www.noexit.co.uk/conman
For Neal, who’ll enjoy this one
and
Luthfa, without whom nobody would be reading this.
Love to you both.
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
part one
now
then
one
two
three
four
five
six
seven
eight
nine
ten
eleven
twelve
thirteen
part two
fourteen
fifteen
sixteen
seventeen
eighteen
nineteen
twenty
twenty-one
twenty-two
twenty-three
twenty-four
part three
twenty-five
twenty-six
twenty-seven
twenty-eight
twenty-nine
thirty
now
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
OTHER TITLES BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Copyright
part one
now
“Wait, is this a con? Is that what this is? Are you … are you trying the old switcheroo with me? Trying to pull wool over my leg? … You swear? Because let me tell you right now Mr Cheng, I’ve had exactly my legal limit of swindlers, marks, mitt fitters, cacklebladders and cold pokes. Up to the brim, you understand? Enough to last my family and me a long time. To last us the twenty years I’m going to have to spend in prison if I don’t get the thing back, in fact … Yes, prison Mr Cheng. Big grey building? Nestling among ten acres of beautiful rolling concrete? Conveniently situated for group showers and buggery, ideal for the first time offender … ? Well it’s where they put husbands like me. Idiot husbands who … Look, look forget it, just give me a price to have it back. A proper price. And don’t try and jerk the fleece behind my back. How much?”
Look, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to come back in here disturbing you. It’s just the police said … and it’s a bad line and it’s … Sheesh, bad day, bad line. Bad from the beginning. From forever. I won’t be long. I’ll get out of your hair. You get back to your drink. Ignore me. Really, I’m sorry.
“What? But you only paid … No way? Redford and Newman? Nobody gets Newman. The guy’s a hundred and sixty years old, wired up to an intravenous bottle of spaghetti sauce in Beverly Hills … Swear? … Lord. Okay okay, but c’mon Mr Cheng, please. You gotta do me a better price. My daughter … there’ll be lawyers. Lawyers. They’ll say I … God. C’mon, it’s me, Mr Cheng. Please?”
Woahh, sorry, sorry. Oh look, I spilt your drink all over – let me – barman? – let me get you another. Sorry. It’s just this guy on the phone, he’s got my life in his hands and the police told me to … oh it’s too complicated to explain. Barman? Whatever my friend here is having.
“Look Cheng, haven’t you been listening? I don’t have that kind of money … Well, I-I’m suggesting you lend the thing to me. Just for a day or so. An hour even. The police said I needed … Yes, the police. Where do think I’ve been for the last … Well when’s your buyer coming? … Oh for Chrissakes, three hours? … No, I keep telling you, I can’t, I don’t have it. Look I beg you, promise me you won’t sell it … Earl’s Court, I’m in Earl’s Court. A pub. The World or The Map or something …”
Huh? Atlas? Oh, oh thanks. Thanks my friend. How’s your drink? Look, I’m sorry about the yelling. It’s just … well as you can see from the suit, it’s been quite a day. This? I dunno. Corn syrup I think. I know, I know, it stinks. Hell, I didn’t get any on your … ? Okay. Again, I apologise.
“Cheng? My friend here says it’s The Atlas. Earl’s Court … No, round the corner from there. Look, give me three hours. I’ll come up with something. I have to. Jane’s dad is saying she’ll … God, just promise me you’ll stall your … Fine. Three hours.”
God. What am I going to do? Three hours. So that’s …
Right. Of course. Great.
Excuse me? Hi, sorry to bother you again. My watch is … well it’s … long story. Do you know what time it is?
Already?
Okay okay. Right. Calm. Don’t panic. That gives me …
Christ.
Do you know if there’s a bank or anything around here? Pawn shop maybe? Somewhere I can sell … I don’t know, a lung or something? What’s a lung worth? You want to buy a lung? A kidney? How are you for kidneys?
Hn? Sorry, I know, I’m in a bit of a … I’ve had a …
Oh no, no I couldn’t, I don’t want to intrude on your –
Oh that’s kind, you’re very kind, thank you. You don’t have a tissue, do you? My nose is beginning to …
Thanks.
Man. What time did you say – ?
God. Where’s that phone. Let me … let me try her again. Sorry. I’ll just be … I need to make a …
“Hello Jane, I – ? Edward please. I need to talk to … Because I’m her husband and I love her and I need to explain. We’re a family, I would never … I can, I can prove I didn’t … well no, but – in a few hours. I’m trying to … Please Edward, tell her …”
Christ.
“Tell her she … she is everything to me. Everything. You understand? She’s why I get up in the morning. She’s the whole point. Her and Lana. They’re the whole point. They’re all I have. Forget the rest. Forget the shop. That’s not who I am. They are who I am. My family is who I am. You take them away from me and I have nothing. Nothing. And … and tell her if she goes and she takes our daughter I might as well be guilty of everything they say I’ve done because then I’m in prison for life anyway. You tell her that. Edward? Edward, are you – ? Edward?”
Great.
I’m sorry. You don’t have to –
Well thank you. Thank you, that’s very kind.
God look at my shirt, this syrup’s getting all over the place. I’m gonna take my jacket off, put it on the … oh God it’s everywhere. Gaah, my lighter’s all sticky. My cigarettes. All my pockets … God it’s all over the letters, damn. Sorry, can you hold … thanks.
How? Oh you don’t want to know. No really, enjoy your drink. I’ll just …
Man. Man oh man.
And look at this place. Look at it. It’s like nothing ever happened. The bar, the tables. Like they were never here.
Hell, maybe they were never here? Maybe it’s me? Maybe I’m losing –
Letters? Oh. You’re still … Thanks, sorry, my mind’s all …
From? What these? Ha. From indeed. Her name’s … God she was right, they even smell like her. Go on, sniff the … see? Clever touch. And look, even the postmarks – oh you can’t see, they’re covered in this damned syrup. God it’s everywhere. My matches, my notebook … Anyway, trust me. Postmarks. Six months ago. Four months ago. Here, this one? Three weeks ago? Clever clever clever.
In fact, you want clever? Let me read you … No I insist, here we go, you listen to this. You won’t believe it.
“… and the more I think about your words Neil …”
Oh, that’s me. Neil Martin. How do you … oh, sorry. It’s just syrup, it’ll scrub off. Sorry.
Anyway –
“… the more I think about your words Neil, the more I feel the same. Just thinking of you gives me a sick ache inside. A painful teenage ache. Because that’s how it feels when we’re apart, Neil. Painful because I imagine you with her and I know I have to wait so long until I can see you again …”
And so it goes on. Pages and pages.
Oh you don’t want to know. Just hope you never meet her. Don’t meet her or anyone like her. And don’t … don’t lie to the only person you ever truly loved, either. Don’t ever do that.
I’m rambling. I know, I’m sorry. I’m a bit … Jus
t tell them the truth. I mean it. Tell them everything. Tell them you love them. Show them you love them. Every day. Don’t let it … don’t let it in. Don’t let it start. Do the right thing. Do the good thing.
Oh, and balance your chequebook every month.
I know, I know, it sounds …
But I mean it. Every month. Cheques and balances. Keep on top of it. And plumbing too. Hell, don’t neglect your plumbing.
That’s how it can start.
Or at least, that’s how it all started for me.
All … all this.
Plumbing. And a cheque. Writing a very small cheque.
Or rather, wishing I had.
God, I really wish I had.
then
one
With a deep breath, I flipped back through the stubs, reading out loud to the room like a teacher at registration.
“Okay okay. Let’s not … let’s not panic. C’mon now. Visa bill. Next bill. Road Tax …”
Dionne Warwick warbled from the stereo, goading me to take it easy on myself. Fat chance.
“… vet bill, Mastercard, Jane’s Visa. If you have not yet received a new cheque book …”
I flapped it shut and a little more panic squirted into my stomach.
It wasn’t there.
Not that I really expected it to be there. It wasn’t the chequebook for the business account and it hadn’t been there the first six times I’d checked it. But it was my last hope. A clutched straw at the bottom of an over-scraped barrel on the beach at Last Resort.
Throat tight, I chewed the inside of my cheek, trying to keep my gaze from the corner of the desk. From catching the eyes of the two beautiful female faces smiling from behind the glass of a silver photo frame.
Shit, I thought.
The cat wandered into the lounge idly across the Easiklip flooring and sat on the rug, looking up at me. I swivelled around in my creaky chair to look at him straight.
“Did you pay it?” I asked. “Please. Tell me you paid it?”
Streaky remained silent, but his look said he would have paid it if he’d been asked to. Because he wasn’t the sort of forgetful cretin who’d put his whole family and future at risk. He started washing his bottom.
Trying to keep a lid on the fear, I swallowed hard, turned the photo-frame face down and began to wade purposefully through the paperwork on the desk for the hundredth time. Letters from the bank, from solicitors, trade fairs. It would be here. I must have paid. I must have. I’m not an idiot.
But what started as a purposeful wade collapsed quickly into a despairing yowl as an unquestionable fact arrived, dropped two leaden suitcases and took up permanent residence in my bowels.
I was an idiot. I hadn’t paid it.
I got up itchily and clicked off Dionne because I don’t know about you, but I like to choose a CD to fit a mood, and Bacharach just isn’t panicking sort of music. I let the small flat sit in a brooding silence for a long while. Of course, the cat might have called it a peaceful silence, or a tranquil silence.
But then the cat didn’t know what I knew.
Loose knees shaky, I wobbled into the kitchen to distract myself with tea. Blu-tacked to the kettle’s smudgy surface was a small pink cardboard star with ‘£2’ printed on it. I blinked and it vanished.
Easy there, Neil. Easy.
I jumped at the sound of the phone in the lounge. Our nice phone. White bakelite. Heavy, with a proper circular dial and a real ringgggg to it.
I stood listening to the real ringgggg for a moment. Hating it. I’d gone off the phone recently. I preferred letters. Letters I could ignore more easily.
Ringgggg.
I moved back into the lounge, past the couch that had a blue cardboard star on its arm, proclaiming “£50 o.n.o.” and hauled up the receiver.
Bedlam. A party. Laughter. Music.
“Hello?” I said. More music and laughter. Some people clearly not doing their accounts. Or at least, not doing mine. “Hello?”
“Heyyy, is Franny there? Francesca?” Laugh, shout, thud.
“No. No there’s no-one here of that name. I think you have the wrong –”
“Is that Mike?” Thuddy guffaw shout.
“No. There’s no Mike and no Francesca. You have the wrong –”
He hung up, so I did too.
I blinked a few times. The small ‘£5’ sticker on the telephone dial didn’t move. I blinked harder. That got it.
I sat on the £50 couch and dragged worried eyes about the lounge.
This mental car-boot pricing, working out what I was going to end up selling everything for, had begun recently. Ever since the firm of Boatman, Beevers and Boatman, EC3 had written to me asking about the cheque. Their first letters I’d ignored. The next few I’d fobbed off. Brief responses about ‘pending payments’ and ‘full recompense in due course’.
But they kept coming. Each one leaning a little harder, pressing a little further, like an escalating bar-room threat. “… Dear Mr Martin, please be informed that unless contact is made with this office by Friday, November 6th, we will have no choice but to take legal action …”
Yeah?
Yeahhhhh.
I was halfway back to my kettle, mentally breaking down the next ten days into a workable rota of self-loathing and deceit when there was a scream.
But a real scream. A terrifying, throat-tearing scream.
Palms cold, I bounded over the cat and back into the lounge. There was a rev of un-tuned engine and squeal of tread-less tyres. I whipped open the curtain.
She was on her knees, face in shadow, bathed in the UFO glow of the yellow street lamp, a crunch of broken glass lying like spilt diamonds about her. The light from my window must have caught her eye because she turned to face me, face torn with anger.
“The police!” she bellowed. “Get the police!”
Heart thundering, I heaved up the bakelite, whirring the nines and clamping it under my ear. As I was connected, I craned a look back out onto the dark street. She was stumbling to her feet, one shoe off, leaning on our wall for support, whirling her bag like a slingshot and yelling into the night.
“Go on! Take it! Take it! Kill yourselves, you dickless fuckers! Wrap it round a postbox. Very rock and roll. Very in the hood!”
“Police emergency,” the phone crackled.
“Hi yes yes, a woman has been attacked, or carjacked I think.”
“Two killed!” the woman bellowed up the street, kicking and whirling. “Two killed in nine-year-old Honda Civic on the Upper Richmond Road! Oh very Tupac. Very P fucking Diddy!”
The policeman took the details and said officers would be there soon, so I hung up and hurried down into the cold blast of the street. Lights were clicking on in the Georgian mansion block opposite, nets twitching as local residents felt the tremor of their property values dropping. The woman was slumped against my wheelie bin with her bag at her feet, breathing deep, shaking.
“I’ve called the police. They’re on their way. You all right?” I jittered, heart thumping.
Gathering her thoughts and cigarettes, she eventually eased herself up. She had a nasty graze on her temple and three thick waterfalls of dark red hair had come unclipped from an evening-out arrangement, tumbling lazily over her face and shoulders. Her dark cocktail dress was now sequinned with pavement grit. She pushed her hair aside, revealing a striking pair of dark brown eyes.
“Bastards,” she sighed eventually. “You got a light?”
“Uhmm, I-I’ve got tea?”
“Any vodka you can stick in that?”
“Er y-yes I should be able to find some. Come on in. God, you all right? What happened?”
“Put a lot of vodka in,” she said, leading the way up the
scruffy steps. It really was a very short cocktail dress. “Don’t worry if the tea won’t fit in there with it. And grab my other shoe could you?”
Head tumbling, I watched her disappear inside the flat and then scurried about on the pavement for a moment, eventually retrieving a dark brown velvet stiletto from the kerb and hurrying in after her.
“Groovy place. What do you do, collect this stuff?”
Her name was Laura. She sat on the couch, breathing deep. Nervous chit-chat, calming herself down. Her other shoe was off now, painted stockinged toes curling anxiously on the edges of the rug. The first vodka I’d fetched hadn’t even touched the sides so I’d fixed her another. I drank tea and the cat watched her from the footstool as she lit up a shaky cigarette, taking long and slow draws, peering about the room.
“I guess so,” I said, handing her a chipped saucer as a makeshift ashtray. “It’s my job.”
Laura peered about the geek-chic walls. The posters, prints and props.
“Superman, huh?” she said. Understandably I suppose, as the Man of Steel’s iconic, brick-chinned visage was present a little too often in frames and figurines about the room. Not to mention his proud, hands-on-hips stance on my t-shirt. Laura exhaled a cloud of blue smoke and blinked at me from behind her hair. “This a gay thing?”
I coughed a little into my tea, getting it up my nose a bit while Laura took another shaky suck on her Lucky Strike and apologised, licking her lips.
“Sorry,” she said. “Nervous. Stupid. I’m a bit rattled. After …” and she motioned at the window. “Forgive me, I didn’t …”
“No of course, fine fine,” I repaired. “You’re not the first. I suppose it’s all a little camp. But no. It’s a … father-figure thing. Rather a clumsy one at that.”
Conman Page 1