never shed tears. That was how they found out he was different, when he
was a baby: he used to hurt himself and not cry.
Ma sometimes said: "He do feel things, but he don't never show it."
Pa used to say that Ma got upset often enough for two, anyway.
When really awful things happened, like the rat joke that Snowy and
Tubby played, Billy found he got all boiled up inside, and he wanted to
do something drastic, like scream--but it just never happened.
He had killed the rat, and that had helped. He had held it with one
hand, and with the other banged it on the head with a brick until it
stopped wriggling.
He would do something like that to Tony Cox It occurred to him that Tony
was bigger than a rat--indeed, bigger than Billy. That baffled him,-> so
he put it out of his mind.
He stopped at the end of a street. The corner house had a shop
downstairs--one of the old shops, where they sold lots of things. Billy
knew the owner's daughter, a pretty girl with long hair called Sharon. A
couple of years ago she let him feel her tits, but then she ran away
from him and would not speak to him anymore. For days afterward he had
thought of nothing else but the small round mounds under her blouse, and
the way he felt when he touched them. Eventually he had realized that
the experience- was one of those nice things that never happen twice.
He went into the shop. Sharon's mother was behind the counter, wearing
candy-striped nylon overalls. She did not recognize Billy.
He smiled and said: "Hello."
"Can I help you?" She was uneasy.
Billy said: "How's Sharon?"
"Fine thanks. She's out at the moment. Do you know her?"
"Yes." Billy looked around the shop, at the assortment of food,
hardware, books, fancy goods, tobacco, and confectionery. He wanted to
say, She let me feel her tits once, but he knew that would not be right.
"I used to play with her."
It seemed to be the answer the woman wanted: she looked relieved. She
smiled, and Billy saw that her teeth were brown-stained, like his
father's. She said: "Can I serve you with something?" There was a
clatter of shoes on stairs, and Sharon came into the shop from the door
behind the counter. Billy was surprised: she looked much older. Her hair
was short, and her tits were quite big, wobbling under a T-shirt.
She had long legs in tight jeans. She called: "Bye, Mum." She was
rushing out.
Billy said: "Hello, Sharon!"
She stopped and stared at him. Recognition flickered in her face. "Oh,
hi, Billy. Can't stop." Then she was gone.
Her mother looked embarrassed. "I'm sorry-I forgot she was upstairs
still-"
"It's all right. I forget a lot of things."
"Well, can I serve you with something?" the woman repeated.
"I want a knife."
It had popped into Billy's head from nowhere, but he knew straight away
that it was right. There was no point in banging a strong man like Tony
Cox on the head with a stone--he would just hit you back. So you had to
knife him in the back, like an Indian.
"For yourself, or your mother?"
"What's it for?"
Billy knew he shouldn't tell her that. He frowned, and said: "Cutting
things. String, and that."
"Oh." The woman reached into the window display, and pulled out a knife
in a sheath, like Boy Scouts had.
Billy took all the money out of his trouser pocket.
Money was something he was not good about-he always let the shopkeeper
take however much was needed.
Sharon's mother looked and said: "But you've only got eight pence."
"Is it enough?" She sighed. "No, I'm sorry."
"Well, can I have some bubblegum, then?"
The woman put the knife back in the window and took a packet of gum from
a shelf. "Six pence
Billy offered his handful of money, and the woman took some coins.
"Thanks," Billy said. He went out into the street and opened the packet.
He liked to put it all in his mouth at once. He walked on, chewing with
enjoyment. For the moment, he had forgotten where he was going.
He stopped to watch some men digging a hole in the pavement. The tops of
their heads were level with Billy's feet. He saw, with interest, that
the wall of the trench changed color as it went down. First there was
the pavement, then some black stuff like tar, then loose brown earth,
then wet clay. In the bottom lay a pipe made of clean new concrete. Why
did they put pipes under the pavement? Billy had no idea. He leaned over
and said: "Why are you putting a pipe under the pavement?" A workman
looked up at him and said: "We're hiding it from the Russians."
"Oh." Billy nodded, as if he understood. After a moment he moved on.
He felt hungry, but there was something he had to do before he went home
for lunch. Lunch?
He had eaten a packet of biscuits because Pa was up the hospital. That
had something to do with why he was here in Bethnal Green, but he could
not quite make the connection.
He turned a corner, looked at the road name on a sign tacked high up on
a wall, and saw that he was in Quill Street. Now he remembered. This was
where Tony Cox lived at number nineteen.
He would knock on the door No He didn't know why, but he felt sure he
ought to creep in by the back door. There was a lane behind the terrace.
Billy walked along it until he came to the back of Tony's house.
All the taste was gone from his bubblegum, so he took it out of his
mouth and threw it away before quietly unlatching the back gate and
walking stealthily in.
TONY COX drove slowly along the rutted mud track, out of consideration
for his own comfort rather than for the owner of the "borrowed" car.
The lane, which had no name, led from a B-road to a farmhouse with a
barn. The barn, the empty, dilapidated house, and the acre of infertile
land surrounding them, were owned by a company called Land Development
Ltd.; which was in turn owned by a compulsive gambler who owed Tony Cox
a lot of money. The barn was occasionally used to store job lots of
fire-damaged goods bought at rock-bottom prices, so it was not unusual
for a van and a car to draw up in the farmyard.
The five-bar gate at the end of the lane was open, and Tony drove in.
There was no sign of the blue van, but Jesse was leaning against the
farmhouse wall, smoking a cigarette. He came across to open the car door
for Tony.
"It haven't gone smooth, Tony," he said immediately.
Tony got out of the car. "Is the money here?
"In the van." Jesse jerked his head toward the barn. "But it never went
smooth."
"Let's get inside--it's too hot out here." Tony heaved the barn door
open and stepped in. Jesse followed him. A quantity of packing cases
occupied one third of the floor area. Tony read the labels on a couple:
they contained surplus Forces uniforms and coats. The blue van stood
opposite the door. Tony noticed that trade plates had been tied over the
original license plates with string.
"What have you been playing at?" he asked incredulously.
"Oh, blimey, Tony, wait till you hear what I've had to do."
"Well bloody tell me then!"
"Well, I had a prang, see--nothing much, just a little bump. But the
geezer gets out of his car and wants to call the police. So I pisses
off, don't I. But he stands in the way and I hits him."
Tony cursed softly.
Now fear showed in Jesse's face. "Well, I knew the law would be looking
for me, didn't I. So I stops at this garage, goes round the back to the
khasi, and nicks a set of trade plates and these overalls."
He nodded eagerly, as if to lend his own approval to his actions. "Then
I come on here."
Tony stared at him in amazement, then burst out laughing. "You mad
bastard!" he chuckled.
Jesse looked relieved. "I done the best thing for it, though, didn't I?"
Tony's laughter subsided. "You mad bastard," he repeated. "Here you are,
with a fortune in hot money in the van, and you stop"-his chest heaved,
and he wheezed with renewed laughter' you stop at a garage and nick a
pair of overalls!" Jesse smiled too, not from amusement but out of the
pleasure of a fear removed. Then he became serious again. "There is
proper bad news, though."
"Gorblimey, what else?"
"The van driver tried to be a hero."
"You never killed him?" Tony said anxiously.
"No, just knocked him on the head. But Jacko's shooter went off in the
fracas"-he pronounced it frackars--and Deaf Willie got hit. In the boat
race.
He's bad, Tone."
"Oh, balls." Tony sat down suddenly on an old three legged stool.
"Oh, poor old Willie. Did they take him up the hospital, did they?"
Jesse nodded. "That's why Jacko's not here.
He's took him. Whether he got there alive ..."
"That bad?"
Jesse nodded.
"Oh, balls." He was silent for a while. "He don't get no luck, Deaf
Willie. The one ear's gone already, and his boy's a mental case, and his
wife looks like Henry Cooper--and now this." He clicked his tongue in
sorrow. "We'll give him a double share, but it won't mend his head." He
got up.
Jesse opened the van, relieved that he had managed to convey the bad
news without suffering Tony's wrath.
Tony rubbed his hands together. "Right, let's have a look at what we
got."
There were nine gray steel chests in the back of the van. They looked
like squat metal suitcases, each with handles at both ends, each secured
by a double lock. They were heavy. The two men unloaded them, one by
one, and lined them up in the center of the- barn. Tony looked at them
greedily. His expression showed an almost sensual pleasure. He said:
"It's like Ali Baba and the forty bloody thieves, mate."
Jesse was taking plastic explosive, wires and detonators out of a duffel
bag in a corner of the barn. "I wish Willie was here to do the
bang-bangs."
Tony said: "I wish he was here, full stop."
Jesse prepared to blow open the chests. He stuck the jellylike explosive
all around the locks, attached detonators and wires, and connected each
tiny bomb to the plunger-type trigger. Watching him, Tony said: "You
seem to know what you're doing."
"I've seen Willie do it often enough." He grinned.
"Maybe I can become the firm's peter man-" "Willie ain't dead," Tony
gruffly.
"Not so far as we know."
Jesse picked up the trigger and, trailing wires, took it outside. Tony
followed him.
Tony said: "Drive the van outside, in case of the petrol going up, know
what I mean?"
"There's no danger--"
"You've never done a peter before, and I'm not taking the risk."
"Okay." Jesse closed the rear doors and backed the van into the
farmyard. Then he opened the bonnet and used crocodile clips to connect
the trigger with the van's battery.
He said: "Hold your breath," and pressed the plunger.
There was a muffled bang.
The two men went back inside. The chests stood in line with their tops
hanging open at odd, twisted angles.
"You done a good job," Tony said.
The chests were neatly and tightly packed. The bundles of notes were
stacked twenty across, ten wide, and five deep: one thousand bundles per
chest. Each bundle contained one hundred notes.
That made one hundred thousand notes per chest.
The first six chests contained ten-shilling notes, obsolete and
worthless.
Tony said: "Jesus H. Christ."
The next contained oncers, but it was not quite full. Tony counted eight
hundred bundles. The last chest but one also contained one-pound notes,
and it was full. Tony said: "That's better. Just about right."
The last chest was packed solid with tenners.
Tony muttered: ."Gawd help us."
Jesse's eyes were wide. "How much-is it, Tony?"
"One million, one hundred and eighty thousand pounds sterling, my son."
Jesse gave a whoop of delight. "We're rich! We're lousy with it!"
Tony's face was somber. "I suppose we could burn all the tenners."