Authors: Rupert Thomson
The door of the pub creaked open under his hand, crashed shut behind him. He ordered a pint of bitter and drank a third of it, then he put his glass down and glanced around. Half a dozen suits, two girls in office skirts and blouses. A scattering of old men wearing hats. Not a bad place, though. The booths looked original, the name of the brewery elaborately carved into the panes of frosted-glass. Statues of women in togas hoisted opalescent globe-lights towards the dark-brown ceiling. A polished brass rail hugged the foot of the bar. His brother Gary would have approved. Gary used to deal in antiques.
He asked the barman if Charlton Williams was around.
The barman jerked his eyes and eyebrows in the direction of the window. âOver there.'
From where he was standing, Barker could only see Charlton Williams' back. Brown leather jacket, grey trousers. Cropped black hair. Barker moved across the pub towards him, pint in hand.
âCharlton Williams?'
The man who swung round was this side of forty, but only just. He was going bald from the front, his hair receding at both temples, leaving a round piece that looked as if it might fit into a jigsaw. He reminded Barker of a wrestler who was always on TV on Saturdays in the late sixties.
âThe name's Barker Dodds. I'm a friend of Ray's. Ray Peacock. He said to find you here.'
Charlton's pouchy eyes narrowed. âYou're the bloke that needs a place to stay, right?'
Barker nodded.
âSo where's the luggage?'
âBus station. Victoria.' Barker drained his pint.
Charlton pointed at the glass. âSame again?'
âCheers.'
Charlton Williams. According to Ray, Charlton had been named after the football club. People used to call him Athletic, which was a bit of a laugh, Ray said, because Charlton had never played sport in his life, not even darts. Charlton was drinking with Ronnie and Malcolm, two mates from the meat market in Smithfield. When they had emptied their glasses, Barker bought another round. It struck him that he had no idea what would happen next. The pub was where his knowledge ended. He was like someone who was about to go missing. A sense of freedom, limitless and exhilarating, suddenly invaded him. He smiled and nodded at the faces that surrounded him, as if they were in on it, as if they were the bearers of his secret.
He breathed in slowly, feeling his lungs expand. The same smell the country over: spilled beer, cigarette smoke, crisps. His ex-wife Leslie used to work in a pub. The Phoenix. The first time he went in there he was drunk. She noticed him straight away, she told him later, but he couldn't remember seeing her at all. Other things on his mind, she said with a knowing smile. She was used to that. Women came third with a lot of men, after booze and horses â or, sometimes, if the men did drugs, women weren't even placed.
Then he noticed her.
A wet night in Stonehouse, rain blowing sideways through the streetlights. Still summer, though. His denim jacket soaked, he pushed through the pub's double-doors. Stood at the bar and smoothed his hair back with both hands, fingers spread
over his head, thumbs skimming the tops of his ears. A couple of musicians were setting up next to the Emergency Exit â one of those second-rate bands that tour the country playing other people's songs. A scrawny man in cowboy boots and jeans was tuning a battered white guitar. Then he stepped forwards. Put his face close to the microphone.
One-two. One-two. Sshh. Sshh. One-two
⦠Nothing irritated Barker more. He sat on his tall red stool and scowled. A voice asked him if he was being served. He looked round. Freckles spattered the girl's bare arms, and one side of her mouth seemed higher than the other when she smiled.
âYou new here?' he said.
âNo,' she said. âWhy? Are you?'
He liked that â the cheek of it. The nerve. He bought her a drink. A ginger ale. And that was what she tasted of when he kissed her, about an hour later, behind the old Pickford's building on Millbay Road. Ginger ale. Once, she leaned back, away from him, and said, âYou're an ugly bastard, aren't you.' It was one of those things women say when they like you and they're not sure why.
She wouldn't let him fuck her on the street, which was what he wanted, but she didn't stop him pushing her T-shirt up and pulling down her bra so he could see her breasts shining in the raw white glare of the nearby car-park. When he reached under her skirt, though, she began to struggle.
âNot now.'
âWhen then?'
âTomorrow. My night off.'
Steam flowered in the sky behind her; they must have been working late at the laundry that weekend. He walked her back, just one word in his head.
Tomorrow
. A terrace of brick houses, drainpipes chuckling with the last of the rain. Weeds growing sideways in the walls. And the pub's double-doors half-open, dirty red carpet, dirty golden light, and from where he was standing, on the pavement, he could see the man with the
cowboy boots and the white guitar, talking his way into a song:
I'd do this for Dolly Parton, only she's not here
â¦
At the end of the month Barker walked into Lou's and had the barmaid's name tattooed across his chest in big block capitals.
LESLIE
. Lou tried to warn him. Always a mistake, he said, to have a woman's name tattooed across your chest. You want to get rid of it, you can't. But Barker didn't listen.
âYou coming or what?'
He looked round. Charlton Williams was waiting by the door and, beyond him, in the gritty London sunshine, Ronnie and Malcolm were facing each other, pointing at a folded newspaper and nodding.
From the window of his room in Charlton's house Barker had a view of the entire estate. Built during the early seventies, the houses were neat boxes of white weatherboard and brick, their front gardens almost non-existent, their short, steep drives more than a match for the hand-brake on most cars. None of the streets followed straight lines. The thinking was, if a street dipped and twisted a bit, then it had character. Nature was just around the corner. You could almost believe you were living in the country.
The Isle of Dogs.
Each morning Barker would wake with an empty feeling in his stomach that had nothing to do with hunger and for a moment he would wonder where he was. The walls were smudged with strangers' fingerprints. A fawn carpet curled against the skirting-board. Then he would see his bags. They lay on the floor under the window, zips gaping. Glimpses of his few possessions: the dull gleam of the weights, his bright-red bowling shirt, the edge of a history book. You're lucky, he told himself, to have a place at all. He had Ray to thank for it. When Barker mentioned he was leaving, Ray said he would give his mate a call. They had served in the Army together. The Green Jackets. Five minutes on the mobile phone and it
was fixed. Though grateful, Barker felt uneasy. He'd seen the look on Ray's face. Somewhere deep down, below the skin, it said,
You're in my pocket now. You owe me one
.
He owed Charlton too, of course â a man he knew much less about. Charlton worked nights at the meat market, but he would never say exactly what he did and Barker chose not to ask. He had to be earning good money, though, because he slept in satin sheets and drove a brand-new Ford Sierra. A shame he didn't spend some of it on a cleaning-lady. If Charlton had a woman over, he would always try and talk her into tidying the house. Otherwise the empty pizza-boxes piled up like red-and-white pagodas, and the fridge began to smell. Charlton had given Barker the spare room, telling him that he could stay as long as he wanted. Any friend of Ray's, etc. etc. It turned out that Ray had saved Charlton's life while they were in Northern Ireland â or so Charlton said three or four days after Barker moved in. Charlton had just finished work and he was sitting at the kitchen table with a bottle of Bell's while Barker fried some bacon.
âI wouldn't be here now,' he said, swilling the whisky slowly round the inside of his glass. âYou've seen Ray in action, right?'
Barker broke two eggs into the fat and watched the white appear. âWe were working in a club once,' he said, âand three blokes wanted to get in. Navy, they were. Shit-faced. Ray told them no. They didn't like that.' Barker turned to Charlton, spatula in hand. âI never saw exactly how he did it, he moved that fast. But, next time I looked, two of the blokes were lying on the ground and the third was making a run for it.'
Charlton nodded. âGrasp Sparrow By The Tail.'
âYou what?' Barker said.
âDrive Away Monkey.'
âWhat are you on about?'
âTai Chi.' Charlton grinned. âRay's been doing it for years. We used to take the piss out of him.' Charlton started waving
his arms around in the air, slow-motion, his fingers splayed, like a hypnotist or a magician.
âWhat's the story with the sparrows?' Barker said.
âIt's one of the positions. The idea is, you're always ready. Never caught off balance.' Charlton finished his drink. âWhat's Ray up to these days?'
âThis and that.' Barker flipped the eggs so as to brown them on both sides. âHe's got kids now.'
âYeah?'
âTwo boys.'
Charlton shook his head. âFuck me,' he said, and yawned.
Though Barker had put two hundred and fifty miles between himself and Plymouth, he hadn't shaken off its influence. During his second week as Charlton's guest, he woke from a dream â or thought he woke â to see the Scullys outside his bedroom window. They looked cold, especially the girl, as if they had been standing on the road all night, their lips dark-mauve like the lips of people with heart conditions, their faces smooth, inscrutable. Two of the men stood on the green mound opposite the house, their arms folded, their feet apart, while the third leaned casually against a parked car. The girl shivered on the pavement, under a streetlamp, both hands tucked into her armpits. All four were staring up at him, their strange, wide-spaced eyes fastened on his window. At last the man who was leaning against the car lifted a hand into the air and Barker saw something dangling from his index finger, something that was flimsy, almost transparent. In his dream Barker peered closer. The man was holding a pair of knickers that belonged to Barker's ex-wife, Leslie. The man swung the knickers on his finger, almost as if he was teasing a dog. All the Scullys were grinning now, and their grins told Barker everything.
He lay on his back in the narrow bed and studied the pattern of smudges on the wall. Maybe he should have paid Leslie more attention â or maybe there was nothing he
could have done. He remembered the smell of other people's meals as he climbed the five flights of stairs to her tiny attic flat in Devonport. On summer evenings, during their first intoxicating days together, she would put James Last records on the stereo, then she'd strip down to her underwear and dance for him. Her breasts cupped and threatening to spill, her plump thighs curving towards that succulence above â he had never seen a woman who looked so good. He married her in September â he'd just turned twenty-four (she was twenty-seven) â and two months later he heard that she'd been seen with Gavin Stringer in the Garter Club on Union Street. He broke a pool cue on the side of Stringer's head. That slowed him up a bit. By the time Christmas came, it was someone else â a fireman from Whitsand Bay. Barker tracked him down on a night of gale-force winds in January. The fireman's hair kept flattening, the way grass does when a helicopter lands. Barker hit him in the stomach, feeling the organs jostle, rupture, split under his knuckles. Then he hit him in the face. Left him slumped on the pavement like a tramp or a drunk, one eyeball swinging against his cheek. âAll this violence,' and Leslie shook her head. âI just can't deal with it.' âBut it's because of you,' he shouted. âIt's you.' That wasn't the whole truth, though, and they both knew it. The marriage lasted less than a year.
An empty feeling, lying there. He couldn't imagine the future, what it held in store. He felt it was rushing towards him and yet, no matter how hard he looked, he couldn't see it coming. Once, when he was about fifteen, he and his brother Jim stole a Ford Capri and drove it along the main road at night with all the lights switched off. Nothing happened. They weren't even caught. He had the same feeling now, somehow, only the excitement had drained away, the daring too, and panic flickered in its place. He imagined lightning striking inside his brain. He could smell scorched air. He thought of Ray and his Tai Chi. In the days when Barker worked
on the door of a night-club, there wasn't much that could surprise him. He was almost always two or three seconds ahead of any move that might be made. But he didn't seem to have access to that ability at other times. More and more often he felt hurried, unprepared. He knew he couldn't stay with Charlton for ever, yet there were days when he couldn't even leave his bed. He had about eight hundred pounds, in cash. That wouldn't last long, not in London. He needed to find some work â any work. He was reminded of something his father used to say.
Jobs don't come looking for you. Only the police do that
.
One afternoon while Charlton was asleep Barker walked to Petticoat Lane. Rotten fruit clogged the gutters, and the sickly scent of joss-sticks floated in the air. He had the sense that, all around him, people were attempting the impossible: a thin man with a twitchy, unshaven face wedging a steel roll-door open with a piece of wood, a pregnant woman selling second-hand TVs. As he stood uncertainly among the stalls, the sky darkened and rain began to fall. He turned a corner, hoping to find shelter â a café, perhaps. Instead he saw an old-fashioned barber's shop. The sign in the window said GENT'S HAIRSTYLIST and underneath, in smaller, less formal letters,
Come In Please â We're Open
. Barker opened the door, which jangled tinnily, and stepped inside. A row of mirrors glimmered on the wall, reflecting the rain that was streaming down the shop-front window; the glass seemed to be alive, liquid. At the back an old man in a white cotton coat was sweeping hair into a pile. Barker asked him if he ran the place. The old man said he did.