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The Driver

Page 16

by Mandasue Heller


  Stranded when Damien and his friend hopped into the car and took off, Carl shoved his hands into his pockets and walked over to see what Patsy wanted. She’d been a bit of a babe back in the day and he’d enjoyed a couple of drunken snogs with her. But it had never gone any further than that because she’d had too many other men sniffing around her at that point in time and he’d never been a fan of sloppy seconds. It had been almost a year since he’d last seen her, and as he got closer and was able to see her more clearly he was truly shocked by the change in her. He struggled to keep the look of horror off his face – and he fought to conceal the revulsion he felt when he got a whiff of her, because she absolutely reeked.

  ‘I need something,’ Patsy blurted out when he reached her, speaking as if they still knew each other as well as they once had. ‘I’ve got money. Look.’ She thrust out the ten-pound note.

  ‘Er, very nice,’ Carl said cautiously, wondering why she’d targeted him – he hadn’t even been dealing gear when they’d last seen each other. ‘Is that all you wanted?’ he asked now, already backing away. ‘Not being rude, but I’m a bit busy just now.’

  ‘I need something,’ Patsy repeated, clutching at his arm. ‘I know you’ve got some. I can smell it.’

  Repulsed by the skeletal feel of her fingers digging into his flesh through his jacket, and seriously creeped out by her claim to be able to smell what he had in his pocket, Carl tried to shake her off. But she held on tight.

  ‘Just one bag,’ she whined. ‘Please.’

  Paranoid about how bad this would look if anyone were to come along, Carl hissed, ‘Leave off, Pat. I’m not into that shit.’

  ‘I’ll give you a blow job,’ she wheedled, her tongue snaking in and out of her crumbling teeth.

  ‘Nah, man, leave it out.’ Grimacing, Carl shook her off at last and rushed back to his own block.

  Mel was in the living room when he let himself in. She was sitting cross-legged on the couch with a mirror in one hand, a pair of tweezers in the other.

  ‘I’ve just seen Patsy Mills,’ Carl told her, going through to the kitchen to wash his hands to get the imagined grime off himself. ‘You should see the state of her. She’s proper lost it.’

  ‘Great,’ Mel murmured, her focus firmly on the dark hairs she was plucking from around her top lip.

  ‘Christ, doesn’t that hurt?’ Carl asked, pulling a face as he watched her from the doorway. ‘Can’t you just shave it?’

  ‘Can’t you just fuck off and mind your own business?’ Mel snapped, flashing him a dirty look. ‘I thought you were supposed to be going out.’

  ‘Yeah, I was, but—’

  ‘So go, then,’ Mel cut him off, glaring at him.

  Muttering under his breath, Carl dropped the tea towel and snatched up his rolling gear off the table. Slamming the front door behind him, he went across to Joe’s to have a moan. But Joe wasn’t in so he wandered down to Cheryl’s instead – just in time to bump into Shay on his way out.

  Cheryl was in the hallway behind him, her loose hair mussed up as if she’d just climbed out of bed. She blushed when she saw Carl but fronted it out with a smile.

  ‘Were you coming here?’

  ‘No, I’m on my way out,’ Carl said, flicking a look of hatred at Shay’s back as he swaggered down the corridor like the cat who’d got the cream. Noticing now that Cheryl’s T-shirt was on inside out and the wrong way around, he said, ‘I take it you two have sorted things out?’

  ‘Kind of,’ Cheryl admitted, feeling guilty, because she knew that Carl, like Joe, wouldn’t understand why she’d let Shay back in after what had happened. But it was all right for them. Carl had Mel – for all her faults; and Joe liked being on his own. But neither of them knew how hard it was to try and bring up a child alone.

  ‘Oh, well, it’s your choice.’ Carl shrugged. ‘I just hope you know what you’re doing.’

  ‘I can’t just cut him off, can I?’ Cheryl said, sensing his disapproval and feeling strangely sad. ‘He’s still Frankie’s dad.’

  ‘And Jayleen’s fiancé,’ Carl reminded her. Groaning when her face immediately dropped and tears sprang into her eyes, he said, ‘Oh, God, I’m sorry, Chez. I didn’t mean it.’

  Shaking her head, her eyes flashing with pain, she said, ‘No, you’re right. But he won’t be for much longer. He promised he’s going to leave her this time.’

  ‘Babe, wait . . .’ Carl said, stepping forward. But she closed the door in his face.

  Feeling like the biggest git on earth, he walked to the main door and slammed it open, angry with himself for upsetting Cheryl. Whatever he thought of her situation, she had the right to make her own decisions and shouldn’t have to base them on worrying about how her friends were going to react.

  Chrissie was immediately behind him, but Carl hadn’t noticed her, so he jumped when she said, ‘You’re going to break that, and we’ve all got to use it, you know.’

  ‘Sorry,’ he muttered. ‘Got a lot on my mind, wasn’t thinking. You okay?’ he asked now, seeing her reddened eyes as he held the door for her.

  Composing herself, because she didn’t like people to see when she was upset, Chrissie said, ‘Yeah, I’m fine, thanks. Sorry for snapping. I’ve not been feeling very well. Stomach bug.’

  Carl gave her a small smile. She was clearly upset about something, and he’d have loved to offer her an ear for her troubles. But there was no way he was sticking his nose into her and Eddie’s business.

  A cab came into the parking lot just then. Chrissie said goodbye and walked down the path.

  Staying where he was, Carl lit a cigarette and sneakily checked out her legs. Mel’s were long and slim but they had no shape, and she insisted on wearing ugly flat shoes that did nothing for her – or for him. But Chrissie always wore heels, which made her look sexy – and made Carl wonder why the hell Eddie screwed around with so many munters when he had a fit bird like her keeping his bed warm.

  Up ahead, Chrissie was holding her short skirt down as she climbed into the back of the taxi. She knew that Carl was watching her and might ordinarily have been flattered enough to put a little extra sway into her walk. He was a good-looking lad and he had something about him that reminded her of Eddie’s nicer side – kind of like the bad boy without the bad bit: street enough to be cool, but not underground dangerous.

  So, yes, ordinarily Chrissie might have been tempted to give him a thrill to show her appreciation for his interest. But she was too tired.

  Just as she’d been too tired to be bothered trying to reason with Eddie after he’d woken in a foul argumentative mood – again.

  She closed the cab door, told the driver where she wanted to go and waved at Carl as they set off.

  Waving back, he sucked on his smoke and went off in search of someone to hang out with.

  Seconds after Carl and Chrissie had gone, Patsy came out from behind the block and sidled up to the door. It should have locked automatically behind Carl, but his rough treatment had caused it to stay open so she was able to walk straight in.

  The corridor smelled different from that of her own block, and that unnerved her, so she put her head down and rushed for the stairs. She wasn’t even sure where Eddie actually lived but she had a vague recollection that it was on the fourth floor, so that was where she headed.

  Eddie was stomping around the flat like a bear with a sore head. He’d woken on another comedown, and felt like his skull was literally caving in. But there was no way he was admitting that coke was the cause – not while Chrissie was determined to make him face up to his so-called addiction by nagging him to death about it.

  He didn’t know what had been up with her these past few days but she’d been narking at him like a proper bitch. Which had inevitably ended in them having a massive row this morning, during which she’d threatened to leave if he didn’t lay off the coke and start paying her more attention. And he’d told her to go for it, sniping that he didn’t need or even particularly want her here anywa
y. And then, just to hammer home the message that she had absolutely no control over him and never would have, he’d phoned Clive and ordered him to pick up two grams and bring it round asap. To which she’d responded by flouncing out.

  Too edgy to stay inside now, Eddie decided to take the dog down and let it have a runaround on the grass while he waited for Clive to deliver his medicine. But just as he was about to put the animal on its lead it started growling deep in its throat. Aware that he might be about to be raided or hit when he heard a shuffling sound outside the door, Eddie reached down behind the hall table and slid out the machete he kept there. Then, pressing his eye up against the spyhole, he scanned the corridor.

  A lone figure was mooching about in the shadows to the right of his flat’s door, but there didn’t appear to be any others hiding as far as Eddie could tell. Narrowing his eyes when the figure suddenly approached Chrissie’s door and bent down to look through the letter box, he wondered if it might be somebody from the council or DSS checking up on her. Either way, he had to get rid of them before those stupid girls started making noise and raised their suspicions. So he put the machete back and straightened himself up, all set to tell whoever it was that he’d just seen his ‘neighbour’ going out.

  Furious when he opened the door and saw that it was Patsy, he glanced around to make sure that nobody was watching, then darted out and grabbed her.

  ‘Get in here!’ he hissed, dragging her towards his own flat.

  ‘I was looking for you,’ Patsy yelped, her elbow cracking loudly under the pressure of his grip. ‘You didn’t come back. You said you would, but you didn’t.’

  Warning her to shut her mouth, Eddie threw her inside and slammed the door shut. He didn’t want this stinking headcase souring his fresh, clean air, but rather that than have her squealing his business out for all his neighbours to hear.

  Sure that he was going to beat her, Patsy made a dash for the living room. But Eddie chased her and pinned her up against the wall with his arm across her throat.

  ‘What are you playing at, coming round here in broad daylight?’ he demanded, slapping her harshly around the face with his free hand. ‘And since when did I say you could go out?’

  ‘I’m hurting,’ Patsy cried, desperation tipping her over the edge and giving her the guts to answer back. ‘You said you’d bring me something.’

  ‘You tried to rip me off,’ Eddie reminded her, fury causing spittle to spray out from between his gritted teeth and soak her face. ‘So you’d better just fuck off home before I really do kill you, you skanky slag!’

  ‘You said you’d look after me!’ she screeched into his face. ‘Me and the baby! You’re his dad, you owe him!’

  Slapping her again to shut her up because she was getting hysterical, Eddie dragged her back out into the hall. Pausing there, because he realised that he didn’t actually know what to do with her, he mulled over his options. He couldn’t chuck her out in this state because she would draw far too much attention to herself – and, therefore, to him. But she couldn’t still be here when Chrissie got back, because it really would be the last straw if she found another tart in her castle – especially one who was screaming about Eddie being the father of her bastard child. The only thing he could do was calm Patsy down and send her back to her own place before she did any real damage. So, much as he didn’t want to, because it was the last thing she deserved after pulling a stunt like this, he reluctantly told her that he would give her what she needed – on the proviso that she went straight home, and stayed there.

  Nodding her agreement, Patsy gasped for breath when he released her at last.

  ‘Sorry for shouting,’ she whimpered, following him back into the living room with a pathetic smile of gratitude on her face. ‘I just thought you’d forgotten about me. But you hadn’t really, had you? You were just punishing me for being bad. But I’m being good now, aren’t I? I haven’t stolen your drugs or touched your gun. I’ve been looking after business for you like I said I would, haven’t I?’

  ‘You still shouldn’t have come,’ Eddie muttered, rooting through his jacket pockets. A bag had slipped out of the batch he’d given to Carl the other day and he was sure it should be there somewhere.

  ‘I won’t do it again,’ Patsy promised, willing to do or say whatever he wanted as long as she got her fix.

  Finding the bag at last, Eddie handed it to her. ‘Not here,’ he said when she scrambled to open it. ‘Go home. I’ll sort you out properly later.’

  ‘You won’t forget, will you?’ Patsy asked, gazing up at him with distrust in her eyes. ‘I didn’t want to come out but I had to. You know that, don’t you?’

  ‘I won’t forget,’ Eddie assured her, checking that nobody was around before he ushered her out.

  She’d just turned from a nuisance into a liability, but Eddie knew that he was partly to blame because he’d been meaning to sort out a new stash house for ages but had been too lazy to get on with it. It just wasn’t going to be easy to find somewhere as close, or someone he trusted with his shit as much as he’d once trusted Patsy. And it galled him that he would have to keep her sweet until he did find an alternative, but he had no choice. If she felt the need to roam like this again, all it would take would be for her to say the wrong thing to the wrong person and he’d be fucked.

  Next door, Tasha had squinted out through the spyhole when she’d heard Eddie showing his visitor out. She couldn’t properly see the woman who she’d just heard arguing with him because she moved off too quickly towards the stairs. But she did catch a glimpse of dark bushy hair, which ruled sleek blonde Chrissie out.

  Tasha rushed into the living room now, pulled a chair out from under the table and carried it over to the window. Standing on it, she pressed her nose up against the grille and peered down. A couple of minutes later a scrawny-looking girl scurried out of the main door below, followed shortly afterwards by Eddie who, even from this distance, looked shifty as he skulked off in the opposite direction.

  Tasha pursed her lips. Interesting, she thought. Very interesting.

  ‘What are you looking at?’ Elena asked, coming in from the bedroom just then.

  ‘Nothing,’ Tasha said evasively, stepping down off the chair. ‘Just the view.’

  ‘Really?’ Elena drawled sarcastically, clearly not believing her. ‘Because it’s so spectacular from here, isn’t it?’

  Tasha didn’t care what Elena thought. This was her secret and she had no intention of sharing it – at least, not with her so-called friends. She didn’t know yet quite what she would do with the information she’d just gleaned, but she would use it to her advantage if she got a chance. Maybe as leverage to get Eddie to dump that leech who called herself his girlfriend, because any fool could see that the bitch wasn’t right for him. He needed somebody with the same fire inside her as that which burned in him.

  A woman like Tasha.

  Unlike the others, who were still childishly yearning to go home, Tasha had quickly realised that this situation might actually be more of a blessing than a curse. English men were so stupid – and rich beyond the dreams of any of the menfolk back home. And Eddie could give her everything she’d ever wanted: money, clothes, jewellery, protection – all the luxuries that bitch Chrissie took for granted but hadn’t earned.

  Tasha had earned it. And she wanted it. She just needed a way to get Eddie to see that she could handle his business better than his so-called girlfriend.

  17

  Joe left it a week before he went looking for Katya again. He didn’t know if she would want to talk to him, considering that she already suspected he was following her around on Eddie’s orders, but she had told him her name – after a little persuasion – so he was hoping that she would.

  She’d been on Newton Street last time he’d seen her, but there was no sign of her there tonight. And nor was she back on Dale Street, so he was forced to trawl around looking for her. Eventually finding her a few streets away from where he’d started,
Joe suddenly felt nervous as he approached her. Gazing out at her face through the windscreen, he was dismayed to see the instant fear in her eyes. But then, amazingly, she almost smiled.

  ‘Fancy a coffee?’ he ventured, rolling his window down.

  Katya bit her lip and glanced around before answering. She had been scared when she’d recognised the car but the fear had melted away as soon as their eyes met. Her heart was pounding now, and there was a fluttering of excitement in her stomach. She’d thought about him almost constantly over the last week, recalling his lovely soft voice and his beautiful eyes. But she hadn’t dared to hope that he might come looking for her again. And now here he was.

  ‘Yes, thank you,’ she said shyly.

  ‘Right,’ Joe said, sounding as shocked as she herself was that she’d agreed. ‘Great. Well, let’s go then.’ Leaning over, he pushed open the passenger-side door.

  He took her to a different café this time, further out of town than the previous one. Again, he settled her at a table in the corner before going to the counter to buy their coffees. And, again, he spoke to her as if she was a lady, which made her feel strange because it had been so long since anybody had treated her so nicely.

  ‘Thanks for coming,’ Joe said when he’d settled into the seat opposite hers. ‘I didn’t think you would.’

  ‘Neither did I,’ she admitted. ‘But, like you said last time, it’s only a coffee.’

  ‘Absolutely,’ Joe agreed, unable to stop himself from smiling. ‘So how have you been?’

  Katya gave a tiny shrug. ‘Nothing is ever very different. I work, I sleep, I work again. There’s really nothing more I can tell you.’

  Amazed that she was being so forthcoming after her previous reticence, Joe said, ‘I’m sure there’s a lot more to you than that.’

  Blushing, Katya shook her head. ‘This is all I do and all I am.’

  ‘All you think you are,’ Joe corrected her. ‘But I’m guessing that you haven’t always lived like this. Am I wrong?’

  ‘No, but it doesn’t make any difference,’ Katya said, gazing down into her cup.

 

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