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Authors: Malcolm Mackay

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction

How a Gunman Says Goodbye (15 page)

BOOK: How a Gunman Says Goodbye
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28

He doesn’t know that he’s on Jamieson’s mind; Frank’s too. Calum has other things to concern himself with. Emma’s at the flat. She lives with two other girls from the university, and she’s fleeing them now. Something about them causing a racket when she’s trying to study. She came to him for peace. He’s made her a cup of tea, and he’s leaving her alone in the kitchen. This ought to be pleasant. This should be Calum and his girlfriend, spending a little quiet time together. Like normal couples do. Instead, he’s sitting in the living room, worrying.

He never worried before. Never had anything to lose before. There were times when he was concerned for his brother and his mother. His brother more so, because he’s used him in jobs. Only minor use – borrowing cars from the garage William works at – but still, worth worrying about. People could use it as an excuse to go after William. Target his family to make him suffer. But there was never any possibility of William stopping being his brother.

Emma seems to have got bored, he can hear her moving around. Looking for distractions, probably. He’s standing in the kitchen door now, watching her wash her cup in the sink. She’s turned round and she’s smiling at him. Not a loving smile, more an understanding one.

‘Sit down,’ she’s saying, ‘let’s chat.’ She can be a little bossy, he’s learning, but it’s a flaw that she carries with charm. Not everyone does.

He’s sitting opposite her at the kitchen table. Small kitchen, a little cramped. He may not have a lot of experience with relationships, but he knows this is ominous. This is one of those relationship chats. Most people dread the ‘Where are we going?’ conversation. He’s dreading the ‘What have you been doing?’ one.

‘What’s up?’ he’s asking. Smiling; play it casual, make it seem as though he’s not concerned. She’s too smart to buy that. He’s trying so hard to convince himself he’s not concerned. He’s not even fooling himself. Calum ought to be starting this conversation. He should be pushing her towards the exits, for both their sakes. Can’t bring himself to. It’s weak and it’s unforgivable.

‘I’d like to talk about us.’ Just as he expected. ‘Don’t worry, it’s not one of those conversations,’ she’s saying with her smile. They both know she’s not being entirely honest. It’s always one of those conversations. ‘I just want to talk about work.’

There it is. That’s the word that scares him. She must see the reaction; she must see that she’s made him nervous. If there’s one thing that’s going to scupper their relationship, it’s talk of work. Maybe it’s a good thing; surely this will compel him to push her away.

Yet so many other guys in the business must have these conversations at some point. There are a lot of married men, or men in long-term relationships. A minority of gunmen, admittedly. Still, some of them manage to make relationships work, and yet the very thought terrifies him. This job does not go well with a relationship. It has to be one or the other.

‘I just think that your injuries seem healed – enough to work anyway,’ she’s saying. She’s giving him a curious look. This is her attempt to coax the truth from him. It won’t work. You don’t spend more than a decade guarding a secret like that and then blurt it out just because someone asks sweetly. Even if that someone is a cute girl you’re sleeping with.

‘I suppose they are,’ Calum’s saying. ‘You accusing me of skiving off?’ Asked with a smile, and with the hope of diverting the conversation.

‘No, just wondering if you have work to go back to, that’s all.’

Or what kind of work I have to go back to, Calum’s thinking. ‘I don’t know. Maybe, maybe not,’ he’s saying. This is something he hadn’t planned for. The relationship wasn’t supposed to last this long. She’s not supposed to be here.

‘Don’t you think you should find out?’ she’s saying, putting a little pressure into her voice.

‘Okay, I will.’ She’s obviously annoyed with his flippancy. ‘I’m okay for money, so it’s not like there’s a huge rush,’ he’s saying.

‘That’s not the point. Don’t you want to work?’

Boy, there’s a question and a half. If she had any inkling how much that question meant to him, she would have given him more time to answer. Instead, he’s sitting dumbly, while she picks up the conversation again. He’s watching her, seeing her get exasperated. Perhaps this is the way out. Let her think he’s lazy and pathetic, unwilling to work. That might drive her away.

She’s lecturing him on the responsibility his employers have, given that he was injured at work. ‘You were injured working, weren’t you?’

Now she starts digging, looking for details that he can’t provide. She’s trying to trip him up in this conversation. Trying to lure out a confession. He resents that. It’s hard, in any circumstances, to forgive someone for trying to trip you up. If she has any understanding of what he does, then she must understand this is not the way to find out about it. She needs to come straight out and ask. People rarely come straight out and ask. Be blunt and straightforward. No games.

‘Yeah,’ he’s saying, ‘I was injured working.’

‘At a printer’s.’

‘Yes, at a printer’s. Is there something else you want to ask?’ The tone is sharp enough to hurt. Emma’s looking down at the table. She’s thinking about whether she wants to answer that question or not. He’s wishing he hadn’t asked it.

She starts with a sigh. Preparing herself before she says something uncomfortable. Letting him know that something unpleasant for both of them is on its way. ‘I’ve been talking with Anna. You remember Anna; she was there the night we met. I think she hooked up with your friend George, the chatty one. She was talking about him. He never called her back, by the way, and she’s not too impressed with that. She wanted him to call her, so that she could turn him down. She was telling me that she’s sure your friend George is involved in some illegal stuff. She doesn’t know what exactly, but she’s convinced it’s not proper. That he’s some kind of gangster. I laughed at first, but she wasn’t joking. She also thinks you’re involved in the same sorts of things.’

He’s waiting, considering. She doesn’t know anything, she’s just guessing. Stabbing in the dark. Something he’s familiar with. ‘What sorts of things does she think I’m involved in?’

‘I don’t know exactly, but not good things. She thought maybe drugs, something like that. She thought George was the sort of guy who could be involved in anything. I don’t think of you that way. Am I wrong?’

How far do you take the truth? He has to give her something, Calum knows that. A little act of honesty, because outright lying isn’t an option any more. It might be an option if he wanted to get rid of her, really wanted to. He tells himself he does, but when push comes to shove, he can’t push or shove.

‘I’m not involved in drugs,’ he’s saying to her. It’s half-true. He’s never sold drugs. Never used them. He’s killed people for being involved in the drug trade, though. By any sensible measurement, that constitutes involvement. ‘I can’t guarantee that people I know aren’t involved in them in some way, though,’ he’s saying. ‘I know people I probably shouldn’t. I’ve done things that I guess you would frown upon. I don’t know how that changes things.’

She’s looking at him and nodding. ‘I don’t know, either.’

It’s Emma who doesn’t want to talk about it any more. She seems to think they need to stop and contemplate everything they’ve discussed so far. She’s packing books into her bag. She reaches up and kisses him.

Okay, she kissed quickly and left without saying anything else, but she still kissed. That has to mean something. Calum didn’t want to stop, but he can’t have a conversation by himself. He wants to resolve this – never leave things hanging. That comes from his work. You never leave loose ends flapping in the wind. If you need to deal with something, then deal with it now; leaving it will only cause trouble later on. Loose ends tend to entangle themselves in other things. He’s sitting at the kitchen table. Sitting in silence. It feels as though that was such an important conversation, yet he has no idea of the outcome. You never really know which conversations are vital. You’re not always a part of the ones that matter most to you.

29

Frank’s told him everything he can. Told it straight. Now he’s sitting in front of the desk, waiting for a reaction. Waiting for Jamieson to make the judgement that will shape the rest of his life. Jamieson’s tapping the desk with his forefinger; he does that whenever he’s thinking. Presumably does it when he’s nervous too, although he usually makes a point of keeping his nerves to himself. He’s looking at Frank, then sideways at Young.

‘John, could you leave us for a few minutes.’

Young doesn’t say anything, but Frank can see out of the corner of his eye that he’s already halfway to his feet. Young would have expected this. Jamieson doesn’t want anyone else around when he makes the difficult speech about how much they’ve appreciated everything Frank’s done for them. How much they’ll miss having him around. If there’s anything they can do for him, he need only ask. All the usual shit people tell you as they push you off a cliff.

The door closes quietly behind Young. Jamieson’s looking over Frank’s shoulder, making sure nobody can possibly hear them. Now he’s leaning back in his chair and sighing loudly.

‘What a fucking situation,’ he’s saying with a weary smile.

‘Sort of situation that’s only supposed to happen to other people.’

‘I seem to be getting a few of those lately.’ He’s looking at Frank. There’s no way out of this. He knew from the start it was going to have to be this way. He’s going to soften it as much as possible, but it’ll still feel hard to Frank. ‘I think we both know what has to happen now.’ Jamieson’s looking to Frank for a reaction. Please make this easy for me.

What happens now is you throw me overboard, Frank is thinking. He won’t come out and say it, but he’s not going to roll over, either. He hasn’t worked this long, done all that he’s done, just to walk away with a whimper. He deserves better, and he knows he’s still capable of better. No matter what other people might think.

‘I think I can guess where this is going to go,’ he’s saying. Frank doesn’t realize, but Jamieson can see the hard look in his eyes. The look of a man about to fight. The last look he wanted to see. ‘I know that I can still do this job. I can still do it better than ninety nine per cent of the other guys in this business. Maybe, a few years ago, I could do it better than a hundred per cent of the rest. That doesn’t make me useless. That doesn’t make me some old cripple who needs resting. I can still do this job, and I don’t want you, or anyone else, thinking otherwise. I made a mistake. I’m not stupid enough to think I earned the right to make a mistake. Nobody earns that right – we both know that. Mistakes are usually the end of it for people like me. But I earned the right to prove it was only once. That’s what I reckon.’

Jamieson’s nodding along politely. Heard it all before, old man. This salvo, uncharacteristically effusive from Frank, and sounding off-the-cuff, is so familiar. You hear it every time someone lets you down. The chance to prove it was all a one-off. Ignoring the fact that once is once too many.

You can sweeten a conversation like this all you want; a man like Frank will still see the truth of it. Jamieson understands that.

‘I’m not going to retire you,’ Jamieson’s saying, knowing that’s exactly what he’s about to do. ‘But I think we need to take a look at things. What happened with Scott,’ he’s saying, and pausing, ‘can’t happen again. Calum got you out once, but I won’t send him a second time. That wouldn’t be right.’

Frank’s nodding, he gets it. Jamieson’s admitting that he shouldn’t have sent him the first time. He should have left Frank to die.

‘We need to make sure you don’t get into those circumstances again,’ Jamieson’s saying. He’s talking slowly, and aware of it. Picking every word, sounding unlike himself. ‘I’m not saying that I won’t give you another job, but maybe we need to look at other things you can do. Just for now.’

Frank isn’t reacting. Isn’t saying anything, isn’t nodding along. Frank’s thinking: he’s throwing me overboard, but he’s tying a rope to me, so that I won’t drift far. Neither out nor in.

No-man’s-land. Dangerous, but useless. They don’t want him wandering off into the darkness where they can’t see him, but they don’t want him doing any more jobs he might botch.

‘What sort of other things did you have in mind?’ he’s asking, after a ten-second pause that felt longer.

Jamieson’s shrugging a little. ‘There has to be plenty that a man with your talent and experience can bring. Advice, for one. Helping organize things, I guess. There’s plenty. If I take you off gun jobs, that leaves me with Calum. I don’t know how committed he is yet. You could play a part in helping me with that. I’ll also want someone else on board for cover. I’ll need to find someone worth recruiting. You can definitely help with that.’

Frank still hasn’t reacted. This is all beneath him, and they both know it. He doesn’t want to do the kind of work Jamieson’s suggesting. The kind of work other people can do. Might as well ask him to make cups of tea and wash his fucking car for him.

‘Listen, Frank,’ Jamieson’s saying, leaning across the desk. There’s a pleading tone to his voice. ‘I know things like recruiting are bullshit to you. John can do all that. But I will need you around. I got to stamp on Shug Francis; all this crap with him has gone on a lot longer than it should have. I should have wiped him out inside a month, instead it’s four months and growing. People are talking. I stamp him, and then I make a move. A big move. I need to show people that I still have strength. I need to step it up. I’ll need good people around for that. Hell of a lot of work. I’ll need experience around to help me through that. Key roles, no bullshit.’

He said more than he intended. Telling Frank his plans for the future wasn’t supposed to happen, but it’s out of the bag now. So Frank has to offer some sort of reaction. Jamieson’s said everything he can. It’s now either Frank or silence.

‘Smart move,’ Frank’s saying. ‘Good time to step it up, pick a fight with a bigger organization. Need to pick the right one. I’m sure you’ll have that worked out already, though.’ Agreeing with Jamieson, but not committing to helping him. His tone wasn’t just wary, it was almost dismissive. A tone that suggests he doesn’t want to be involved. Frank didn’t notice that he was giving that much away, but Jamieson did.

‘So what do you think?’ Jamieson’s asking anyway. ‘You think you might have a big role to play in that?’

Frank’s looking him in the eye for just about the first time in the conversation. ‘I suppose I could. The best work I could do would be the work I’ve always done. If that’s not available, then I’ll do the best I can.’

There were a few minutes of chit-chat – nothing either man will remember. Now Frank’s leaving the room. Jamieson’s watching the door close behind him, knowing that John Young will be opening it within the minute. He’ll want to know where they stand. Jamieson’s not in the mood. Young will be cold and analytical. He’ll want detail, he’ll want precision. Jamieson wants a whiskey. He’s opening his drawer, taking out a bottle and a glass. The door’s opening without a knock and Young’s walking across to his couch, noting the bottle and glass. Noting the glass filling three-quarters of the way up.

‘Went that badly, huh,’ he’s saying, after a respectful pause to let Jamieson drink.

‘Yep.’

‘So what now?’

He wants those details that he loves so much. Jamieson’s tapping the top of his desk. It’s not details that he has, it’s a sense. A horrible sense that things are going to change, and that he’s not going to like it.

BOOK: How a Gunman Says Goodbye
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