The Elephant Tree (14 page)

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Authors: R D Ronald

BOOK: The Elephant Tree
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The barman placed both bottles of Becks and a cocktail for Elizabeth on the bar and took the note Neil held out to him.

‘Custom good then?’ Scott leaned in and asked Neil.

‘Yeah pretty decent. Should get everything else moved in here before long, and no, I haven’t invited anyone back for a party,’ he said, grinning.

* * *

Saturday morning Scott was woken again by the sound of his phone. He cursed himself for having again forgotten to switch it to silent as he reached down to pick it up. Hoping to hear Angela answer him, he pressed green and said hello without checking caller ID. He waited a few seconds as his brain emerged reluctantly from the fog of sleep, and then said hello again. Nothing. Could he hear faint breathing this time on the other end of the line? He wasn’t sure, but it was too early for games so he looked at the screen then hung up. Another withheld number.

Daylight violated the bedroom through the un-curtained window. Scott vowed to fix the pole later in the day, picked up his cigarettes and went into the kitchen to make coffee.

Steam from the kettle fogged the cold kitchen window. Like a child, Scott leaned across and wrote his name on the glass, and then unconsciously wrote Angela underneath.

She had promised to call yesterday but maybe she’d just been busy at the hospital or Christmas shopping. Besides, he had a load of work to finish up at home and email through to the office, which he really should have completed yesterday, so even if she called he wouldn’t be able to take time out to see her anyway.

He rubbed out the names and poured boiling water into his cup.

About six hours later Scott was putting the finishing touches to his design work when the phone rang again. He checked the caller ID before answering, and saw Jack flash up on the screen.

‘Almost finished, I’ll have them emailed within a half hour,’ Scott said as he answered the phone.

‘What? Oh, right. Listen, I want you to come and see me today.’

‘It’s after three now and I have at least an hour more work to finish up here, so I don’t think so, Jack.’

‘I thought you said you’d email them to the office in a half hour.’

‘Yeah well, creative timekeeping. Can’t it wait ‘till tomorrow?’

‘Just come to the club tonight instead. I have a meeting before my shift this evening but I’d like to see you,’ Jack said, sounding a little anxious, Scott thought, which was unlike him. He usually carried the demeanour of someone who had ice water instead of blood running through his veins.

‘OK I’ll try.’

‘And Scott.’

‘Yeah’

‘By yourself and don’t bring anything, understand?’

‘For fuck’s sake, OK,’ Scott said, angrily, and hung up the phone. Jack had a knack of making him feel like a child again, of being able to get what he wanted without any obvious signs of coercion.

It was past five when he finally finished up and emailed his work to the Zebra office. He took a shower to freshen up and heard Boris’s excited barking and galloping up and down the hallway, usually a sign someone was at the front door. Judging by the time it would probably be Neil to sort out that night’s supply; let him wait, Scott thought, and finished his shower.

Ten minutes later, with a towel around his waist, Scott trudged to the front door and opened it. Neil was sitting of the bonnet of his Hyundai smoking a cigarette, with one foot on the bumper and one on the floor.

Scott turned and went back inside as Neil hopped up off the car and followed.

‘Last club night before the holidays’, Neil said brightly. ‘You think we should take more stuff?’

‘I dunno, maybe.’

‘You have everything ready or should I bag up while you get dressed?’

‘I haven’t started yet, so help yourself. Listen, I have to go and see Jack at Aura later tonight. I’ll come round the bars with you first but will you be OK to do Blitz on your own?’

‘Don’t worry about it I’ll handle the bars as well. You just take the night off. Elizabeth will get a kick out of seeing me fly solo anyway,’ he said, grinning.

‘So you’re keeping her for a while then?’ Scott asked. His initial impression of Elizabeth hadn’t left a pleasant taste in his mouth, but he had enough going on without poking his nose into Neil’s business as well.

‘Yeah. Great body, she has her own place, and she’s filthy,’ he said with the broad smile of someone who knows. ‘All boxes ticked.’

Later as Scott made his way to Aura, large snowflakes began to fall and settle on the city streets. Any evidence of yesterday’s rainfall was gone and the cold dry ground provided the perfect canvas for the snow’s seasonal decoration.

Two streets later and passing cars had turned the thin covering of snow to slush on the roads, taxis whispered past over the wet tarmac, reflecting the garish neon glare of Christmas lights hanging down from above.

He turned the corner and saw the queue for admittance was already lined up down the block. Scott zipped up his jacket and headed towards the entrance. The club’s name was inset into blocks of stone over the doorway. Down either side, intricate pillars designed in similar fashion gave the entranceway the appearance of having been carved into a cliff face.

As Scott stepped over the red rope and approached the door, a square shaped man in a tuxedo held out a palm towards him the size of a side of ham, and simply said ‘no’. Scott looked up at the doorman and didn’t recognise him from previous visits to the club. Scott knew he didn’t meet the dress code for a place like this, and he certainly wasn’t waiting over an hour for admittance in the burgeoning queue that had already formed anyway. Another doorman made his way down the steps as Scott was thinking up the quickest way to explain himself inside.

‘Hello Scott.’

Scott didn’t recognise the voice and looked in the direction of its owner. A sharp glint reflecting from his earlobe immediately caught Scott’s eye and identified its owner. The same face he’d seen after the job with Twinkle.

‘I’m just here to see Jack,’ Scott said, wanting to offer up nothing more.

‘OK, in you come.’

The doorman who’d first obstructed Scott moved to begin a pat down, but was told by the other man to let him past.

Scott walked past avoiding any eye contact. He felt a little shaken and his legs were numb from cold and the sudden shock of seeing the man again.

Inside he followed the wide carpeted corridor towards the heart of the club; the deep bass that travelled down here from the three rooms of dance music sounded muffled and disjointed, like the sound on a plane at high altitude right before your ears pop.

The doors opened out onto a huge room the shape of a goldfish bowl. The centrepiece was a large circular dance floor that was packed with clubbers and slowly revolved; flooded with atmospheric smoke and illuminated by an impressive array of spotlights and lasers constantly changing in both direction and colour in time with the music. Surrounding it were two outer levels, each elevated slightly higher than the last that were almost as busy as the dance floor. People gathered, talking and drinking in standing areas interspersed with large reflective columns, or sat at tabled areas in large upholstered armchairs and couches. Three bars evenly spaced around the outside were warmly lit and staffed by people Scott would have expected to see draped over food processors or golf clubs on cheesy TV game shows, with their bronzed skin and fixed air hostess smiles. Four podiums were situated between the tabled areas and dance floor, three containing gyrating dancers, both male and female and the last, just a bit higher again, for posterity Scott assumed, contained the deejay booth.

Scott made his way to the bar and ordered two Southern Comfort and cokes with no ice. The barman tried unsuccessfully to disguise his disdainful look at Scott’s wardrobe selection; perhaps assuming him to be a VIP he repositioned his serving smile and fetched the drinks without comment.

Scott took a sip from his glass while walking up to the deejay booth. Four columns of smoke simultaneously billowed down onto the dance floor and expanded out like inverted mushroom clouds, as the throbbing bass and pulsing lights slowed down. Looking up at the deejay booth Scott could see the fixed look of concentration on his brother’s face. His hands moved over buttons on the various CD players and computerised mixing equipment in front of him as the music tempo began to increase. The thunderous bassline slowly returned and the congregation of clubbers on the dance floor again began to move in time. The beat picked up speed and the bass volume crescendoed to an almost deafening level before it broke back down again and the vocals flooded out, causing cheers from all around the club for Jack’s atmospheric manipulation.

Jack was accompanied by two girls Scott guessed at being barely of legal age for admittance. Seeing Scott approach, Jack leaned in to whisper to them both and patted each on the ass as they vacated the booth.

‘Very smooth,’ Scott said, trying not to sound too sarcastic. He didn’t want to start with any pointless bickering.

Jack ignored the comment. Scott handed him the other glass which his brother accepted, placed in front of him and nodded.

‘Have you made plans for Christmas then?’ Scott asked, figuring he may as well start the conversation.

Jack pressed some more buttons on the equipment mixing in the next track, and didn’t acknowledge he’d heard the question.

‘I warned you to stay away from them Scott,’ Jack said finally, leaning towards his brother over the edge of the deejay booth. His voice had taken on the same parental tone he’d used on the phone earlier, and having him now looming down towards Scott was too much for him to take.

‘Back off Jack. You’re not dad,’ Scott snapped. ‘You can give me all the advice you want, but whether I choose to follow it or not is up to me.’

Jack turned back to the mixing equipment, preparing the next track to be woven into place. Scott figured he was using this as an excuse to carefully select his next words. Jack didn’t like being spoken to aggressively like Scott had just done, but he was clever enough not to retaliate in a like manner and further antagonise the situation. Scott could see Jack’s analytical mind processing the various outcomes of the conversation and discarding them one by one until he had settled on a course of action that would result in things best going his way. Scott thought it best to interrupt before Jack regained momentum.

‘You remember that time as kids, mum and dad took us to that fairground?’ Scott asked.

‘Remind me.’

‘We went on different rides and stuff, but I could only go on the little kid rides cause I wasn’t tall enough for the height restrictions on the good ones.’

A smile hinted at Jack’s lips, which Scott took as a sign he remembered.

‘Well there was that ghost house thing we went in. It was all dark corridors with stuff hanging down that would brush against your face, or guys working there putting their arms through holes in the walls and grabbing kids that walked past. A tape played with chains clanking and wailing and stuff.’

‘Yeah I remember, so what?’

‘Well just before the end there was the Frankenstein’s monster. A life size wax model or something, but it looked so real they had even put a cage around it. By the time we got round to it there were a bunch of kids gathered up peeking around the corner at the cage, nudging each other to go first but no-one would, they were terrified. You tried to calm them down, saying it wasn’t real but they still wouldn’t listen. We could see you were scared too but you walked out and stood still right up against the cage and called for everyone to run past behind you. They all ran as quick as they could and didn’t look back, but I was still stood frozen at the corner.’

‘I called out to you, I waited but you wouldn’t come.’

‘I know you did Jack, I’m not blaming you. Eventually you went through to the finish and I was still stood there on my own. I tried to go past but I just couldn’t do it. I walked all the way back around the place and came out at the entrance. I saw all the kids talking excitedly to their parents about what was inside, and you were stood talking with mum and dad.’

‘Jesus, Scott. You were a little kid, I’m four years older than you. You couldn’t have been more than what, five at the time?’

‘Yeah but that stayed with me for so long after. In my head it became like a pivotal moment in life that I’d failed at. You were the kid who went past, succeeded, but I turned back and failed.’

‘You do know how ridiculous this sounds, right?’

‘Maybe so, but now if I have a chance to do something, to walk past the Frankenstein cage even if I do feel scared, then I want to do it.’

‘That was a dummy in a cage and any fear we felt was imagined, we were never in any danger. I don’t know what you’re talking about doing, but if you’re scared then I would imagine there is a very real danger to go with it.’

‘Either way, I’m not gonna sit around forever doing hand me down jobs from your design company and there’s obviously no future in my other after hours activities.’

‘If you’re serious about wanting to step up to more responsibility then we can work that out,’ Jack said, turning and really looking at Scott, for maybe the first time that night.

‘I don’t want to always be in your shadow, Jack. I appreciate the offer but I just want to make enough on my own to start over with a new life for myself.’

‘That again. You can’t run from yourself Scott. The one thing all your problems have in common is you.’

Scott laughed at this, it sounded like something Angela would have said. ‘If there’s nothing else then I’m gonna go,’ Scott said, and finished the rest of his drink. ‘I’ll try to come down and see you at some point over Christmas. Take it easy, Jack.’

He turned to leave and saw the doorman with the diamond earring watching them from the other side of the club. ‘Is the guy with the earring in here new?’ Scott asked, turning back to face his brother.

‘I’ve seen him on and off for a while,’ Jack said, looking curiously at Scott. ‘Why, do you know him?’

‘No, he’s maybe familiar but that’s about it. Probably just someone else with an earring like that I’m thinking of,’ Scott said, to stop any further questions.

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