by Joan Fleming
YOUNG MAN, I THINK
YOU’RE DYING
Joan Fleming was a British author of more than thirty crime and thriller novels. She was born in 1908 in Lancashire, England, and educated at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. The British Crime Writers’ Association twice awarded her with its prestigious Gold Dagger award for best crime novel of the year, once in 1962 for When I Grow Rich, and again in 1970 for Young Man, I Think You’re Dying. She died in 1980.
YOUNG MAN, I THINK YOU’RE DYING
JOAN FLEMING
THE LANGTAIL PRESS
LONDON
This edition published 2010 by
The Langtail Press
www.langtailpress.com
Young Man, I Think You’re Dying © 1970 David Fleming
ISBN 978-1-78002-009-9
“So slowly, slowly rase she up
And slowly came she nigh him,
And when she drew the curtains by –
‘Young man, I think you’re dying.’
‘Farewell,’ she said, ‘ye virgins all
And shun the fault I fell in:
Henceforth take warning by the fall
of cruel Barbara Allen.’ ”
Lowland Scottish Ballad
CHAPTER I
PIZZAS! He adjusted his expression to one of disgust and contempt, but lovingly, in the manner of an artist, he picked up the sliced onion and arranged it down the pastry in a straight professional line next to the sliced tomato. Far back, out of sight, in his utmost mind, he loved them; the smell was, to him, entirely felicitous and it was not possible to be unhappy in an atmosphere of such sensual content.
However, in his social set work was an evil thing, something to be avoided if humanly possible; a nuisance, a drag, a bore, something that had to be put up with, like parents, until such time as one could escape to freedom. For a long time, anyway until he was fifteen, Joe had not known the meaning of the much-used word freedom—until he looked it up in a dictionary which his poor father used for crossword puzzles. It was faintly disappointing to find that this golden, glittering word which he had used liberally for so long simply meant personal liberty, non-slavery, but he had swallowed it along with the vitamin pills his mother pressed on him every morning.
Now, after working for two years for Silas d’Ambrose (he insisted on the apostrophe, he himself always making it audible) he fully realised that he was, indeed, a victim of slavery and that freedom meant having your own business, sitting with your feet up on one of the tables reading Playboy, issuing occasional reminders such as: “Have you washed your hands, Joe?” “Mind you cut the bad bits off those tomatoes!”, whilst your employees slaved and slaved.
The pizza bar in which he slaved was in a house in a small eighteenth-century street in Soho, due shortly for demolition. In the flat above the bar Madame Joan, Palmist, carried on her trade. A few doors down, a shop selling rubber goods and medicines for waning sexual prowess bore the stone words on the grey brick wall above the ground floor window: EXCHANGE AND BULLION MART and the date 1721. There had been a crumbling notice above the pizza bar, which Silas had had taken down to make way for the word PIZZAS in bright blue neon electric lettering; it now hung indoors for the amusement of customers and read: M. SLY CORSETIERE. Joe personally had no time for these kind of jokes; his own place, when he had it, would be the last word in modernity; it would have a Ladies as well as a Gents and there would be Dames and Messieurs over the doors, such as had impressed him deeply at London Air Terminus. He would not have the huge gas ovens and the slaves working behind a counter in full view of the customers, but conceal the business side behind a tasteful modern stained-glass partition; gorgeous naked girls with huge bosoms would glide in and out from behind the screens bearing plates of pizzas; or nearly naked, like the girls at the Playboy Club. He would insist that they disappear behind the screen as soon as they had served the food; this vanishing would titillate the customer so that he wouldn’t get bored staring at them for too long. Joe had a small notebook in which, when he had time, he jotted down his own “Do It Yourself Market Research,” under the simple heading Plans, keeping the book carefully locked away from his mother who, if she had found it, would have read it aloud to his father to the accompaniment of the giggling that annoyed him so much.
It was not fashionable to like your boss and when he was with his chums Joe would be as loud as the others in protests of detestation but, in fact, his liking for Silas went beyond a mere sneaking approval. He admired him very much; his ease of manner, his good temper and, best of all, the way he paid promptly, with the occasional reminder: “And don’t forget I’ve paid the Income Tax.”
He was kind to Joe, too. When, for instance, Joe had given him a false name because he was so deeply ashamed of his own name, Silas had discovered it over the question of National Insurance and had said: “So you’re really called Joe Bogey, are you? I say, I say! With or without the e? I’d keep the e if I were you; like me, you’re descended from the Huguenots, who were immigrants to this blasted sceptered isle.”
“Oh yes?” Joe had said, looking his most gormless because he did not approve of classy language.
“We fled from oppression in France in the eighteenth century. Your name would probably have been de la Bougerie or something of the kind that the poor English clots couldn’t wrap their tongues round. So you hang on to your e. And when you give your name don’t stutter and go red and stand on one leg; say boldly and clearly Joseph Bogey, with an e. That’ll shut them up! They used to call Napoleon Buonaparte Boney, so you have an honourable precedent and don’t forget it.”
For two years and more Joe had observed Silas and all his ways; disapproval and bewilderment had gradually changed to admiration. As he grew up along with his playmates who, with the passage of time, had become verbose and revolutionary, he was given to understand that his boss was someone to be despised, a member of the privileged class and thus never to be trusted; Joe did trust him all the same and looked up to him as a do-er of the Right Thing.
Even over the vexed question of length of hair Joe had, after a pretty tight struggle, meekly given in and in due course his chums had accepted his short hair as part of the slavery with which they themselves would not put up.
Silas had clapped the tall white chef’s hat over his long, greasy brown locks and dragged him over to a looking-glass. He had laughed: “You look a right Charlie, don’t you?” The glance Joe had given himself was subliminal, a full moment of viewing would have been too horrifying; he had snatched off the starched hat and held it in front of him as though he were about to be sick into it.
“You see, long hair’s all right if you’re a bricklayer’s mate and don’t mind mortar in your hair, or if you’re a Council’s employee, bashing holes in the road and like your hair smelling of drains. But here my customers don’t want your hairs in their pizzas. Get me? So it’s either becoming an expert chef with short hair and a big future before you, or joining your chums with plenty of hair but no prospects. You can take it or leave it.”
And with the heart-warming smell of pizzas in his head and eighteen pounds a week in prospect it had seemed worth a searing visit to the barber and an acute draught round his ears for a few hours afterward.
There were two of them working in the bar, Joe being the senior boy, and they worked on a rota; one week from six p.m. to midnight and the next week a visit to the bar at six a.m. to make the dough and leave it to rise, then a return to the bar and work from twelve to three, with both of them there on a Saturday night. Two extremely plain girls did the washing up, especially chosen for their looks and figures which were unattractive beyond belief, and a very superior person indeed, called Mrs. Jam
es Trelawny, mopped the floors and wiped the Formica table tops and plastic chair seats. Silas appeared to do nothing whatever, lounging elegantly about, smoking Balkan Sobranies but making quite sure that no customer left the bar without paying him.
Like small blessings Joe dropped tiny fragments of margarine over the whole colourful tray he had now prepared with mushroom slices, tomatoes, aubergine slivers, onion, cheese, a criss-cross of anchovy fillets, and oregano herb, finely chopped and sprinkled over the whole. He opened the door of the second oven, felt the temperature with his hand, careful not to touch the hot metal, swung the heavy tray on to his shoulder and with a flourish which he had achieved only in the course of time, slid the whole into the black depths and swung the door closed. In the same operation he brought out the sizzling contents from No. 1 oven, laying it down in all its fragrant glory.
“That’s a clever boy, give us one!” The high husky voice was only too familiar, it was a red-head called W. Sledge of whom Joe had stood in some awe since he had come to live in the same tower block and share the same play-ground when they were both ten. It annoyed him that W. Sledge should have turned up on a Monday night, their not so busy time; the time made it much more difficult to give him a free meal.
“Eff off!” he said, sliding a pizza on to a plate with a large metal slice and placing it on the glass shelf for the customer to pick up.
“Don’t be like that! It’s important.”
“It would be,” Joe returned sarcastically as he slid another three-and-sixpennyworth on to a plate.
W. Sledge folded his arms and leaned gracefully against the wall, watching his toiling friend with faint jeering amusement. Though he was not to know it, he bore a strong resemblance to the young Shelley with unhealthy pale features of rat-like proportions and a wild cacophony of tangled red hair; he was wearing skin-tight pants, an orange-coloured polo necked shirt over which was a fisher-man’s knit V-necked sweater, the tasteful ensemble finished by several rows of beads which appeared to be made of date stones or something and smelled strongly of the Middle East.
He was extremely picturesque and added lustre to the otherwise fairly drab crowd of customers in the pizza bar. Silas, however, gave him a beady look and said: “Can we help you, sir?” though he knew him perfectly well by sight. This meant all too clearly: you-better-bloody-well-sit-down-and-behave-yourself and was by no means unjustified, as it was W. Sledge’s tendency to come in with a crowd of rowdies and there were occasionally symptoms of an inclination to break the place up. But tonight, because he wished urgently to communicate with his friend Joe, he sat down meekly and accepted the plate of hot savoury pizza which Silas banged down in front of him, together with the implements for eating it, suavely wrapped in a folded paper napkin as though they were rather indecent things, which they were not. His behaviour, in fact, was impeccable; when he had finished eating he threw one arm over the back of his chair and sat staring meaningfully at his friend, picking his teeth until the stroke of midnight, after which not another pizza was served and the unused ones were put under a plastic cover for the next day.
Joe was hustled along the overcrowded pavements through the usual cosmopolitan crowd jostling and struggling nowhere; outside Bob’s Baked Potato Bar, which in the dark backward and abysm of time had been the best restaurant in London, an elderly couple stood and shivered miserably, bitterly disappointed in the meal they had had.
“It must have changed hands, dear,” the old lady was murmuring to her husband as he beckoned a cab. But W. Sledge, too, hailed the taxi and as it drew up he snatched at the handle and pushed Joe inside whilst at the same time firmly pressing the old gentleman back on to the pavement with the sole of his foot stretched out backwards so that the taxi driver could not see it.
“He kicked you!” the old lady said indignantly.
W. Sledge slammed the taxi door and leaned forward to him through the driver’s small glass aperture: “Fiery Beacon!”
The taxi lurched off down the Haymarket and the old gentleman said: “He didn’t really kick me, dear. He pushed me with his foot to be exact, but it hurts rather.”
But though W. Sledge had whipped up a potential event it was, in fact, disappointing in that Joe knew in advance what was expected of him. It was his turn.
It would seem that only two alternatives had presented themselves to the young Sledge in the way of a career, the first and obvious one being that of entertainer, but he had found to his chagrin that time, in respect of the beat, meant nothing at all to him. Though he was able to bang drums with great energy and enthusiasm he unfortunately always banged them at the wrong split second. Several groups had given him a trial but he had been turned down by them all. He had to face the sad fact that he was not “musical.” So there had been no alternative but for him to become what is called an entrepreneur. This word at one time applied to someone who, for instance, ran a pierrot show on some seaside pier but it has been upgraded with time and now applies simply to an organiser working for himself. W. Sledge became an organiser in that he organised himself into obtaining goods without payment and selling them at various sources of which he kept a record in a notebook, written in a code which he had invented himself. In the course of time these activities advanced, if the word is relevant, from the category of Petty Crime to that of Crime. In the same way the appellation Petty Thief advanced into Thief but since that word has been devalued W. Sledge settled for entrepreneur finding it more interesting than the ambiguous alternative: Company Director.
By sheer prestidigitation, details of which would make a useful handbook in itself for those wishing to imitate, W. Sledge had, at the age of twenty-one, achieved a pleasant flat of his own in the council tower block in which he had lived with his parents since he was ten. He had kept a beautiful Hindu mistress of fourteen whom he rented to other entrepreneurs, strictly during the day. He received unemployment benefit. He had achieved a six-year-old Jaguar which he kept in an underground garage in return for serving petrol during the early hours of the morning every other weekend when not on the parking lot by Fiery Beacon. He was also a chairman and founding member of an exclusive club with the name of The Wotchas, the membership of which never exceeded six, a brotherhood not in the least resembling but almost as closely knit as the Freemasons. Absolute loyalty was the prerequisite of this club, the joke name being the exact reason for its existence in that they were actually watchers one for another. Ten per cent, the watcher received.
This brief summing-up of W. Sledge’s career makes sad reading: he had achieved too much, too soon. An infant until his last birthday in the eyes of the law, he considered he “had everything.”
“It’s an old lady in Kensington, W8,” W. Sledge said as they sat back in the cab. “It’s an absolute cinch since I cleaned the windows there last week and I know my way around.”
“No, no, I wouldn’t touch it. I wouldn’t like an old lady to get hurt,” Joe returned firmly.
“There’s no question of her getting hurt,” W. Sledge reproved. “Not much, anyway.”
“Aw, Sledgey.” Joe sighed at the wickedness of it. He also used the affectionate term because none of his acquaintances was allowed to use the so-called Christian name by which he had evidently been christened: it stank. “Why pick on me?”
“It’s your time round. What’s up with you anyway? Getting goose flesh?”
In an attempt to change the subject Joe asked what he thought he was up to, joining a window-cleaning firm; that was a corny old game, only fit for an elderly lag, and it meant giving up the Social Security loot.
Sledge smiled that smile he used when he was feeling the utmost superiority to the dim-wit with whom he was conversing.
“Oh my dear!” He winced at the pain the remark caused him.
“Well, I mean to say … are you slippin’, joinin’ a firm? You must be off your top.”
W. Sledge brought a pair of large dark glasses out of his hip pocket and put them on before he turned to stare at Joe, whose
face was only intermittently lit as the taxi slipped past the Houses of Parliament and along to the Embankment. He was dissatisfied with his eyes which, he realised, were not compelling enough, in fact they were not compelling at all, they were shallow and poky and pale, and as he lived with a girl who had compelling dark eyes of the saucer variety he was extremely conscious of this deficiency in himself, so when he wished to be forceful he resorted to the artificiality of black dark glasses of an abnormal size.
“Who said anything about joining a firm? Haven’t you any wits at all, man?” He sighed heavily at the ennui of having to explain anything so simple. “You only need a short ladder, little more than a pair of steps; a water-proof jacket out of which there’s a washleather hanging, a cloth cap …” he stopped to cackle with laughter at the idea of himself in a cloth cap …
“Right? You park the Jag a little way off one of these old-fashioned great big blocks of flats. You must make sure it’s Kensington, though, because there’s sure to be at least one Lady something, if not three or four, in the block. You take a note of one name on the name plates in the entrance so that if there’s a porter, there nearly always is but they’re usually in their own pads, sitting in front of their fires watching telly; if there’s a porter snoopin’ around you tell him you’re going up to Lady So-and-so’s. If not, you start off up the stairs; you stump up and down, round and round and sooner or later, man, some dear old lady sees you and squeaks: ‘A window cleaner! Just what I want,’ and asks you how much you charge. Well, you think of the lowest figure and halve it …”
He almost, not quite, yawned at the simplicity of it all. “Well, I mean, you’re inside … it’s peanuts. Mind you, she’s not as green as she’s cabbage-looking, she never leaves you alone in the room, but she stands there smiling whilst you’re having a good dekko and she’s watching the marvellous shiny job you’re making of the windows. She’s always pleased with your work, maybe there’s a cuppa at the end of it or maybe a tip. She’ll always ask for your card and when you haven’t got one on you, she’ll write down your address so she can get in touch with you next time she wants her windows cleaned …”