“You must have the skull of an ox,” Sean said to him. “I don’t know many people who could have taken such a belt across the back of the head like that and lived to tell the tale.”
“Yeah well, shame I ain’t got bones to match,” Gleet said, lifting the shoulder of his injured arm with a wry smile that didn’t hide the pain he was in.
“What the fuck happened?” The question burst out of Paxo like he’d been doing his best to contain it until now but it had finally got away from him.
“Where do I start?” Gleet murmured, closing his eyes for a moment. He opened them again. “OK, Tess asked me to come over and keep tabs on you lot. Where is she, by the way?”
The casual question took us by surprise so that no one had a chance to prepare a face against it. Gleet took a sip of his tea, eyes darting round us. He caught our dismayed expressions and lowered the mug very slowly, his face going through phases of denial, shock and anger before finally settling on a deep abiding sorrow.
“Oh no,” he muttered, almost to himself. “I knew it was gonna be bad when I saw them taking Jamie, but . . . oh Jesus, no. Not Tess . . .”
He choked into silence, head down, his left hand clutched round the half-drunk mug of tea like it was his only anchor. After a moment his shoulders began to shake and I realised he was weeping.
I glanced up. The boys were standing around uncomfortably in the tiny bathroom, all squeezed in together, trying not to touch or meet each other’s gaze. I saw Sean take a breath to ask Gleet questions and, however desperately I knew we needed answers, I couldn’t let him do that to the poor guy. Not right now.
“OK. Everybody out,” I said, herding them through the door into the bedroom. When Sean would have argued, I added, “Give him a minute, for pity’s sake.” And I shut the door firmly behind them.
When I turned back Gleet was openly crying, tears sliding down through the dried blood on one cheek, leaving smeared greasy tracks.
“I loved her,” he said, more to himself than to me. “And I never got the chance to tell her.”
“Oh Gleet – she knew,” I said softly, but couldn’t have explained my certainty.
“I would have done anything for her,” he said, running straight on as though I hadn’t spoken. “I even lent Slick part of his share of the dosh for this caper.” He gave a harsh snort that never quite made it into a laugh. “Should have known he’d mess it up. He never had nothing he didn’t trash, that lad. So I talked Tess into coming along, just to make sure she got her share. And now—”
He broke off, mouth compressed into a thin line with the effort of damming back the floodwaters. His lips quivered under the strain and finally broke banks.
“It’s all my fault,” he said, oozing bitterness like a polluted beach. “I knew the kind of people Daz was getting himself mixed up with and I didn’t warn him or nothing.” He looked up, seemed to focus on me properly for the first time since my return. “I might as well have killed her myself.”
“So, what happened, Gleet?” Sean asked.
I’d let Gleet pull himself together for a moment longer before we went out. He’d heaved himself upright and, awkwardly with one hand, had splashed cold water onto his face first. He didn’t bother to dry it, just shook his head a couple of times like a wet dog.
Maybe he thought it might obscure the fact that he’d been crying – enough to be worth the pain it clearly caused him to move his head so abruptly. Nobody who looked at those red-rimmed eyes could make any mistake about that, but I didn’t think it kind to say so.
When we emerged to the others’ scrutiny, Sean’s question was gently put. As though he was only too aware of the pain it was going to cause to go over the events again, now Gleet knew that Tess was dead.
It was strange. In the past I’d watched Sean kill without compunction, without a hint of hesitation or regret. And yet here he was, behaving with such compassion towards a man he barely knew.
“I followed you all down to Mondello this morning,” Gleet said, sitting down carefully on the edge of the bed and shuffling back against the headboard, hunching his shoulders so his elbow didn’t bump against the woodwork. “I met up with Tess down in the car park last night and she told me the plan.”
I looked at him in surprise. “That was Tess?” I said. “I knew someone had been down there with you but I didn’t think she could get up the stairs so fast in those heels.”
Even as I said it I realised there wasn’t any mystery. She’d just taken them off to scamper up the smooth concrete steps and across the polished lobby floor, and put them back on to walk back into the bar. Not exactly a difficult trick.
Paxo shot me a dark look, like I was side-tracking Gleet unnecessarily, and waved him on with some impatience.
“Seeing as I knew what was going on, I just hung around near the main gate at the track and waited for the pair of them to leave, like. Only I thought I’d got more time so I went for a bit of a wander. I thought the bunch of you would all be in with the advanced mob and you’d send Gnasher – Jamie – out with the intermediates.”
That flat grey gaze swept over Sean and me, cutting the others out. “He must have been spittin’ feathers when you two decided to drop down a group and force him in with the novices, but they needed you out of the way so Jamie could slip out with Tess, like,” he went on. “They shoulda been there and back inside twenty minutes and you’d never have been any the wiser, see?”
“Yes,” Sean said, ominous, “we do see.”
Gleet paused a moment as though the long speech had tired him. His skin had that waxy pale tinge and he’d started to sweat. He had his right hand tucked under his left forearm and was gripping it tightly, as though he could squeeze the pain away. From this angle it was pretty clear that his elbow joint was smashed and, from the scars, it probably wasn’t the first time.
“So,” Gleet went on, labouring a little now with the distraction, “I was in the wrong place. I was watchin’ the action from in the stands when I saw his bike leavin’. Took me a little while to get back to the Suzi and set off after ‘em, like. By the time I got to the petrol station, it was too late. They’d already gone.”
“And you didn’t see anyone else?” Sean asked.
Gleet started to shake his head and stopped, wincing. “No, nobody. Nobody except all the lads who were fillin’ their bikes up for the track. I stuck my head into the bog, but there didn’t seem to be nobody there, neither. I thought I must have missed ‘em on the road, but I knew I hadn’t.”
Sean and I exchanged a quick look. Had Gleet seen the dead courier? It would seem not. He had no reason to lie if he had.
Should we tell him?
Sean shook his head slightly.
No point.
“So, what then?” he prompted instead.
“Well, I shot back here and cruised round the car park a coupla times, but I couldn’t spot that little four hundred of Jamie’s anywhere, so I was just about to hightail it back to Mondello – feeling a right plonker if you must know – when the lift doors opened and there he was,” Gleet said, eyes focused inwards, remembering. “He was struggling like a bastard, I’ll say that for him, but two of ‘em had a hold of him and they knew what they were about – bouncer types.” His gaze snapped back, skimmed over Sean and took in the size and the way of him, recognising something of what he was.
“Struggling?” Daz said, frowning. “But we thought Jamie was the one who—” He broke off abruptly as Gleet’s head swung in his direction.
“Who what? Who did for Tess, you mean? No way,” Gleet said, stony. “Not the way he was fightin’ and yellin’, like. Whatever they’d done, he didn’t look like he wanted to be any part of it.” And he went quiet because now, unlike then, he knew exactly what it was that Jamie had not wanted to be a part of.
“So why were they taking him at all?” I wondered. “And where?”
Gleet forgot himself long enough to attempt a shrug, then had to pause to catch his breath. He’d begun to rock a little, almost unconsciously, in self-comfort.
“Search me,” he said at last. “But he didn’t want to go, that’s for sure.”
“So, what did they do with him, these men?” Sean asked, repeating my question.
“They had a big white van near the exit,” Gleet said. “Merc of some kind, I think. They started trying to bundle him into the back of it, but he didn’t want to go. Eventually, one of them pulled out one of those extending night-sticks and thwacked him one.”
Sean’s eyes flicked to mine again.
Eamonn?
I wouldn’t give him an answer.
“They hit him?” Paxo said, sounding puzzled. “But we thought he must have been in it with them.”
“No way,” Gleet said. “I saw them hit him and it wasn’t no friendly tap, neither. He went down like a sack of spuds.”
“And what happened to you?”
“I hopped off the bike and waded in, like,” Gleet said, rueful. “Should have waited until they put that damned stick away first, though. Took one on my arm, first whack, then got lamped round the back of the head and that was me out of it. Next thing I knew, you lot were standing over me.”
“We still don’t know why they were taking him – or where,” Sean said, almost to himself. He glanced at me. “If they were going to kill him, why bother to take him with them at all?”
“They don’t seem too fussed about leaving a trail behind them,” I agreed.
“Oh, I don’t think they were out to kill him,” Gleet said and all eyes turned in his direction. “Well, just as the first bloke clouted Jamie, the other one grabbed his mate’s arm and yanked it back, like. Told him to ‘go steady’ or ‘go easy’, something like that. I didn’t catch it right. Sorry.”
So, who would want the kid in one piece?
Sean’s gaze flicked towards me and I saw the same answer that had been forming in my mind.
His mother.
“It’s got to be,” Sean said, as though I’d spoken out loud.
“Shit,” I muttered, suddenly replaying the conversations I’d had with Jacob since we’d arrived in Ireland. His questions. My answers. I’d kept him up to speed and thought no more about it. “Isobel must have made a deal with Eamonn. And I know just how she’s been getting her intel.”
“You weren’t to know, Charlie,” Sean said, almost without censure.
Paxo had been following the brief discussion backwards and forwards like a tennis fan, scowling. “Hang on. Are you trying to tell us that Jamie sold us out to his mother?” he said, voice rising. “The little shit.”
“I don’t think so,” Sean said. “They thumped him and chucked him in the back of a van. Hardly the way you’d treat a co-conspirator, is it?”
“So why
have
they taken him?” William asked.
“I’ve no idea,” I said, grim. “But I think I might know someone who can answer that.”
I crossed to the phone and followed the instructions for dialling out international. Everyone’s eyes were riveted on me, with the exception of Gleet. He’d allowed his head to sag back against the pillows and his eyelids had sunk into a doze like someone had flicked a switch.
“Who are you calling?” Paxo demanded as the call connected and rang in my other ear. “Come on, Charlie, don’t—”
I held my hand up to silence him as the phone was picked up at the other end.
“Hi Jacob,” I said. I was aiming for a light tone but my voice came out tight and ever so slightly angry. Which was hardly surprising, given the circumstances.
“Charlie!” Jacob said, sounding just as tense. “What’s happening?”
“We were rather hoping,” I said, “that you could tell us that.”
He paused a fraction too long. “What do you mean?”
I sighed. “Just let me talk to Isobel,” I said tiredly. “I know she’s there. Just tell her the courier’s dead, Tess is dead, and Eamonn’s boys have taken Jamie, but that if she thinks that cold-hearted bastard is going to let the boy live after what he’s seen, she’s kidding herself.”
For a whole five seconds I stood there clutching a silent telephone then Jacob said, quiet and subdued, “Hold on a moment,” and all the background noise at his end abruptly disappeared.
I closed my eyes briefly. I suppose that right up until that point I’d been hoping Jacob would blow up at me again for getting it all wrong. Instead all I felt was the stab of betrayal in my side, like a vicious stitch.
There was some crackling at the other end of the line. “Jamie is Isobel’s son as much as mine. I’d no right to keep her out of it,” Jacob said then, his voice sounding more distant, echoing. “I’ve put it on speakerphone. Go ahead, Charlie. Isobel’s right here.”
“Have you told her what’s happened?”
“Yes,” Isobel’s voice sounded uncharacteristically wavery. She seemed to take a breath and said, more firmly, “Yes, he has.”
“I don’t know what kind of a deal you cut with Eamonn, or what promises he’s made you, Isobel,” I said, harsh, “but he won’t keep them. He can’t. As soon as he’s got what he wants, your son is history.” I paused, and couldn’t resist adding, “And you as well, probably.”