The Life and Loves of Gringo Greene (24 page)

BOOK: The Life and Loves of Gringo Greene
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   ‘I go with your judgement,’ added Streeter, ‘every time,’ and that sounded to Gringo of brown nosing of the worst kind.

   ‘There’s an appointment fixed at your local VAT office, for, let me see, yes here it is, 2pm, on Thursday.’

   ‘But that’s the day after tomorrow,’ said Gringo, suddenly wondering what they were asking of him, and what might be the ramifications.

   ‘Yes, that’s correct,’ confirmed Soloman, ‘but you have the remainder of the day to go through everything with Donald. You’ll be up to speed by Thursday. I’m sure you can handle it.’

   ‘The appointment is with some bitch called Cairncross,’ said Streeter. ‘Yes here it is, one Ms J Cairncross,’ and there was something inherently bitter about the way he said
some bitch
.

   ‘Shouldn’t we have legal representation present?’

   ‘No, we don’t think that’s a good idea at all, only guilty people take along the legal eagles.’

   ‘But I’m not even an accountant.’

   ‘Well that’s what we thought,’ said Streeter eagerly, as if this was his precise part of their dirty little plan. ‘You can always plead ignorance. Can’t you? It’s often the best way. Throw yourself on their mercy, so to speak.’

  
Throw yourself on their mercy.
Jesus, thought Gringo. He didn’t like the sound of that at all.

   ‘So that’s it then,’ said Soloman, standing, ‘I shall leave you with Donald and he can fill you in on the background. Ask him anything you want, old boy, anything at all, and perhaps you could ring me on the Thursday afternoon and let me know how you got on.’

   They all stood and Soloman shook Gringo firmly by the hand, Soloman’s well-practiced crooked business handshake, without looking him in the eye. Then he mumbled some excuse about a very busy diary and fled the room.

   ‘Come on,’ said Streeter. ‘Let’s get down to business.’     

   The pair of them, Gringo and Streeter, spent the rest of the day poring over facts and figures, VAT returns and printouts and God knows what else, pausing only for a brief late pub lunch, where Gringo attempted to turn the conversation to the stunning women that ran riot through HQ. Somehow Streeter didn’t seem that interested, though Gringo never once considered him to be gay. Odd though.

   At 4pm he was presented with a huge file of copies of everything they’d examined. He was almost dragged to the front door and sent on his way, as if Dryden Engineering Head Office imagined they could solve their problem by simply booting it, and him, out into the street to fend for himself. Bye, bye, and good riddance!

   Poor Julian, pondered Gringo on the rainy train journey home. He and Julian had often had their differences but by and large they respected one another. He would be missed, that was for sure, if only for the workload he shouldered. Someone else would have to take that on, and Gringo determined that it would not be him.

  
He even lets me sit on his knee.   

 
The new office femme fatale’s words came back to him and he laughed aloud, much to the amusement of his fellow passengers.

   Not for much longer, Becky, not for much longer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
Twenty-Six

 

 

 

First thing Wednesday morning brought Gringo another huge stack of mail, and hidden in amongst it was a handwritten envelope. Alas, it was not from overseas, and on first inspection he didn’t recognise the writing. It looked like a birthday card, though it was most certainly not his birthday. Perhaps it was some kind of clever advertising ploy. If it was from National Double Glazing he would take it round to their showroom after hours and set fire to it and shove it through their letterbox, a crazy idea he would never carry out, but an inspiring one nonetheless.

   He opened the envelope and pulled out a card.

   It was from Sarah.

   It was a
Thank You
card.

   The front cover featured an old American design from the fifties. A tall, dark and slim gentlemen dressed in a morning suit, carrying a top hat, a smug grin set on his face, while before him standing on tiptoe was a slightly shorter, micro waisted lady, reaching up to kiss him on the cheek, a speech bubble pouring from her pert little mouth announcing:
Thank You, Darling.

   He opened the card.

   Sarah had written:

  
Gringo,

   Thank you, darling, for a truly wonderful weekend. I can’t tell you how much I enjoyed myself. I hope you did too. I think you did!

   I am away this coming weekend, Antiques fair in Norwich, booked up long ago that I can’t possibly
escape, but I shall be
back the following weekend, and I’ll be going down to the cottage on the Friday.

   If you would like to accompany me, you would be most welcome. Come to the flat any time on Friday up till six-thirty. I shall be leaving at seven.

   Hope to see you then.

   All my love,

   Sarah,

   XXXXXXXXXXXXX

   And seeing as I know how you adore kisses, here are some more XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

and for luck XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX!!!!!   

 

   Gringo immediately knew he would go. There was never a doubt about it. The only question was, how could he explain his absence to Maria, and would he let Sarah know he was coming, or just turn up at the last moment? That was a no brainer. He’d keep her guessing, sweating; of course he would, right up to the last second. He tugged open the kitchen drawer and tossed the card inside and didn’t think any more about it.

 
 

The date that night with Maria went better than he could have hoped. He pumped her for information about the VAT office and Ms Cairncross in particular, a woman Maria did not know, and of what might be the outcome of his visit to VAT HQ. Maria was flattered he’d asked, and more than that, willing and able to talk on the subject at great length, though never, Gringo thought, in a boring or overbearing way. 

   They enjoyed a cosy meal in a small country pub that neither of them had visited before, and afterwards adjourned to Maria’s apartment. She made coffee and they cuddled up on the sofa and kissed and hugged, Gringo more than happy to interact with her super fine lips, though there was something there that told him everything was not quite going to plan. For his part he was still concerned about displaying his body. His skin now presented multi coloured bruises that suggested a herd of wild buffaloes had trampled across his flat stomach while he was asleep.

   During a break in the kissing Maria whispered: ‘I’m sorry Gringo, but we can’t go any further, it’s my time of the month.’

   Oh thank you, God, thank you! 

   ‘That’s all right, doll. It happens to everyone.’

   ‘You don’t mind?’

   ‘Course not.’

   ‘I thought you’d be livid, seeing as we haven’t done it all week. I thought you’d be gagging.’

   ‘No-ooo, I know how the world works, though I have to admit, I have been looking forward to seeing you.’

   ‘Thought so. Would you like me to do something else?’

  
Would you like me to do something else?

  
His mind shifted through the gears.

   ‘Like what?’

   ‘Well… you know... I could do anything you want.’

   Normally, Gringo would have jumped at the chance of
doing
something else
, or having
something else
done to him by a pretty girl like Maria, but his mind returned to the state of his still hidden body.

   ‘No, you’re all right, darling. Perhaps another time, eh?’

   ‘Sure, Gringo,’ she said, smiling, ‘any time you like.’

   Not long after that she saw him out with a goodnight kiss in the hallway, and any worry or anxiety that had been there on her part had evaporated. He was content enough to discover her lips were now relaxed and back to their best brushed warm towel state.

   ‘Night, darling,’ he whispered, nibbling her pierced ear.

   ‘Night, Gringo.’

 

Driving home he knew he’d had a close shave. But what could a man do? When you run more than one partner it was a constant problem, and he had no intention of becoming monogamous, not now, not for her, not ever.

   He jumped into bed as soon as he arrived home, but before falling asleep he thought of Soloman and Streeter and the cowardly way, that was his take on it, they had passed their hot potato to him. He wondered what Ms J Cairncross was like. How old? How fat? How officious? How desperate for promotion? A tubby lesbian, or tall slender sex bomb, probably somewhere in between. His mind shifted back to Sarah and her neat
Thank You
card. 

  
I enjoyed myself. I hope you did too. I think you did!

  
Oh yes, I enjoyed myself all right, and after that, he recalled the events of the entire weekend, before anticipating the next occasion, lost in that shack of a cottage down by the river, a true shag palace if ever there was one. He fell asleep soon afterwards and for some reason dreamt of unending journeys on crowded and odorous railway trains.

   Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring.

   The phone beside Gringo’s bed was a chunky old-fashioned one, black of course, with a thick maroon cable, a collectable item in its own right, that he’d acquired at auction. He’d bought it especially for the black Bakelite case, and the loudness of its toll.

  
Ring ring, Ring, ring, Ring ring, Ring ring.

   When Gringo fell asleep he did so completely and utterly. There was no point in doing anything half-heartedly. He did it for keeps.

   Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring.

   He had read stories of infamous burglars who had impressed their cohorts by sitting astride their slumbering victims, whilst clapping their hands as loudly as possible. It is much harder to wake a sleeping human in the dead of night than most people think.

  
Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring.

   Gringo could now hear the bell resounding through his bedroom. He imagined he was dreaming. Was it the bell from the railway engine? Finally he came to realise it was not, but still he couldn’t rise and move and answer.

  
Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring, Ring ring.

   In the darkness his eyes jerked open. He sat up and reached for the lamp. The telephone had stopped ringing. But it could only have just happened, because he could still hear the tinny echo of the bell bouncing from the walls of his bedroom. He glanced at the clock. 2.48. Outside, he could hear the wind getting up.

   Who had been be ringing, disturbing him, at this ungodly hour? If it was that silly little bitch Rebecca Walker again, playing some childish prank, he would have a serious word with her, but was it her? He picked up the phone and dialled 1471.

  
You were called at 2.47. We do not have a number to return the call.

 
Great! Call withheld.

   He cursed and turned off the light and went back to sleep, though it took considerable time to do so, his brain active again, imagining impossible scenarios.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
Twenty-Seven

 

 

 

 

 

 

He had only visited the tax offices once before. It had happened almost ten years earlier when he was summoned to appear for failing to submit a tax return in each of the previous five years. Their offices were dull and musty, with a proliferation of ancient brown lino on the corridor floors that seeped into the office where he was shown, frayed floor covering that someone had tried to cheer up by tossing down an ancient maroon and navy rug.

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