened.
They went back to the van and Freddie de la Hay hopped into the back while William sat in the passenger seat, wiped his brow with his handkerchief and closed his eyes. Marcia could detect a state of shock when she saw it, and she held William’s hand gently before she started the car.
“We’ll go home and have a nice dinner,” she said.
“I’ve got some scallops. And we’ll give Freddie de la Hay a steak.”
William opened his eyes. “He’s a vegetarian,” he said. “Remember?”
“Was,” said Marcia.
70. At the Ragg Porter Agency
THAT MONDAY was not proving to be a particularly busy day at the Ragg Porter Literary Agency, and the three directors—Barbara (nonfiction), Sheila Stevens (films and other media) and Rupert Porter (fiction)—had taken the opportunity to have their quarterly planning meeting somewhat in advance of its normal date. The agency was doing well, having recently taken over the administration of the estate of a deceased novelist who had suddenly—and posthumously—become immensely successful. They were now looking at the list of their existing authors with a view to guessing which of them might be expected to die in the short rather than the long term, and which of these might enjoy a sudden burst of posthumous popularity.
“It seems such a pity that some people have to pass on in order to be widely read,” said Sheila.
Barbara winced. “For heaven’s sake don’t use that term,” she said. “Passing on! What a euphemism. Call it what it is. You die when you die, you don’t pass on. Where do you pass on to, may I ask?”
Rupert came to his colleague’s defence. “Oh, I don’t know,” he said. “Passing on sounds very reassuring. Rather stately, in fact. And who knows where we go after this mortal vale? My housemaster at Uppingham used to talk about the Elysian Fields as if they really existed. I think he may have believed in them. Probably did.”
Barbara gave him a glance. They heard a great deal from Rupert about Uppingham.
“Well, that’s very nice,” she said.
Rupert did not pick up her sarcasm. “Yes, indeed it was. He used to give us little talks and, do you know, everybody listened. Even the chaps who were not very academic. They sat there and listened. He explained that the Elysian Fields were probably restricted to those connected with the gods in some way; ordinary people had to go to the Fields of Asphodel, if I remember correctly. Not quite so comfortable.”
“Like standard class on the trains,” suggested Sheila.
Rupert nodded. “Yes, I suppose so. That’s quite a good analogy, in fact. Indeed, one might expand it and apply it to Christian notions of the afterlife. First class would be heaven, while standard class would be hell, or purgatory.”
“That depends on the line,” said Sheila. “Some lines are all right, the others, well … Why do we tolerate it? Why do we tolerate having the worst train service in Western Europe? And one of the most expensive ones in the whole world?”
“Because we privatised the railways,” Barbara said. “The French and the Germans warned us. They said: ‘It’s not going to work.’ And we ignored them, and look at us now. Dirty trains. Not enough seats. Nowhere to put your luggage. When you get into the train in France, for example, there’s always bags of room to stow your suitcase. They assume, you see, that people are going to travel with a suitcase. Radical assumption!”
“So what are we going to do about it?” asked Rupert.
They looked at one another. “Well, frankly,” said Barbara, “I don’t see that there’s much that Ragg Porter can do about it. So I suggest that we get on with our meeting.”
“All right,” said Rupert. And then, with the air of one who had just remembered something, “Oh, I took a call for you, Barbara, while you were out for lunch.”
“Yes?”
“Yes,” said Rupert. “It was a journalist. I noted his number down somewhere. He wanted to know about that Greatorex manuscript of yours.”
Rupert now had Barbara’s full attention. “Greatorex?” How had the press got to hear of this?
“Yes. That’s the yeti biography, isn’t it?” said Rupert. “Not that I believe it for one moment. At Uppingham we had a chap who had climbed quite a few of those mountains in Nepal. He said that the yeti was complete nonsense.”
Barbara gave him a withering look. “That is a matter of opinion. Errol Greatorex is a highly regarded travel writer.” She held Rupert’s gaze. “And may I remind you of the advance we’re going to be getting for this particular manuscript? And serialisation rights sold to the Sunday Telegraph. So don’t talk this thing down, Rupert.”
Rupert put up his hands in mock defence. “All right.”
Barbara still looked at him severely. “Who was this person, anyway?” she asked.
“Somebody from The Times,” he said. “He said that he had been talking to an MP he knows who told him that you had this manuscript and that you could arrange an interview for him.”
Barbara’s eyes glinted. “Which MP, may I ask?” She knew the answer, of course.
Rupert laughed. “Your boyfriend. Oedipus Snark.” He paused. “Pillow talk getting out of hand, Barbara?”
Barbara ignored this and they moved on to the next topic on the meeting agenda. But immediately after the meeting she got the journalist’s telephone number from Rupert. She would have to handle this carefully, she thought. If the story broke prematurely, then the large advance that she was confident of securing for her author might be compromised. The point about the yeti book was that it would have impact, and the leaking of the story beforehand could substantially diminish that.
The journalist was available and took Barbara’s call.
“So what’s the story?” he asked. “Is it true that you’ve got the biography of the abominable snowman?”
Barbara laughed. “Who on earth told you that?”
“Somebody. You know that we don’t reveal our sources.”
“Well, I know exactly who it was: Oedipus Snark. And yes, it’s true that I spoke to him about this. But it was a joke. A complete joke. I didn’t expect Oedipus to take it any further. I assumed that he’d know that the whole thing was absurd.”
The journalist was silent. “You mean there’s no yeti?”
Barbara laughed. “Of course there’s no yeti. Sorry about that. And no Father Christmas either.”
The journalist sounded disappointed. “Oh well,” he said. “The best-laid scoops of mice and men …”
“Well put,” said Barbara, and rang off.
She stood at the window and thought. Oedipus Snark could spoil everything unless he was stopped. But how did you stop somebody like that? Threaten him with something? But what could she threaten Oedipus Snark with? Unless …
71. On the Nature of Friendship
SHE WAS STILL THINKING of the yeti—and of Oedipus Snark—when she reached the door of her building in Chepstow Villas. Like William French, Barbara Ragg lived on the top floor, but that was where the similarities between his and her domestic arrangements ended. Corduroy Mansions was nowhere near as well appointed as Sydney Villa, the house in which Barbara had lived for the last twelve years. Her flat in Sydney Villa, a four-floor building of generously sized apartments—one to each floor—had belonged to Fatty Porter, the business partner of Barbara’s late father, Gregory Ragg. When Fatty had stopped working and moved to Norfolk, he had sold the flat to Gregory, who had lived in it for little more than a year before he too retired and took up residence in Kent. Gregory had given the flat to Barbara, much to the annoyance of Rupert Porter, who thought that his father would not have sold the flat to Gregory had he known that Gregory intended it for his daughter.
“I would have loved to live there, Dad,” Rupert had complained to his father. “Gregory knew all along that Barbara wanted it. Why should she be there and I’m stuck in my smelly old place?” His smelly old place was in fact a rather pleasant flat in Holland Park, not far away from Sydney Villa. What really rankled Rupert was that the transaction had meant that he could not fulfil his ambition to have two flats rather than one.
Not that Rupert and Barbara did not get on—they sparred a little, as colleagues will do, but beneath there were the strong bonds that bind those who are members of families that have run a business together over more than one generation. And Fatty and Gregory themselves had been very close friends�
��both members of the Savile Club, where they dined together once a week and where Fatty had for many years sat on the catering committee. Rupert and Barbara were not quite as close, because Barbara had never really got on with any of Rupert’s girlfriends, nor, after he married, with his wife, Gloria.
“She doesn’t like me,” said Gloria. “I can sense it. You know how you can sense dislike. You just feel it.”
“Negative waves,” said Rupert. “You can pick up negative waves. But do you think Barbara really doesn’t like you? She seems civil enough.”
“Yes, civil,” said Gloria. “But have you noticed that when she’s talking to us, she always looks at you? Have you noticed that? Even if she’s saying something to me, she looks at you.”
“There was a chap like that at Uppingham,” mused Rupert. “He always looked at somebody else when he spoke to you. Strange chap.” He paused. “Maybe she looks at me just because she’s used to my face. She sees it at the office all the time and so she’s used to it.”
Gloria shook her head. “I think it’s because she’s jealous. Deep down, she’s jealous of me. You were her friend—ever since you were small. You went to each other’s birthday parties, didn’t you? Right from the beginning.”
Rupert smiled. “She’s not jealous,” he said. “She’s just a friend. There’s never been anything more than that between us.”
Gloria did not doubt that—at least from Rupert’s point of view. But she was a woman, after all, and she had views on how women felt about their male friends. No male friend, she believed, was ever just a friend. His potential for being something else was always, even if only subconsciously, evaluated, thought about.
“And anyway,” Rupert went on, “she’s got that awful boyfriend of hers. That Snark. Oedipus Snark, no less. I was at Uppingham with him, you know. What on earth was a mother doing calling her son Oedipus? What can she have been thinking of?”
“I can’t stand him,” said Gloria. “Remember when Barbara managed to persuade him to come and open the Elizabethan Fair in the gardens and he turned up twenty minutes late and left after five minutes? Ghastly man. Insincere. Untrustworthy. Strange that he should be a Liberal Democrat. Not a trace of sandals.”
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