Authors: Alan Sillitoe
He was the only person I knew who you couldn't lie to, and get away with it. There was nothing to say. He looked at me for a while, with a gaze that seemed more pregnant than the
Encyclopaedia Britannica
. The last time I had worked for him I'd gone to prison because I was one of the expendables and now, facing him for the first time since, a thought flashed into my mind that promised danger and pleasure. The only emotion that can combine the two so neatly is revenge, yet how could someone like me dare to contemplate getting a Peer of the Realm put behind bars for a good long spell, even though he was the most crooked bastard in Great Britain â and that meant the Commonwealth, which probably meant the world? I let the suicidal, self-destroying notion go. âIt was a bit remiss of me. I'll know better next time.'
âI'm sure you will, if there is a next time. Are you sure you want to be my driver? I've had a few more applicants, as you can understand. One of them was Kenny Dukes's brother Paul, and I don't think I've ever seen a more wicked villain than that. On the other hand, he's the sort of driver who's been practising on stolen cars since he was twelve. Now he's twenty-five and in his prime.'
âI crashed my first car when I was five,' I said, which was true, âand now I'm thirty-five.'
He took a box from under the desk that was big enough to put his feet on, and lifted out a cigar. To smoke it he needed one of those forked supports an arquebusier used to have. âSo you see, Michael, I've got a decision to make. However, I'm a born judge of men. I always was. I've got to be. I wouldn't last five minutes if I wasn't. I know that you and me had a little trouble ten years ago.'
I'd been waiting for that. âIt was my fault.'
âThat's for me to say,' he snapped. âBut I suppose it inclines me more towards you than otherwise. You might say it taught us a lot about each other. Almost makes you part of the family. I like to learn from the past, and don't like starting with somebody from scratch unless I have to, or unless he's an exceptional case, as you were in those days, and as Kenny Dukes's brother isn't. They're ten a penny, that sort, in south and east London. They're well built, cocksure and clever, but if you stop looking over their shoulder for a second they get too clever. And even the cleverest of them can't think. Oh yes, they can move with cunning and alacrity in an emergency, but they can't think.'
âWhat do you expect?'
âI know, but there comes a time when you hope that a subordinate might be able to think to the advantage of the man who's paying him. I regard you as being in a different category. What's more, you're looking quite distinguished. Ten years in the wilderness seem to have made a man of you. In those days I didn't so much mind a young roustabout for my wheel man. Now I like a steadier chap, but one who still knows the tricks. I'll start you at five hundred a month, and you can have your old quarters back above the garage. You've got twenty-four hours to move in.'
The answer to everything was yes. His handshake was the grip of an earth remover, and my hands were neither small nor weak. He called me back from the door. âHow did you hear about this job?'
âI bumped into Bill Straw at Liverpool Street this morning.'
âWhere was he going?'
âHe wouldn't tell me.'
âWhat time was it?'
âJust before half past nine.'
He reached for the telephone. âI wish you'd come earlier.'
âI didn't know it was important.'
âPiss off.' He didn't even look up. âI want a call to Holland,' he was saying into the mouthpiece as I closed the door.
If poor old Bill had got on that Harwich boat train, as Moggerhanger wrongly surmised due to my quick thinking, he would have been met at the Hook, made to tell where the money was and put to a particularly grisly death before being dumped into the ooze. Luckily, he was safe in Blaskin's aerial foxhole, a fate which in no way would faze an old Sherwood Forester.
Not wanting to get back to Upper Mayhem too early, where I would only brood myself to death over Bridgitte's callous desertion, I decided to go into Town and get something to eat. A few hundred yards from the tube station a little dark girl who looked about ten but must have been thirty, judging from her big tits and almond eyes, was trying to carry a suitcase full of stones along the pavement. People passing were in too much of a hurry to help. Then she pulled the suitcase, till she had to stop. Then she pushed it. At that rate she'll get to the underground in the morning, I thought. It'll take another day to reach the platform, and she'll tumble into some railway station â the wrong one â in about three weeks. Luckily, it wasn't raining.
I passed her, but a soft heart forced me to turn and pick up the case. She thought I was a footpad after her worldly belongings and looked at me, raising a little bun fist, though realising that she couldn't win. I expected the weight to pull my arm off, but for my gold smuggling muscles it was no real burden, and I walked at a normal quick-march rate, with her half running by my side. âI'll help you with it to the tube station. I'm not trying to steal it. It's on my way.'
She also had a satchel and a shoulder bag, so I slowed down. Her accent was foreign, and so was her lovely smile. âThank you very much.'
She was about four foot nothing, but full of promise. I asked her name, and she said it was Maria. âYou going on holiday?'
I thought she hadn't understood. âHoliday?' I said. We got to the ticket office. âWhere to?'
âVictoria.'
I bought two fares, thinking to leave her after setting her luggage on the train. She'd clamped up since her first big smile and trotted by my side, while I was still wondering why Moggerhanger had given me the job so readily. It was as if he had been expecting me, though I couldn't dredge up a reason to prove it. âMaria,' I said when we were on the platform, âyou going on holiday?'
A bearded wino in his twenties knocked her so hard as he pushed by that she almost fell onto the rails. I pulled her back, which was as well for him that I was so occupied, but then I elbowed him onto the bench. âNo holiday,' she said. âI want to die.'
I laughed. âYou want to fly?'
âNo, die.' She tried not to sob. Her accent was thick, but I could understand her. âNo more job.'
I was about to run away and leave her when the train came in. The last thing I wanted was a waif on my hands. I pushed her inside, and we faced each other over the luggage. The red woollen scarf that went round her neck and over her shoulder was only half as long as the braids of black hair that descended her back. She wore a white blouse under her coat, a black skirt, black ribbed stockings and black lace-up boots. Her face was oval and pale, a clean parting down the middle of her skull. Her brown eyes were almost liquid with tears, and the effort she made not to let them flow almost brought tears to my own â and stopped me getting out at Acton Town. I leaned forward: âWhere are you from?'
âPortugal.'
I held her warm hands, and tried to cheer her up. âNice place, Portugal.'
I wished I hadn't said that, because she looked up full of hope. âYou been there?'
âYes. Good country. Lisbon is a wonderful city. You go there now?'
She didn't answer so I looked away, wondering where I'd go to eat before getting my train to Upper Mayhem. Something wet fell on my middle finger left hand, and I turned back to her. It was a tear. I don't know why I lifted my hand and licked it off. It was automatic, thoughtless, but with the hand that still held hers I felt a shiver go through her. I looked into her eyes, and thought I'd done the wrong thing in licking up that tear because as sure as hell â and the stare she gave hinted as much â such a gesture was, in the part of Portugal she came from, a kind of pre-nuptial ceremony that was binding forever.
My next chance of escape was at Hammersmith. I had enough on my plate at the moment. When she spoke, the shiver went through me and not her. âI go nowhere. I lose my job working in English house. Missis Horlickstone throw me out. Mister Horlickstone hit me. Children hit me. Too much work. At six o'clock I get up, clean, do breakfast, serve tea, take children to school on bus, then go shopping, come back, clean, cook lunch, serve, clean up, make tea, get children from school on bus, feed children, bath children, cook dinner, serve, clean up. You know what money I get?'
I thought the cheapskates would have paid her about thirty pounds a week.
âFifteen. I also babysit. No time off. For six months I work, live in box room, no air, no sky â¦'
I couldn't believe it. She was joking, but was breaking my heart. âAnd they sacked you?' I said at South Kensington.
âI ran away. They're on holiday in Bermuda. They come back next week, so I leave.'
I wondered whether she'd got the family silver in her suitcase, but knew she couldn't be anything but honest. âAnd now you want a better job?'
Another hot tear stung my wrist. I imagined a white acid spot when it dried. âYes. No. I don't know. I want to go home, but my family need money. They live on it. I have no money for train to â¦' She named some place in Portugal I'd never heard of.
So here was a lovely little down-trodden self-respecting intelligent thing like her with neither job, money nor place to sleep, in vast wicked London, sitting on the Underground facing a soft-hearted villain like me who also happened to be the son of Gilbert Blaskin. I supposed I could put her on the Circle Line and tell her to get off when it stopped. Where she would end up, I couldn't imagine. She looked blank, and dumb with suffering. I wanted to go to the house she had come from and burn it down, which would be futile because the owner wasn't in it, and would get the insurance anyway. âWhere will you stay tonight?'
She wiped her eyes with a white laundered handkerchief. âI have money for room. Tomorrow I don't know.'
âHaven't you got any friends?'
âMissis don't let me out.'
âSo what will you do?'
âDon't know. It takes time to get job.'
I drew my hands away and sat up smartly, as befitted a man who was about to become an employer. âYou've got one already, if you want it. Here's Piccadilly. We'll get out now, and go for something to eat. You hungry?'
âOh, yes.'
âGood. While we're eating I'll tell you about your new job.'
We found a place which served flock steak, chalk chips, ragdoll salad, whale fat gâteaux and acorn coffee. She loved it, so I made out that I did as well. âI'll tell you what's going to happen.' I lit my cigar. âI have a country house in Cambridgeshire, as well as a wife and three children. Now, my wife and children are away at the moment, visiting our property in Holland, and won't be back for a few days, but I'm supposed to find a woman to help with the housework. I was going to put an advertisement in the
Evening Standard
, but don't need to now. What I suggest, Maria, is that you come with me to the house this evening and look the place over. I'll pay your fare. If you don't like it, you can stay the night, and a few more nights if you like, and then come back to London. My wife should be there, so you'll be quite safe.'
âYou really got job?'
âThat's what I said.' She tampered with my dessert, so I pushed it across. âCome and see the house. At least you won't waste your money on a hotel.'
She looked even paler under the artificial light. It was dusk outside, and people were hurrying along the street. âWhy are you good to me, mister?'
The question tormented me more than it did her. I wasn't even sure I wanted to get her into bed. Maybe I couldn't stand living alone. She finished my dessert and I stood up. âLet's go, then.'
Out on the street it started to rain, and I had left my umbrella at Blaskin's. I stopped, as if pricked with it, and snake venom was trickling down my leg. I saw the newsflash tickertaping across the Swiss Centre: NOVELIST ON MURDER CHARGE. Then I rubbed it away in the hope that it wouldn't come true.
âWhat's a matter?' she asked when I dropped the case. âNo job for me now?'
âNo job for anybody,' I told her, hurrying on, âif we don't get to Liverpool Street and hop on that train.'
Six
âNever,' I remember Blaskin saying, âbother with a novel that takes more than five pages to cover one day.' Blaskin said many things. Blaskin is all wind and piss. Whatever he said, he meant the opposite. It was his silence you had to beware of. You were only safe when he had a pen in his hand. Even then, you had to be ready to duck in case, like James Cagney in
G-Men
, he mistook you for a fly on the door, and aimed it at you like a dart.
The day I got the job with Moggerhanger was one of the longest in my life, or so it seemed at the time, proved by the fact that when I got back to Upper Mayhem with Maria, my troubles were just beginning. There were more lights shining in our comfy little railway station than had ever been set glowing when main line expresses rattled through. You could see the light for miles over the flat Fen country, a glow in the sky as if a new hydroelectric dam had been opened in the Yorkshire Dales.
My first thought, walking with Maria and her suitcase from the bus stop, was that a band of squatters had occupied the place. I had often worked out what I would do if that happened. I'd phone Alfie Bottesford in Nottingham and tell him to get a posse of the lads together so that in one rough assault we'd have those squatters, including women, cats and kids, their pots and pans bundled into blankets, wending their lonely way in a refugee column across the Fens.
But I could hear no triumphant wassailing as I opened the gate and stepped silently down the platform. The radio was on, and I signalled to Maria to slow down and say nothing, which gesture alone should have indicated that all was not right with her prospects for the promised job. My adrenalin was whirlpooling too much to worry about her. I looked into the booking-office-cum-parlour. Three half-packed suitcases were on the floor, and Bridgitte sat at the table trying to hypnotise a cup of tea. I felt like a marauder, dagger in teeth, about to fade back into the countryside, as if I had come to the wrong house. But it was as much mine as hers, just as were the years we'd been together, whose miserable intensity came back the longer I stared.