Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
I needed to see for myself."
ption brooked no argument.
The interru
"Are you a marksman? I don't think so. Are you expert at drawing defensive perimeter lines? I doubt it. There's nothing for you
here.
Don't sulk, Mr. Markham. You're a good driver always do what you do
well."
elbaum
Markham unlocked the car, held the door open for him. Litt
felt
aged, tired, cold.
, the
The tone of Markham's voice was resentful
teeth of a saw on a buried nail.
"So, back to London. I hope it's been a worthwhile exercise for you, Mr. Littelbaum -above and beyond lunch."
"It was worthwhile. Can we have the heater on full, please? He's there, Mr. Markham. I saw where he is. It was like I could smell him."
251
The bird ate the minced meat, stabbing down with its beak in quick, urgent strokes.
Vahid Hossein had led her to the small clearing among the bramble
and
thorn, at the edge of the marsh, where the grass was short from the rabbits' feeding. Farida Yasmin did not know whether he had brought her there out of a sense of boastfulness, or whether he wished to
share
with her.
His fingers were long, gentle and sensitive. She was behind him,
within reach of him. He had sat her down, told her not to move and whistled into the late-afternoon light. The bird had come from close by, had materialized over the dead reed fronds, with a laboured
flight.
Now he stroked its head feathers with his fingers, and he used her handkerchief to clean the wound. The bird permitted it. She hoped it
was not a boast but the demonstration of his wish to share with her a
precious.
moment so
His fingers moved on the feathers, soothing the
bird, and pried into the wound, and she saw the peace on his face.
It was as if, that day, she had slipped from the mind-set of Farida Yasmin Jones. The identity of her Faith was discarded, as a snake's skin was shed. That day she had she knew it and it did not trouble her
d to the world of Gladys Eva Jones.
reverte
en a car.
She had stol
from her comprehensive school knew how to steal a car.
Any kid
It
was
the talk in the canteen at lunch, and in the grounds in midmorning on the bus going home.
break, and
She had listened in disgust, years
before, as boys, girls, had talked through the theory of how to do it,
what she had heard. She was a thief, had
and she had remembered
oken
br
the rule of the Faith as it had been taught her, and she did not care.
king area beside the small railway station where the London
In the par
commuters left their cars for the day, she had felt a raw excitement been so easy.
and it had
The hairpin into the lock of the blue Fiat
the kids always said that the small Fiat was the
127 because all
mplest to take and the stripping of the covering, the marrying up
si
252
of
the ignition wires. She was a thief; a few seconds' work with a
hairpin and she was no longer the virtuous Farida Yasmin who could recite the Pillars of the Faith, pages of the Koran, and had once
been
the favoured pupil of Sheik Amir Muhammad. She had not felt shame, only excitement.
She watched him, watched his fingers on the bird, watched the rifle lying half out of the sausage bag on the far side of him, and the
excitement was a toxin in her bloodstream. It was now a part of her.
She recognized that it had nothing to do with the Islamic faith to which she had dutifully converted.
For all her teenage and adult life, Gladys Eva Jones had craved to be
noticed, to be valued. He had listened thoughtfully when she'd told him that the police had been to her workplace, and had nodded his
quiet
appreciation when she had described the theft of the car. She sat and
watched him, the bird and the gun. She knew what he planned to do that
night, had even seen the man he would kill and could remember each feature of that man's face. The excitement the knowledge engendered in
her was a liberation. At last, Gladys Eva Jones was a person of
importance. The sensation was as fresh as morning frost to her,
compared to the dull tedium of her parents' home, and the shunned, shut-out existence at the university. Her hand hovered over the hair at the back of his head. She thought of the empty boredom of Theft Section at the insurance company, and she stroked the hair on his
head
with the same gentleness as he caressed the feathers of the bird.
Her hand trembled, as if she sensed the danger of what she did. The bird flapped away in heavy flight, and his eyes followed it, watching its wing-beat.
Soon he would be gone with the rifle, and she would wait at the car for
him to return. He needed her, and the knowledge of it gave her the confidence to slip her hand down on to the skin and bristly hair at the
back of his neck... She knew the man who would be killed that night, and the house where he would be killed, and the excitement coursed 253
in
her.
There had been an older boy in her street who had a .22 air rifle.
It
was fired on wasteland where a factory had been demolished. Many
times
she'd gone after him to the waste ground and hung back, had never
qui4e
had the courage to ask him if she could fire it. She'd dreamed at night about the chance to hold the rifle, aim it, and fire it. One summer evening, the boy had shot a pellet against a passing bus, and the police had come and taken it away so she'd never had the chance.
But, for the lonely, unpopular girl, the rifle had stayed in her mind as the symbol of the boy's power. On the waste ground with his
friends, he swaggered when he carried it. The dream from childhood was
roused. One hand still stroked the hair at the back of his neck,
but
other
her
hand moved in slow stealth behind his back until her fingers
touched the weapon's barrel, which protruded from his bag. She felt its clean smoothness and the tackiness of the grease, and her fingers slid on the oiled parts. She imagined it against her shoulder, and her
finger against the trigger, and she touched the sharpness of the
foresight, and she thought of the sight locking on to the chest of the
man in the house on the green. Her hand moved faster, but more
firmly,
on the nape of his neck, but her fingers glided in gentleness on the cool metal of the rifle's barrel. He could see what she did, but
he
could not snatch the rifle away from her because that movement would frighten the bird.
She said, very quietly, "I should be with you."
"No."
"I could help you."
hand had moved to hers.
His free
She felt the roughness of his hand
covering it. She would be with him, following him, and sharing with e had, in truth, no comprehension of the thudding blow of
him. Sh
the
tock against a shoulder, or the ear-splitting noise of the
rifle s
254
discharge and the soaring kick of the barrel. She only understood the
power that the rifle offered. The pain was in her hand.
y
Relentlessl
he squeezed her hand down on to the sharp point of the foresight,
until she struggled to remove it. His eyes never left
crushed it
the
bird. He freed her hand and she quietly sucked the blood from the ctured wound.
small, pun
She kneaded the muscles at the back of his
neck.
"I go alone," Vahid Hossein said.
"Always I am alone."
"I am here to give you anything you need," Farida Yasmin whispered.
Meryl heard the impertinent, lingering blast of the bell.
She was in the kitchen, locking the legs of the ironing board, with the
heap of washed and dried clothes in a basket at her feet. She started r to still its insistent shrillness. It surprised her
for the doo
that
Frank had not gone to answer it. She heard the voice of Davies, the detective, speaking into his radio in the hall. Stephen was with
her,
cise
at the kitchen table, methodically writing in his school exer
book.
In spite of it all he was doing the weekend work that his class teacher had set. That was her next looming problem: Monday morning, and no school. Frank shouted down from upstairs that he was on the toilet.
ing for her to come, and assuring her
Davies was at the door, wait
that
the camera had picked up one of the village people. She switched
off
on.
the ir
All Frank had told her was that Martindale, the bastard, would not serve him.
r, and she saw Vince, smelt his beer breath.
Davies opened the doo
She was behind Davies.
"It's all right, Mr. Davies, it's Vince. Hello, Vince God, don't 255
say
e to start on the chimney."
you've com
Vince was the most fancied builder-decorator in the village. There
, but he was the best known.
were others
He was a great starter and
a
finisher, but those with a leak or a slipped tile or the need
poor
for
en repainting of a spare bedroom for a visitor knew they could
a sudd
rely on him. And he was a popular rogue... The Revenue had looked at
and he'd seen them off.
him twice in the last seven years,
ish council because
He was in a constant state of dispute with the par
the builders' supplies dumped in the front garden of his former
of
council house, now his freehold property, behind the church. Anyone ay a hand on a Bible and say they would never have a
who could l
rainwater leak or a slipped tile or the need for fast redecoration call him a fraud, a bully, a botcher. There were not many.
could
Small, powerful, his arms heavily tattooed, he was everybody's
friend,
and knew it and exploited it. What Vince believed in, above all else, was the quality of his humour. He had no doubt that his jokes made him
a popular cornerstone in the village.
Meryl tittered
sly. The
nervou
mortar was coming out of the brickwork
on the chimney. It was just something to say.
"Surely you're not going up there?"
"Actually, I've come for my money."
"What money? Why?"
owed."
"What I'm
aid you."
"Frank p
me two fifty down, but there was more materials I've got
"He paid
the
s."
bill
He was routing in his trouser pocket, dragging out small,
crumpled sheets of paper.
"I'm owed nineteen pounds and forty-seven pence.~
256
"You said it was inclusive, for Stephen's bedroom, everything for two
fifty."
"I got it wrong. You owe me."
"Then you'll get the extra when you come to do the chimney."
"If you're still here, if pigs fly, if-' "What does that mean?" He'd been in her kitchen. She made him four pots of tea each working day and gave him cake. She'd left him with the key when she'd gone out and
he'd been working in the house. She'd trusted him.
"What on earth are you talking about?"
"If you haven't moonlighted going, aren't you? I'll be left, owed nineteen ounds
p
and forty-seven pence, and you'll be gone. I've come
for my money."
She choked.
"I can't believe this. Aren't you Frank's friend? We're not going ere."
anywh
Well, you should be. You're not wanted."
"No?
tuttered, "Go away."
She s
e got my money."
"When I'v
etective moved without warning, stepping forward two, three
The d
paces.
at Vince's collar and had him up on to his toes.
He caught
When the
fist came up Davies caught it, as if he was handling a child. He
t hard against Vince's back, pivoted him round and marched
twisted i
him
back down the path. She heard everything Davies said into Vince's ear.
, scumbag, don't come here to play the fucking bully.
"Listen
Go back
to that godawful pub and tell them that these people aren't leaving.
't ever bloody come back here."
And don
With a jerk of his arm, the detective pushed Vince down on to his
knees
257
in the roadway, forced his face into the deepest and widest of the kept hold of him until he stopped struggling, lay still
puddles and
in
ion.
submiss
Davies released him, and stepped cleanly back to watch
Vince crawl away.
She leaned against the wall beside the door. Davies came back in
and
closed it quietly behind him. She hadn't noticed it before but
Frank's
trousers were too short for him and his sweater was too tight. She put
her hand on his arm.
"Thank you I don't suppose you should have done that."
"I don't suppose I should."
"Frank would have called him a friend he went up on the roof in a storm
last winter."
Very gently he took her hand from the sleeve of the sweater. She
't look into his face, didn't dare to.
didn