told me they were violent criminals whose business was supplying the masses with hard drugs, Iâd have no problem pulling the trigger.
I sighed loudly and sat back on the sofa, willing myself to calm down. A serious mistake had been made, there was no denying that. But it had been Raymond who had orchestrated it. What mattered now was that I kept my nerve. Thereâd be a far bigger police operation to find the killers of two hard-working customs officers than there would have been to find the people whoâd put away three low-level gangsters, which meant I was going to have to be extremely careful. I needed to know what it was these customs officers were doing, and who the hell the civilian was who was with them. Armed with that knowledge I could at least work out how how likely it was that the police could get on to Raymond. The whole thing was odd because I didnât think Raymond would ever get himself involved in the type of situation that put him and his business empire at risk. You donât get to his position and stay there by executing representatives of the forces of law and order.
I possess a mobile phone thatâs registered in the name of a man Iâve never met before, and that man always pays the bills. Whenever I need to make contact with Raymond I use that phone, and I used it now.
Unfortunately, it was Luke who answered. Luke is Raymondâs personal assistant and bodyguard. Heâs the strong, silent type who tends to look at you as if youâve just patted his bottom and blown him a kiss; all simmering rage and barely suppressed violence. Legend has it he once broke a love rivalâs legs with his bare hands, and heâs supposedly an expert at some highfalutin martial art whose name I forget. Useful to have around in barroom brawls, but thatâs about it.
âYeah,â he grunted, by way of a greeting.
âItâs Dennis, I need to speak to Raymond.â
âMr Keenâs not available.â
âWhenâs he going to be available?â
âI canât tell you that.â
Conversations with Luke can be frustrating. He always acts like heâs the heavy in a very cheap gangster flick.
âGive him a message. Tell him I need to speak to him urgently. Very urgently. Heâll know what itâs about.â
âIâll let him know you called.â
âDo that. And if I donât hear from him by the end of the morning, then Iâll come looking for him.â
âMr Keen doesnât like threats.â
âIâm not threatening him. Iâm just telling you whatâll happen if I donât hear from him.â
He started to say something else but I didnât bother waiting around to find out what it was. I rang off and put the phone in the pocket of my dressing gown. What a start to the fucking day.
Iâm not a panicker by nature. I can sometimes be thrown off course by a shock, especially a big one, but I can generally pull myself together without too much difficulty. This, though, was different. Not only had I jeopardized my livelihood and freedom, Iâd broken every moral rule Iâve ever made. Iâd killed men who, on the surface of it at least, didnât deserve it.
I went back into the sitting room, located another cigarette and lit it, coughing violently as the smoke charged down my throat. I switched off the Ceefax and aimlessly flicked through the channels.
The phone rang again. The landline, not the mobile. I let it ring. It wouldnât be Raymond, and if it was Danny, I didnât want to talk to him for a while. Not until I had a better idea of what I was going to do. After five rings the answerphone kicked in. My bored voice told the caller I wasnât in but if he left a message with a number and the reason why he was calling me, Iâd get back to him. Or her, I suppose. If my luck was in.
The beep went, then my immediate bossâs voice came on the line. I nearly jumped