Authors: Nichola McAuliffe
âGood morning.'
The door opened and his thoughts scattered like birdseed.
âOh Lucy, I've had an accident. I'm sorry. It's only water â the catheter hasn't leaked. It's just water.'
He repeated the words quickly. He had caught sight of the expression on her face when she saw Shackleton on the television.
âIt's video taken last night while he was hostage. Good stuff, I think.'
She wasn't listening. He watched her as she tried to hide the softness in her eyes, the softness that had been his after making love when she'd ask, âYou hungry? Cup of tea?'
Not for him, not really, but because she was always ravenous after. Now she was ravenous before. He hoped it was still before. Maybe that's why Shackleton wanted her â if he did â because women didn't look at men like that any more, with that mixture of gentleness and encouragement seen in the faces of Madonnas on Christmas cards. What she gave Gary now was that look mixed with pity. The Madonna after the Crucifixion. When it was all over.
She was undoing his pyjama top now, trying not to look at the screen. But she couldn't stop herself when she heard his voice. Live from his home.
âRecuperating from his injuries ⦠bravery ⦠modesty ⦠an example to his colleagues.'
Lucy sat Gary up to peel off the jacket. She wanted to turn a handle and flush out the thoughts of Tom while she dealt with Gary's poor wasted body. But she couldn't. She was afraid her thoughts of Tom would be so loud Gary might hear them through the thin bone of her skull if she leaned too close to him.
âNo ⦠Lucy. Leave that. Don't you want to see what Tom's got to say? Sit down a minute.'
Lucy couldn't believe Gary had no idea of her feelings for Tom; thank God he didn't. She felt as if she was wearing a neon sign saying:
I AM OBSESSED WITH TOM SHACKLETON
. But Gary hadn't guessed. And with luck, he never would.
She perched on the side of the bed, composing her face to indifference. Perhaps he'd still be in the house when she went over to do her chores. What did she have clean in the wardrobe? No, the skirt was too formal â anyway she didn't have any shiny tights left, only those nasty dull American Tan jobs from the supermarket.
She settled on jeans. They had an elasticated waist but he needn't see that, she'd wear a short shirt outside. Good. Decision made. Her bottom was still pert for a size fourteen and as she spent most of her working time either bending over or on her hands and knees she thought she might as well show off her assets.
âHe's good, isn't he? Very plausible.'
âOh Gary â¦' She was hurt by his coolness. âHe's not plausible, he's really sincere. He does care about race issues. He cares about people, Gary.'
âVery plausible. Not glib at all. Really quite believable.'
Jenni's Gnome sat with the Prime Minister and his
éminences grises
. The five men watched the television screen. The Flamborough Estate story had been running all day. It was a slack news season so every programme was full of it, the fact, the comment, the hopes for the future. Tom Shackleton had gone overnight from being one of forty-three chief constables to being the acceptable face of policing. The One Who Understands. Compassion in National Policing. The People's Policeman. The headlines were writing themselves.
âBut is he biddable?'
The Prime Minister looked at his advisers. Shackleton's future was to be decided in this room by these three men, the grey men behind the PM. The Gnome thought of the rhyme from Richard III's time: âThe Cat, the Rat and Lovell the dog, Rule all England under the Hog.'
He smiled.
âI think he is. He wants success more than he wants to be champion of the underclass.'
âHe's good, he's very good,' said the Rat, a man whose physical characteristics were almost as appealing as the Gnome's. âDoes he mean all this about the issues? How much does he care?'
The Gnome waited a second before he replied.
âWell, David. Let me put it this way, he's on message with all the right principles but put a family of asylum seekers in his loft conversion and he might think twice.'
âI think we all might,' said the Dog grimly. âBut if we let any more of the buggers in, he might have to.'
âNow, Alan,' said the PM mildly. âBe careful, we haven't been swept for bugs. Anyway' â the change of tone was abrupt â âyou don't mean that, do you?'
The Dog looked at him. The PM's strange doll's eyes were cold, alert. The Prime Minister's appetite for cynicism was very small.
âOf course not. No.'
The Cat looked across at the Dog.
âAlan, when we make jokes it's often a sign of something we really believe.' He paused, he had their attention. âI've known Tom Shackleton for quite a while now and it's true what David says, he's not a hands-on type. He doesn't want to get grubby unless there's a camera crew there. Emotional involvement is not his style. It's a job, and if that involves kissing babies or kissing backsides, he'll
do it. He's not burdened with deep beliefs or a sophisticated moral code. He's a pond skater, elegant, fast on his feet and unlikely to cause ripples. Most important he's a star turn. Look at him â¦'
He rewound the tape and played it again: Shackleton smiling, nodding, shyly proud, quietly modest.
âThe public's going crazy for him. He's got the Kennedy touch. Let's face it, he is what London needs.'
âYes.' The Rat nodded. âThe Caretaker Commissioner's done a good job â'
âWasn't his nickname George?' interrupted the Dog.
The Rat nodded briefly, anxious to get on.
The PM raised his eyebrows.
The Dog took it as a question.
âAfter the play, Prime Minister.
The Madness of George III
.'
âAnd is he?'
âAs a box of frogs, Prime Minister. And very hands-on with his female staff, I'm told.'
The Rat made a movement that, had he been the real thing, would have been a ruffling of his fur, and continued.
âRemember the chaos when he took over? He's done well â but now we need someone with charisma. Media-friendly.'
The Gnome had waited his moment.
âShackleton's your man. He talks all the right fights, Race, Drugs, Crime â'
The Dog bounded in again.
âAnd let's face it, the British public will forgive anything if they think you need them. Our heroes are all damaged goods. No one's going to erect a statue to Michael Schumacher or Nigel Mansell â no, it'll be George Best and Princess Di. Now, I'm not saying Shackleton's a loser but he's got that vulnerable look the housewives like. And the men can understand him. Good choice.'
The Prime Minister winced. He trusted the Dog's judgement implicitly but he wished his opinions were formed by something more profound than pragmatism.
âGive him the Met then?'
He looked at the Cat.
âWell, the hoops will have to be seen to be gone through but yes, I don't see why not.' The Cat paused. âHe wants a knighthood, you say?'
The Gnome nodded.
âHe'd prefer a peerage. Lower-middle background, can't shake it off.'
âRight. Good. That's settled. Let him have the Met â'
âYes ⦠he gets the K automatically and we can chuck him a peerage if he remembers which knife and fork to use.'
The Dog chuckled at his own wit. The Cat and Rat smiled. The PM didn't lose his expression of concerned sincerity. He stood up.
âAnd the Crime Tsar?'
âOh Carter, definitely Carter.'
The three wise men all agreed. No discussion. The PM left the room, hurrying off to a cabinet meeting. Smiling a caricature of a boyish smile.
The Gnome, casually, as if an afterthought, asked the Dog, âCrime Tsar?'
âDon't tell me you didn't get the memo either. That bloody secretary, she's pregnant and her brains seem to have dropped out when she opened her legs to conceive ⦠it's shortform for United Kingdom â what's left of the ruddy thing â Anti-Crime Coordinator. The Cabinet's got plans for a sort of FBI â remember we kicked the idea around about a year ago? Scotland's gone for it too and Northern Ireland say they'll cooperate. Fully paid up members of the awkward squad.'
The Gnome nodded.
âAnyway, all serious crimes will come to this super force under the command of this Crime Tsar. Direct line to Europol, BWD, all of them. He'll be able to take charge of any case from any area. So anything more serious than dropping litter will be his province. He'll be a sort of Supercop.'
The Dog laughed. The Gnome smiled. The Dog was struck again by the sheer niceness of the man. How could someone so transparently a force for good and so patently ugly have risen so far? But then good looks had never been the mark of the British politician.
âPretty powerful position.'
âGod's policeman, Robbie. All the chief constables will answer to him, except Northern Ireland and that bugger doesn't answer to anyone. No, the idea is to try to get all the best coppers, all the best intelligence, under one roof. Natural progression from NCIS. Good idea, eh? Coming down to the bar?'
The Gnome shook his head. The cheerios were loud. Confident voices, confident, powerful people. When the advisers had left the room Robbie â the Gnome â MacIntyre stood looking down at the Thames through the leaded window.
He loved the inside of the Houses of Parliament, he loved the stone of the walls and the wood panelling but most of all he liked the quiet power it exuded. Inside looking out. It was the objective of his life, to be an insider.
He loved being rich, he loved being powerful, but most of all he loved being accepted. Being liked even. Inside this building he wasn't an ugly dwarf any more, openly pitied or scorned. Nobody here would shout after him: âWhat you doing for panto this year?' âOi, Grumpy, where's Snow White?' Both things had been yelled this week, and he'd smiled, and he'd waved.
His thoughts swirled like the water below.
Jenni. When should he tell her? What would get her knickers down? Telling her and hoping for gratitude or not telling her and dangling his influence like a fishing fly. No contest. Dangle. He smiled. So Carter would get the new top job and all Jenni's scheming would be for nothing. He snorted. Serve her right. And her Action Man husband. He'd have her and have him over. What could be nicer?
Lucy had let herself in. There was no sign of anyone. Disappointed, she went into the kitchen. The coffee cups were on the table, the remains of toast and the lid off the honey. The central reservation, a rectangle of work surface the size of a snooker table, was uncharacteristically cluttered. Jenni's kitchen could have accommodated any top chef â it was more than equal to the challenge of her occasional forays into lasagne and tossed salad.
The mess meant Tamsin and Kit were there. She bent down to get her cleaning-materials trug from under the sink. Her neat little tray of sprays and dusters.
âHello.'
Lucy jumped so hard she banged her head.
âI ⦠er ⦠I didn't hear you come in. Sorry.'
Why she was apologising for being frightened out of her wits she didn't know.
Tom stood over her.
âDid you bang your head?'
âNo ⦠well, yes, a bit.'
She stood up. He was wearing a tracksuit and no shoes. She noticed how neat his feet were, high arches, pale.
âIt's all I could put on with these.'
He held up his bandaged hands.
âOh yes ⦠how do you feel? What an experience â it must have been awful for you. I saw the film, well, the video on television this morning.'
Lucy listened to herself rabbiting on. Making a complete fool of herself. Shut up, Lucy, her brain was shouting. He's bored already. Shut up.
He smiled.
âCould you ⦠would you mind making me a cup of coffee? Only Jenni's just grabbed a quiet moment to run our daughter and grandson home.'
Lucy burbled, âYes, yes, of course. Coffee, black, isn't it? One sugar?'
As if she could forget. Look what happened the last time she gave him a cup of coffee. She realised her hands were shaking when she tried to fill the kettle through the spout as she usually did. A spray of water soaked her shirt. Oh God, he'd think it was a wet T-shirt competition. She tried to rub herself down with a teacloth. Hopeless.
She took a deep breath, removed the lid of the kettle and filled it properly. She managed all the business with the cafetière and poured the coffee into a cup without spilling it. She turned to give it to him. He had disappeared. She called out, âTom â¦? Excuse me, Tom, I have your coffee. Where would you like it?' She felt silly being so correct but then, as her aunt had said, sexual intercourse didn't constitute a formal introduction.
âHere, Lucy.'
His voice came from upstairs. The bedroom. By the time she got there most of the coffee was in the saucer. She upended it and poured it back then knocked politely on the open door.