Authors: Campbell Armstrong
âThat would also be very difficult, considering I never met the man.'
âDo you ever eat
garinim
?'
âWhat a strange question.'
âJust answer it.'
âSometimes I eat it, yes,' Marak said.
Perlman sat down, sinking into a big sponge of an armchair, the kind that only a contortionist could escape with any semblance of dignity. He heard springs creak. Good to take the weight off the aching leg. He stared at Marak. âSummary so far. You don't know Lindsay. You don't know Wexler. You don't know how you came into possession of the wallet. You didn't burn that photograph. You don't know Furfee, you don't know Quick. Basically speaking, you know fuck all.'
âI think you are barking up a wrong tree,' Marak said.
This flat might have been a butcher's storage freezer. Perlman shivered and flipped a switch on the electric heater and heard one of the bars come on, clicking as it warmed. He smelled dust burning. It was like the stench of a mouse on fire.
Perlman asked, âHow did you hear about Lindsay? Were you sitting in Haifa one day with the Glasgow phone book in front of you and looked under solicitors and jabbed the page with a pin?'
Marak said, âI knew his name.'
âHow come?'
âI heard it mentioned in Haifa. Lindsay did business there now and then.'
âOh aye? What kind?'
âI don't know what kind. I heard his name, that's all.'
âYou're truly getting on my wick, son. Come on, tell me something you really
know
. Give me concrete. Hit me with gospel.'
âMy date of birth.'
âI'm not easy to insult, but you're pushing me to the edge. Tell me something juicy.'
âJuicy? You mean interesting.'
âBolt me to my seat.'
âI believe in justice.'
âI suppose that's a start. Isn't that a start, Inspector? You and me and Marak have something in common.'
Scullion said, âTell us more. Marak.'
âAnd I believe in peace,' Marak said.
Perlman said, âOh-oh. Justice
and
peace. We've got an idealist here, Sandy.'
Marak looked at the carpet, a soiled threadbare thing whose design had long ago faded into a few indistinct floral blotches. âYou're mocking me.'
âNo. I was admiring your idealism,' Perlman said.
âI suppose
you
have none,' Marak said.
âI had most of my ideals kicked out of me working the streets of this city, son. A few wee bits and pieces are intact. Only just. Generally, I think idealism is a young man's game.'
âHow sad,' Marak said.
âWe're here to talk about your
tsurris
, Marak. Not ours. Face it. You've got serious problems.' Scullion blinked his swollen eye rapidly. It was almost shut.
âYou can prove nothing against me,' Marak said.
âYou think so, eh?' Scullion said. âCheck the list. Assaulting a police officer. The possibility of illegal entry into the country. The unprovoked attack on Joseph Lindsay's secretary. Possession of a wallet belonging to a man who was murdered â'
âMurdered? I'm to be blamed for that?'
Scullion said, âLet me continue. There's the small matter of your presence at the scene of Shiv Bannerjee's murder.'
âWhose murder?'
âThe Waterloo Hotel, Sauchiehall Street, remember? You were there, Marak. We have an eyewitness. She identified you from the print. What were you doing in that room at that particular time?'
âShe's mistaken,' Marak said.
âI don't think so,' Scullion said.
Marak tilted his head back, laid his palms upturned on his thighs like a man seeking a source of relaxation. Perlman watched him and thought: Lindsay, Wexler, Bannerjee. Is this kid the one? Is this the killer? The connections were there, certainly, and they were strong enough to be audible. Marak and Lindsay, that fiction about buying a house was total
shtuss
. Marak and Wexler: how had Shimon come into possession of the wallet if he hadn't met Wexler somewhere along the way? And the Waterloo Hotel: he'd been present in the bathroom with Bannerjee, according to Charlotte Leckie.
But it was all circumstantial. Incriminating, aye, but still circumstantial. Where was the sword that had killed Wexler, and how had Marak acquired the cocaine to murder Lindsay, how had he coerced Lindsay into swallowing the condom unless he'd used a gun, and where was that gun now? The questions foamed and fizzed in Perlman's head. He tried to imagine this young man in the act of decapitation, but the pictures were grainy. Nor could he see him force a gun to Lindsay's head.
And the wallet, that fucking wallet. That bothered Perlman. You throw away a wallet if you've stolen it from a man you've killed. True or false? You take the cash, dump the wallet. If you're prepared to gamble, you might nick a credit-card or two. No matter what you take, you dump the bloody wallet if you have any smarts whatsoever. Unless you were a
behayma
like Furfee, who'd held on to a murder weapon.
But Shimon Marak hadn't tossed it. So why not?
Maybe he didn't know it was in the flat. Maybe it had been placed there by somebody else.
Quick? Furfee?
Perlman pondered the idea of taking Marak to Pitt Street and confronting him with Quick and Furfee. It might be interesting, even revelatory. On the other hand, anything Quick and Furfee had to say would invariably be self-serving and consequently unreliable. There would be enough layers of exaggeration, false claims and accusations to keep a polygraph technician busy for years.
Perlman lit a cigarette. His throat was dry and raspy: if he was to break into song he'd sound like an old-time blues singer. Blind Lemon Jefferson, maybe.
âI think I'll talk to Linklater about what he can restore of the photograph, Sandy.'
âGo ahead,' Scullion said.
âIt'll give us some idea if Shimon was destroying incriminating evidence.' He reached for the telephone that lay on the floor under the coffee table and he dialled Linklater's number. He got Sid Linklater's answering machine. âCall me back, Sid. I'll be on Inspector Scullion's mobile. ASAP. I've got a nice wee restoration job for you.'
Marak said, âHe would have to be a magician to retrieve an image from that black stuff.'
âHe's an alchemist, Shimon. He can take lead and turn it into the sweetest gold. Right, Inspector?'
Scullion, beginning to look like a prizefighter in need of a good cuts man, nodded. âHe's the best. Far and away.'
âAs I told you, I have nothing to fear,' Marak said.
âBully for you.' Perlman dragged on his smoke. âYou live in Haifa?'
Marak didn't answer.
Perlman asked, âWith your family? Are you married?'
Marak said, âI don't discuss my family.'
âI'm interested in your background. Sisters? Brothers? What does your father do?'
âMy father â¦' Marak glanced at the ruins of the photograph on the coffee table then switched subjects. âWhen you check, you'll see that my fingerprints are nowhere on that wallet.'
âFine. We'll go over the wallet with a toothcomb, Shimon. What were you saying about your father?'
Marak slumped a little. âMy father's dead.'
âI'm sorry to hear that.'
âYou didn't know him. How can you be sorry?'
Perlman said, âPrickly, Shimon. I was expressing a common human condolence. Your father's dead, and I'm sorry. How did he die?'
Marak said, âHe was shot.'
âWho shot him?'
âIt doesn't matter now.'
âI'm interested,' Perlman said.
âIt doesn't matter,' Marak replied, a little pitch of sorrow in the voice.
Perlman sensed the young man's anger and loss. A damaged psyche was always difficult terrain to travel, but that didn't deter Lou Perlman, intrepid explorer. âSomebody shoots your father, it doesn't matter? I don't believe that, Shimon. Why was he shot?'
âHis associates thought he'd cheated them.'
âCheated them how?'
Marak gazed at the floor. His hands were damp. They left prints on the dark wooden arms of his chair. He's in pain, Perlman thought. The death of his father is an open wound and he's covered it over in a gauze so thick, so congealed with old blood, it will never heal. Therefore the arrogance, the cold front, this was his armour.
âCheated them out of what, Shimon?'
Marak stood up suddenly. âMoney.'
âBut he didn't do it?'
âHe'd never steal or cheat. He was a very honest man. He was the finest man I have ever known.' Marak clenched his hands so tightly his knuckles stood out like tiny sharp stones. âThey gunned him down in the street. I was fifteen years old and I saw it and I will never forget it. I don't want to talk about my father any more.'
Marak was silent. Perlman observed him, thinking how tightly wound he was, how tense his emotional sinews were drawn. A kid sees his father shot down in the street: what effect would that have on a life? Anger and loss and what else? A slow-burning fuse of vengeance? Something you tended carefully every day, making sure the fire hadn't gone out, a flame you fanned? Every day and every night, the same thought scalded you. And anything else around the edges, joy and love and laughter and music, lay in a shadow you couldn't penetrate because you were focused on only one thing. And so you prepare, and when you're ready, when you think you're old enough and tough enough, you make your move.
Settle old scores. Close the ledgers.
Marak said, âI need to use the toilet. Is that permissible?'
âI'll keep you company,' Perlman said.
âI'm allowed no privacy?'
âIn the circumstances.'
âAh, of course, the circumstances.'
Perlman followed the young man out of the room. Scullion came behind.
âI'll hang around the front door,' Scullion said.
âAfraid I'll try to run away?' Marak asked.
âI'm not taking chances.'
Perlman went inside the bathroom with Marak and felt awkward when he heard the young man undo his zip and the sound of his urine striking water. He turned his face away: a small illusion of privacy, he thought. Why not? He heard Marak flush the toilet, then zip his trousers up. The young man sighed as if with relief. And then suddenly the room was blasted with cold air, and Perlman swung his head in time to see Marak open the window and climb up on to the cistern and step out into the dark.
Perlman rushed to the window and saw Marak clinging to a drainpipe. âYou fucking
idiot
! Give me your hand. Come back inside.'
âI don't think so.' Marak was about four, five feet away, his hands clenched on the icy surface of the pipe. He couldn't climb in these slippery conditions, he'd fall, he'd go down until he struck the ground eighty or ninety feet below.
âStay where you are,' Perlman said. âJust reach out, I'll help you back inside.'
But Marak was climbing somehow, pushing himself up the pipe towards the edge of the roof, straining and grunting as he moved. His hard breathing steamed the air. Perlman heard Scullion come into the bathroom.
âJesus Christ,' Scullion said. He stuck his head out of the window. âMarak, don't be an arsehole. You're safer in here with us than you are out there.'
âI am safer where I am,' Marak said. He was already out of reach, a dark-coated figure flattened against the side of the building and climbing slowly.
âWhere the hell do you think you're going?' Perlman roared.
âWhere you can't follow.'
Perlman clambered on to the lid of the cistern and twisted his head to the side and watched Marak continue his climb, arms hugging the drainpipe, towards the roofline.
I'm going out there
, Perlman thought.
I was the one that lost him, I have to be the one that brings him back down
. The lunacy of this act wasn't even a consideration: it was his responsibility, plain and simple. He had a good head of adrenaline going and his leg no longer ached and he felt weirdly youthful, as if the decision to go out into the precarious structures of the night rejuvenated him.
âNo,' Scullion said.
âWatch me, Sandy,' and Perlman stepped on to the window ledge and felt the chill air sneak under his trousers.
âNo, Lou,' Scullion shouted. âFor God's sake.'
âHere I go, singing low.' Perlman reached out for the drainpipe, and swung his body into space, and for a moment he thought he'd lost contact with the pipe and was going to tumble out into nothingness, which he understood was no philosophical abstraction but something dreadfully and inevitably real. It was where your life ended, and your world stopped. But he had the pipe, cold as it was, under the palms of his hands. The slick ice that had formed on the surface wasn't going to help him climb. Ice and gravity, co-conspirators. He looked up and saw Marak scramble on to the roof.
âShimon, come back down, do it now, do it nice and slow and we'll be fine.' Perlman thought his own voice was a thin flute and unconvincing. Face it, Lou: you're clinging to a fucking drainpipe and hanging on for that condition people call âdear life' and you're trying to convince some daring young guy to turn himself over to
you
? Dear life indeed. He glanced down, saw the wall of the tenement sheer beneath him, saw light from windows here and there, saw the outlines of the iron fences that marked one back yard from another, sharp railings; if you slipped there was every chance you'd be impaled. Very nice.
Cop kebab.
Looking down: wrong thing to do, Sergeant.
He shinned a couple of inches up the pipe. What an effort. He looked at the roofline above. He heard Marak's feet on the slates.
Scullion shouted, âFor fuck's sake, Lou. Get your arse back in here.'
âI don't think I can,' Perlman said.