Authors: Alan Sillitoe
I turned cold. If I moved, would they put the knife in?
âYou've done the best job anyone could have done,' he said when I went forward. âEverything's safe under lock and key, exactly where it should be. I knew you had the steadiness not to panic and do something stupid. Now take this, and go and get some sleep. You look as if you need it. We've had the garage flat tarted up a bit since you left.'
I was staring at a cheque for five hundred pounds.
âDon't spend it all on lollipops and french letters,' he said, âthere's a good lad! You're one of us now, Michael.'
I was going to say I thought I'd kacked up the whole operation, but stopped myself in time. âI didn't expect a bonus.'
âThe best men don't, I've often noticed. But next time don't be so free on the rides to bums who want lifts, especially to that fool pushing a panda-pram up and down the Al. I've passed him many a time. He nearly caused an accident once when I threw a ham sandwich at him.'
Cottapilly and Pindarry sniggered. I wondered if they were holding hands.
âAnd where's Dismal?' Moggerhanger asked.
I gulped. âDismal?'
âThat useless dog.'
âI left him at a friend's place.'
âBring him back. He belongs to my daughter. He was a present from Chief Inspector Lanthorn. He was sweet on Polly at one time, poor old Jack!'
âCan I leave it till tomorrow?'
âYou can keep him as far as I'm concerned. But clear out now. You're wasting my time. Wait a minute, though.' I turned from the door to see a smile on his clean-shaven chops. I could smell his aftershave. âDid the rats bother you?'
âWhat rats?'
âAt Peppercorn Cottage.' His joke wasn't taking effect.
âNot really. But they came a bit tough when I ate one raw. When I boiled a couple for breakfast they tasted a treat, though.'
He laughed, his whole face rosy. âNot everybody's frightened to death of a few rats,' he said to Cottapilly and Pindarry. âThose two wouldn't go near the place. Nor would that big soft turd Kenny Dukes. That's another reason I had to send you.'
It was my turn to laugh. âI'll go any time you like.'
I went out to looks of dislike from those by the door, and unable to believe that the sky hadn't fallen in. My impulse was to run to the bank and get the cheque in before the ricochet hit me between the eyes, though in my heart I knew that Moggerhanger's cheques were as safe as the Bank of England.
I collected my briefcase from the car and climbed the outside stairway to the flat. There was a carpet on the floor, and the bed had been made, a flowered counterpane laid on top. An ashtray had been put down in place of the tin lid on the bedside table, and somebody had left a copy of the Gideon Bible as well as six tins of Baxter's Lager still in their cardboard handpack. On another table, under the window with chintz curtains drawn across, was a pot of plastic flowers. A sailing ship, framed on the wall, ploughed into snowy waves. In the corner was one of those big wireless sets from the fifties. I recognised the home-from-home style of Polly Moggerhanger. Or was it Mrs Whipplegate? Maybe Jericho Jim had been trying his hand at interior decorating, because there was something of a prison cell about the layout.
I wasn't in a state to appreciate it, not having slept properly for days â or weeks if I counted the argy-bargy with Bridgitte before she left for Holland. I opened a tin of beer (it was cold, as if it had recently come out of the freezer. Nice touch, that. Good to feel wanted) and smoked a fag. After being in the car for so long that it had become my skin, I hardly knew where I was. Blaskin would have said I was bemused, such was his talent with words, and I suppose he would have been right. Though it was only seven thirty I took off my clothes and got between clean sheets, sorry that Mrs Whipplegate hadn't been here to welcome me.
One afternoon at the end of April I was called to the house by Kenny Dukes. I'd had so much sleep in the week before that I thought it would take me a year to get back into one piece, yet as soon as I entered Moggerhanger's presence my wits slotted into place. It was a matter of them having to. âHe's sitting in there with Parkhurst,' Kenny said as we crossed the yard. âSo I expect he's organising another operation.'
âDidn't know he was a surgeon,' I said. âReminds me of that scene in Sidney Blood when he gets his worst enemy on the operating table.'
âOh,' Kenny drooled, âdon't it, eh?'
â
The Running Gutter
I think it was called.'
âOne of his best.'
âWho's this Parkhurst bloke?'
âHis son,' Kenny said, âby his first marriage. Born with a silver spoon in his mouth and sent to the best private schools â but you wouldn't know.'
Parkhurst sat on the floor with his back to the wall, looking so straight ahead that I thought he was blind. You could tell he was a man of few words because all the time the boss was talking he scraped match after match along the emery until flame crackled into life, and then he would lay each charred stick in the ashtray when the heat got close to his fingers. Maybe he spent more on matches than on clothes, because he wore a shabby grey suit and cheap suede shoes, and a tie that looked as if it hadn't been to the cleaners in months. He might have been good looking if he dressed better, in spite of his lank hair and thinnish face.
âYou've been called in,' Moggerhanger told me, âbecause we're going up to Spleen Manor, in Yorkshire.' He laughed. âNo rats, this time. There are servants' quarters, what's more, and a caretaker to keep the place warm, so we'll be well looked after. It's near Bluddenden. Work out a route. You'll be towing the horse box, but the Roller will handle it all right.' He looked at Parkhurst: âThis is my son, by the way, unless you thought he couldn't be. Parkhurst, wake up, for God's sake, and meet one of my best men. I wish you'd take a few leaves out of Mr Cullen's book, even if only chapter one â you bone idle bloody skiver.'
I expected a scowl from Parkhurst to indicate that he would like to kill me, but he wouldn't even rouse himself to that extent. Or maybe he'd heard such a spiel too often.
âAll you do,' his father went on, âis idle your time away around the clubs. You don't even dress properly, though your wardrobe's full of good suits. Or get a haircut. Polly's worth fifty of you. When I was your age I'd been on my own feet for twenty years. I stopped you going to prison for as long as I could, and when they finally dragged you off all it did was give you a nickname.'
Parkhurst spoke in a low voice, as if he didn't want to exert himself. âBollocks!'
Moggerhanger winced, and smiled to cover his anger. âOne of these days you're going to get into such trouble that you'll shoot into real life and wonder what you were doing ever to be like this. But I'll tell you one thing: I'm going to stop paying your gambling debts.'
âThey're your places I play in,' Parkhurst said in the same dead voice, âand the tables are rigged.'
There was a pause. âYou can go elsewhere and see if it's any different. If you can't pay up then, you'll soon have no face left. See how you like that.' He changed his tone, or tactics. âOh, Malcolm, why don't you wake up? I've got no end of jobs for you. You could be a great help, if you'd decide to do as I tell you.'
The match he threw onto the carpet went out. âDon't want to.'
âIs that all, Lord Moggerhanger?' I asked.
âLord-fucking-Moggerhanger,' Parkhurst babbled, as if to himself. âI ask you!'
âBe ready in half an hour, Michael. Get George to fix the horsebox on, and make sure the inside's spick and span.'
âI was going to bring Dismal back today.'
âHe can wait. Polly won't mind. She's in Italy with her boyfriend â though she's supposed to be happily married. What children I've got!'
Parkhurst grunted. âAt least they don't have blood on their hands.'
I thought Moggerhanger would burst. âBut they have money whenever they ask for it. You'll get no more cash from now on.'
Parkhurst smiled as if he'd heard that one before as well. I left them wrangling. George sat on a garden seat reading the
Standard
. âTake a dekko inside, Mr Cullen. I've been working on it since five this morning. It's as neat as Montgomery's caravan.'
It may not have been as big, but along one side was a series of drawers and cupboards, their brass handles flush in beautiful mahogany. The top made a flat surface for a desk, or a sleeping place at a pinch, and there was a swivel chair (itself worth a fortune) as well as a small window with curtains, a night cupboard (with no doubt a golden pot inside), a discreet radio rack and a stove and picnic-set under the desk. A map on the wall showed Moggerhanger's properties, and on the table stood a photograph of the family when they were much younger. They also looked happier. Parkhurst, wearing the tie and blazer of some prep school, gripped his father's right hand and looked up at him with a frightening mixture of adoration and panic. Polly stood a foot or so away, smiling widely at something only she could see, but which she knew she would one day get, and it wasn't the camera.
George looked over my shoulder. âGo on in.' He thought it would be a real treat. The length of carpet on the floor looked as if it had been cut from a precious Persian (to the best of my knowledge). On the wall opposite the table-desk hung a dressing gown on a hanger, wrapped in cellophane. âHome from home,' I said.
âHe could survive in the wilds for weeks. I can't open the drawers for you, because they're locked. He's got guns and fishing tackle, and food to last a while. Not that Lord Moggerhanger will ever need it, but it takes his fancy to think he might have to use it one day. I suppose he's got to spend his money on something. But when it's on tow, go easy on the corners. I'd have a nervous breakdown if anything happened to it.'
Cottapilly and Pindarry put Moggerhanger's luggage into the boot. Mrs Whipplegate, coat on, stood in the yard with a suitcase, and I almost fainted at the thought that she was on the trip as well. âI have to go, because there'll be some secretarial work.'
I asked how long for.
âA couple of nights, but you can never tell with Lord Moggerhanger. He's thinking of buying some agricultural land adjoining Spleen Manor. Otherwise I'm as much in the dark as you are.'
The car had been vacuumed inside, and polished highly on the outside to double for a shaving mirror. The telephone had been plugged in and the cocktail cabinet unlocked, as if we were going on holiday. Moggerhanger came to the car with a cigar burning. Lady Moggerhanger was like a ghost from ten years ago. Her hair had been black. Now it was grey. She was a good-looking woman in her early fifties but had put on weight. I saw Polly's features embedded there as she held out her hand for me to shake in such a way that I thought she had been practising before a full length mirror since becoming Lady Moggerhanger. âHow are you, Mr Cullen? I heard you were back. You don't seem a day older.'
I said I was very well, and that neither did she.
âDrive carefully. And take care of Lord Moggerhanger.' They made their goodbyes and I got in behind the wheel, noting that the wing mirrors gave fair views to the rear. I was happy that Parkhurst had wriggled his way out of the trip.
By four o'clock we were locked into heavy traffic going towards the North Circular. âIt's the rush hour already,' Moggerhanger grumbled. âYou see 'em going to work at eleven in the morning, and they're on their way home by three. It's no wonder the country's sluicing down the drain. I'm sometimes at it twenty-four hours a day, except for a short nap. I'm lucky to get a round of golf in, these days.'
The horsebox wasn't much of a pull, but on cornering I had to go out a bit so as not to clip the kerb or knock a lamp post. I almost fetched a cyclist off his grid, and the obscenities he screamed through the window sent a reddish tinge over Mrs Whipplegate's liberated face, such an enjoyable sight that I blessed that grey-bearded irascible pushbiker.
âYou have to watch 'em,' the chief said. âI don't mind you cutting up some young blood in a BMW, but not a silly old bastard with soda in his eyes.'
âI'll do my best,' I said.
âWould you kindly pass me a brandy and splash, Mrs Whipplegate?'
He nursed the glass while I did my fancy footwork in order to put a few miles behind us. The sky was dull, but the road dry. You couldn't have everything. By five we'd gobbled a few miles on the same old route to the north. Not long ago I'd steamed down it with Ronald Delphick's Panda Roadshow, and I hoped he'd had a profitable gig in Stevenage, followed by a night-long bang with a bevy of nubile admirers. Some people have all the luck. When I first saw him he was plain Ron Delph, and read a Tube Map anticlockwise, which everybody thought was pure genius in action. But that was in the sixties.
A flick of the wheel and even the Rolls-Royce would concertina if I hit a bridge support at a hundred. But why would I want to do that? You may well ask, because I certainly asked myself. I had left Upper Mayhem intending to lead an honest life. Instead, I had landed a job with Moggerhanger in order to help a friend, and been enrolled to do work which I suspected was crooked to the core. Not that I thought it a valid reason to put an end to things. Life was wonderful, and would go on because I had a job, money, and respect (of a sort) from the man I was employed by. âDo you think this is one of the best cars in the world, sir?'
âIt's not
one
of the best, it's
the
best.' He was in his most bullish mood. âThere's nothing to touch it.'
âWhat about a Merc?'
He shifted in his seat and peered through the windscreen at a Mini in front. âGet round him. The Merc's good, but I feel better in a Roller than I do in a Merc, so it must be that much better, eh?' He nudged me, but I stayed straight enough to thread the needle between a lorry and the central reservation. He threw a cigar-end out of the window, and I thought I saw the wheels of the Mini bump over it.