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A Private Business

Page 32

by Barbara Nadel


  The door creaked open. Maria put her notebook underneath her bedcovers. Nurse Julie smiled. “Try and get some kip, Maria, yeah?”

  “Yeah.” Maria slid down so that she was lying in the bed.

  “Night.” Nurse Julie left.

  Maria got out of bed. She was on fifteen-minute observations, what some still called “suicide watch.” So she had fifteen minutes …

  She took out of her knickers the tie the woman who’d prostituted her own children to buy drugs had sold to her in the dayroom and tied it around her neck. The woman said that if you managed to tie the other end round the door handle and then loll your head forward you could be dead inside fifteen minutes. She quickly tied the other end around the doorknob and leaned forward with all of her weight.

  Mark had gone. In the morning the rubbish would be collected and so Mumtaz filled the wheelie bin up with the last of the waste from the kitchen and then pushed the whole thing out onto the pavement. Mark’s visit had been nice but also upsetting. Because of what he’d told her about Grint, Betty Muller and Maria. It was possible Grint never was going to pay for what he’d done to those women. Try as she might, she couldn’t find that leaflet that had come to the office. Given time, Grint would engineer another scam, try taking other people’s money.

  She was walking back down the darkened garden path when she heard a noise behind her. She turned and saw the Silver Prince standing by her gate, his trademark trainers shining in the moonlight.

  “What do you want?” Her heart was pounding.

  “Your husband still has a debt,” he said.

  Shaking, she nevertheless walked toward him. “My husband is dead,” she said. “Is that why you’ve been following me? Because Ahmed had a debt?”

  He didn’t reply.

  “Well, you’re out of luck, I’m behind with the mortgage,” she said. “I have nothing.”

  “I don’t think that’s strictly true. I’ve been watching you for some time, remember? You have a job, parents, friends.”

  She moved still closer to him. “Get out of my garden,” she said. “Leave us alone!”

  “Oh, I’d love to,” he said. “But my boss, a man Ahmed Hakim was deeply indebted to, is still owed money by your husband and now you’ll have to pay, I’m afraid. You’re a solvent lady and my boss has decided that you have inherited Ahmed’s debt.”

  “Debt for what? And who is this boss of yours?” Mumtaz asked.

  “Ahmed, amongst his many vices, liked a little flutter on the roulette wheel,” the man said. “He was absolutely rubbish at it, just as he was absolutely rubbish at paying what he owes.”

  For a second she didn’t know what to say. Ahmed had been many things, but a gambler was a new one on Mumtaz. She swallowed. “I’ll go to the police,” she said.

  “You can’t.”

  “I can. I can tell them what you did to Ahmed.”

  “And explain to them why you didn’t give me to them before?”

  “Yes!”

  And then he said, “You could, but you wouldn’t want young Shazia to go through what her father did to her again, would you? Anyway, you owe my boss, Mrs. Hakim, for stopping Ahmed raping you—and the kid. You are going to need some friends in high places if you want to get that girl married off well, without her virginity. So I would pay up, if I were you. We’ll discuss terms in the next few weeks.”

  Every bone in Mumtaz’s body vibrated with fury. How did this man know that Ahmed had abused Shazia? No one knew that. Had Ahmed told him? Boasted about it maybe? “I’ll see you dead before that happens!” she said and then she walked through her front door without looking back.

  The man in the silver trainers smiled. He knew when women were attracted to him and he knew they often did it in spite of themselves. He also knew he had Mumtaz where he, and his boss, wanted her.

  It was amazing what the mind did sometimes. Sometimes it just woke up. Betty Muller sat bolt upright on her prison cot and she knew exactly how Maria’s key had got into her bag. She’d seen him do it! That last day at Maria’s house, Paul had slipped it into her bag and then he’d just smiled at her.

  She’d only told him by phone what Maria was about to do later that afternoon. So how had he known? Had he set her up as an accomplice to that act? Had he wanted the police to think she’d been terrorizing Maria? That had been God, hadn’t it? Oh, if only Maria had taken the gift of a child that God had given her and been grateful! She would have been. She would have done anything to have a child. Anything. How she’d hated Maria for that. Hated her!

  All she had to decide now was whether she was going to tell anybody about what Paul had done. She tried to have a little practice to see what it sounded like. But when she said Paul Grint’s name, she found that, try as she might, she could only say nice things about him.

  Acknowledgments

  This book would have been impossible without help and input from the following people.

  For loving the whole idea of the Arnold Agency I must thank my agent, Juliet Burton, my editor at Quercus, Jane Wood and my Quercus publicist, Lucy Ramsey. You really got behind it, and me, and I thank you so much for that.

  Comedy help came from Warren Lakin, Hattie Hayridge and Susan Murray. You all taught me so much about a profession that almost defines the word “guts.” Thank you.

  For accompanying me on seemingly endless jaunts around the Olympic site, the Thames shoreline, in and out of ruins and cemeteries, as well as feeding me, putting me up and putting up with me, I have to thank my good friends Kathy Lowe, Jim Reeve and Sarah Bancroft.

  Help also came, as usual, from the wonderful Newham Bookshop in Plaistow, from Stratford Circus and from arange of local people, some with names and some without as well as from familial and other sources who prefer to remain anonymous.

  Equipment advice was provided by Lorraine Electronics Surveillance of London E10 and much thanks to them for that.

  Finally I’d like to thank my family and my friends, particularly my husband, my son and my mother. And, although she is sadly no longer with us, I’d also like to thank my friend and fellow author Gilda O’Neill who loved the east end and knew so much about it and its people. I hope she would have liked this book.

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Contents

  Part one

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Chapter VIII

  Chapter IX

  Chapter X

  Chapter XI

  Part Two

  Chapter XII

  Chapter XIII

  Chapter XIV

  Chapter XV

  Chapter XVI

  Chapter XVII

  Chapter XVIII

  Chapter XIX

  Chapter XX

  Chapter XXI

  Chapter XXII

  Part Three

  Chapter XXIII

  Chapter XXIV

  Chapter XXV

  Chapter XXVI

  Chapter XXVII

  Chapter XXVIII

  Chapter XXIX

  Chapter XXX

  Chapter XXXI

  Chapter XXXII

  Epilogue

  Chapter XXXIII

  Chapter XXXIV

  Chapter XXXV

  Acknowledgments

 

 

 


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