do much of a story. He guessed that the woman was going to tell him who had shot her husband and ask him to print it. But it was juries who decided who shot whom, not newspapers. Kevin said: 'Tell me your name, please?'
'Doreen Johnson, five Yew Street, east one. My Willie was shot on this currency job.' The woman's voice cracked. 'He's been blinded.' She started to shout. 'It was a Tony Cox job-so just print that!' The line went dead.
Kevin put the phone down slowly, trying to take it in.
This was turning out to be one hell of a day for phone calls.
He picked up his notebook and went to the news desk.
Arthur said: 'Got something?'
'Don't know,' Kevin told him. 'A woman phoned up. Gave me her name and address. She said her husband was on the currency raid, that he was shot in the face and blinded, and that it was a Tony Cox job.'
Arthur stared. 'Cox?' he said. 'Cox?'
Someone called: 'Arthur!'
Kevin looked up, annoyed at the interruption. The voice belonged to Mervyn Glazier, the paper's City editor, a stocky young man in battered suede shoes and a sweat-stained shirt.
Glazier came nearer and said: 'I may have a story for your pages this afternoon. Possible collapse of a bank. It's called the Cotton Bank of Jamaica, and it's owned by a man called Felix Laski.'
Arthur and Kevin stared at one another.
Arthur said: 'Laski? Laski?'
Kevin said: 'Jesus Christ.'
Arthur frowned, scratched his head, and said wonderingly: 'What the hell is going on?'
24
The blue Morris was still tailing Tony Cox. He spotted it in the car park of the pub when he came out. He hoped they would not play silly buggers and breathalyze him: he had drunk three pints of lager with his smoked- salmon sandwiches.
The detectives pulled out of the exit a few seconds behind the Rolls. Tony was not concerned. He had lost them once today, and he could do it again. The simplest way would have been to find a fast stretch of road and put his foot down. However, he would prefer that they did not know they had lost him, just like this morning.
It would not be difficult.
He crossed the river and entered the West End. As he picked his way through the traffic he wondered about the Old Bill's motives in following him around. It was partly a simple case of making a nuisance of themselves, he was sure. What did the briefs call it? Harassment. They figured that if they tailed him long enough he would get impatient or careless and do something stupid. But that was only the justification: the real motive probably lay in Scotland Yard politics. Perhaps the Assistant Commissioner (Crime) had threatened to take the Tony Cox firm away from C1 and give it to the Flying Squad, so C1 had laid on the surveillance in order to be able to say they were doing something.
So long as they did not get all serious about it, Tony did not mind. They had got serious once, a few years ago. At that time Tony's firm had been under the eagle eye of the CID at West End Central. Tony had had a close understanding with the detective-inspector working on his case. One week the DI had refused his usual money, and warned Tony that the game was over. The only way Tony had been able to square it had been to sacrifice some of his soldiers. He and the DI had set up five middle-management villains on extortion charges. The five had gone to jail, the Press had praised the CID for breaking the gang's hold on London, and business had gone on as usual. Sadly, that DI later went down himself, for planting cannabis on a student: a sorry end to a promising career, Tony felt.
He pulled into a multistory car park in Soho. He paused at the entry, spending a long time taking his ticket from the machine, and watched the blue Morris in his mirrors. One of the detectives jumped out of the car and ran across the road to cover the pedestrian exit. The other found a parking space on a meter a few yards away-a position from which he could see cars coming out of the building. Tony nodded, satisfied.
He drove up to the first floor and stopped the Rolls beside the office. Inside he found a young man he did not know.
He said: 'I'm Tony Cox. I want you to park mine and get me one of your long-stay motors-one that's not likely to be picked up today.'
The man frowned. He had frizzy, untidy hair and oil-stained jeans with frayed bottoms. He said: 'I can't do that, mate.'
Tony tapped his foot impatiently. 'I don't like saying things twice, son. I'm Tony Cox.'
The young man laughed. He stood up, putting down a comic, and said: 'I don't care who you are, you-'
Tony hit him in the stomach. His large fist landed with a soft thump. It was like punching a feather pillow. The attendant doubled over, moaning and gasping for air.
'I'm short of time, boy,' Tony said.
The office door opened. 'What's going on?' An older man in a baseball cap entered. 'Oh, it's you, Tony. Having trouble?'
'Where have you been-smoking in the bog?' Tony said harshly. 'I want a car that can't be traced to me, and I'm in a hurry.'
'No problem,' the older man said. He took a bunch of keys from a hook on the asbestos wall. 'Got a nice Granada, in here for a fortnight. Three-liter automatic, a nice bronze color-'
'I don't give a toss what color it is.' Tony took the keys.
'Over there.' The man pointed. 'I'll park yours.'
Tony went out of the office and got into the Granada. He put on the safety belt and pulled away. He paused beside his own car, which the man in the cap was now sitting in.
'What's your name?' Tony said.
'I'm Davy Brewster, Tony.'
'All right, Davy Brewster.' Tony reached for his wallet and took out two ten-pound notes. 'Make sure the kid keeps his mouth shut, okay?'
'No problem. Thanks very much.' Davy took the money.
Tony pulled away. As he drove, he put on sunglasses and his cloth cap. When he emerged into the street, the blue Morris was away to his right. He put his right elbow on the window ledge, covering his face, and steered with his left hand. The second detective, on Tony's left, had his back to the road so that he could see the pedestrian exit. The man was pretending to look in the window of a religious bookshop.
Tony looked in his mirror as he accelerated away. Neither of them had seen him.
'Easy,' Tony said aloud. He drove south.
The car was quite pleasant, with automatic gears and power-assisted steering. It had a tape deck. Tony sorted through the cassettes, found a Beatles cassette, and put it on. Then he lit a cigar.
In less than an hour he would be at the farm, counting the money.
Felix Laski had been well worth cultivating, Tony thought. They had met in the restaurant of one of Tony's clubs. The Cox casinos served the best food in London. They had to. Tony's motto was: if you serve peanuts, you get monkeys for customers. He wanted rich people in his gambling clubs, not yobboes asking for draft bitter and fivepenny chips. He did not like fancy food himself, but on the night he met Laski he was eating a vast, rare T-bone steak at a table near the financier's.
The chef was pinched from Prunier's. Tony did not know what he did to the steaks, but the result was sensational. The tall, elegant man at the next table had caught his eye: a fine-looking man for his age. He was with a young girl whom Tony instantly marked as a tart.
Tony had finished his steak, and was tucking into a mountain of trifle, when the accident happened. The waiter was serving Laski with canelloni, and somehow a half-full bottle of claret got knocked over. The tart squealed and jumped out of the way, and a few drops of wine spattered Laski's brilliant white shirt.