by Rob Aspinall
Death & Back
A Charlie Cobb Thriller
Rob Aspinall
Contents
Free Starter Library
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Guide to Charlie Cobb & UK Slang
Free Starter Library
Also by Rob Aspinall - Breaker
Also by Rob Aspinall - The Holdup
Also by Rob Aspinall - Homecoming
Also by Rob Aspinall - Truly Deadly
Connect with Rob
Acknowledgments
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Prologue
I know what I said. I wasn't gonna do this anymore. I wasn't gonna do things like crack this guy in the face with a baseball bat. Or leave this moron bleeding in a pile of piss-stained rubbish.
I wasn't gonna do stuff like that.
I promised my daughter, Cassie, I'd jack in the criminal life. Go straight. No more fighting in the gutter.
But if I hadn't made the bloody promise, I wouldn't be here at all.
They say violence doesn't solve anything. And Cass would agree. But if you ask me, I reckon that's a big bag of bollocks. Violence solves a lot of things. It sorts out arguments. Divides up territory. Decides the pecking order. I mean, look at animals. They're always banging heads over this or that. Not as if they're holding hands and dancing around in Fluffy Rainbow Cloud Land. They've gotta scrap to survive.
So yeah, I said I wouldn't do this anymore. But I've got a damn good reason for giving these two losers a beating.
I'll elaborate more in a bit.
First, I've got a man to put in hospital.
1
The sky was dark. The wind relentless. The black dinghy shook under the assault of every wave. Water slapped in over the sides. Ice cold, invading the inflated rubber floor.
Amira huddled with her elbows tucked to her ribs. Her hands on her knees. Her shins wedged against the large African man in front. The toes of someone's trainers digging into the small of her back.
All around her, she saw trembling bodies in cheap orange lifejackets.
The whites of eyes wide with fear and minds wired in spite of exhaustion. Amira willed the minutes, the seconds, the waves away. She breathed heavy through an open mouth. Attempted to quell the gathering squall inside her stomach.
It was no use. The rise and fall over each wave was unbearable. And they seemed to come at the dinghy from all sides.
Someone had already vomited. The smell unbearable.
The only reason Amira could think she hadn't been sick, was down to her stomach being empty of food. Two days without a bite to eat. And very little to drink.
On-board the dinghy, not an inch of rubber went spare. Which meant Amira couldn't see anything of the sea, or the land. Only the soulless sky.
She wondered if the unseen person steering the dinghy was off course. Or even worse—lost.
Amira would have asked him had she been able to move or make herself heard over the cross-chatter of languages. She didn't understand much. But she heard a few words in Arabic from two men sat on the far right edge of the dinghy. One man terrified of falling over the side—he couldn't swim. His friend reassuring him—the sea was warm, they had lifejackets, it couldn't be much longer.
The friend sounded as if he was trying to convince himself.
So she hung on, her mouth drier than the Hamad desert. Her mind in a sleep-deprived fog.
Until a glimmer of hope appeared. The sky was no longer black, but grey. It transitioned into a blue haze, casting light onto the faces of her near neighbours. The first she'd been able to see since departing the shores of Izmir.
To her left, she noticed a small girl. No more than seven. An angelic face. A shivering body swallowed up by her life jacket. She leaned into an ageing woman who looked too old to be her mother. They both appeared Arab.
From somewhere in the crowd, Amira heard a mention of land, spoken in her own tongue.
Cries from the bow of the dinghy confirmed it.
Everyone seemed to get the message. Amira saw smiles on faces. Felt her own mouth crease, the sickness in her stomach suspended for a precious moment. A man at the front yelled something about a beach. It was close. Less than a mile, another said.
Less than a mile. The waves would grow smaller. The dinghy would run ashore with the gentle, fizzing surf. Amira would step into the turtle-blue shallows. Dust her feet with the golden sands of whichever beach they landed on.
She would feel her stomach settle on solid ground. Her energy return. Then would come food, water, sunny skies . . . Amira snapped awake from her daydream.
A large wave hit with shuddering force. Seawater rained ice-cold over her head. She felt the wave roll underneath the dinghy. The bow rising steep to the left.
The first passengers fell off the side. Legs and feet disappearing into the water. The dinghy tipped steeper, almost ninety degrees. People panicked and screamed.
Another wave pounded the small craft. Amira slid to her left, swamped in a giant tangle of scrambling bodies.
She couldn't hold on. No one could. There was nothing—and no one—left to hold onto.
2
Going straight is tougher than it looks, especially during lunch and dinner service. I've been waiting tables at Gastronomy for a week. And I still haven't figured out how to work the card machine.
But I can't complain. In fact, I'm pretty damn lucky.
I only got the job because I was walking down the street when the previous waiter stormed out. He quit on the spot right in front of me. Threw his apron down on the pavement.
I picked it up and stepped inside. Asked the owner, Chef Dubois, if he needed a hand. I lied about my experience and he was desperate.
So I got the job.
Well, a week's trial at least.
And I've been working my arse off ever since, taking every shift the little Parisian bastard will throw at me.
Up until this gig, finding work was impossible.
My C.V. is basically a sheet of paper with a name on it. I've got no qualifications. No education. You can't exactly put enforcer work down in your employment history. And what am I supposed to put under skills? Breaking legs? Hanging people off buildings? Negotiating wholesale drug deals? No, you can't put any of that down.
And I doubt doing metalwork in Strangeways prison counts as a job.
So when Dubois bollocks me yet again in the kitchen, I take it on the chin.
"Pointer," he says, "table two are still waiting on their wine."
Shit, I forgot.
"Yes, chef," I say, sliding a pair of empty plates onto a counter. "On it, Chef."
"You're still on trial Pointer," he reminds me as I fly back out of the swing doors.
Yeah, the guy's got me by the balls.
I grab table two's bottle of wine off the bar top and weave through the packed restaurant.
My name's Pointer, for now. Trev Pointer. Or Trevor James Pointer, according to my new passport. Not that Dubois has a clue who I am, but it's best to be careful. Keep my head down. Don't give the police or Rudenko's mob a sniff of my whereabouts.
I sort table two out with the wine and hurry over to another table where a young kid is playing with his ice cream. He's got a haystack of blonde hair and a look in his eye that says trouble. While mum and dad deal with a wailing tot, he scoops some ice cream on the end of a spoon and flicks it at me. Next thing I know, I've got caramel vanilla running down my nose. I smile and wipe it off. He flicks some more. It splats on my cheek. Again, I wipe it off. I'd like to teach the bleeder some manners. But I laugh and ruffle his hair. As I lean over the table and gather the dirty dishes, he tips the melted remains of the ice cream into my apron pocket.
"Oh Ollie, don't do that," his mum says half-hearted.
"It's alright," I say. "Boys will be boys."
I walk away with a stack of dishes, ice cream dribbling down the front of my pants.
Dubois is on me in a flash. "Pointer, you're dripping all over my floor."
The guy is worse than the cops, with his big black quiff and beady little eyes watching your every move. At five-six, he's almost a foot shorter than me. I could knock him into the ground with one thump of my fist, but you can't do that in the real world. The rules are different. The bullies are the little men with a string if letters after their name.
Besides, I’m not that man any more. It’s my new mantra.
"Sorry, chef," I say, biting my tongue. "I'll get a mop."
I tell you one thing, ice creaming a man's pants would not stand in the underworld.
The rush continues for the rest of the evening. Being on my feet all day is a shock to the system. In my old profession, there was a lot of sitting around. In cars, bars, mafia fronts—either waiting for the phone to ring or something to happen. And just when it's quietening down in the restaurant, a hen party bundle their way in late. A dozen forty-something women in pink t-shirts and tutus. One of them wearing a tiara. Another carrying a giant inflatable dick. They play merry hell with me. Slapping me on the arse, talking dirty.
I play along with a smile. Lift the bride-to-be down when she gets up and dances on the table. Laugh at their mucky jokes and try and keep 'em quiet with food and wine. They tip me well and leave. I lock the restaurant door behind them. Wipe the tables down with Piotr, a spotty young kid with shaved blonde hair and glasses. We stack the chairs upside down on the tables. I head into the kitchen to grab a broom from the store cupboard.
The kitchen is empty of cooks. Only Dubois still here. He's stood by the back fire exit door with two burly blokes in dark suits. One in navy, the other in black. Both with white, open-neck shirts underneath. They're short on hair, but big on gold jewellery. Ugly too, like ex-boxers.
Dubois hands over a brown envelope full of cash.
The man in a navy suit rifles through the notes with a finger. "You're two hundred short," he says, in a deep cockney voice.
"It's the usual amount," Dubois says.
"The premium's gone up," the bloke in black says. "Twenty percent."
"Come on," Dubois says. "This is all I've got—"
"Relax, Franky baby," the guy says, tapping a hand against Dubois' cheek. "We'll get it off you next month."
I open a utility cupboard and pull out the broom. I can't help staring.
The guy in navy glances over. "What are you looking at, Tinker Bell?"
Dubois turns. Waves me away.
I close the cupboard and walk out of the kitchen. The two men eyeball me all the way out of the door.
3
Before she could take a breath, a second large wave dumped Amira and the others into the sea. Under the water, it was a chaotic tumble of arms and legs and terrified faces, kicking and fighting for space, for air, for life. Amira popped out onto the surface. A large, diagonal wave rolled towards her at speed. A deep blue juggernaut that picked her up and carried her backwards. Saltwater stung the inside of her nostrils. She swallowed a mouthful and gasped for air in the freezing Aegean.
Some refugees made for shore—chopping their way through a three-quarter mile swim. Others flailed and thrashed, going nowhere but down.
The life jackets were not up to the task. Amira was sure hers was faulty—only half inflated—and hers wasn't the only one.
Amira's instinct was to kick for dry land, but she couldn't help looking for that little girl and her ageing relative. She didn't see the older woman, but she did see the girl. Twenty metres to her right, caught in a mess of panicking bodies.
The girl screamed for help between gulps of water, unable to stay afloat. A large, frantic man dragged her down with him, her lifejacket ripped from her tiny body.
Amira front-crawled towards the girl, attempting to cut through the crowd. But it was useless. A wall of wheeling limbs slapped into her head and shoulders. She pulled away and hurried to unfasten the string tie around her lifejacket.
Her hands trembling underwater, Amira loosened the tie. She pulled her lifejacket over her head and let it float away. She wrestled herself out of her soaking black coat, seeing the girl forced under as another large wave rolled in.
Amira took a deep breath.
Before the wave could carry her further from the girl, she ducked under the surface, diving a metre down. Moving free from the constraints of her lifejacket, she kicked beneath the swimmers.
Eyes open, Amira saw the girl slip below the surface, her stick thin legs kicking in vain.
She swam hard towards the girl. Caught her as she dropped deeper and made for the surface. They emerged together into a clear stretch of water. The girl cried for her grandmother, coughing up water. Amira held her close and looked around. Saw only people heading towards shore. She turned again. The capsized dinghy rushed towards them. Amira told the girl to take a deep breath. She pushed the child's head under the water and followed her down.
The dinghy drifted overhead like a dead whale. Amira saw lifeless bodies caught beneath the capsized boat. She covered the girl's eyes until the dinghy passed by. She dragged the girl to the surface once more. They took a collective breath.
"We have to swim," Amira said, turning onto her back and holding the girl above the water. "Help me," she said, her teeth chattering.
Together they swam backwards towards the shore, riding the tide. The current was merciful, taking them in to a small beach, rather than the rocks on either side of the cove.
As they reached the shallows, the water grew warmer. The sun rose higher in the sky. Amira felt her shoulder blades drag against the sand below the water. Yet the surf hit the pair hard as waves rushed in, one on top of the other.
Amira fought to her feet, pulling the girl up. The waves smashed into her legs, already shaky from the swim. She fought against the tide, carrying the girl and wading onto the beach.
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Every step sapped more of her strength, the wet sand like glue, sucking at her feet. Exhausted and frozen, her sickness had abated the moment the dinghy capsized. Amira dropped to the dry, fine sand further up the beach. She lay next to the girl and looked along the shore. A pile of lifejackets discarded. Some of the surviving passengers already moving on. Others sitting with heads in hands, or screaming out to sea, mourning lost loved ones.
The girl sobbed gentle tears, curled in a shivering ball. "Grandma . . . Where is Grandma?"
Amira sat up. She put an arm around the girl's shoulders, holding her close. "Your grandma is gone," Amira said. "I'm sorry."
The girl cried into the pink shirt stuck to Amira's goose-pimpled skin.
"We have to go," Amira said, hoisting the girl to her feet against her will.
The child wept and wailed, hysterical, fighting to collapse to the floor.
Amira wouldn't let her. She shook her by both arms, raising her voice. "We live with what we have," Amira said, then quieter as the girl calmed down. "Together, agreed?"