Kiley nodded to show he understood.
âThis girl you looking for â¦'
âAdina.'
âAdina, yes, she there. Nice lookin', too. You and she â¦?'
âNo.'
âJust lookin' out for her, somethin' like that.'
âSomething like that.'
âMr O'Hagan, he heard you was there, askin' for her.' Claude frowned. âI don't know. I think he had words with her. Somethin' about stickin' by the rules. He don't like no boyfriends, no one like that comin' round.'
âShe's okay?'
âI reckon so.'
âI'd like to see her. Just, you know, to make sure. Make sure she's all right. She has a friend in London, works for me. Worried about her. I promised I'd check. If I could.'
Claude tapped his fists together lightly as he thought. âCome by the club later, you can do that? But not so late, you know? Around nine. Mr O'Hagan, no way he's there then. Cyril or I, we meet you out front, take you in another door. What d'you say?'
Kiley said thank you very much.
The dressing room was low-ceilinged and small, a brightly lit mirror the length of one wall, make-up littered along the shelf below. Clothes hung here and there from wire hangers, were draped over the backs of chairs. The other girls were working, the sound of Gloria Gaynor distinct enough through the closed door. Adina sat on a folding chair, cardigan across her shoulders, spangles on her micro-skirt and skimpy top. Her carefully applied foundation and blusher didn't hide the bruise discolouring her cheek.
Gently, Kiley turned her face towards the light. Fear stalked her eyes.
âI slip,' she said hastily. âClimbing down from the stage.'
âNothing to do with O'Hagan, then,' Kiley said.
She flinched at the sound of his name.
Kiley leaned towards her, held her hand. âAdina, look, I think if you came with me now, walked out of here, with me, it would be all right.'
âNo, no, Iâ'
âCome back down to London, maybe you could stay with Irena for a bit. She might even be able to wangle you a job. Or some kind of course, college. Then you could apply for a visa. A student visa.'
âNo, it is not possible.' She pulled herself free from his hand and turned aside. âI must ⦠I must stay here. Pay what I owe.'
âBut you don'tâ'
âYes. Yes, I do. You don't understand.'
âAdina, listen, please â¦'
Slowly, she turned back to face him. âI can earn much money here, I think. In a year maybe, debt will be no more. What I have to do: remember rules, be respectful. Remember what I learn for my diploma. Which moves. And my hands, always look after my hands. This is important. A manicure. When you dance at table, be good listener. Smile. Always smile. Make eye contact with the guests. Look them in the eye. Look at the bridge of the nose, right between the eyes. And smile.'
Tears were tracing slowly down her cheeks and around the edges of her chin, running down her neck, falling onto bare thighs.
âPlease,' she said. âPlease, you must go now. Please.'
âI Will Survive' had long finished, to be replaced by something Kiley failed to recognise.
He took one of his cards from his wallet and set it down.
âCall,' he said. âEither Irena or myself. Call.'
Adina smiled and reached for some tissues to wipe her face. Another fifteen minutes and she was due on stage.
The Basic Spin. The Lick and Flick. The Nipple Squeeze.
The Bump and Grind. And smile. Always smile.
*
In the following months, Adina phoned Irena twice; both calls were fragmentary and short, she seemed to have been speaking on someone else's mobile phone. Sure, everything was okay, fine. Lots of love. Then, when Kiley arrived one morning at his office, there was a message from Claude on his answerphone. Adina had quit the club, something to do with complaints from a customer, Claude wasn't sure; he had no idea where she'd gone.
Nothing for another three months, then a card to Irena, posted in Bucharest.
Dear Irena, I hope you remember me. As you can see, I am back in our country now, but hope soon to return to UK. Pray for me. Love, Adina.
PS A kiss for Jack.
It is cold and trade on the autoroute north towards Budapest is slow. Adina pulls her fake fur jacket tighter across her chest and lights another cigarette. The seam of her denim shorts sticks uncomfortably into the crack of her behind, but at least her boots cover her legs above the knee. Her forearms and thighs are shadowed with the marks of bruises, old and new. An articulated lorry, hauling aggregate towards Oradea, slows out of the road's curve and approaches the makeshift lay-by where she has stationed herself. The driver, bearded, tattoos on his arms, leans down from his cab to give her the once-over, and Adina steps towards him. Smile, she tells herself, smile.
CHANCE
The second or third time Kiley went out with Kate Keenan, it had been to the theatre, an opening at the Royal Court. Her idea. A journalist with a column in the
Independent
and a wide brief, she was on most people's B list at least.
The play was set in a Brick Lane squat, two shiftless young men and a meant-to-be fifteen-year-old girl: razors, belt buckles, crack cocaine. Simulated sex and pain. One of the men seemed to be under the illusion, much of the time, that he was a dog. At the interval, they elbowed their way to the bar through louche suits and little black dresses with tasteful cleavage, New Labour voters to the core. âChallenging,' said a voice on Kiley's left. âA bit full on,' said another. âBut relevant. Absolutely relevant.'
âSo what do you think?' Kate asked.
âI think I'll meet you outside later.'
âWhat do you mean?'
She knew what he meant.
They took the Tube, barely talking, to Highbury and Islington, a stone's throw from where Kate lived. Across the road, she turned towards him, a hand upon his arm.
âI don't think this is going to work out, do you?'
Kiley shrugged and thought probably not.
Between Highbury Corner and the Archway, almost the entire length of the Holloway Road, there were only three fights in progress, one between two women in slit skirts and halter tops, who clawed and swore at each other, rolling on the broad pavement outside the Rocket while a crowd bayed them on. Propped inside a telephone box close by the railway bridge, a man stared out frozen-eyed, a hypodermic needle sticking out of the scabbed flesh of his bare leg. Who needs theatre, Kiley asked himself?
*
His evenings free, Kiley was at liberty to take his usual seat in the Lord Nelson, a couple of pints of Marston's Pedigree before closing, then a slow stroll home through the back-doubles to his second-floor flat in a shabby terraced house amongst other shabby houses, too far from a decent primary school for the upwardly mobile middle-class professionals to have appropriated in any numbers.
Days, he sat and waited for the telephone to ring, the fax machine to chatter into life; the floor was dotted with books he'd started to read and would never finish, pages from yesterday's paper were spread out haphazardly across the table. Afternoons, if he wasn't watching a film at the local Odeon, he'd follow the racing on TV â Kempton, Doncaster, Haydock Park. â
Investigations
', read the ad in the local press, â
Private and Confidential. All kinds of security work undertaken. Ex-Metropolitan Police.
' Kiley was never certain whether that last put off as many potential clients as it impressed.
Seven years in the Met, two seasons in professional soccer and then freelance: Kiley's CV so far.
The last paid work he'd done had been for Adrian Costain, a sports agent and PR consultant Kiley knew from one of his earlier lives. Kiley's task: babysitting an irascible yet charming American movie actor in London on a brief promotional visit. After several years of mayhem and marriages to Meg or Jennifer or Julia, he was rebuilding his career as a serious performer with a yearning to play Chekhov or Shakespeare.
âFor Christ's sake,' Costain had said, âkeep him away from the cocaine and out of the tabloids.'
It was fine until the last evening, a celebrity binge at a members-only watering hole in Soho. What exactly went down in the small men's toilet between the second and third floors was difficult to ascertain, but the resulting black eye and bloodied lip were front-page juice to every picture editor between Wapping and Faringdon. Today the UK, tomorrow the world.
Costain was incandescent.
âWhat did you expect me to do?' Kiley asked. âGo in there and hold his dick?'
âIf necessary, yes.'
âYou're not paying me enough, Adrian.'
He thought it would be a while before Costain put work his way again.
He put through a call to Margaret Hamblin, a solicitor in Kentish Town for whom he sometimes did a little investigating, either straining his eyes at the local land registry or long hours hunkered down behind the wheel of his car, waiting for evidence of some small near-lethal indiscretion.
But Margaret was in court and her secretary dismissed him with a cold promise to tell her he'd called. The connection was broken almost before the words were out of her mouth. Kiley pulled on his coat and went out on to the street; for early December it was almost mild, the sky opaque and indecipherable. There was a route he took when he wanted to put some distance beneath his feet: north up Highgate Hill, past the spot where Dick Whittington was supposed to have turned again, and through Waterlow Park, down alongside the cemetery and into the Heath, striking out past the ponds to Kenwood House, a loop then that took him round the side of Parliament Hill and down towards the tennis courts, the streets that would eventually bring him home.
Tommy Duggan was waiting for him, sitting on the low wall outside the house, checking off winners in the
Racing Post.
âHow are you, Tommy?'
âPretty fine.'
Duggan, deceptively slight and sandy-haired, had been one of the best midfielders Kiley had ever encountered in his footballing days, Kiley on his way up through the semi-pro ranks when Duggan was slipping down. During Kiley's brace of years with Charlton Athletic, Duggan had come and gone within the space of two months. Bought in and sold on.
âStill like a flutter,' Kiley said, eyeing the paper at Duggan's side.
âAcademic interest only nowadays,' Duggan smiled. âIsn't that what they say?'
The addictions of some soccer players are well documented, the addiction and the cure. Paul Merson. Tony Adams. Stories of others running wild claim their moment in the news then fade. But any manager worth his salt will know the peccadilloes of those he might sign: drugs, drink, gambling, having at least one of his teammates watch as he snorts a line of cocaine from between the buttocks of a four-hundred-pounds-an-hour whore. You look at your need, your place in the table, assess the talent, weigh up the risk.
When Tommy Duggan came to Charlton he was several thousand in debt to three different bookmakers and spent more time with his cell phone than he did on the training ground. Rumour had it, his share of his signing-on fee was lost on the back of a spavined three-year-old almost before the ink had dried on the page.
Duggan went and Kiley stayed: but not for long.
âCome on inside,' Kiley said.
Duggan shrugged off his leather coat and chose the one easy chair.
âTea?'
âThanks, two sugars, aye.'
What the hell, Kiley was wondering, does Tommy Duggan want with me?
âYou're not playing any more, Tom?' Kiley asked, coming back into the room.
âWhat do you think?'
Watching Sky Sport in the pub, Kiley had sometimes glimpsed Duggan's face, jostling for space amongst the other pundits ranged across the screen.
âI had a season with Margate,' Duggan said. âAfter I come back this last time from the States. Bastard'd shove me on for the last twenty minutes â “Get amongst 'em, Tommy, work the magic. Turn it round.”' Duggan laughed. âEvery time the ball ran near, there'd be some donkey anxious to kick the fuck out of me. All I could do to stay on my feet, never mind turn bloody round.'
He drank some tea.
âNearest I get to a game nowadays is coaching a bunch of kids over Whittington Park. Couple of evenings a week. That's what I come round to see you about. Thought you might like to lend a hand. Close an' all.'
âCoaching?'
âWhy not? More than a dozen of them now. More than I can handle.'
âHow old?'
âThirteen, fourteen. Best of them play in this local league. Six-a-side. What d'you think? 'Less your evenings are all spoken for, of course.'
Kiley shook his head. âCan't remember the last time I kicked a ball.'
âIt'll come back to you,' Duggan said. âLike falling off a bike.'
Kiley wasn't sure if that was what he meant or not.
*
There were eleven of them the first evening Kiley went along, all shapes and sizes. Two sets of dreadlocks and one turban. One of the black kids, round-faced, slightly pudgy in her Arsenal strip, was a girl. Esther.
âI ain't no mascot, you know,' she said, after Duggan had introduced them. âI can run rings round this lot.'
âMy dad says he saw you play once,' said a lad whose mum had ironed his David Beckham shirt straight from the wash. âHe says you were crap.'
âYour dad'd know crap right enough, wouldn't he, Dean,' Duggan said. âLiving with you.'
The rest laughed and Dean said, âFuck off,' but he was careful to say it under his breath.
âOkay, let's get started,' Tommy Duggan said. âLet's get warmed up.'
After a few stretching exercises and a couple of circuits of the pitch, Duggan split them up into twos and threes practising basic ball skills, himself and Kiley moving between them, watching, offering advice.