The John Milton Series Box Set 4

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The John Milton Series Box Set 4 Page 39

by Mark Dawson


  McCauley continued talking, but Elijah had heard it all before. It was a reminder. McCauley knew that. It was a familiar voice to calm him down enough so that he could do what he needed to do.

  Elijah bounced up and down, waiting and waiting for the bell to ring. The announcer took over.

  “In the blue corner, the challenger, weighing in at twelve stones seven pounds even. He boasts a record of nine fights, nine wins by KO. He is the fighting pride of Sheffield—Mustafa ‘Boom Boom’ Muhammad.”

  The crowd went crazy, screaming and cheering. Elijah could hear nothing but noise now as he lifted his arms in the air and acknowledged the crowd.

  “And in the red corner, weighing in at twelve stones six pounds and three ounces, with a perfect record of eighteen fights, no defeats and fourteen wins by KO. He is the British and Commonwealth champion, the Tottenham Terminator, Samuel ‘Lights Out’ Connolly.”

  Elijah stared across the ring as Connolly raised his arms in the air. He looked bigger than he had at the weigh-in, but Elijah knew that he was the larger of the pair. He carried more power, too, even if he was six years younger.

  Elijah knew it. He was a freak. A nineteen-year-old kid in a man’s body.

  Fast.

  Powerful.

  He was the man.

  And he was going to win.

  They were ushered to the centre of the ring by their trainers, and the referee delivered his final instructions. Elijah nodded that he understood what he had been told, even if all that he had heard was a faint buzzing, an incoherence lost amid the growing clamour of the spectators. McCauley slapped him on the cheek, pushed in his mouthguard, squeezed his shoulders, and left him alone.

  It was him, Connolly and the referee.

  That was it.

  It was easy to feel alone, and Elijah welcomed it.

  Everything else was forgotten. Every detail of his life leading to that moment. All the hurt and pain he had suffered. All the bad, all the good. His family, his friends. They all faded away until there was only a single point of focus.

  Samuel Connolly.

  The bell rang.

  39

  Milton found his way to the press box. It was part of the balcony, a closed box fronted by a wide picture window. There were two rows of seats, one raised above the other, and each seat came with a small retractable desk. The print journalists were there, their laptops out, already tapping out their thoughts as they waited for the bell. Milton looked to the right and saw a second box that had been given over to the television coverage, with a small studio and, next to it, a space for the commentator and the colour man.

  All the seats were taken. Milton stayed at the back of the room and looked down through the window to the ring below.

  The bell rang.

  “Here we go,” someone muttered. “Let’s see what he’s got.”

  Milton watched. Elijah moved to the centre of the ring and flicked out a jab as Connolly met him there. He caught a jab from Connolly on his right glove, countered with another of his own. He moved around, firing out the jab and finding his range. Connolly was rangier than Milton had expected. He had long arms and his fists moved quickly, but Elijah had started well. He was concentrating on the movement in front of him, wary of incoming artillery even as he landed his own punches.

  Milton found that he had clenched his own fists, and that he was twitchy with nerves. Elijah stepped back, too slow, and caught a jab flush in the face. He stumbled, just a little, then came back with a three-shot combination that sent Connolly back to the ropes.

  Come on, Milton thought. Go get him.

  The bell rang before Elijah could follow up.

  Elijah made his way back to the corner, sitting down on the stool and opening his mouth so that his mouthguard could be removed. His heart was beating faster than it normally did after one round.

  “Boxing well, Mustafa,” McCauley said, talking fast. “Keep finding your range and don’t forget the jab to the body. He’s moving well, but you can move better, you hear me?”

  Elijah nodded, glancing at ringside and seeing the blurred faces gawping back at him. He blinked and saw them all in focus again. Men in suits. Women in dresses. Money.

  “One down,” McCauley continued, tipping a water bottle into his mouth and wiping his face down. “You’ve got him. He’s good, but you’re better. When you land, he won’t be able to handle it. You’ve just got to find the opening. Be smart.”

  Elijah nodded, opened his mouth for the mouthguard, and got to his feet. The bell rang and he moved to the centre again.

  Hicks was in the first row, three metres away from the corner where the young man was being worked on by his trainer. His skin was slick with a light sweat, but, apart from that, there was no indication that he had been in a fight.

  He had an excellent view and could see nothing that gave him any reason to think that something bad was about to happen. Ziggy had forwarded him pictures of the men who Milton had suggested might cause trouble, but he hadn’t seen any of them, and they certainly were not sitting near the ring. He had shot a short video that showed the occupants of the first couple of rows and had forwarded that to Ziggy. He had explained that he would be able to run it through image-recognition software and compare it to the photographs that he had extracted from the phone Milton had stolen. No reports yet.

  He heard Milton’s voice in his ear. “Anything?”

  “No,” Hicks replied. “Looks normal.”

  “Same here,” Ziggy reported. “No positive hits.”

  The referee signalled and the two fighters got to their feet. The bell rang, the referee stepped out of the way, and the two young men met in the middle of the ring.

  Elijah jabbed and caught Connolly against the side of his chin, then jabbed again. He ducked and moved to his right, opened up the space between them again, then stepped forward and landed a leading right hook to the side of Connolly’s head.

  Hicks heard Connolly make a sound and knew that Elijah had hurt him. Connolly shook off the effects of the punch and came on to Elijah, grabbing hold and landing short hooks into his body and around the sides of his head. Elijah tried to shake him off, but his arm was caught in Connolly’s. The referee came between them, but Connolly only stepped away a couple of paces and then he was on him again.

  Ziggy was in Hicks’s Range Rover, parked in the car park near the venue. He had taken out his laptop and set it up on the dashboard, patching it into his phone and a strong 4G signal. The laptop was showing an illegal stream of the fight while also running Ziggy’s image-recognition software. The feed was processed and compared with the photographs that Ziggy had pulled from the phone that Milton had stolen. The footage concentrated on the action in the ring, but there had been several pans across the crowd before the fight had begun and during the intervals between the rounds. Hicks had also provided video from his position at the front of the crowd. There had been no hits so far, but Ziggy kept looking.

  Ziggy had no interest in sport, apart from those occasions when he had broken into the websites of betting operations and manipulated the code so as to pay out to the dummy accounts he had set up. He had certainly never boxed in his life, but even he could tell that Elijah Warriner had skill.

  The second round came to an end. Ziggy leaned forward, ready for the camera to cut to a wide shot, and, as it did, he heard the laptop fan spin up as the processor began to work.

  There had been no hits yet, but Ziggy had worked with Milton enough to know when he was nervous, and he was nervous now. There would be a reason for that; operators like him did not scare easily.

  40

  McCauley squirted a jet of water over Elijah’s face. Elijah blinked it out of his eyes.

  “He’s doing exactly as we thought,” McCauley said. “He’s going to try to win rounds by making it look like he’s got you against the ropes and landing.”

  “He’s not getting anything through,” Elijah said breathlessly.

  “Doesn’t matter,
” McCauley replied, a smile creeping across his face. “He can’t hurt you. Box with your brain. Move and throw the check hook. All right? Throw the check. He won’t see it coming. You’re too quick.”

  Elijah was up and the third round began. He walked to the centre of the ring. Connolly was into his stride, pushing him back with short punches that Elijah caught on his arms. It still forced him backwards, absorbing blows on his shoulders and forearms and gloves as he covered up on the ropes.

  He was calm. He couldn’t hear the noise. He was focused on Connolly and nothing else.

  Connolly locked up again, then separated just enough to uncork an uppercut that blasted between Elijah’s gloves and detonated on the tip of his chin. The world blurred a little and he staggered backwards. His legs felt like they weren’t attached to him, and the noise around him was replaced by a high-pitched ring. He lifted his gloves up in response, an automatic reaction drilled into him by all the hours he had spent in the ring. Connolly unloaded punch after punch onto his gloves.

  Elijah’s senses cleared, but he was against the ropes and couldn’t remember how he got there.

  And then something changed.

  Connolly had him in a clinch, rabbit-punching him in the kidneys. The referee left them to brawl for a moment, and then the strength seemed to ebb out of Connolly’s arms. Elijah slipped the hold and saw that Connolly’s guard was still down. That was strange—he had been fastidious about guarding against Elijah’s power shots—but Elijah wasn’t going to question the opportunity. He moved away from the ropes in one pivot and landed a check left hook as Connolly moved forward towards him again.

  It stopped him in his tracks.

  Elijah didn’t pause to admire his work. He stepped forward and landed a double-jab, then threw a right hook that landed half on Connolly’s glove and half on his chin.

  Connolly staggered and Elijah pounced. He threw another right hand, then landed a left hook to the top of Connolly’s jaw. He was wobbling now, sweat spraying out with every fresh impact, splashing back into Elijah’s face.

  Elijah came forward again, forcing Connolly against the ropes.

  He landed another right hand, and suddenly Connolly was down on one knee.

  Elijah was too caught up to notice, drawing back his arm to land another punch, before the referee caught him by the bicep and moved him backwards to the neutral corner.

  The noise swept over him, a barrage so abrupt it was as if someone had just turned up the volume. Elijah heard individual voices—hoarse shouts of his name, whoops of pleasure, groans of anguish—before they coalesced into one omnipresent, deafening thrum.

  And it was all there in front of him. His future, his life.

  Knock him down and that would be it.

  The referee counted eight and let Connolly continue.

  He came out to the middle of the ring. Elijah saw: Connolly couldn’t focus his eyes.

  Elijah unleashed a right-handed uppercut. He knew it was over as soon as it landed. He could feel the hit all the way down his arm, into his shoulder, shuddering through every single muscle along the way.

  He could hear the voices again. Every noise. Every cheer.

  Connolly went down as if someone had chopped him at the knees. The referee started the count. He could’ve gone all the way to a hundred; it wouldn’t have made any difference.

  Connolly was out.

  Part XII

  The First Day

  41

  “Happy Christmas!”

  Elijah was in the shower, standing under the hot jet and letting the water sluice off the sweat that had started to dry on his skin. McCauley had put his head around the door, and Elijah guessed that the clock must have ticked over to midnight.

  He looked down to his feet and saw a reddening in the water, looked at his hands and saw how the knuckles had cracked and bled. He turned off the water, wrapped his towel around his waist, and went back into the dressing room.

  McCauley was there, gathering up the bloody wraps and dumping them in a black bin liner with the rest of their rubbish. Elijah’s shorts and boots were on the seat where he had left them. McCauley had laid out his jeans and shirt, both freshly laundered and pressed. Elijah went to the sink and looked at his reflection in the mirror.

  “There’s not a mark on you,” McCauley observed.

  “He nailed me once,” Elijah disagreed, probing the side of his face.

  “Don’t worry. You’re still pretty.”

  Elijah towelled himself off. His arms were sore from where Connolly had hammered at his guard, and his kidneys ached as he bent down to pull on his jeans, but that was all to be expected.

  He winced as he pulled on his shirt. “What you make of Connolly?”

  “Tough. We knew he would be.”

  “I know. But the way he went down.”

  “You hammered him, Mustafa.”

  “Yeah. Maybe. But there’s something that’s bothering me.”

  “What?”

  “He had me in a clinch, right? Third round, just before I dropped him. He was bombing me inside, big hits; then he just let go. The ref didn’t split us up; he just let me out.”

  “Maybe he thought he’d softened you up enough?”

  “I don’t think so. He just stood there, his guard down, like he wanted me to tag him.”

  McCauley reached his hand up and rested it against Elijah’s cheek. “You’re overthinking,” he said. “You’d already tagged him—two, three big shots. I doubt he was all there by the time you put him down. Forget about it. It looked good from where I was standing.”

  Elijah shrugged. McCauley was probably right. There was no point in second-guessing himself. He’d done what he needed to do. He’d won the fight, sealed it with another KO that cemented his reputation as a fighter with dynamite in his fists. Elijah knew he would have looked good out there. Tommy Porter had already put his head in the door to congratulate him and to say that he needed to make sure he was at the party afterwards. He had said that there was business to discuss.

  There was a knock at the door now. McCauley went over and opened it, then stepped aside.

  Elijah turned. It was Alesha. He had given her a backstage pass, an embossed sticker that she was wearing on the leg of her jeans.

  “Hey,” she said, a smile beaming out. “You okay?”

  “I’m good,” Elijah said.

  “Can I come in?” she asked.

  “Course,” he said. “I’m just finishing up.”

  She came inside, closing the door behind her. McCauley turned and made himself busy with the rest of the equipment.

  “You looked amazing,” she said. “I was listening to what the others were saying next to me. They were saying how you were better than they thought, how you were going to be a world champion, all that. I loved it.”

  She beamed at him again. He felt a buzz in his stomach, an emptiness that he usually felt when he was nervous, and he realised that the prospect of trying to get with her was scaring him more than going into the ring with someone like Connolly. She was so fine; older than him, too. He had never had much luck with women, not as a kid and not really up in Sheffield. He had been useless when he was younger, and there hadn’t been time for it since he had moved. He had been concentrating on his training for the most part. There had been a couple of things that had never gone anywhere, a little fun but nothing serious. He had never been with a girl—not properly, all the way—and the prospect of it was making him sweat.

  “What are you doing now?” she asked him.

  “I got the after-party,” he said, his mouth dry. “You want to come?”

  “You sure?”

  He nodded. “It’s in Bethnal Green. Only if you can—if you’re not busy, I mean.”

  “I’d love to,” she said.

  42

  Milton called Sharon and asked if she knew what Elijah was planning on doing following the fight. She told him that there was a party and that she would arrange for his name to be left at
the door. Milton thanked her and said that he would see her there.

  He finished the call and then dialled Hicks.

  “Everything okay?”

  “Seems fine,” Milton said.

  “What’s next?”

  “There’s a party,” he said. “It’ll probably be easier to get to Elijah there than it was here.”

  “You still worried?”

  “I am.”

  “Where is it?”

  “Bethnal Green,” he said, giving Hicks the name and address that Sharon had provided for the club.

  “You want me to come?”

  “I’d appreciate it. His mother put me on the guest list, but it’d be good to have someone on the outside, just in case.”

  “So you get to go to the party while I’m shivering in the cold?”

  “You know you’re going to heaven.”

  “I doubt that,” Hicks said. “I’ll set off now. Call me if you need me.”

  Milton made his way out of the Olympic Park to Stratford underground station. The Central Line ran to Bethnal Green, and he pressed himself into a busy carriage and waited for the train to set off. He wasn’t ready to relax, not just yet. He had known that it would be difficult for Pinky to cause trouble at the venue, and getting to Elijah would have been almost impossible. A club was a different matter altogether. He hadn’t had the chance to reconnoitre the venue, but he guessed that it would be much simpler to get inside compared to the significant security that had been put in place before the fight.

  He would be much happier once the day was done and Elijah and his mother were on their way back north to Sheffield.

  The after-fight party was at Oval Space in Bethnal Green. Elijah had never been before, but was quickly impressed. It was a large venue that was itself dominated by the disused gasholder that loomed over this part of Hackney Road. The club was situated within a large hangar; part of it had been sealed off for this event, but Elijah guessed that there would still have been more than enough space for a thousand revellers. Porter had booked it and invited all of the fighters and their entourages, together with a guest list of industry movers and shakers.

 

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