Hold Back the Night
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Epigraph
Part One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Part Two
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Part Three
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Part Four
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Copyright
Hold Back the Night
Adam Baron
‘Good things mostly leave no trace, but something always comes of evil.’
Knut Hamsun, Growth of the Soil
Part One
Chapter One
It was the hottest summer since 1976. London seemed to groan at the weight of itself, like a woman pregnant with triplets. The tube was packed and bad-tempered and a strike by council workers had left the streets draped in the smell of fermenting bin bags, which lay piled outside houses and shops, spilling onto the street, pulled open by kids or dogs or the homeless or the rats that us Londoners are never, apparently, further than ten feet away from. There was dog shit everywhere and our hard-working water suppliers had imposed a hosepipe ban. The newsreaders spoke of standpipes, and every other ad on TV seemed to show a pretty girl running out of the sea with a can of overpriced glucose in her hand.
Those who could afford to fled at the weekends. The rest seemed to crowd outside the pubs like buffalo at the watering hole. A lot of people griped about the heat just as much as they had griped about the lack of it the year before, scowling at anyone who came too near to them, clutching onto their space as though the people surrounding them were a different, alien species.
But apart from the insomnia, and the traffic, which made driving more like sitting in a peat oven, and the fumes, which made cycling just plain toxic, I didn’t actually mind it. I wasn’t working that hard and my occupation means I get to spend a lot of time outside anyway. It also meant that the people I was looking for would be right there, outside, in front of my face, not huddled round gas fires in dingy squats or skulking around in video arcades. The summer was easily the best time for them, made better, the better the weather stayed. Pollution and stink were nothing to them compared to bone-numbing days outside the tube stations and long nights in freezing doorways. The heat drew them out and made my job easier. All I had to do was walk around in the sunshine, in the places they were likely to be, until I found them.
Except there was one girl the sunshine wouldn’t show me, no matter how hard I looked. Not, at least, when I was searching for her. The night wouldn’t give her up, the night that called to her and surrounded her and penetrated her completely. That led her by the hand through foul pastures and laid her down to lie where the sun could not reach her. Where the rats were closer than ten feet and bolder. Far bolder. Drawn by the stink of a part of her that was slowly rotting, because it had died within her a long, long time ago, and was just waiting for the rest of her to catch up.
I found her though. I found her twice.
Chapter Two
If I’d had to guess the age of the man sitting across the small, round, French-style bar-table I would have had to think about it. At first I would have put him near sixty, but that would have been too high. His collar-length hair was the patchy white/grey of a young seagull but the forehead it fell over was smoother than I would have expected, leading me to think that the greying was a genetic thing. He also looked weary; his milky blue eyes were rimmed with red and they both sat on what looked like two thumb-smears of soft charcoal placed just above his cheekbones. Even though I’d never seen him before I could tell that he looked drawn, his features given sudden and stark prominence by a lack of sleep and sustenance. His face looked made-up, badly made-up to look old.
I didn’t have to guess the man’s age, however, because I already knew it, exactly, to the day. I also knew why he had asked to meet me, what he wanted me to do for him, and beyond that I knew that I would agree to do it and then shake his hand. Still, I heard the man out, nodding now and then, writing the odd thing down. When he’d finished he sank back into his chrome chair, and though he wasn’t a heavy man, so much weight settled back with him that I couldn’t imagine how he would ever lift himself out of it. I took the cheque he offered me and then left him there, staring through the smeared windows at all the cars and the buildings and the people walking past, possibly wondering how it all kept going; why the people hadn’t all stopped dead, why the buildings hadn’t just collapsed in broken heaps all around them. Why this had only happened inside of him.
As a small gesture, one that I knew would not mean anything to the man, I paid the bill at the till on the way out. It was only a few cups of coffee. Call it a birthday present. Then I walked out into the world that was still standing and thought about the morning, nearly two weeks before, when I had sat in another cafe in a different part of London, and how with strange fluidity the commonplace events of that morning had led me there.
* * *
I had got up quite early on a Thursday and left my flat in Clerkenwell before eight. I’d bought a paper, got in the car, which started, and then gone to sit in a greasy spoon on Camden High Street. I had a bacon sandwich and a cup of tea, and I was keeping a loose eye on the pavement opposite for a young girl called Donna Appleby, when something down a side alley caught my eye. It was a door, thrown open, and a body rushing out of it. A boy, a skinny white boy with a floppy bowl haircut, tripped on a couple of old boxes and went sprawling. He was followed out by a big fat, white guy, in his mid-fifties, unshaven, dressed in those huge jeans and a yellow, short-sleeved shirt straining over a taut belly. He landed the boy a toe in the ribs as he went to get up. The boy scrambled up against the right-hand alley wall as the fat guy stood facing him, blocking his escape onto the High Street.
My tea rested in mid-air as the fat guy tried to get hold of the boy. But the boy was good, he ducked and bobbed. I tried to make out if I’d seen him down at Sal’s gym, where I train sometimes, but I didn’t recognize him. I pulled my camera out of my holdall and took a few shots, not really knowing why. This had nothing to do with what I was there for. Then the big guy managed to land a big right on the side of the boy’s head and it looked like it was over. The boy went down hard and he didn’t move. Fat guy landed more size tens on the boy’s side and head, and I swore to myself, about to go over there, when suddenly the boy sprang up. He was past the fat guy in a second and even though Fat tried for ten yards or so, there was no way he was ever going to catch him. The boy legged it off up the High Street, stepping off the pavement into the road, spots of blood trailing back over his shoulder from his mouth and landing on the tarmac behind him. The fat guy stood watching him for a second before walking back up the alley, breathing hard, swearing to himself. He stepped back in the door he had thrown the boy out of and it shut hard behind him.
People walked past the top of the alley engrossed in
their own thoughts. I sighed with relief and put my mug down. Strange what you see when you’re looking for something else.
I was about to order some more tea when, as they say, bingo. Four hundred pounds came and sat down on the other side of the road.
I took about ten snaps of Donna, eight more than I needed, getting close in with the zoom of my brand new second-hand Leica. Then I just focused, and looked at her through the camera lens. She was pretty, with clear skin, and bright green eyes. Pulling back I could see that she was about sixteen, but that she could easily have got a child travel-card without much fuss. She was petite, fairly well dressed in jeans, trainers, scruffy tee shirt and former-Ginger Spice hair tied in the rat braids they do up by the Lock. She looked just like any teenager waiting outside the M&S, for her mother maybe, except I could see that below the frayed cuffs of her jeans her ankles were dirty, even though she was wearing a garish pink polish on her toes. She also had a small cardboard carton in front of her that had a quantity of coins in it.
I put the camera down on the table next to the brown sauce bottle and reached into my bag for the photo I had of her, which her mother had sent me. Just to make sure. Then I looked through the lens again and yes, this was the same girl. Miss Donna Appleby of Keswick in Cumbria. I watched as a youngish blond man, walking out of the store with a carton of fresh juice in his hand, stopped to give her some money. The guy walked off, running a hand back through his hair, perhaps thinking to himself what a benevolent, in-tune kind of person he was. If that is what he was thinking I would have agreed with him. I kept the camera steady on the girl, her face blinking in and out of the picture as the hurried queue of people being sucked towards the tube like so much dust into a Dyson moved past her.
In the photograph Donna’s hair was longer, and it wasn’t a fake caramel but a pleasant, natural brown that people who have hair that colour call mousy. She was standing with her back to a field. In the field were two ponies and behind the field was a big, ivy-covered Georgian house with a large, new-looking conservatory holding on to the right-hand side. It had eight long, airy windows. Donna was looking straight down the barrel and her face was fixed in a laugh, making her look carefree and happy. Her mother had told me that the photo was only six months old, however, so she can’t have been that happy. A month or so later she had disappeared from the home in the picture and her whereabouts had been a mystery to her family, to the police, and to the large firm of investigators her father had hired immediately to find her.
But then, as I like to say, along came me.
I held the Leica steady again and studied her. I felt the slight, erotic tinge of guilt you get when looking at someone, particularly their face, when they don’t know you’re doing it. The face was remarkably clear, without even a single freckle that I could see, which is a shame because I like freckles. But I liked Donna’s face. I liked her. She had an open, sunny expression. She grinned at people if they gave her money. I liked her especially though for the fact that she was exactly where I had been told she would be, at almost exactly the right time. My kind of girl. I paid the woman for my tea and sandwich, asked her to mind my bag for a second, and walked outside.
It was only nine fifteen, but on the street it was already starting to get hot. I waited for a couple of cars to pass and then I crossed over the road, kicking aside a Coke can and stepping over a tyre-flattened smear of recycled Pal. I walked past Donna, casually.
‘Can you spare any change please, sir?’
I stopped, turning round to notice her. I looked down into her eyes and then dug my hand in my pocket. I pulled out a pound coin, but as I reached down to hand it to her I pretended to hesitate. I think I did a good job. My brother used to be an actor and I like to think I collected a little dissimulation DNA myself. The girl’s face changed. She looked a little worried, like I had decided not to give her the money. But not surprised. I stared down at her for a moment before letting out a breath.
‘Listen,’ I said, ‘what’s your name?’
Very slightly, her jaw hardened.
‘Natalie,’ she answered, after a second, looking at me like ‘What the fuck do you want?’
‘Natalie,’ I said, trying to sound concerned, ‘my name’s William. Bill. Billy. I was just sitting over there having breakfast when I saw you sitting here.’
I hesitated again, and laughed self-consciously. ‘Listen,’ I went on, ‘I don’t like giving money to people. You understand? But would you like me to buy you some breakfast? No strings, of course. I just felt guilty eating my bacon and eggs.’
I laughed again, a little embarrassed. I ran a hand through my hair like the blond guy had done, but met a little less resistance than him due to yesterday’s two, one. I smiled down at the girl and stood with my hands on my hips. She looked unsure for a second, but I imagine she thought there wasn’t much anybody could do to her in a cafe. So she stood up, gathered her things, and followed me across the road towards the greasy spoon.
I bought Donna, or Natalie as she had become, a vegetarian special: toast and coffee. I had another tea. I told her I was glad she’d come over with me. I told her she could order what she liked. I didn’t tell her that I was a private investigator who specialized in locating stray teenagers and that her parents had hired me to find her. I told her that she looked pretty young to be out on the streets, although that was a lie, and I asked her if she had run away from home. Being a stranger she found it easy to tell me about herself, where she was from, even why she had run away. She told me what sometimes happened behind the airy windows of the house she’d been standing outside, in the picture that was in my bag only two feet away from her. She didn’t tell me where she was staying now though, which might have been useful at a later date. I made the observation that while I understood, and I sympathized with her deeply, I thought she should phone her family and tell them she was fine.
‘Your mother at least,’ I said.
Donna looked down at her plate. The past seemed to arrive on her clear, soap ad face for a second, like a grey cloud, closing it in. But she blew it off. The sun came through. She said she would think about it. She finished eating, and asked me if she could have a can of Lilt to take with her. We talked, and then we went outside.
I said goodbye to Donna-Natalie and told her to be careful. She said she would be, and thanks, and then she crossed back over the High Street to her pitch. I watched as she sat down and set her stall out again.
I felt a pang of regret as I hitched my bag over my shoulder and walked the short distance to my car. I don’t know if the regret was because I had deceived the girl, or because of what she had told me, or simply because I had enjoyed chatting to her and felt bad about leaving her where she was. Whatever. I blew it off. I got to my old Mazda, opened up and stepped in. I wound the windows down. I turned round in the side street I was parked in and pulled out onto the High Street. I saw the big man drive by in an old silver Jag, trailing a hand down the side of the door, a cigar burning furiously. I drove up towards where Natalie was sitting.
As I got level the lights turned red, and while I was stopped I watched as another girl walked up to Natalie and started speaking to her. The girl looked about sixteen too, she had a denim mini on that stuck out at the sides, a vest top, and one of those tiny rucksacks made out of silver vinyl that girls used to wear in clubs, and probably still do in smaller towns. She was tall, with long lean legs, no bra, and a firm, tan stomach. As she’d walked up to Donna I saw that she had a big mouth, teeth. Teeth. Her hair was a shortish bleached blonde, clamped to her head in the kind of tight bunches I always think look like electrodes, but which did in fact suit her strong features. As she bent over to give Donna something I got the briefest glimpse from behind of a triangle of clean, bright white cotton knickers.
Summer. Jesus. Lock me up and throw away the key.
A horn behind me sounded. There was a space in front of my car. Donna looked up and I waved at her through the window. She waved back. The other g
irl straightened up and looked at me. Then I put my foot on the pedal, turned the wheel away from the hot, angry bee box that was now Camden Town, and drove home.
Chapter Three
Home is on a side street behind Exmouth Market in now very fashionable Clerkenwell. It’s a former photographic studio that I acquired about six years ago. When I got back from Camden I parked my car and left the morning’s film with my friend Carl at the repro shop I use. I strolled back up to the market and bought a carton of milk and then asked some workmen what the shop they were refitting was going to be. Some kind of interior design place, mate, I got with a shrug to go along with it. Just what we need round here, I told them, before going upstairs to my flat.
Once inside, I switched the kettle on and sat at my desk, listening to a piece about child labour in Bangladesh on Woman’s Hour, which was followed by one on how to make your own marmalade. What I didn’t do was get on the phone to Mrs Appleby and tell her that I had located her daughter Donna in Camden Town, outside Marks and Spencer, or that she was now called Natalie, had dyed her hair, and made up at least a portion of her income begging for change. I could have, but I didn’t, which wasn’t unusual behaviour on my part because I never tell my clients where their children are. I used to, when I first started. But often a kid has run away from home because a father, or an uncle maybe, has been cruel. Or violent. Or raping the shit out of them. Male and female. If they are under sixteen I sometimes tell the police where they are. If they’re in trouble. If they are over sixteen I don’t tell anybody. I just find them, photograph them, and, if they will speak to me, tell them to think of their mothers and phone home. Then I send the photograph I have taken to my client and I give them an honest description of how their kid is.
For this service I charge a flat rate of four hundred pounds, inclusive of update reports if I happen to run into their kid again, in the near to nearish future. I suppose I lose a lot of work this way, not telling where I have located my quarry, but I’m not sending some fucked around teenager back to a vicious weekend alcoholic who likes to act tough when his team loses at home, or an uncle with a very shaky hold on the concepts of age difference and family ties. I made this decision after I had found a thirteen-year-old girl living in a squat in Streatham and I’d taken her father down there. Now, the life the kid had been leading in Streatham was probably not exactly pleasant, but there was still a mixture of resignation and terror in the girl’s eyes when she saw her father. All the guy said was ‘Outside. Get in the car,’ in a voice that told me the kid would have been a lot better staying where she was. The kid did go with her father but I could tell that having had the courage to leave once, she would be on the road again pretty soon. Or at least I would if I’d have been her. Once, if you like, I was her, and when I’d finally had enough, nothing could have got me to go back.
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