A Darker Shade of Blue

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A Darker Shade of Blue Page 19

by John Harvey


  ‘The Meadows. A friend of Jahmall’s, his eighteenth.’

  ‘Did they often go around together like that, Jahmall and Shana?’

  ‘Sometimes, yes.’

  ‘They were close then?’

  ‘Of course.’ An insult if it were otherwise, a slight.

  ‘And his girlfriend, she didn’t mind?’

  ‘Marlee, no. She and Shana, they were like mates. Pals.’

  ‘Mum,’ the younger girl said, raising her head. ‘Shana didn’t like her. Marlee. She didn’t.’

  ‘That’s not so.’

  ‘It is. She told me. She said she smelled.’

  ‘Nonsense, child.’ Clarice smiled indulgently and shook her head.

  ‘How about Shana?’ Resnick asked. ‘Did she have any boyfriends? Anyone special?’

  The hesitation was perhaps a second too long. ‘No. She was a serious girl. Serious about her studies. She didn’t have time for that sort of thing. Besides, she was too young.’

  ‘She was sixteen.’

  ‘Too young for anything serious, that’s what I mean.’

  ‘But parties, like yesterday, that was okay?’

  ‘Young people together, having fun. Besides, she had her brother to look after her…’ Tears rushed to her face and she brushed them aside.

  The phone rang and the victim support officer answered it in the hall. ‘It’s Jahmall,’ he said from the doorway. ‘They’ll be taking him back up to the ward any time.’

  ‘Quickly,’ Clarice said to her daughter, bustling her off the settee. ‘Coat and shoes.’

  Resnick followed them out into the hall. Door open, Jade was sitting on one of the beds in the room she and Shana had obviously shared. Aware that Resnick was looking at her, she swung her head sharply towards him, staring hard until he moved away.

  Outside, clouds slid past in shades of grey; on the opposite side of the narrow street, a couple slowed as they walked by. Resnick waited while the family climbed into the support officer’s car and drove away… a good boy, Jahmall. Not wild… Not any more. The crucifix. The mother’s words. Amazing, he thought, how we believe what we want to believe, all evidence aside.

  On the Ilkeston Road, he stopped and crossed the street. There were more flowers now, and photographs of Shana, covered in plastic against the coming rain. A large teddy bear with black ribbon in a bow around its neck. A dozen red roses wrapped in cellophane, the kind on sale in garage forecourts. Resnick stooped and looked at the card. For Shana. Our love will live for ever. Michael. Kisses, drawn in red biro in the shape of a heart, surrounded the words.

  Resnick was putting the last touches of a salad together when he heard Lynn’s key in the lock. A sauce of spicy sausage and tomato was simmering on the stove; a pan of gently bubbling water ready to receive the pasta.

  ‘Hope you’re good and hungry.’

  ‘You know…’ Her head appearing round the door. ‘…I’m not sure if I am.’

  But she managed a good helping nonetheless, wiping the spare sauce from her plate with bread, washing it down with wine.

  ‘So — how was it?’ Resnick asked between mouthfuls.

  ‘All right, I suppose.’

  ‘Not brilliant then.’

  No, some of it was okay. Useful even.’

  ‘Such as?’

  ‘Oh, ways of avoiding tunnel vision. Stuff like that.’

  Resnick poured more wine.

  ‘I just wish,’ Lynn said, ‘they wouldn’t get you to play these stupid games.’

  ‘Games?’

  ‘You know, if you were a vegetable, what vegetable would you be? If you were a car, what car?’

  Resnick laughed. ‘And what were you?’

  ‘Vegetable or car?’

  ‘Either.’

  ‘A first-crop potato, fresh out of the ground.’

  ‘A bit mundane.’

  ‘Come on, Charlie, born and brought up in Norfolk, what do you expect?’

  ‘A turnip?’

  She waited till he was looking at his plate, then clipped him round the head.

  Later, in bed, when he pressed against her back and she turned inside his arms, her face close to his, she said, ‘Better watch out, Charlie, I didn’t tell you what kind of car.’

  ‘Something moderately stylish, compact, not too fast?’

  ‘A Maserati Coupe 4.2 in Azuro Blue with full cream leather upholstery.’

  He was still laughing when she stopped his mouth with hers.

  The bullet that had struck Jahmall’s shoulder was a 9mm, most likely from a plastic Glock. Patched up, replenished with blood, Jahmall was sore, sullen, and little else. Aside from lucky. His girlfriend, Marlee, had twenty-seven stitches in a gash in her leg, several butterfly stitches to one side of her head and face and bruises galore. The BMW was found on open ground near railway tracks on the far side of Sneinton, burned out. No prints, no ejected shell cases, nothing of use. It took the best part of a week, but thirty-seven of the fifty or so people who had been at the party in the Meadows were traced, tracked down and questioned. For officers, rare and welcome overtime.

  The Drug Squad had no recent information to suggest that Jahmall was, again, dealing drugs, but there were several people at the party well known to them indeed. Troy James and Jason Fontaine in particular. Both had long been suspected of playing an active part in the trade in crack cocaine: suspected, arrested, interrogated, charged. James had served eighteen months of a three-year sentence before being released; Fontaine had been charged with possession of three kilos of amphetamine with intent to supply, but due to alleged contamination of evidence, the case against him had been dismissed. More recently, the pair of them had been suspected of breaking into a chemist’s shop in Wilford and stealing several cases of cold remedies in order to manufacture crystal meth.

  James and Fontaine were questioned in the street, questioned in their homes; brought into the police station and questioned again. Jahmall spent as much as fourteen hours, broken over a number of sessions, talking to Maureen Prior and Anil Khan.

  Did he know Troy James and Jason Fontaine?

  No.

  He didn’t know them?

  No, not really.

  Not really?

  Not, you know, to talk to.

  But they were at the party.

  If you say so.

  Well, they were there. James and Fontaine.

  Okay, so they were there. So what?

  You and Fontaine, you had a conversation.

  What conversation?

  There are witnesses, claim to have seen you and Fontaine in conversation.

  A few words, maybe. I don’t remember.

  A few words concerning…?

  Nothing important. Nothing.

  How about an argument… a bit of pushing and shoving?

  At the party?

  At the party.

  No.

  Think. Think again. Take your time. It’s easy to get confused.

  Oh, that. Yeah. It was nothing, right? Someone’s drink got spilled, knocked over. Happens all the time.

  That’s what it was about? The argument?

  Yeah.

  A few punches thrown?

  Maybe.

  By you?

  Not by me.

  By Fontaine?

  Fontaine?

  Yes. You and Fontaine, squaring up to one another.

  No. No way.

  ‘There’s something there, Charlie,’ Maureen Prior said. ‘Something between Jahmall and Jason Fontaine.’

  They were sitting in the Polish Diner on Derby Road, blueberry pancakes and coffee, Resnick’s treat.

  ‘Something personal?’

  ‘To do with drugs, has to be. Best guess, Fontaine and James were using Jahmall further down the chain and some way he held out on them, cut the stuff again with glucose, whatever. Either that, or he was trying to branch out on his own, their patch. Radford kid poaching in the Meadows, we all know how that goes down.’

  ‘You’
ll keep on at him?’

  ‘The girlfriend, too. She’s pretty shaken up still. What happened to Shana. Keeps thinking it could have been her, I shouldn’t wonder. Flaky as anything. One of them’ll break sooner or later.’

  ‘You seem certain.’

  Maureen paused, fork halfway to her mouth. ‘It’s all we’ve got, Charlie.’

  Resnick nodded and reached for the maple syrup: maybe just a little touch more.

  The flowers were wilting, starting to fade. One or two of the brighter bunches had been stolen. Rain had seeped down into plastic and cellophane, rendering the writing for the most part illegible.

  Clarice Faye came to the door in a dark housecoat, belted tight across; there were shadows still around her eyes.

  ‘I’m sorry to disturb you,’ Resnick said.

  A slight shake of the head: no move to invite him in.

  ‘When we were talking before, you said Shana didn’t have any boyfriends, nobody special?’

  ‘That’s right.’

  ‘Not Troy James?’

  ‘I don’t know that name?’

  ‘How about Jason? Jason Fontaine?’

  The truth was there on her face, a small nerve twitching at the corner of her eye.

  ‘She did go out with Jason Fontaine?’

  ‘She saw him once or twice. The end of last year. He came round here in his car, calling for her. I told him, he wasn’t suitable, not for her. Not for Shana. He didn’t bother her again.’

  ‘And Shana…?’

  ‘Shana understood.’ Clarice stepped back and began to close the door. ‘If you’ll excuse me now?’

  ‘How about Michael?’ Resnick said.

  ‘I don’t know no Michael.’

  And the door closed quietly in his face.

  He waited until Jade was on her way home from school, white shirt hanging out, coat open, skirt rolled high over dark tights, clumpy shoes. Her and three friends, loud across the pavement, one of them smoking a cigarette.

  None of the others as much as noticed Resnick, gave him any heed.

  ‘I won’t keep you a minute,’ Resnick said as Jade stopped, the others walking on, pace slowed, heads turned.

  ‘Yeah, right.’

  ‘You and Shana, you shared a room.’

  ‘So.’

  ‘Secrets.’

  ‘What secrets?’

  ‘Jason Fontaine, was she seeing him any more?’

  Jade tilted back her head, looked him in the eye. ‘He was just a flash bastard, weren’t he? Didn’t care nothin’ for her.’

  ‘And Michael?’

  ‘What about him?’

  ‘You tell me.’

  ‘He loved her, didn’t he?’

  Michael Draper was upstairs in his room: computer, stereo, books and folders from the course he was taking at City College, photographs of Shana on the wall, Shana and himself somewhere that might have been the Arboretum, on a bench in front of some trees, an old wall, Michael’s skin alongside hers so white it seemed to bleed into the photo’s edge.

  ‘She was going to tell them, her mum and that, after her birthday. We were going to get engaged.’

  ‘I’m sorry.’

  The boy’s eyes empty and raw from tears.

  Maureen Prior was out of the office, her mobile switched off. Khan wasn’t sure where she was.

  ‘Ask her to call me when she gets a chance,’ Resnick said. ‘She can get me at home.’

  At home he made sure the chicken pieces had finished defrosting in the fridge, chopped parsley, squashed garlic cloves flat, opened a bottle of wine, saw to the cats, flicked through the pages of the Post, Shana’s murder now page four. Art Pepper again, turned up loud. Lynn was late, no later than usual, rushed, smiling, weary, a brush of lips against his cheek.

  ‘I need a shower, Charlie, before anything else.’

  ‘I’ll get this started.’ Knifing butter into the pan.

  It cost Jahmall a hundred and fifteen, talked down from one twenty-five. A Brocock ME38 Magnum air pistol converted to fire live ammunition, 22 shells. Standing there at the edge of the car park, shadowed, he smiled: an eye for an eye. Fontaine’s motor, his new one, another Beamer, was no more than thirty metres away, close to the light. He rubbed his hands and moved his feet against the cold, the rain that rattled against the hood of his parka, misted his eyes. Another fifteen minutes, no more, he’d be back out again, Fontaine, on with his rounds.

  Less than fifteen, it was closer to ten.

  Fontaine appeared at the side door of the pub, calling out to someone inside before raising a hand and turning away.

  Jahmall tensed, smelling his own stink, his own fear; waited until Fontaine had reached towards the handle of the car door, back turned.

  ‘Wait,’ Jahmall said, stepping out of the dark.

  Seeing him, seeing the pistol, Fontaine smiled. ‘Jahmall, my man.’

  ‘Bastard,’ Jahmall said, moving closer. ‘You killed my sister.’

  ‘That slag!’ Fontaine laughed. ‘Down on her knees in front of any white meat she could find.’

  Hands suddenly sticky, slick with sweat despite the cold, Jahmall raised the gun and fired. The first shot missed, the second shattered the side window of the car, the third took Fontaine in the face splintering his jaw. Standing over him, Jahmall fired twice more into his body as it slumped towards the ground, then ran.

  After watching the news headlines, they decided on an early night. Lynn washed the dishes left over from dinner, while Resnick stacked away. He was locking the door when the phone went and Lynn picked it up. Ten twenty-three.

  ‘Charlie,’ she said, holding out the receiver. ‘It’s for you.’

  DRUMMER UNKNOWN

  There’s a photograph taken on stage at Club Eleven, early 1950 or perhaps late ’49, the bare bulbs above the stage picking out the musicians’ faces like a still from a movie. Ronnie Scott on tenor sax, sharp in white shirt and knotted tie; Dennis Rose, skinny, suited, a hurt sardonic look in his eyes; to the left of the picture, Spike Robinson, on shore leave from the US Navy, a kid of nineteen or twenty, plays a tarnished silver alto. Behind them, Tommy Pollard’s white shirt shines out from the piano and Lennie Bush, staring into space, stands with his double bass. At the extreme right, the drummer has turned his head just as the photo has been taken, one half of his polka-dot bow tie in focus but the face lost in a blur of movement. The caption underneath reads ‘drummer unknown’.

  That’s me: drummer unknown.

  Or was, back then.

  In ten years a lot of things have changed. In the wake of a well-publicised drug raid, Club Eleven closed down; the only charges were for possession of cannabis, but already there were heroin, cocaine.

  Ronnie Scott opened his own club in a basement in Chinatown, Spike Robinson sailed back across the ocean to a life as an engineer, and Dennis Rose sank deeper into the sidelines, an almost voluntary recluse. Then, of course, there was rock ’n’ roll. Bill Haley’s ‘Rock Around the Clock’ at number one for Christmas 1955 and the following year Tony Crombie, whose drum stool I’d been keeping warm that evening at Club Eleven, had kick-started the British bandwagon with his Rockets: grown men who certainly knew better, cavorting on stage in blazers while shouting about how they were going to teach you to rock, to the accompaniment of a honking sax. Well, it paid the rent.

  And me?

  I forget now, did I mention heroin?

  I’m not usually one to cast blame, but after the influx of Americans during the last years of the war, hard drugs were always part of the scene. Especially once trips to New York to see the greats on 52nd Street had confirmed their widespread use.

  Rumour had it that Bird and Diz and Monk changed the language of jazz the way they did — the complex chords, the flattened fifths, the extreme speeds — to make it impossible for the average white musician to play. If that was true, well, after an apprenticeship in strict tempo palais bands and pick-up groups that tinkered with Dixieland, where I was concerned they c
ame close to succeeding. And it was true, the drugs — some drugs — helped: helped you to keep awake, alert. Helped you to play an array of shifting counter rhythms, left hand and both feet working independently, while the right hand drove the pulse along the top cymbal for all it was worth. Except that in my case, after a while, it wasn’t the drumming that mattered, it was just the drugs.

  In a matter of months I progressed, if that’s the word, from chewing the inside of Benzedrine inhalers to injecting heroin into the vein. And for my education in this department I had Foxy Palmer to thank. Or blame.

  I’d first met Foxy at the Bouillabaisse, a Soho drinking club frequented by mainly black US servicemen and newly resident West Indians, of whom Foxy was one. A short, stubby man with a pot belly beneath his extravagantly patterned shirts and a wisp of greying beard, his ears stuck out, fox-like, from the side of his head. A scaled-down Foxy would have made the perfect garden gnome.

  ‘Hey, white boy!’ he hailed me from his seat near the piano. ‘You here to play?’

  ‘Maybe.’

  ‘Forget your horn?’

  For an answer, I straightened my arm and let a pair of hickory drumsticks slide down into the palm of my hand.

  A bunch of musicians, mostly refugees from some dance-band gig or other, were jamming their way through ‘One O’Clock Jump’, but then a couple of younger guys arrived and Foxy pulled my arm towards him with a grin and said, ‘Here come the heebie-jeebie boys.’

  In the shuffle that followed, Tony Crombie claimed his place behind the drums and after listening to him firing ‘I Got Rhythm’ at a hundred miles an hour, I slipped my sticks back out of sight.

  ‘So,’ Foxy said, planting himself next to me in the gents, ‘that Tony, what d’you think?’

  ‘I’m thinking of cutting my arms off just above the wrist.’

  Foxy smiled his foxy smile. ‘You’re interested, I got somethin’ less extreme might just do the trick.’

  At first I didn’t know what he meant.

  *

  The Bouillabaisse closed down and reopened as the Fullado. Later there was the Modernaires in Old Compton Street, owned by the gangster Jack Spot. Along with half a hundred other out-of-work musicians, I stood around on Archer Street on Monday afternoons, eager to pick up whatever scraps might come my way: depping at the Orchid Ballroom, Purley; a one-night stand with Ambrose at the Samson and Hercules in Norwich. And later, after shooting up, no longer intimidated or afraid, I’d descend the steps into the smoke of Mac’s Rehearsal Rooms where Club Eleven had its home and take my turn at sitting in.

 

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