Authors: Jessica Stirling
It had been different in the early months of their marriage when his sister, Fiona, had shared the flat with them or, more correctly, they with her.
As soon as war was declared, however, Fiona had enlisted in the WAAF. She was currently attached to a Fighter Command sector station at Kenley and had manned the communications system during the worst of the German air attacks in August and September. Kenny had been sick with worry. He had said a prayer for her every night, a gesture that Rosie had regarded as pure superstition, bordering on the unhealthy.
Rosie leaned across the kitchen table, soup spoon dripping.
âMy sister is living with another man, a man who isn't her husband and you're not the slightest concerned.'
Kenny said, âShe's taken in a lodger, that's all.'
âWho told you that?'
âYou did,' said Kenny, ânot ten minutes ago.'
He was tired. He was perpetually tired these days. He was still several years short of forty but felt like an old man.
Frayed nerves, overwork and worry, magnified by her handicap, had changed Rosie too. She was no longer the girl he had fallen in love with, and in spite of the fact that he loved her still there were times when he wished he'd heeded Fiona's advice and remained a bachelor.
âWho told you about Babs and her lodger?' he asked.
âPolly.'
âHow did Polly find out?'
âBabs couldn't wait to run round to Manor Park Avenue to impart the news that she'd ditched Jackie and found another man.'
âWhoa,' said Kenny. âA lodger isn't the same thing as another man.'
âAs good as.' Rosie paddled her spoon in her soup. âYou know what Babs is like. She'll have this chap in her bed before he knows what's hit him.'
âThousands of women are taking in lodgers,' Kenny said.
âAmericans?'
âIf he's American he probably won't stay long.'
âJust long enough to nin-knock her up.'
âOh, Rosie!'
âI don't know what Mammy will have to say about it.'
âDoesn't your mother know yet?' said Kenny.
âNo, and I am not going to be the one to tell her.'
When war had broken out he had assumed that his clever little wife would continue to work in Shelby's bookshop but within weeks she had gone out to find â to demand â her share of highly paid war work. Now this silly squabble, this storm in the family teacup had blown up and Rosie was off again, blaming him for her sister's indiscretion just as she blamed him for everything else that displeased her.
A precious hour, that's all the time they would have together this evening; Rosie seemed determined to squander it fretting about her sister's moral welfare. He had dragged himself home after a twelve-hour shift and would have to go out soon to fire-watch; ten until two, perched, freezing, on the roof of the CID building in St Andrew's Street. The canteen at police HQ would have supplied him with an unrationed supper and congenial company. He wished now that he hadn't bothered coming home at all.
âWhere,' he said, âdid Babs meet this chap?'
âAt the Welfare Centre, I think.'
âNot the Sweethearts Club?'
âI don't think she's ever been to the Sweethearts Club.'
Rosie broke bread into her soup and mopped it up with her spoon. She looked deathly pale and there were panda-like circles around her eyes. Eleven hours a day assembling tiny components in an ill-lit cubicle in Merryweather's electrical factory was ruining her health. Soon, Kenny thought sadly, Rosie would look as old as he felt.
âPerhaps he's an old chap, this lodger,' Kenny heard himself say.
âHe is not an old chap,' Rosie retorted. âHe's young. Take my word for it â Babs is doing the duh-dirty on poor Jackie.'
Kenny wondered where Rosie had heard such a coarse expression and, come to think of it,
how
she had heard it. Probably at Merryweather's where the girls were more worldly-wise than his wife even though she'd been raised in one of Glasgow's toughest neighbourhoods and had had a gangster for a father.
He pushed away his plate. âThis American chap, what's he doing here?'
âWorking for a newspaper, I think.'
âWhat? Like a journalist?'
âPhotographer.'
âReally!' Kenny said.
âI don't know much about him,' Rosie said, âonly what Babs told Polly and Polly told me. I don't think Polly was interested, to tell you the truth.'
âI wonder,' Kenny said, âwhy Babs told Polly in the first place.'
âTo impress her,' Rosie said. âIt's always been Babs's ambition to go one better than Polly.'
âTaking in a lodger is hardly going one better.'
âNuh, but taking on a lover is.'
Rosie lifted away the soup plates and put them on the draining board beneath the blackout curtains at the sink. She opened the oven door and brought out two small meat pastries. On top of the stove was a pot, a pot that gave off no steam or smell. She opened the pot lid, spooned luke-warm peas on to the plate with the pastries and put it down before her husband.
Kenny studied his supper without comment.
âWhat are you having?' he asked, at length.
âI'm not hungry.'
âDid you have lunch?'
âI bought something off the trolley.'
âYou should eat something, Rose,' he said mildly.
âI
told
you, I'm nuh-not hungry. This business with Babs has ruined my appetite.'
Kenny cut into one of the pastries, more onion than meat within.
âWhat do you want me to do about it?' he said.
âGo see her,' Rosie said.
âI can't just barge in out of the blue and ask Babs if she's sleeping with her lodger.'
Rosie frowned, eyes darker than ever, the circles around them like huge blue bruises. âTell her you're checking his visa?'
âChecking visas isn't my department.'
âIf Dominic were still here, he'd take care of it. He'd sort Babs out.'
Kenny knew better than anyone that Dominic Manone had been fortunate to escape imprisonment for his crimes. He was stung by the unfair comparison with his brother-in-law. âDo you really want me to talk to Babs?'
âYuh, I really want you to.'
âI can't go tonight. I'm fire-watching in half an hour.'
Rosie's frown deepened. âYou're not wriggling out of it?'
âI'll go tomorrow as soon as I finish my shift.'
âIs that a promise, Kenneth?'
âYes, dearest,' he said, âthat's a promise.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Hallop's Motoring Salon, once Jackie's pride and joy, had been taken over by the Civil Defence. The plate-glass windows behind which a selection of desirable second-hand motorcars had once reposed were crisscrossed with sticky tape. A water supply tank had been erected in the forecourt and only the pumps and repair pit behind the main building remained functional, reserved, Kenny guessed, for servicing emergency vehicles.
It was here on the forecourt of the salon during an investigation into Manone's shady dealings that he had first encountered Jackie Hallop and Babs and had become involved with Rosie and the rest of the Conway clan. If anyone had told him then that he would fall head over heels in love with the sister-in-law of a notorious Glasgow criminal and wind up married to her he would have called them crazy.
Kenny hadn't clapped eyes on Babs since early summer. He had been far too busy. The Special Protection Unit was no longer the paltry wee sideshow it had been under the late Inspector Winstock.
Kenny had spent that afternoon with a liaison officer from Naval Intelligence at the old Greenock Prison, interrogating two so-called âbusinessmen' who had been arrested for running shipments of British-made arms to neutral ports in Portugal in contravention of about three dozen laws, at least four of which might see them hanged. The liaison officer had invited him to dine at the Royal Greenock Yacht Club â now a naval establishment â but mindful of his promise to Rosie, he had politely declined.
Instead he had hitched a ride in an RN gharry as far as Paisley, had caught a tram from there to Holloway Road and trudged the last half-mile to Raines Drive. By right he should be back at HQ, or with Rosie in the flat in Cowcaddens. He had rigged up red light bulbs in the flat's kitchen and bedroom and Mr McVicar, the local warden, had been instructed to press the button on the landing door the instant the siren sounded, for Rosie, being deaf, couldn't hear the warnings of air attack and he emphatically didn't want to have to rake among the rubble in search of his wife's broken body, thank you very much.
He stood on the doorstep of Babs's bungalow and listened to a wireless set playing dance music for a moment, then he rang the bell.
The door opened. Babs peered out at him.
âIf it's the blackout againâ' she began.
âNo, it's me,' said Kenny.
âWho?'
âKenny. Rosie's husband.'
âBlimey!' said Babs. âWhat a surprise.'
âMay I come in?'
There was a faint sheen of light under the door of the living room but the hallway, sensibly, was in darkness. The sound of the radio orchestra was louder now and Kenny recognised the tune â âOnly Make Believe'.
Babs frowned. âWhat is it? Is Rosie ill?'
âEveryone's fine. I just happened to be in the neighbourhoodâ¦'
She stood back and admitted him to the hallway. In the darkness he could smell her perfume, her warmth, and sense, he thought, her agitation.
âI'm not disturbing you, am I?'
âCourse not. Come in.'
She stepped ahead of him into the cosy, lamp-lit living room. There was even a fire in the grate, though the room was hardly what you would call warm. The wireless set, one of several that Jackie had collected over the years, was on a stand by the window. Babs switched it off.
The chap in the armchair by the hearth wore a heavy pepper-and-salt sweater, thick corduroy trousers and a pair of well-darned woollen stockings. A newspaper was folded across his chest and Kenny guessed that he had been catching up on his shut-eye.
âWhere's your daughter? Where's April?'
âIn bed, fast asleep,' Babs told him. âDrink? We have Scotch.'
âNo. No thanks,' said Kenny.
He thrust his hands deep into his overcoat pockets and tipped his hat back, his blue eyes watchful and assessing, not hard.
The man in the armchair rose and offered his hand. âHi,' he said, âI'm Christy Cameron. I guess we haven't met.'
Kenny shook the chap's hand.
âThis is my sister Rosie's husband,' Babs said. âHe's a copper and I think he's here to give you the once-over.'
Christy Cameron spread his hands. âWell, here I am, in all my glory. You sure you don't want a drink, Mrâ¦?'
âMacGregor. Kenny.'
âInspector Kenny?'
âJust Kenny will do.'
Babs brushed his shoulder as she passed out of the room into the hallway to check on the blackout curtain or to make sure that April was asleep.
â
Have
you come to give me the once-over?' Christy said.
âMore or less.'
Christy laughed and seated himself in the armchair again. He nodded towards the sofa that faced the fireplace. âBest make yourself comfortable if I'm gonna regale you with the story of my life.'
Obediently Kenny unbuttoned his overcoat, took off his hat and seated himself on the sofa.
âI guess you're wondering what I'm doing here?'
âI assume you're a lodger,' Kenny said.
âYeah,' Christy said. âIt wasn't my idea, but when Barbara offered me room and board â would you have turned it down?'
âI imagine not,' said Kenny.
âYou get sick of hotels in my game.'
âWhat exactly is your game, Christy?'
âNobody told you? I'm a photographer.'
âWhat do you photograph?'
âAnything and everything.'
âFor instance?' Kenny said.
âIf you wanna check my credentials call the London office of
Brockway's Illustrated Weekly.
'
âWhere's your head office? New York?'
âYeah, in Plaza Center,' Christy said.
âAre you on staff or do you work on contract?'
âBoy, you sure do come to the point, don't you?'
âUsually,' Kenny said.
âI'm notâ¦' he glanced at the door again. âIt's notâ'
âStaff or contract?' Kenny said.
The rhythm of the afternoon's interrogation was still with him but quizzing an innocent civilian wasn't part of his brief. What did it matter if Babs was having a fling? The Yank would be gone long before Jackie got out of uniform. The only danger, Kenny supposed, was that Jackie might arrive home unexpectedly on embarkation leave.
âContract. I work for other magazines as well.'
Babs returned with April in her arms. The little girl, wide-eyed and not at all sleepy, was dressed in pink flannelette pyjamas and a pair of fluffy white socks. A dressing gown was draped about her shoulders.
âHi, kid,' Christy said, winking. âToo rowdy for you, are we?'
âShe wants a drink of milk.' Babs put April down on Kenny's lap. âHold her for a minute, Ken, will you?'
Awkwardly he slid an arm about his niece's waist. He was unused to small children for he had no younger brothers or sisters, only Fiona, and the idea of Fiona ever sitting on his lap was ludicrous. April leaned back and stared up at him for several seconds, then glanced at Christy Cameron, who said, âIt's okay, honey. He's your uncle.'
The child nodded, and Kenny said, âAunt Rosie's my wife.'
âUh-huh,' April said.
She squared herself on his lap, steadied herself with a hand on his arm and gave a comfortable little wriggle as if to say that she was prepared to let him amuse her and, if required, amuse him in turn.