Authors: Nick Oldham
âI'm a businessman who gets pleasure from what he does.'
âI take it you're a bit of a porn king? I mean, if you think you can sell on the stuff I've got, you must have some contacts.'
âSome, yeah. I'm very hands-on, too.' He looked into Henry's eyes, his own sparkling with double meaning which churned Henry's stomach.
Henry gave a laugh. âI like a man who enjoys his work.'
Ingram fell silent again.
They reached a roundabout. Henry drove straight on towards Preston down New Hall Lane. It was a very unprepossessing route into England's newest city, travelling down a long stretch of road with terraced housing either side and a variety of grotty shops, mainly run by members of the Asian community. On the left, behind all this, was Preston's notorious Callum Estate, a hive of fear and violence. Behind the houses on the right was a tight network of terraced streets, populated mainly by ethnic minorities. New Hall Lane ran through the centre of this like the Maginot Line, but Henry knew that whilst racial problems existed, the city generally worked well on that front. It was general lawlessness and youth offenders that caused most of the problems, regardless of ethnic origin.
Henry slowed, turned into a side street that was a dead end. He manoeuvred the Nissan into a tiny parking space.
âPlace we're going to is just on the front. You coming?'
Ingram nodded.
Together they walked out of the side street and ambled down the main road, passing a furniture shop, another selling ethnic foods and a boarded-up pub before reaching the front door of a double-fronted second-hand shop called âJamil's', which had a pavement display of battered furniture and old bikes for kids. Henry pushed through the door and an old-fashioned bell announced their arrival. The inner display of goods pretty much matched the outer, although it was augmented with an array of electrical goods, boxes of CDs and DVDs. They threaded their way through these wares and arrived at the sales counter behind which sat a young Asian man, mid-twenties, leaning back in an office chair, reading a copy of the
Asian Times
.
He lowered the newspaper and eyed his customers, apparently not recognizing Frank Jagger at first, or so it seemed, but then his slight scowl turned into grin. He folded his newspaper untidily and rocked forwards up on to his feet, extending his hand. âHey, pal,' he said, and shook Henry's hand.
Henry felt even more queasy inside, but he gripped the young man's hand and returned the shake.
âJamil, how you doing?'
âI'm good, Frank, how the shit are you?' He spoke with a broad Preston accent.
âGood, good.' Their hands parted. Henry thumbed at Ingram. âThis is Ryan.'
âHi, man,' Jamil nodded. He did not shake hands, but gave Henry a suspicious looks which queried Ingram's presence.
âIt's OK,' Henry reassured him. âWe're in business.'
Jamil shrugged.
Henry turned to Ingram. âLet me introduce Jamil Ahmed. This is his business and he's as honest as the day is short.'
âWhat do you want to sell?' Jamil asked, pleasantries over.
âBack room?' Henry suggested.
Jamil raised the flap on the counter and the three of them retreated to a tiny, cluttered office where the Asian guy dropped into a chair behind a paper-stacked desk and the other two cleared two plastic chairs of rubbish before sitting and facing him.
âHow long have you guys known each other?' Ingram asked.
Henry thought, Small talk, big implications.
The two eyed each other uncertainly. Jamil blew out his cheeks as he worked out the answer. âFour years, give or take.'
Ingram nodded.
Jamil turned his attention to Henry. âWhat've you got for me, Frank, mate?'
âWell,' Henry drawled, âI'm in the process of clearing the decks, so I've got a bit of a sale on â¦'
âFrank, I'm a busy man, as you can see. Just get to the detail, will you? I'm not interested in your financial probs.'
Henry looked at the ceiling with a squint, then back at Jamil. âI have in my possession twenty thousand half-litre cans of Stella, which I need to offload PDQ.'
âA cash-flow crisis,' Jamil said with insight, sniggering.
âNot remotely,' Henry said firmly. âJust offering an old friend a bargain.'
âHow much?'
âThey cost a quid a tin in the shops.'
âI can get lager for twenty-two pence in ASDA.'
âBut this is quality,' Henry said. âStella Artois.'
âHow much?'
âI need to cover my costs and make some profit.'
âHow much, Frank?' Jamil asked irritably.
âMake an offer.'
Jamil emitted an exasperated breath. âTwenty thousand tins?' His brown nostrils flared.
âYou have to collect,' Henry said.
Jamil's head tilted sideways as he considered. âFive pence a tin.'
Henry almost leapt out of his chair. âThat's just a grand!'
Jamil shrugged. âTake it, leave it.'
âYou robbin', Muslim bastard!'
âRobbing, maybe; Muslim, no way. I'm an atheist, just like you.'
âRobbin' atheist bastard, then,' Henry snarled. He sat back down. âTen pence a tin.'
Jamil shook his head. âSeven pence, final offer.'
Henry worked it out. âFourteen hundred quid,' he said despondently. âMake it a round fifteen and it's a deal.'
âFifteen hundred it is.' Jamil extended his hand.
âWhat's the profit margin in that?' Ingram asked.
âNarrow,' Henry said bitterly. âVery fucking narrow. Pile 'em high, sell 'em cheap.' He shook his head in disbelief as they headed back out of Preston towards the motorway. âMaybe three-fifty after costs ⦠doesn't even pay my bloody fine, let alone my creditor.' His voice was purposely hopeless and so immersed was he in his thoughts, he failed to spot the speed camera until it flashed brightly behind him. âHell, that's all I need,' he bleated.
âNot as though you're likely to pay it, are you?'
âNo. The car's registered to an Asian guy in Rusholme, I think.' Henry put his foot down and sped to the motorway junction, cutting south on to the M6, then east on to the M61 and back to the car park at Botany Bay, parking behind Ingram's car.
Henry waited for him to get out, but the man sat there staring, deep in contemplation for a few tedious moments. He then said, turning to look Henry in the eye, âSo far, so good.'
âGlad you think so.'
âNow I need to speak to your creditor.'
âAnd why would that be? If you're gonna bail me out, just go ahead and do it. Give me the money I owe, I'll pay him off, then you shift the DVDs. Give me five per cent of that and I'll be happy.'
âI'll bet you will. How do I know this whole thing still isn't a con, just to get me to pay you, then you disappear?'
Henry sighed.
âYou are, after all, a bit of a con merchant, aren't you?'
âI'm a businessman. On the wrong side of the tracks, maybe, but still a businessman. I'm trustworthy and that's why I'm so uptight about my creditor â as well as the fact he'll cut my balls off if I don't pay up. I don't welch on deals,' he said forcefully.
âThis'll be the last thing, then. Let me meet him, let me talk to him, and then you and me can be partners. How does that sound?'
The London apartments were always in high demand. Donaldson, therefore, was lucky to get one. It was one of six in a converted house in Holland Park, all owned by the American Embassy. Individually they were valued at around the three-quarters of a million pound mark, but Donaldson observed that even for that price, there wasn't enough room to swing a raccoon in it. He felt that he had to squeeze in through the door, down a narrow hallway and into the living room-cum-kitchen. The bedroom and bathroom were off to one side. It was all laminate floors and modern, square furniture. His eyes took in the tiny living space, recently used by an FBI agent on a three-month secondment from LA.
âIs it to your liking?'
Behind him was the young lady from âFacilities' at the embassy. She had been more than eager to help Donaldson find a pad, especially when he regaled her with his tale of woe. He had bumped into the lady more than once in the corridors and had been aware of her lustful gazes. She wiggled the door keys between her fingers.
âIt's good, thanks, Alex,' he said gratefully, dropping his two hefty holdalls on the floor. He took the keys and she ran her forefinger across his palm in a suggestive way. Her eyes shone.
âI know you're going through some really bad shit,' she said, âbut if you need a shoulder or something, you've got my mobile number.'
Donaldson nodded dumbly. âI have, yeah, that'd be good.' He did not look her in the face.
When she left he sat on the two-seater sofa and began to cry.
âIt's very dangerous.'
âCouldn't agree more.' Henry inserted a piece of fried chorizo into his mouth and looked around the restaurant, checking if he'd been followed. His senses were on high alert and his radar tuned in, and he thought he had managed to get into Manchester city centre without a tail, but he could never be one hundred per cent sure. Ingram was very edgy about him still, and Henry was sure the man would not be feeling completely safe until he had chased up every avenue with Frank Jagger. Henry emitted a small groan of pleasure as his bit into the Spanish sausage, his eyes rolling heavenwards.
âNice,' he said to his dining companion in the tapas bar.
Andrea Makin smiled wickedly. âI could make you do that.'
Henry started to chew quickly, dropped his eyes and jabbed his fork into a bowl of mixed olives.
âSorry, changed the subject there,' she apologized insincerely. âWhat you are planning is very dangerous and could blow the whole thing to bits. You've come a long way in a short space of time ⦠it would be a shame to spoil it.'
âI think it's the best way.'
Andrea sat back. She wiped her lips before taking a sip of her Rioja. âConvince me.'
âI've had this guy on a rope for over ten years. He owes me a lot and he knows it, even if we have had our run-ins in the past,' he said wistfully. âHe knows what side his bread is buttered on, and at the end of the day, it's a pretty simple ask. All he has to do is remember my name and say he lent me some money that he wants back.'
âWhy not use another undercover cop?'
Henry rotated his jaw. âBecause' â he stabbed another chunk of chorizo â âthis guy already has the background, a real background that will withstand any degree of scrutiny, because it
is
real. He's a crim, a known dealer, belongs to a criminal family and is therefore watertight if Ingram goes nosing. We don't have to make anything up, because it's all there. If he gets followed home, it's fine. If he gets followed around, fine. The guy's a lowlife â plus he's been my snout for ever.'
âWhat's his name?'
âCan't tell you that, can I?'
âYou have to.'
âOnly if he agrees ⦠if he doesn't, we'll rethink.' Henry spooned some paella on to his plate. âIt'll work,' he said confidently.
âYour last idea did, I suppose.'
âOh yes.'
âBut what if Ingram goes nosing into that?'
âJamil's place? No probs. It's been trading for two and a half years now and Jamil is so deep undercover I'm surprised he even remembers he's a cop. That little shop has produced a lot of superb intel for us, and no one knows it's run by the police. It's a dream.'
Henry's personal phone rang. Kate calling.
âHello, sweetheart.' He glanced across at Andrea, who winced and pulled a face. âYeah, yeah, I'm really sorry but I can't come home tonight ⦠I've arranged for the local cops to keep an eye on the house ⦠don't worry ⦠and your mum's there for the night, isn't she? She'd scare the crap out of any prowler ⦠I wish I could, but ⦠I know you know ⦠night. Love you.' He ended the call.
Andrea regarded him, puzzled. âSomething going on?' She nodded to indicate the phone.
âHad a few problems with a prowler.'
âSerious?'
âWho knows?'
There was a beat of silence, then Andrea said, âSo you're in town for another night?'
âI thought it prudent â just in case Mitch checks on me again.'
Andrea pursed her lips. âOf course, if we get seen together now it's legit, isn't it? Ingram's seen us as a couple.'
Henry shook his head. âWe managed to scam that once and we're lucky he didn't recognize you. If he starts to follow you up, you've no cover to crawl under and then the job would be screwed.'
She pushed herself away from the table. âI could do wonders for those erection problems of yours.'
Henry blanched and the tortilla in his mouth lost its taste.
âAnyway, room twenty-six, that's on the second floor of the Premier Inn, about two hundred yards down the road, which is where I'm staying now. I'll sneak off.' She stood up slowly. âIf you're not there in half an hour, we'll forget it. Deal?'
âDeal,' Henry murmured.
W
ith a terrible churning in his guts, telling him this was a huge mistake, Henry Christie made the introductions and prayed that the next phase of the âmating-up' with Ryan Ingram did not hit the fan and cover him with shit.
In the past Henry had been accused of a lack of judgement and that morning he wondered if the allegations had been correct.
I mean
, he thought,
introducing this idiot to Ingram! What the hell am I thinking? This can only go one way â down the U bend and out to the sewage treatment works.
But it was too late now.
Henry had laid the ground and the only possible way of pulling out now was to declare he was a cop.