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by Tony Parsons


  MURPHY & SON

  Domestic and Commercial Plumbing and Heating

  ‘Trustworthy’ and ‘Reliable’

  We went around the back of the shops and up a flight of stairs. Mrs Murphy opened the door, framed by growing grandchildren. They were all much bigger than I remembered and I expressed the dumbfounded adult sense of wonder that time had not stood still. Their pale freckled faces crowded around Mrs Murphy. Shavon, a year younger than Scout, and her kid brother Damon, and Baby Mikey, around four now, a toy toolkit including a plastic hammer and screwdriver fastened around his pot belly. Their bandy-legged mongrel pushed his way through the crowd and began the butt-sniffing circle dance with Stan.

  ‘Biscuit! No! Stop! Leave him, Biscuit!’

  Stan went off into the house with Biscuit without glancing back and I saw Scout wince with pain at our dog’s total lack of regret about leaving us. She handed Mrs Murphy a bag containing Stan’s supplements to aid his joints, digestion and itchy skin. He had quite an elaborate health regime. As he progressed further into the flat, Stan was greeted by the rest of the family. Mrs Murphy’s husband Big Mikey – a suave, wafer-thin man with neat silver hair – and their son Little Mikey – a black-haired heavyweight – and Little Mikey’s wife, Siobhan.

  Stan was in good hands.

  ‘It’s only seven days,’ Mrs Murphy said, touching Scout’s hair. ‘He’ll be fine. And so will you, young lady. Here.’

  She had made us sandwiches.

  Scout was bewildered.

  ‘Don’t they have any food on the plane?’

  ‘Ah,’ Mrs Murphy said, ‘but British Airways don’t know how you like your sandwiches, do they?’

  She had us there.

  ‘I’ll just go and say goodbye to him,’ Scout said, handing me the sandwiches as she went into the flat.

  Mrs Murphy looked me in the eye.

  ‘I know you want – I don’t know what you would call it – a joined-up life,’ she said. ‘A unified life. You want it for Scout and you want it for yourself and you feel that if you got that life then everything would work out. But you have it already. It doesn’t matter if you don’t look like every other family in the school – or the world. It doesn’t matter if you love each other. That sounds corny.’

  ‘No,’ I said. ‘It doesn’t sound corny to me.’

  ‘But you are complete,’ she said. ‘You and Scout. You already have that unified life. That joined-up life. That family. You just haven’t quite realised it yet.’ She felt like she had said too much. But sometimes people feel that way when what they have really said is everything. ‘But I’m an old lady,’ she said. ‘What do I know?’

  Scout was back.

  ‘Quite a lot, probably,’ Scout said, joining the conversation.

  Mrs Murphy shooed us away.

  ‘Go on, the pair of you,’ she said. ‘Off with you. See you in seven days.’

  We carted our suitcases down to Charterhouse Street and looked for a cab. We only had to wait a few minutes before one appeared, and Scout bounced up and down on her junior Asics, excited by the sight of the greatest view in London, one of the greatest views in the world, up there with the Taj Mahal and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon – the sight of a black London cab with its yellow For Hire light on, shining like the sun on a late summer day.

  ‘Yes!’ Scout said, punching the air as she had when she came third in the heats of the 50-metre dash.

  Because children live in the moment too.

  When I awoke in the recovery room, my head as light as freshly spun candyfloss after having my stomach pumped, a couple of DIs from New Scotland Yard who I had never seen before were waiting to talk to me.

  It was the hot debriefing, also known as the golden hour interview, aimed at obtaining as much detailed information as possible from those involved in an incident, especially the chronological breakdown of events.

  ‘We know what happened,’ one of them said, and I realised that they seemed very young to me.

  ‘The cousins are keen to cooperate,’ the other one said.

  ‘They told us about the spat between father and son.’

  ‘Families, eh?’ said the other one, and they both had a smile.

  ‘Bumpus?’ I said.

  ‘We found him lying on one of those – what’s it? – car compactors. Everybody missed him. The uniforms. The shots. He was just lying there. You were having a little nap underneath.’

  ‘Looks like they were planning to recycle him.’

  ‘But they didn’t get around to it. One of the paramedics finally spotted him.’

  ‘So Bumpus is in custody?’ I said.

  They looked at each other.

  ‘The morgue,’ one of them said. ‘Someone shot him. Point blank in the heart.’

  ‘And what about the gun?’ I said. ‘Did you find the weapon? Do you have any prints?’

  One of them yawned. The other looked at his watch.

  They were done with me. And they had had a long day.

  ‘What gun?’ they said.

  Then they let me sleep.

  ‘Going somewhere good?’ the taxi driver asked us as we headed west to the airport.

  ‘Sicily,’ Scout said. ‘The jewel in the Mediterranean.’

  Our driver nodded, suitably impressed.

  Scout and I smiled at each other and then we settled back, alone with our thoughts.

  The black cab sped west to the airport and the tower blocks along the Westway loomed high above us as the Sunday streets of Notting Hill bustled with life below, and already I could see the planes heading to the airport, thin flashes of molten silver in the renewed blue of a perfect sky.

  Scout was reading her book. Dog Songs by Mary Oliver.

  She was right – there are all kinds of poems in the world. But there was no getting around the fact that some of the best ones are about dogs. And we missed our boy already.

  Then I heard the bells of an ice cream van in those endless streets of the sprawling, eternal city and I saw that Scout had closed her eyes and was leaning back in the seat of that black cab, as if she was listening to the bells of a Sunday morning church service, or the bells of St Paul’s Cathedral itself, rather than some Mr Whippy van getting the last of the summer trade.

  Scout was making a wish.

  And I turned my face away to watch the planes, because finally I had learned enough to not ask my daughter what she was wishing for.

  Because then it could never come true, could it?

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  Published by Century 2019

  Copyright © Tony Parsons, 2019

  Front cover image © Arcangel

  Tony Parsons has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work.

  First published in Great Britain in 2019 by Century

  Century

  20 Vauxhall Bridge Road

  London, SW1V 2SA

  www.penguin.co.uk

  Century is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN 9781473537491

 

 

 
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