by John Barlow
Praise for John Barlow’s previous books:
“A cracking read that’s impossible to put down.” Yorkshire Post
“Barlow’s imagination appears unlimited, almost attuned to a parallel world.” New York Times
“John Barlow is back with another story that’s surprising, funny and satisfying… Intoxicated delivers the goods. It’s the real thing.” Washington Post
“Wonderfully innovative. Magic realism meets Yorkshire pragmatism.” Booklist
“John Barlow demonstrates a vast love of language and, above all, the ability to tell a riveting yarn.” Palm Beach Post
“John Barlow is the rare writer who can be playfully inventive, while deeply in touch with literary traditions.” Matthew Pearl, author of The Dante Club
“Like T.C. Boyle, to whom he has been appropriately compared, Barlow paints personalities in broad strokes… Barlow’s lively imagination will carry along those who appreciate risk-taking fiction.” Kirkus
“…masterfully written and paced, rich in back story and subplots. At times enthralling and at others heartbreaking… a rewarding novel by a gifted stylist.” Charleston Post
Prologue
He tells the cab to wait. Walks up the drive. There are For Sale and To Let signs next to each other in the garden. Kids’ toys lying in the flowerbeds. The lawn a few weeks away from a good cut.
She’s already at the door, hands running down the front of a blue print dress, flattening her stomach. She’d been jumpy on the phone. Eager to please.
I don’t like this.
Through the door comes the noise of children shouting and a TV turned up way too loud. In the hall he sees a small wooden table piled high with brown envelopes, and more envelopes on the floor.
Then she’s down the steps to meet him. Smiling.
He looks at the large detached house. Can’t be more than five years old. Tidy place. Nice area too. Very nice.
What happened?
“Hi,” she says, arm outstretched. “The car?”
He nods, shakes her hand. It trembles a fraction and her finger ends are pink, raw.
“I’m Alison.”
“Pleased to meet you.”
A pause.
“So…!”
They look across at the car, parked up close to the side of the house. Sleek, black, pristine. Then again, Porsche GT3s, a couple of years old? They’re all pristine.
“The asking price, it’s, y’know, I’m open to offers.”
An escalation of noise from the house.
“Ah, kids!” she says, trying to laugh.
“One careful lady owner?” he asks, still looking at the motor.
She lets the question find its mark.
“It’s in my husband’s name, but…”
She glances at the For Sale sign at the edge of the garden.
For Sale, To Let.
He’s already turning.
“Not what I’m after. Sorry.”
Flashes her a clipped smile and he’s away down the drive.
“What the hell you come for, then?” she says as she watches him go, the softness gone from her voice.
You don’t want my money. You really don’t.
“Bloody time waster!”
He hears the house door slam shut, the screams from within.
As the cab moves away he pulls out a Nokia, fast dials.
“The last one, Porsche GT3? No good. We’re done. I’m going home. I’ve got a date.”
PART ONE—SATURDAY
One
She’s dancing from one leg to the other, struggling into a pair of jeans, phone jammed between her chin and shoulder. Then, with a single thrust of the pelvis, her dark blue knickers, plus the buttocks they don’t quite conceal, disappear.
“Fifteen minutes,” she says, grabbing the phone as she speaks into it, looking around for more clothes. “No. It’s Saturday. Ten. Okay… Yes, yes…”
He watches from the comfort of a king-size bed as she snakes her arms up into the sleeves of a white shirt, juggling the phone between hands. When the brief conversation is over she throws the phone onto the bed and starts buttoning up her shirt.
On the wall behind her is a framed photograph of a motor yacht, shark-like as it slices through the water, its hull whiter than the foaming surf, whiter than her shirt, whiter than white.
He looks at the picture then back at Den. If he had to choose? Out there on the water, or in here with her? Will he ever be able to choose?
“What time is it?” he croaks, the rasp of yesterday’s late night in his throat.
“Eight-twenty. I’ve got a dead body and you’ve got cars to sell.”
“I wouldn’t call it dead,” he says as she leans over him and kisses his forehead.
“And,” she adds, grabbing a clump of his thick black hair and gently turning his head to one side, “you’re famous!”
Shit. Just what I needed.
On the pillow next to him sits a laptop. He squints at the screen:
FAMILY OF CRIME TURNS
AN HONEST PROFIT
Beneath the headline two people are grinning proudly to the camera, around them a fleet of luxury cars. He looks more closely. A third person, who he knows must be himself, stands some way behind, out of focus, his mop of dark hair casting a shadow over his features until he’s almost unrecognisable.
“What body?” he says, sitting up and watching as she perches on the end of the bed and pulls on a pair of white trainers.
“Just work.”
She springs up again and grabs a brown leather jacket, moving over to the huge Victorian windows to check the weather.
He sighs, knowing that however much he enjoys watching her slither into a pair of jeans, it also means that the metamorphosis is in progress: lover to copper, from Den to DC Denise Danson. Each time she disappears inside her work clothes it’s like saying goodbye to an old friend and hello to one of those acquaintances you wish you didn’t see half so often.
Coppers are dull bastards on duty. They take themselves so seriously it’s painful. Even now, after two years of getting used to it, he steers clear of her when she’s working. Lunchtime dates are the worst. She tries to loosen up, but never quite manages to drop that slightly tetchy, detached nature that all detectives seem to have. No, he and Den are made for the social hours. Whenever they have any.
She grabs her phone, emits a noise which might be a goodbye, and she’s gone.
He looks up at the massive windows. Yellow-grey light spills into the bedroom, down across the white linen duvet and onto the polished wooden floorboards, which despite their high sheen are badly snarled and gouged, as if they bear the permanent scars of teenage acne. Which in a sense they do.
Just over three decades ago he walked into this room for the first time, a nervous eleven-year-old about to get his first taste of a proper art class. Since then he’s always liked it in here, the art studio on the top floor. When he bought the flat, he deliberately asked the developers not to remove the floorboards, just varnish them. Art was never his strong point, but thirty years later and the old studio has turned out to be a remarkably comfortable place to live.
Out beyond the windows the sky is changing rapidly, thick grey clouds dispersing to reveal a radiant blue, like the last remnants of a stormy Mediterranean night surrendering themselves up to a day of intense heat. Were he to kneel on the bed and peer through the glass, though, he would see not a great glistening expanse of sea but rows of red-brick council houses running down the valleyside, an ugly-as-hell modern comprehensive school, and further off the kind of grey tower blocks that seem to be rain-dampened whatever the weather.
When the old high school had been converted into flats, the main selling point was their high ceilings and the sense of space. But for him the building had an added attraction, because he’d always felt comfortable here, as if he belonged. This is where he’d become John Ray, where he’d escaped the shadow of his father and the family name. From these class
rooms he’d gone on to Cambridge, then abroad, far away from the place where he’d grown up, and where he was always someone’s son, never just himself. He had a lot to thank the school for.
Then, two years ago, he came back. It wasn’t his choice, not exactly. Regrets? The view from the window isn’t great, and it definitely isn’t the Mediterranean. But it’s home. For now at least.
He looks again at the photo on the laptop. In the foreground stands a young woman with mad, voluminous hair, a pierced nose and slightly sunken gypsy eyes. Next to her is a young guy in a pale suit and a boyish smile; he’s as big as a bear and his shoulders are so wide they seem to take up most of the shot.
“Freddy, you’re blocking me out!” he says, smiling. “And that’s fine by me.”
He looks again at the figure in the background, arms crossed, reserved. Is there something quizzical about his posture? Difficult to tell. He hardly even recognises himself. And behind them all, high up over the entrance to the showroom: TONY RAY’S MOTORS.
He shuts the laptop and glances around the bedroom. An empty bottle of Carlos I brandy lies on its side beneath the windows, two crystal tumblers next to it. He and Den had spent half the night there on the floor curled up in the duvet, talking about a million things, life, work, fate and how it comes creeping up on you… Occasionally they’d argued about who was going on top, because the truth was that, however well varnished the floor was, it did give you the odd splinter in the bum.
On the bedside table sits a thick square of clear perspex, Auto Trader Used Car Dealership of the Year embossed on it, and in smaller letters, Yorkshire Region. Within the perspex a silver steering wheel is trapped, as if suspended in formaldehyde, a Damien Hirst take on the secondhand motor trade. The award was just a bit too big to fit into his jacket pocket, and he’d had to carry the thing home in his hand last night. There’d been a few sarcastic comments in the city centre. Then again, at six-two and fifteen stone he didn’t get that many comments.
He hadn’t intended to go to the award ceremony at all. But the people organising it just kept asking for confirmation, and then that girl from the Yorkshire Post rang, and wouldn’t leave him alone until he agreed to an interview. By which time it looked like the most natural thing to do was just to go and get it over with. Same with the interview.
The ceremony, at least, had been short. Buffet food. No plate of chicken in a Champagne sauce to pick at while some slurring bloke next to you wearing a Burton’s suit tells you exactly why Leeds United were wrong to get rid of David O’Leary.
All in all it hadn’t been too bad. An hour milling about sipping bubbly and nibbling a variety of forgettable hors d’oeuvres in the Metropole Hotel. Then, at the very moment his name was announced, Den had embraced him, pulling him close onto her, and whispered:
“Tonight I’m gonna suck your cock til your balls explode.”
One minute later, after a brief and uninspiring speech, he walked back over to her, the bulky plastic award in his hand. She was grinning like a loon.
“I wanted to see if I could give you a hard-on when you walked up there,” she said, leaning into him, her hand running across his chest.
That was the thing with coppers, especially CID. They switch on, they switch off. Only one of those settings is good for you. But you can never tell how long they’re gonna be switched, either way. He’s not complaining, though. He was lucky to find Den, and he knows it.
With a yowl of energy he swings his large frame out of bed and heads for the shower, which is where Miss Casey used to store the paints.
Two
She slams the car door shut behind her and looks at her watch. Ten minutes exactly.
There’s already a cigarette in her mouth. She lights it and zips her jacket up to the neck. There’s nothing about smoking that she enjoys, but she always has Marlboro Lights with her when she’s working. If you’re going to face a dead body on an empty stomach, you need something.
Up ahead is a red car, its four doors and boot all wide open. Two scene-of-crime officers in white paper suits are working methodically on it, concentrating on the boot and the back seat.
A police cordon runs around the area, yellow and black tape snapping in the wind. A marked police car and three unmarked cars are parked at odd angles nearby.
First impressions: the car has been left on a patch of disused land beneath a motorway flyover, about two miles from the city centre. The land is accessed by a service road that leads to some industrial units and a dead end. Security man at the units? Cameras?
The space itself is banked steeply on one side by the earthworks of the flyover, and the whole area is cast in the shadows of the motorway. She can see and hear the morning traffic forty feet above, the glint of light coming off vehicles, the hiss of pneumatic brakes. Easy access to the motorway? Dump the car and thumb a lift? There’s an exit a quarter of a mile up ahead, less.
On two other sides of the area the ground is slightly raised, boasting the occasional bush of, what is it, gorse? At some point a frugal attempt at landscaping had been made. It’s the kind of place that serves as an unofficial car park on weekdays. Anywhere around here without double-yellows is fair game. People have no choice. But at the weekends there’s no one.
DI Baron is coming towards her, passing through the cordon at the point where a uniform is stationed, log book in hand. The tarmac underfoot is so old and cracked it’s more like loose chippings. Baron’s steps are only just audible against the constant noise coming down from the motorway.
“Hi, Steve.”
Lean and alert, with close-cropped hair, Baron looks with disgust as she sucks in another lungful of smoke. But she knows that he’d have one himself if only he could bring himself to relax a little, to accept that we all have weaknesses.
But it’s not a weakness, she tells herself, as she feels the hot smoke spread through her lungs. You see it on the news all the time, soldiers in war zones, disasters of one sort or another. Smoking. Always people smoking. Wherever there’s death, there’s tobacco. You need something. She does, anyway.
“Dead girl in the boot.”
He makes it sound like a riddle.
“Yeah, you said.”
“I’ve just spoken to the Super. Briefing in forty minutes.”
She takes another drag, hating the taste. If the briefing’s so soon, they’ll have to be off to Millgarth before long. Everyone else assigned to the case will be assembling there.
“Good spot to dump a car,” she says. “No CCTV cameras that I can see.” Her eyes follow the steep incline up to the traffic overhead.
“Traffic cameras on the motorway,” he says.
“We taking the car in as-is?”
He nods.
They stand a moment in silence.
September has turned cold, despite the blue skies. Baron’s mid-blue suit seems flimsy, a summer suit, cut a little too near his lean frame.
“Shall we?” She drops the cigarette, crushing it with the toe of a Nike.
He stays where he is.
“Tell me,” he says, eyes down on the cigarette, “tell me about John Ray.”
“John? What do you want to know?” She looks straight at him, until he is forced to meet her stare.
“You still seeing him?”
“I’ve never made a secret of it, Steve. You know that.”
“How long ago was it that his brother was murdered?”
“Two years. I’m surprised you don’t remember,” she says. “Your first case as DI, wasn’t it?”
Den was on that case too. But it had been Baron’s first as Detective Inspector, and his first as Deputy SIO. Tough call, getting Joe Ray’s murder first up as a Senior Investigating Officer. No one was ever going down for that one.
He smiles.
“Bad on bad,” he says. “How many of those are you gonna make, eh? Criminal on criminal? Great story, though. Front page stuff. Funny, isn’t it, how the Ray family just keeps cropping up? Someone mentioned them again
yesterday night.”
“Really?”
“Young reporter from the Post rings me up at home, asks me if it’s police policy for officers to be seen about town with the family of known criminals.”
So that’s why he’s got her down here.
She takes a long breath.
“John’s a car dealer. I was at an award ceremony with him.”
“I know what it was. I saw the paper this morning. This permanent, then, is it?”
“Really isn’t any of your business, Sir.”
He turns, starts to walk towards the red car.
She follows, angry as hell, but knowing her anger is stupid. It is his business. Police business. Of course people are going to raise a eyebrow. It’s human nature. I’m a copper, and John’s family is…
“Hi, Brian,” she says as a uniformed sergeant adds her name to the crime scene log.
“Morning,” he says, a thick-set man in his middle years with a soft face. “Nice day for it.”
Gallows humour. The sun hardly up and a dead body to deal with. Ten hours ago he’s having a quiet drink and a laugh with his wife and friends. Good old Friday night drink. Alarm clock. Dead girl.
Meanwhile, two SOCOs go about their business, moving carefully around the car, hardly making a sound. A photographer is already packing up, and to one side a couple of young uniformed constables stand together, talking out of the sides of their mouths and watching as DI Baron and DC Danson approach the vehicle.
“Here we are,” Baron says as they reach the open boot, the SOCO moving away to give them a better view.
She looks inside. A young woman curled up. Early twenties. Hair in a long bob, a deep, natural brown, almost black, face heavy with foundation, lipstick dark, smudged on both sides.