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Click here to download
a review by Bernard Trink of the Bangkok Post
Click here to download a review of The Stretch in The
Guardian.
Stephen Leather writes: The Stretch was quite a departure for
me in that it's the first novel I've written that's based on a screenplay.
I originally wrote it as a two-part drama for Sky, starring Leslie
Grantham and Anita Dobson, the former Eastenders soap stars.
It's about a gangster's wife, Sam Greene, played by Anita, who has
to take over her husband's criminal empire when he gets sent to prison
for a murder he says he didn't commit.
It looks great on film, and when I showed the scripts to my editor
at Hodder and Stoughton, Jon Wood, he was very enthusiastic about
its prospects as a book.
Jon edited The Bombmaker and he did a sterling job helping me get
The Stretch into shape as a novel, and it was quite a blow when he
announced in July that he was leaving to work for a rival publisher,
Orion.
It was line-edited by Sarah Binnersley who also worked on The Chinaman
and TheTunnel Rats and who in my humble opinion is one of the best
in the business.
We were up against a tight deadline to get the book finished, as we
wanted its publication to coincide with the broadcasting of the series
on Sky One. I'm well pleased with the result, and I think the dialogue
in the book is the best I've ever written.
In some ways it was an easy book to write because I'd already seen
many of the scenes being filmed, and it was easy to picture the characters
having seen Anita and Leslie play the roles.
Anyway, here's the first chapter so you can judge for yourself:
The Stretch - The First Chapter
.......The
gun went off, catching Preston Snow by surprise, and he felt as if
he'd been punched hard in the stomach. There was no burning sensation,
and surprisingly little pain, just a dull ache and a spreading coldness.
His eyes widened as he stared at the face of the man who'd shot him.
Unfeeling blue eyes stared back at him.
.......Snow clutched a hand to his stomach
and staggered backwards, blood pulsing from between his fingers. There
seemed to be a lot of blood, but still he was hardly aware of any
pain.
.......The
man with the gun watched dispassionately, the gun at his side. The
man's face was totally blank as if he had absolutely no interest in
whether Snow lived or died.
Snow felt the strength drain from his legs. He stumbled over a coffee
table and fell on his side, barely conscious of where he was. The
coldness was spreading from his stomach, up across his chest, a coldness
that seemed to be drawing all the strength from his limbs. He tried
to speak but no words would come and it was an effort to breathe.
He got up on all fours and crawled towards the stairs.
.......The man who'd pulled the trigger
stood in the middle of the room, watching Snow with a look of bored
disinterest. 'Where the fuck do you think you're going, Snow?' he
asked. 'Stay here and take it like a man, yeah?'
.......Snow scrambled up the stairs,
frantically trying to get away from the man. He had a gun upstairs,
somewhere. It was in one of the drawers in the bedroom. If he could
get to it, if he could defend himself, then maybe, just maybe, he'd
stand a chance.
.......His tracksuit top was drenched
in blood and it flopped around as he crawled. He heard footsteps behind
him but he didn't look back. He felt himself drifting in and out of
consciousness and he shook his head fiercely, trying to clear his
thoughts. 'Stay focused, man,' he muttered to himself. 'Stay fucking
focused.'
.......He looked down at his stomach
as he crawled and saw blood dripping down onto the threadbare stair
carpet. He tried to stem the bleeding but as he pressed his hand against
his stomach a bolt of pain shot through his midriff. He grunted. It
felt as if a hot knife had been twisted inside his stomach.
.......'For fuck's sake Snow, will you
stay still!' shouted the man with the gun. Snow took a quick look
over his shoulder. The man was standing at the bottom of the stairs,
gesticulating with his gun.
.......Snow reached the upstairs landing
and pushed himself upright and staggered towards the bedroom, putting
his free hand against the wall to maintain his balance, smearing it
with blood.
.......The man followed him up the stairs.
He took his time with a lengthy pause between each step. It was the
precision that Snow found terrifying. The man was taking it slowly,
knowing that he had all the time in the world. No one was going to
come to Snow's aid. If anyone had heard the gunshot, they wouldn't
want to get involved. It wasn't the sort of area where people telephoned
three nines.
.......Snow collapsed in front of the
dressing table and pulled out one of the drawers. No gun. He cursed.
Where'd he put it? Where the hell had he put it? He tried to concentrate,
tried to remember where he'd last seen the weapon. He pulled open
a second drawer and rifled through socks and underwear, cursing his
stupidity for not having the gun out in the open. No gun. He tore
the drawer out of the cupboard and tipped the contents onto the floor
and searched frantically. It wasn't there.
.......There were footsteps behind him
and Snow twisted around. The man was standing in the doorway, the
gun at his side, a confident smile on his face. Snow's head swam and
he slumped backwards, sliding down against the dressing table, his
head banging against one of the open drawers.
.......Snow's eyes fluttered shut. He
could feel consciousness slipping away. The pain was going, replaced
by a warm glow. He sighed and his hand slipped away from his stomach,
drenched in blood.
.......The man walked over and looked
down at Snow. He prodded Snow's leg with his foot but Snow didn't
react. Snow's chin was down on his chest and a bloody froth dribbled
from between his lips. Blood was pooling on the floor around his waist,
a thick treacly redness that seemed to sit on the surface of the carpet,
refusing to sink into the pile.
.......'You dead, Snow?' sneered the
man. 'Don't tell me you're dead already.'
.......The man raised his foot and stamped
down on Snow's hand, crushing his bloody fingers. Snow's eyes opened
wide and he screamed in pain. The man grinned triumphantly and leveled
the gun at Snow's face.
* * *
.......They filed into the jury box one
by one and Sam Greene could tell by the way they avoided looking at
her that the news was bad. Her heart sank.
.......'It'll be okay, mum,' said her
son Jamie, and he gave her hand a small squeeze.
.......Sam shook her head. 'No, Jamie,'
she whispered. 'It's not going to be okay.'
.......Sam's husband looked across at
her from the dock. 'Chin up, love,' he mouthed. Terry looked tired.
There were dark patches under his eyes and when he smiled Sam could
see the worry lines etched into his forehead. She was sure there was
a touch more grey at his temples but he still looked good for fifty-two
though; broad shouldered and flat-stomached with the confident good
looks that turned the heads of women half his age.
.......Sam fingered the small crucifix
that was hanging around her neck on a thin gold chain. And hadn't
that always been Terry's problem, she thought. Too handsome for his
own good.
.......Sam tried to smile back at Terry
but she could feel tears welling up in her eyes and she blinked them
back. It wasn't fair. Her husband's fate lay in the hands of twelve
men and women who knew nothing about him, and yet they and they alone
had the power to put him behind bars for the rest of his life.
.......Sam watched them as they took
their seats. Eight women and four men. That was in their favour, Terry's
solicitor had said, because Terry was a good-looking guy and women
were less likely to convict a man that they fancied. Three of the
jury were black and even Laurence Patterson had to admit that that
wasn't such good news because the man Terry had been accused of shooting
was black. 'When all's said and done they do stick together, Samantha,
but let's look on the bright side shall we,' he'd said and he'd patted
her gently on the shoulder the way you'd console someone at a funeral.
That's what it felt like, Sam realised. It felt like a funeral. Everyone
dressed in their Sunday best, faces sombre, avoiding eye contact,
all gathered together to say a final farewell to Terry Greene.
.......A tear ran down Sam's cheek and
she brushed it away with the back of her hand, determined that no
one would see her cry. She knew there'd be photographers outside and
there'd like nothing more than a picture of her with tears running
down her face. She'd been in court every day, and without fail the
tabloids had carried photographs of her arriving or leaving, always
mentioning the fact that she was forty-eight years old and that she
used to be a singer and dancer. 'Faded Sixties singer' one of the
Daily Mail's more acid female feature writers had called her, and
Sam had silently seethed at the unfairness of that. Her career had
barely started to get off the ground before she'd met and married
Terry, and as for 'faded', that was just malicious. She was the mother
of three grown-up children and under more pressure than she'd ever
been in her whole life, how was she supposed to look? Radiant?
.......Considering the pressure she was
under, Sam figured that she looked damn good. At least one of the
prosecution lawyers kept looking at her with more than a professional
interest, smiling each time he caught her eye. Every morning she took
take extra care to get her make-up just right, enough to cover up
the effects of not-enough sleep, but not so much that she'd look as
if she was trying too hard. And she'd been to the hairdresser to get
her hair colour topped up just before the case started. Again, nothing
too obvious, but she needed a little help to keep it its original
dark blonde sheen.
.......Patterson twisted around in his
seat and gave her a confident smile. She acknowledged him with a nod
but couldn't bring herself to smile back at him.
.......'Will your foreman please stand,'
said the clerk of the court. A middle-aged man got to his feet and
self-consciously rubbed the bridge of his nose.
.......Sam took a deep breath, steeling
herself for the worse. Jamie squeezed her hand again and she squeezed
back.
.......'Have you reached a verdict upon
which you have all agreed?'
.......'We have. Yes.'
.......'On the charge of murder, do you
find the defendant Terrence William Greene guilty or not guilty?'
.......The foreman rubbed his nose again,
then cleared his throat. He was a small, nondescript man in a cheap
suit and Sam figured that this was his one moment of glory in a life
filled with mediocrity and that he was determined to make the most
of it. 'Guilty,' he said, stretching the word out as if relishing
the sound of it.
.......Sam cursed under her breath.
.......Someone cheered behind her and
Sam turned around. Two detectives were grinning and slapping their
boss on the back. Detective Chief Inspector Frank Welch, the man responsible
for putting her husband in the dock. Welch grinned at Sam and she
turned away quickly, not wanting to give him the satisfaction of seeing
how upset she was.
.......The judge nodded at Terry's barrister.
'Mr Orvice, is there anything you wish to say on behalf of the defendant?'
.......The barrister looked across at
Terry. Terry shook his head. 'No, your honour.'
.......The judge fixed Terry with a look
of contempt. 'Terrence Greene, stand up.'
.......Terry got to his feet and adjusted
his tie, and straightened his shoulders. He was wearing a dark blue
suit, one of his many Armanis, a crisp white shirt and a tie that
Sam didn't recognise. He looked the judge in the eye, his chin up
defiantly.
.......'Before I pass sentence, I have
a few words to say about the conduct of one of the witnesses in this
case,' said the judge. He turned to look at Sam and she fought the
urge to look away. She felt her cheeks redden but she continued to
stare at him, concentrating on his thin, humourless lips.
.......'Despite the weight of forensic
evidence against the defendant, his wife Samantha Greene has insisted
that she was with him on the night of the murder. I disbelieve her
account of events, as did the jury, and I regard her claims as at
best misguided and at worst a deliberate attempt to pervert the course
of justice.'
.......'You should hang the lying bitch!'
A young black man with shoulder-length dreadlocks had got to his feet
and was screaming at the judge. A pretty black girl tried to get him
to sit down. 'She knows he killed my brother! She should be in the
fucking dock with him!'
.......Two uniformed policemen hustled
him out of the court. The black girl followed, imploring them to let
him go. Luke Snow and his sister Nancy. Brother and sister of the
man Terry was accused of killing. An elderly black couple shook their
heads tearfully but stayed where they were, not wanting to leave until
they'd heard the sentence. Preston Snow's parents.
.......As the courtroom doors banged
shut, the judge once again fixed Sam with his baleful stare. 'I hope
the police will take a close look at the evidence given by Mrs Greene,
with a view to considering a charge of perjury. The love of a wife
for a husband is no excuse for lying to a court of law.'
.......Sam stared back at the judge,
knowing that there was nothing she could say or do. Her mouth had
gone dry and it hurt when she swallowed. It seemed like an eternity
before the judge turned away from her and looked back at Terry.
.......'Terrence William Greene, you
have been found guilty of the murder of Preston Snow. A savage, brutal
murder for which you have shown no remorse. The sentence of the court
is life imprisonment. Take him down.'
.......Two burly custody officers moved
either side of Terry. Terry blew a kiss at Sam, winked, then walked
down the stairs leading from the deck to the holding cells below the
courtroom.
.......'Are you going home, mum?' asked
Jamie.
.......Sam nodded and got to her feet.
'You coming?'
.......Jamie looked at his watch. 'I've
got to get back to Exeter. Exams tomorrow.'
.......'How about a coffee first before
you go?'
.......Jamie looked suddenly concerned.
'Are you okay?'
.......Sam screwed up her face. 'I feel
a bit numb, really. I don't think it's hit me yet.'
.......Jamie nodded. 'I know what you
mean. I sort of expected the worse, but life? I can't imagine dad
behind bars for life, can you? Not dad.'
.......'We'll get through it, Jamie.
So will he.' She gave him a hug. 'Thanks for coming.'
.......'I wasn't sure if dad would've
wanted me here.'
.......'Of course he did. Don't be silly.'
.......Jamie nodded towards the doors.
'I'll walk you out.'
.......'You will not!' said Sam quickly.
'The last thing I want is for you to be photographed with me. You've
gotten off lightly so far, the last thing we want is for your face
to be splashed across the papers with mine. Lawyer-in-the-making in
court for drug baron's murder trial. Just what you need to kick-start
your career.'
.......'I'm not ashamed of dad,' he said.
.......'I know you're not. And neither
am I. But let's not make things more difficult than they already are,
shall we? You sneak out, they'll be too busy looking for me. I'll
see you at the coffee bar we went to last time, yeah?'
.......'Okay, mum.' Jamie kissed her
on the cheek and walked out of the courtroom.
.......Sam stood where she was to give
him time to leave the building. She desperately wanted a cigarette
but smoking was forbidden inside the court building. Patterson appeared
at her elbow holding a stack of files. 'Samantha, I'm gutted. But
it's not over.'
.......'Swings and roundabouts, Laurence.'
Jamie walked towards the exit, pulling up the collar of his sheepskin
jacket. Sam wanted to call after him, but she could see he was in
a rush to get away.
.......'We'll appeal, of course,' said
Patterson.
.......'Whatever.'
.......Patterson placed a hand on her
elbow. 'Can you call in at Richard's office this afternoon? It's at
Terry's request.'
.......'Can't it wait?'
.......Behind her she heard raucous laughter,
then a Geordie voice. 'Great job, Frank.' It was Doug Simpson, a detective
inspector, the man who'd come around to Sam's house with a search
warrant and who'd spent the best part of four hours looking in every
nook and cranny with half a dozen uniformed policeman. Simpson was
patting Welch on the back. 'The look on his face when the judge said
life. Like he expected to be let of with a slap on the wrist.'
.......Welch said nothing but he grinned
triumphantly. The Crown Prosecution Service's barrister walked by
and he gave Welch a thumbs-up. 'Thanks, Frank. Wish all my cases were
as open and shut as that.'
.......Welch's grin widened as he walked
past Sam. Patterson steered her away into a corner. 'It's important,
Samantha. I wouldn't ask otherwise.'
.......'Okay. Fine. Whatever. I'll be
there.' She looked around the wood-paneled entrance hall. 'Is there
a back way out, Laurence?'
.......'I'm afraid not. Not for members
of the public.'
.......'What about for wives of convicted
murderers?'
Patterson smiled thinly and shook his head.
Sam took a deep breath and walked towards the double doors that led
out to the street. She could hear the click-click-click of cameras
and the buzz of questions before she even pushed the doors open. The
Press were huddled around Welch and Simpson and their faces were white
in the glare of television camera lights. Sam kept her face down but
it was useless, they were waiting for her and like hounds on a fresh
scent they bore down on her, throwing questions from all sides. How
did she feel, what were her plans, how had her husband taken the sentence,
had she lied. Sam tried to push through them. 'Please, I've nothing
to say,' she shouted. 'Nothing.'
.......Two figures barred her way. A
man and a woman. Sam raised her face and looked at them. It was Mr
and Mrs Snow, the victim's parents, dressed as if they'd just come
from church. They were both in their late fifties, he in a dark tweed
suit and highly-polished brogues, she in a blue flowery print dress
and a dark blue coat, with a matching blue hat with a wide band into
which had been tucked three silk daises. Sam tried to get by them
but Mrs Snow moved to block her way. 'How could you?' hissed Mrs Snow.
'You gave your word before God and you lied. How could you do that?'
.......Sam shook her head. Mrs Snow raised
a gloved hand and Sam stared at her unflinchingly, waiting for the
blow. Mrs Snow lowered her hand and burst into tears. Her husband
put an arm around her shoulders. His eyes were dull and flat as if
he wasn't even aware of Sam or the near-constant barrage of flashes
as the photographers clicked away. Sam pushed around them.
.......The questions continued. Did she
know why her husband had killed Preston Snow, had her husband asked
her to lie for him, where was she the night Snow was shot. Sam tried
to blot out the shouts, tried to imagine they weren't there. A television
camera appeared at her side and a bleached blonde with too much make-up
thrust a bulbous microphone in her face. Sam pushed the microphone
away. 'Don't you understand - no comment!' she shouted.
.......She reached her car, a black convertible
Saab. It was penned in by two almost-new saloons and Sam knew instinctively
that the Press had done it, cutting off her avenue of escape. She
whirled around. 'Can someone please move this car!' she yelled, but
she could barely hear her own voice above the noise of the Press pack.
.......A battered old Landrover roared
up, smoke belching from its exhaust. 'Mom! Get in!' It was Jamie.
He threw open the door and Sam climbed in gratefully.
.......'Jamie, you're a life-saver,'
she gasped.
.......Jamie grinned and accelerated.
As he roared away from the still-shouting journalists, a bottle smacked
into the windscreen, cracking it down one side. Through the side window
Sam saw Luke Snow screaming and shaking his fist.
.......Jamie slammed on the brakes. 'Bastard!'
.......'Leave it, Jamie,' said Sam.
.......'Look what he's done.'
.......'Forget it.'
.......Jamie looked as if he was going
to argue but Sam patted him on the leg . 'Come on, I'll buy you a
coffee. And a new windscreen.' Jamie accelerated away, still cursing.
.......She rubbed the back of his neck
as he drove. 'You should go and see him, soon as you can.'
.......'I will. Laura wasn't there.'
.......'Yeah. Probably too upsetting
for her. You know what your sister's like. It's Trish I feel really
sorry for her. They're bound to give her a hard time at school.'
.......Jamie drove them to a coffee bar
and they sat in the window and sipped cappuccinos in silence. 'Why
did you lie for him, mum?' Jamie asked eventually. 'After everything
he did to you.'
.......'We're neither of us kids, Jamie.
Anyway, who says I lied?'
.......'The judge for one. .......Come
on, the forensic alone was enough to convict him. Plus they had an
eye-witness. I don't know why you bothered.'
.......Jamie had a smear of frothy milk
across his upper lip. Sam reached over and wiped it away with her
thumb.
.......'What are you going to do, mum?'
.......'Been asking myself the very same
question.'
* * *
.......A cheer went up as Frank Welch
walked into the CID office flanked by Detective Inspector Doug Simpson
and Detective Sergeant Fred Clarke. Welch raised a hand in acknowledgment.
There were two cases of lager on a side table, along with half a dozen
bottles of red wine, stacks of paper cups and a few packets of crisps.
Clarke headed straight for the lager.
.......'Drink, Frank?' asked Simpson.
.......'Get me an orange juice and lemonade,
Doug. I'm going to have a word with the Governor.'
.......Welch went down the corridor and
was waved through by Superintendent Simon Edwards' secretary. 'He's
been waiting for you, Chief Inspector,' she said.
.......Edwards was buried in paperwork
but he stood up and shook Welch's hand as soon as he walked in. 'Great
work, Frank. First class. Pass on my congratulations to the team.
I took the liberty of arranging a small libation.'
.......'Much appreciated sir.'
.......'Not everyday we see a villain
like Terry Greene sent down.'
.......'No, sir.'
.......Edwards sat down and picked up
his fountain pen. When Welch didn't move towards the door, Edwards
put his pen down again. 'Something on your mind, Frank?'
.......'Greene's wife. Samantha. She
lied through her teeth. The judge gave her a tongue lashing but I'd
like to send the file on to the DPP.'
Edwards winced. 'I'm not convinced that's in anyone's best interests,
Frank. You're not married, are you?'
.......It was a rhetorical question.
Edwards was well aware that Welch had never been married. But Welch
answered anyway. 'No, Sir.'
.......'Wives stand by their husbands.
That's what they do, bless 'em. For better or worse.'
.......Welch put his hands on the superintendent's
desk and leaned towards him, but he could see from the look on his
boss's face that he resented the territorial encroachment so he stood
up again and folded his arms. 'The judge said he thought there was
a case of perjury to answer, that's all I'm saying. She lied in court.'
.......'But it didn't do any good, did
it, Frank? Greene still went down. Let sleeping dogs, lie. Okay?'
.......Welch said nothing. He wanted
to argue the point but he had worked with Edwards long enough to know
that there was no point. Once the superintendent had made his mind
up, it was like a steel trap. Nothing would budge him and he'd regard
even reasoned argument as a challenge to his authority. Welch nodded
slowly. 'Okay, Sir.'
.......'Good man,' said Edwards, and
returned to his paperwork.
.......Welch went back into the main
CID room. Simpson held out a paper cup. 'There you go, boss.'
.......Welch took it but didn't drink.
.......'What's up?' asked Simpson.
.......'Difference of opinion with the
Governor,' said Welch. 'He thinks Sam Greene's a sleeping dog. I think
she's a lying bitch.'
* * *
.......Terry Greene took off his jacket
and handed it to the bored prison officer. 'Don't suppose you've got
a hanger,' he said.
.......The prison officer looked at the
label and sneered. 'Jacket. Dark blue. Armani.' He had a nasal Birmingham
accent. He was a big man with a pot belly that hung in front of him
like a late pregnancy. He screwed up the jacket and thrust it into
a polythene bag. Terry undid his belt and slipped off his trousers.
A second prison officer wrote the details down on a clipboard.
.......'Trousers. Dark blue,' said the
prison officer. He was another big man, but well-muscled as if he
worked out. Like his colleague he had short-cropped hair and a neatly-trimmed
moustache.
.......A third prison officer walked
over. A small man with a tight, pinched mouth and small eyes. He picked
up the clipboard and looked at the form. 'The famous Terrence Greene,'
he said. 'We are honoured.' He grinned. 'Armani, huh? Pity it's going
to be out of fashion by the time you get out, Greene.' He handed the
clipboard back to the admitting officer. 'I'm Chief Prison Officer
Riggs. This is my wing.'
.......'You must be very proud,' said
Terry. He took off his wristwatch and held it out to the first prison
officer.
.......Riggs reached over and took it.
He weighed it in his hand. 'Rolex Oyster. Gold.'
.......Terry took a pile of prison-issue
clothes off the table. 'Perhaps you'd be good enough to show me to
my room.'
.......Riggs smiled at Terry. 'You're
a very funny man, Greene. 'He dropped the watch onto the tiled floor
and stamped on it. He kept his eyes on Terry as he bent down and picked
it up. 'Rolex Oyster. Gold. Broken.' He tossed the watch into the
polythene bag. 'Sign for your things and then these nice gentlemen
can take you to your cell. You've missed lunch and I'm sorry but room
service isn't working today.' He paused for effect, holding his hand
up as if silencing a child. 'No wait a minute...I'm not sorry. In fact,
I couldn't give a shit if you didn't eat for a week.'
.......Riggs laughed softly to himself
as he walked away, his prison boots squeaking on the tiled floor.
* * *
.......Richard Asher's office was a little
like the man, thought Sam. Brash with hard edges and questionable
taste. The furniture was all chrome and glass, the paintings on the
wall merely squares of canvas with what looked like sprays of blood
across them. As she walked in, Asher was wearing a telephone headset
and pacing up and down in front of a floor to ceiling window that
looked out over the City. He flashed her a quick smile and carried
on muttering into his headset mike, something about moving money between
the Cayman Islands and Gibraltar and how the taxman wouldn't get a
sniff of it.
.......Laurence Patterson was sitting
on the edge of Asher's white maple desk. He motioned towards an long
black leather sofa on sweeping chrome legs. Sam sat down, crossed
her legs and lit a cigarette.
.......The two men were both in their
late twenties, tall and thin with the build of squash players, and
they both virtually crackled with nervous energy. She'd only met Asher
once, shortly after Terry had been arrested. He was half-Indian with
a dark olive complexion and jet black hair that was forever falling
across his eyes. He smiled a lot and Sam never really trusted him.
Patterson wasn't as good-looking, he had a long, narrow face and a
rash of old acne scars across his forehead, but he seemed to Sam to
be the more trustworthy of the two. Patterson always looked her in
the eye, even when he was giving her bad news, but Asher seemed to
avoid eye contact whenever he could as if he was hiding a guilty secret.
She tapped her cigarette on a crystal ashtray. She smiled at the thought
that appearances could be deceptive. A year ago and she'd never have
believed that her husband would be behind bars, serving a life sentence
for murder.
.......'Funny old world,' she said to
herself.
.......'Sorry, Samantha?' said Patterson.
.......'Just thinking out loud, Laurence,'
said Sam with a smile.
.......Asher took off his headset and
strode over to Sam, his long legs moving as gracefully as a giraffe's.
'Samantha, thanks for coming.'
.......'Didn't sound to me like I had
much of a choice, Richard.'
.......Asher air kissed her, studiously
avoiding any physical contact. Sam could smell his cologne, heady
and sweet with a hint of sandalwood. 'I am so sorry about today,'
he said, but he wasn't looking at her, he was concentrating on a spot
on the wall behind her.
.......'You and me both,' said Sam.
.......'You'll be appealing, yeah?'
.......'Soon as we can. Is that what
this is about?'
.......'Partly,' said Asher.
.......Asher and Patterson exchanged
a quick look and something unspoken passed between them. Sam frowned
and waited. Asher loped over to his desk and sprawled in his chair.
.......Patterson went to stand by the
window. 'However the appeal goes, it's going to be expensive, you
realise that?'
.......'I didn't think for one minute
that you'd be doing it pro bono, Laurence.'
.......Asher sighed. 'Snag is, Terry's
a bit stretched.'
.......Patterson nodded. 'He tucked away
enough to pay for his defence up to today's case, but we're gonna
need more if we're to appeal.'
.......Sam leaned forward. 'If? Now it's
if?'
.......Patterson looked pained. 'When.
If. It all comes down to the readies, Samantha. And the way things
stand at the moment, Terry couldn't appeal a parking ticket.'
.......Sam sat stunned, not knowing what
to say.
.......'It's what you might call a cash
flow problem,' said Asher smoothly. 'Hopefully temporary, but you'd
better hear it from the horse's whatsit.'
.......'What?' said Sam.
.......Asher didn't reply. Instead he
picked up a remote control and pointed it at a large flat screen television
mounted on one wall. It flickered into life and he pointed the remote
at a video recorder.
.......Terry appeared on the screen,
smoking a small cigar. He was wearing the same suit he'd had on in
court, but no tie. He smiled at the camera and waved the cigar. 'Hiya
love. Sorry about the cloak and dagger, but you'll only be seeing
this if things have taken a turn for the worse.'
.......Sam looked at Asher and Patterson.
Both men were watching the screen. She took a long pull on her cigarette.
Terry was smiling apologetically.
'What can I say? It's going to be rough for you, but at least you're
not sitting in a cell stinking of stale piss and cabbage. Look love,
I'm going to need your help, big time. I'm sorry to drop this on you
but there's no one else who can do what needs to be done. I can't
say too much in case this gets into the wrong hands, but Richard and
Laurence will fill you in. You can trust them, okay? Oh yeah, look
up Andy McKinley. He was my driver, he'll be useful. He's working
for George Kay. And give my love to the kids. Tell them a visit would
be nice.'
.......Asher pressed the remote and the
screen went blank.
.......'That's it?' said Sam. Terry's
short speech had posed more questions than it had answered.
.......'It's by way of a reference,'
said Asher.
.......'So that you'll know that what
we're telling you has Terry's blessing,' added Patterson.
.......'And what are you telling me?'
asked Sam.
Asher took a deep breath as if steeling himself to break bad news.
'Terry's been a bit busy recently. Since you and he separated eighteen
months ago...'
.......'Fifteen,' interrupted Sam. 'We
separated fifteen months ago.'
.......'Fifteen. Okay.' He took another
deep breath. 'Anyway, a lot's happened over the past fifteen months.'
.......'You're telling me.' She blew
smoke at the ceiling. 'How bad is it, Richard?'
.......'Snapshot, it's not too bad. Pretty
much balances out. But without injections of outside capital...' He
left the sentence unfinished. He looked across at Patterson and nodded.
.......Patterson walked over to Sam and
gave her a cardboard file. 'It's like a juggler keeping four balls
in the air,' said Patterson. 'As soon he stops moving...' He shrugged
and looked at her glumly.
.......Sam looked at the two men in turn.
They had the guilty looks of schoolboys called up in front of the
headmistress, expecting a caning. 'So you're telling me that if Terry
drops his balls, I'm out on the street?'
.......'Not exactly out on the street,'
said Asher, picking up a glass paperweight and toying with it.. 'But
I think it's only fair to warn you that the mortgage on your house
is actually paid from an account linked to one of Terry's property
companies. And if that were to go into receivership...'
.......Sam opened the file. It contained
several sheets of papers and computer print-outs. There were statements
from a number of bank accounts, only two of which she recognised.
And there were profit and loss statements from Terry's business enterprises.
His nightclubs. His model agency. His courier service. His stake in
the local football club. The timeshare development in Spain. And there
was a list of the family's outgoings. The mortgage on the house. Car
payments. Jamie's university fees. The payments to Terry's mother's
nursing home. Sam shook her head. There were too many numbers to cope
with. 'So we're broke, is that it?'
.......Asher looked pained. 'Of course
not, Samantha. But you realise that without Terry earning, there's
not going to be any cash coming in.'
.......'I don't understand this. Terry's
always been a big spender, but he's been putting money away, too.
Stocks. Shares. He's even got Tessas and Isas and all that stuff.'
.......Asher shook his head. 'Terry's
borrowed against virtually all his assets. Effectively, they belong
to the banks.'
.......'Why would he do that?'
.......'The property whatsit in Spain.
Terry told you about it?'
.......'He mentioned it. It's with Micky
Fox, yeah?'
Asher nodded. 'Micky Fox and a few other like-minded individuals.
It's been a big drain, cash-flow wise. They had to buy the land, grease
a few Spanish palms, pay the architects and the builders...'
.......'I get the picture, Richard.'
.......'Money's been poured into the
development. Millions. And I have to say, Samantha, it was against
my best advice. I did tell Terry that this was a long-term investment
and that he should only use money he didn't have tied up elsewhere.
It was his idea to leverage against his portfolio.'
.......Sam tossed the file onto a chrome
and glass coffee table. 'Can't we sell out now? Pay back the banks.
Then sell the shares.'
.......'They're timeshares, Samantha.
No one's going to pay for them until the building work's finished.
The days of punters buying off-plan in Spain are long gone. Too many
horror stories.'
.......'Okay, so we sell off some of
the other businesses. The model agency's got to be making money, right?
And there's his stake in the football club. That's got to be worth
something.'
.......'Neither are showing much in the
way of profits, and, realistically, they're not going to, not in the
near future.' He pulled another pained face. 'Frankly, Samantha, the
model agency and the football club weren't much more than hobbies
for Terry. He wasn't over-concerned whether they made money or not.'
.......Sam flicked ash and crossed her
legs. 'Terrific,' she said. 'What about the courier company? That's
got to be a real business, right? And he told me he'd invested in
a couple of West London taxi firms.'
.......Asher and Patterson exchanged
a quick look. Sam was getting fed up with their little looks, as if
they were working to a script, telling her only what hey wanted her
to know. They were manipulating her and Sam hated being manipulated.
'What?' she said sharply. 'What's going on?'
.......'Terry does have extensive business
interests, Samantha,' said Asher, 'but many were acquired for their
cash flows rather than profits.'
Sam frowned. 'You're not making sense, Richard. Just spit it out,
why don't you?'
.......Asher took a deep breath. 'In
a word, Samantha. Money laundering.' Patterson walked over to the
window as if he was trying to distance himself from the conversation.
.......Sam smiled tightly. 'That's two
words, Richard.' She took a long pull on her cigarette and blew smoke
up at the ceiling.
.......Asher smiled back but his eyes
were ice cold. It was the smile of a predator and Sam realised for
the first time that Asher didn't really like her. 'Terry uses the
cash-rich companies to clean his profits from his less than legal
operations,' said Asher. On their own, profits are minimal.'
.......'This is getting better and better,'
said Sam bitterly.
.......Asher rubbed the paperweight between
the palms of his hands. 'Terry does have a solution,' he said. 'He
put together two...business deals....shortly before he was arrested.'
.......Sam raised an eyebrow. 'Business
deals?'
.......'Terry has arranged for a consignment
of cannabis resin to be imported from Spain. He's already paid for
it, there's just the delivery to be organised.'
.......For a moment Sam thought that
she'd mis-heard. She put up a hand as if warding him off and shook
her head in disbelief. 'What? What are you saying?'
.......'Terry has paid for four tons
of cannabis resin. It's arriving in three days.'
.......'Cannabis? Drugs? A drugs deal?'
.......'Terry has also invested in a
currency deal in Spain. The notes are going to have to be brought
back to the UK in the very near future.'
.......'Currency? You mean counterfeit
notes? A drugs deal and counterfeit money?'
Asher stared up at the ceiling. Patterson was looking out of the window,
his hands clasped behind his back.
.......'Terry expects me to do his dirty
work?'
.......'He's handed over all aspects
of his business to you, legitimate and otherwise,' said Asher. 'You
will have control over all of his companies, signing rights for his
bank accounts. All we need you to do is to sign a few forms.'
.......Sam twisted her cigarette into
the crystal ashtray. 'You're taking the piss.' She stood up. She could
feel her whole body trembling and she fought to stay calm. 'You're
as bad as he is. Both of you.'
.......She stormed out and slammed the
door behind her. Patterson turned away from the window and gave Asher
a pained smile. 'Told you she wouldn't like it.'
.......'Like it or lump it, she'll come
around. She doesn't have a choice.'
To Be Continued
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