DONNA AND THE FATMAN (Crime Thriller Fiction) (15 page)

BOOK: DONNA AND THE FATMAN (Crime Thriller Fiction)
8.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘That far out? . . . Yeah, sure. I know you have . . . No,’ he muttered, ‘we’ll find it.’

He listened intently for several seconds.

‘That’s right. Just business.’

He scribbled some notes on a pad.

‘Got it. You done great . . . I mean it, son . . . Yeah, I owe you.’

He replaced the phone. Didn’t move for a while. Mervyn watched him carefully.

‘That the party, boss?’

The Fatman shuddered. It was a pleasure-spasm, so he couldn’t help it.

‘It is, Merv.’

Almost giddy with delight, for this was the moment, the moment of moments.

‘I knew we’d be having one,’ he said softly, ‘I just didn’t know where.’

He crossed to the wall and unlocked the rosewood cabinet. It was where he kept his most precious things: the iron bars, the family photos, the locks of girly pubic hair. He reached inside and took out a velvet pouch, feeling the hard barrel beneath the soft material.

‘Try and get sober, Merv. Always helps.’

The pistol slid out into his waiting hand.

‘Cause we’re going for a spin,’ he said. ‘A jolly little jaunt.’

He emptied the clip and checked the rounds.

‘So better start the motor, Billy . . . ’

He pushed the clip back in.

‘There’s a good lad.’

 

* * *

 

CHAPTER 18

 

 

The rain came down spasmodically, at first. A softly deferential sound that spattered in her head and made her curl into a ball of foetal satisfaction. A mile or two away, across the scrubby grass and beyond the line of naked trees, a tractor-engine almost fired. It sounded like an outboard motor, as if some farmer were yanking the cord, and every time it would almost fire, and every time it would suddenly die. Early morning in November, with the birdsong just beginning, and the half-light growing stronger, and the mist hanging low in a Hertfordshire field, and they’re curled in the back of a wideboy car, entwined in the back of a two-tone car.

She was half-asleep and half-awake, and the rain came drumming down. It hammered on the roof and bounced on to the ground. She felt Joe’s breath against her neck, the heat of him beside her. The type of man who doesn’t shave, who lets the darkness grow and gives his girl some trouble with his stubble. Better with him, his smell on her skin and his taste in her mouth, than kneeling before the Fatman, bending the knee and bowing the head and kissing the Fatman’s cock.

For many things have happened to her, in her short and wholesome life. Many types have impinged themselves, have thrust themselves into her consciousness, have watched her raise her head above the grime and swiftly pushed it down again. They’ve shafted her as best they could, because they long to see her stumble, they ache to see her flounder, they yearn to see her fall. For though she is a sweet, young thing, a lot of people hate her, they loathe her absolutely. And she knows all this, the Donna bitch. She’s a very knowing girl.

The rain came drumming down, a lazy flow that splashed on to the windscreen and forced its way beneath her skull, that trickled down the moulded glass and pushed inside her dream. She stretched, and yawned, and opened her eyes. Cold in the car. Joe slept on, his hand between her thighs. In the distance, the tractor-engine almost turned. For a second it seemed that it almost fired. Her bones felt damp, the morning hunger gnawing at her belly.

A gentle tap on the window. She glanced outside. A bird, perhaps. Some country thing that flits above the grass. She heard the tap and glanced outside, saw shadows on the hood. Two trunk-like objects, planted on the hood. Rooted, as it were, a yard or so apart. Two muscled legs, standing on the hood.

And as she takes this in, as reality begins to seep inside her brain, she notices the legs are wearing stonewashed denim jeans and high-neck leather boots, cherry-red and newly polished. She notices the rolling mist, the sullen light, the stream of yellow liquid drumming on the glass and dribbling neatly down. For Donna is the sort who notices these things.

And then there comes a revelation: the fundamental drawback of a two-door Ford Capri — a car with barely room enough for lovers to entwine themselves, to curl up in the rear and spend a night of almost bliss — the basic disadvantage is you’re jammed inside the back, and there’s nowhere you can run, and you’re dreaming it’s the rain while they’re pissing on the glass, and suddenly you’re conscious that the boys are here, they’ve come for you, the quietly vicious boys.

A mile or so across the fields, the engine turned, and failed, and almost died.

‘Slags!’

The small black hole of Billy’s mouth. It’s early morning in November, with the birdsong just beginning, and the half-light growing stronger, and the mist hanging low in a Hertfordshire field, and you’re curled in the back of a wideboy car, entwined in the back of a two-tone car.

He hefted the crowbar above his head. The tractor-motor suddenly fired. Vomit-panic churning in her belly. He braced himself. Pink-rimmed eyes in a bone-sharp face, and he’s vibrant with hatred, he’s throbbing with loathing.

‘Pair of filthy fucking
slags
!’

A muted exhalation, a little scream of pleasure, and he swung the crowbar down. The windscreen exploded into the car. Golden drops and shards of glass seemed to hang in the air. Jagged noise erupted in her head. Something thudded against the side. She watched the driver’s window caving in. Slow-motion, like the movies. They reached inside and flicked the lock, yanked open the door.

Joe glanced at her, the briefest second, his face a mask of perfect love and total fear. A fist smashed into the side of his head. She heard him shout her name. Again and again, like a mantra, as if her name could save him. An arm snaked in and grabbed him round the neck. They tipped the front seat down and heaved him over the top. She could hear him choking, someone laughing. A broad and unlined hand fluttered down on to his crotch. It paused a moment, as if in thought, then dug its hairless fingers in. And when she heard him scream, her life began to crumble, she watched her world disintegrate, the universe she’d built herself imploded.

‘Come on, darling . . . ’

Billy's murmur in her ear.

‘Don’t be shy.’

He reached inside and wrapped his fingers in her hair. He banged her head against the door and dragged her out, for he had permission from the Fatman, authority to treat her rough. A special dispensation, on this very special day. There was a brief explosion of pale, grey sky, then mud in her face, and earth in her mouth, and the small, high grunts of skinhead glee as he hissed the cunt word, over and over.

 

* * *

 

CHAPTER 19

 

 

Joe lay on the ground, softly groaning, the long grass flattened around him. Blood trickled out of his nose and mouth. His left eye was closed and beginning to go black. Mervyn was sitting on his chest. He bent forward and allowed a thick gob of spittle to drop from his mouth.

‘See that?’ He sounded jubilant. ‘Bang on the eyeball! Fucking brilliant!’

Henry leaned against the Daimler, his heavy shoulders drooping slightly, the plump legs crossed at the ankle. He was quietly watching, engorged with malice, putrescent with venom.

The November sky was hanging low above, a raw north wind came whipping against their skin, and everywhere the rich, damp smell, the dense and earthy odour, of a bare and unploughed field in Hertfordshire.

Billy grabbed her hair and pulled her up. Pus-faced Billy, having fun. He stared at her, just stared at her, his sandy lashes barely blinking. It made her tremble, the way he watched her. Made her flesh begin to quiver, and her bowels begin to melt, when he fixed her hard with his colourless eyes.

‘I never liked you,’ he remarked, ‘to be quite honest.’

The words condensed in the frosty air, forming a cloud of vicious steam around his head.

‘Never been a fan of yours, exactly.’

So close he was, they were nearly touching, almost kissing. She could see the flakes of dry skin that floated gently down from his forehead, the milky sediment that glistened in the corners of his eyes.

‘I mean you think you’re clever, don’t you? Think you’re such a genius.’

He clamped a hand around her neck.

‘But I’ll tell you something, sweetheart.’

The pitted flesh.

‘I’m glad I’m not the Donna bitch. Not at this moment. Not right now.’

The razored scalp.

‘Wouldn’t want to be in your shoes, would I? Wouldn’t want to be in your panties, see. Not there,’ he said. ‘Not me.’

A flash of perfect smile.

‘Because it might be what one tends to call unpleasant.’

Saliva seeped between his lips, the bubbles forming and quietly bursting.

‘Be fairly beastly, frankly. That’s how I’d put it, if you asked me. If you really want to know.’

The grip of skinhead fingers round her neck.

‘So what I’d like to convey,’ he said, ‘is how profoundly glad I am that I’m not you. In fact,’ he said, ‘to put it more succinctly: at this precise and precious moment, in this field of frozen dung, I’m feeling rather grateful that I’m me.’

And having thus expressed himself, he shoved her face away.

‘What’s wrong with girly?’

Mervyn, fresh from working out with Joe, and sweating slightly, because he’d had to be firm, came sauntering over. He knew he was looking good, that day. Silk-lined coat and velvet collar. Scraped-clean nails and slicked-back hair. He knew he looked the business.

Billy frowned.

‘What d’you mean, what’s wrong?’

‘I mean she’s gone all grubby.’

‘Has she?’

‘Yeah.’

‘Well some blokes like that type of thing.’

‘Sort of mucky?’

Billy nodded.

‘They like them dirty, frankly.’

‘They’d like our girly, then.’

‘They would.’

Mervyn leaned towards her. He held her chin and turned her face from side to side.

‘But if I’m being honest, here . . . ’

You could smell the toothpaste on his breath.

‘ . . . I’m not sure I’d want it myself, old mate.’

He peeled some grass from her lower lip.

‘Not now we know where it’s been.’

‘It’s been with Joe.’

‘Precisely.’

‘Gentlemen . . . ’

The sudden rasp that cut the air.

‘If one might interrupt, a moment . . . ’

Billy shoved her forward.

‘Gently does it.’

The Fatman’s voice, thick with satisfaction.

‘Mustn’t hurt her.’

He watched the skinhead tip his foot against her legs, and the Donna bitch was on her knees. A swollen Henry smile.

‘You enjoying yourself, son?’

‘I am, boss.’

‘Cause we’ve barely started.’

‘I know, boss.’

Henry gazed at her benignly.

‘Look at me, darling.’

Billy took her by the hair and helped her raise her head. He pulled it back until she saw the broad and shining, pink and grinning, Henry face. The soft, wet mouth. The milky cheeks. The Fatman in his glory.

‘Been a while,’ Henry murmured.

Rubbing his knuckles against his crotch.

‘I mean it’s been a while, since I’ve felt so good.’

The mist was thick above the field. He’ll kill me now, she thought. She knew he wanted to, immensely. It was a private ache that filled the air, his need to do it, fairly soon.

He was smiling down.

‘Speak to me, darling. Say something funny. Make a clever remark, you know the ones.’

He pointed to his left. Billy obligingly twisted her head. She saw Joe lying motionless on the ground.

‘Didn’t put up much of a fight, your bloke. Not very laddish, all things considering. Don’t think I’m being critical, but he’s what I’d call a tosser, frankly. Can’t protect his girly, and I think she likes to be protected. Am I right, darling? Tell me, darling, am I right?’

He peered closer.

‘What’s that brown stuff you got in your mouth, eh? You got earth and grit in there, sweetheart. Grass and mud and shit like that. You got a lot of slime in there, precious, so better cough it out, why don’t you.’

He shoved two fingers between her teeth.

‘Just spit it out, the boys won’t mind. That’s my lovely. That’s the way.’

He pushed his hand inside her mouth.

‘Oh dear,’ he said. ‘Pity, that.’

He was gazing down, shaking his head.

‘I always thought you were such a nice, young girl. A cut above, if you take my drift. You sort of gave that impression, didn’t you? Like you were something special, or something. And now you’re puking on my shoes, without so much as a by-your-leave. I mean without even asking, and it’s only polite to ask.’

‘Piece of filthy—’

‘Gag her, someone.’

The wind was cutting across the field. He shivered slightly. Pulled up his collar.

‘Turning nippy, wouldn’t you know it.’

He reached into the Daimler and took out his thermos.

‘Don’t want to get a chill,’ he murmured. ‘Not at my age.’

He unscrewed the top and poured hot milk into the plastic cup.

‘There’s skin on that milk,’ Mervyn said.

‘I like it boiled, son. It’s healthier.’

Mervyn shuddered.

‘Can’t abide milk-skin. Makes me queasy.’

Henry shrugged.

‘Each to his own.’

He sucked the liquid into his mouth, slowly swilled it round his gums.

‘How you keeping, then, darling?’

His tongue darted out and licked the frothy rim from his lips.

‘Been meaning to ask.’

He took another swig.

‘Never quite got round to it, what with one thing and another.’

He drained the cup and screwed it back on.

‘She’s not saying much, is she?’ Billy muttered.

‘Not very talkative,’ Mervyn added.

‘And she does like to talk.’

‘She does.’

‘Maybe it’s because she’s got that thing in her mouth.’

‘What thing?’

‘That hankie thing. Got it stuffed inside her mouth . . . ’

‘Oh, yeah.’

‘ . . . and tied behind her head.’

‘You think that’s why she’s keeping quiet?’

Other books

Asenath by Anna Patricio
Todo bajo el cielo by Matilde Asensi
The Spiral Effect by James Gilmartin
Firestarter by Stephen King
Suzie and the Monsters by Francis Franklin
The Sword of Fate by Dennis Wheatley
Draw Me In by Megan Squires
Falling Stars by Grubor, Sadie
A Walk in Heaven by Marie Higgins