Vicious
Circle
Danny Gibb had a
U-bend scar on his face that his girl used to like. Said it gave him character.
Made him look hard. But trouble attracts trouble and soon their relationship
was in it. The end came the night he hit his girlfriend for the first and last
time. Hard on the right side of her face which was the wrong side because it
was her good side. He hit her after finding out about
Dr Hambell, who hadn’t always had
letters and women after his name. Sitting in his Harley Street practice,
sipping sherry because he’s got bad news for a man whose skin graft was hard
work and failed to disguise the scars. Drinking because he knows that success
and failure go hand in scalpeled hand. But what the hell? The man’s appointment
isn’t until 10.30 tomorrow morning. Why let that spoil tonight? Enjoy yourself.
Seek sanctuary at the club, talk women and cricket with
Gerry Spavins, who despised Australians
but loved brandy. Shot a day keeps the doctor away. The season starts in April.
The Windies are touring this year. Don’t fancy our chances, old boy. No slouch
with the bat in his day was Gerald. Oxford vice-captain, averaged 43 as an
opener. Career dreams ended by a back injury sustained delivering a stunning
off-break to
George Wallace, wicket-keeper,
teetotaller, Loughborough at the time. Would go on to excel as a botanist until
his death at the hands of a driver drunk on eight pints of Australian lager. A
driver who ploughed into him on a country road near Heathfield, East Sussex as
George examined a species he mistakenly believed to be rare. The jury of eight
men and four women found
Roger Baines guilty, quickly. He served
his time and paid his fine, but never drove again. Caught cabs instead, to and
from the pub where he downed the drinks the night it happened. He liked the
place, no kids, no pool or pinball table. No quiz machine, duke box or women. Just
old friends, pork scratchings and the landlord
David Vine, no relation. Expert
pint-puller, glass-shiner, trouble-shooter. Tell Dave your problem, he’ll give
you an answer and it might not be the one you want to hear. Boxed as a boy in
the rings of East London, did Dave. Nearly made it as a pro until that fateful
night against that dude from Up West. Never bet against the black man they said
and they were right, because
Junior Wright had a right that decked
people. It earned him local fame and small-time fortune. Childhood on the
estates of Hounslow knocked him into shape, quick to get defences up and sharp
to get the right out. Was destined to appear on Sportsnight until he fell for a girl who held up the square round
number cards and walked round the ring with a smile, collecting stares and
wolf-whistles. Short skirts and blonde she was. Strutting, some might say
slutting her stuff. Good enough for page three as well as round three ding
ding, seconds out. Too much, the beautiful temptress for
Warren C, ringside and wasted with his
mates from Bethnal Green. Look at the tits on that. Give me fifty if I get me
‘ands on them? Nods and smiles and go ons and he made a grab for the prize.
Lager had got him thinking he could have her. But little did he know that her
father was near her. Sat in the same seat every fight, keeping two eyes on his
luvly daughter. Before Warren got the chance to lay clammy hands and salivating
lips on her
Charlie the father pounced and had him
pinned to the ground, fist poised to hit face. F-words and C-words raining down
like punches until the knockout blow. The pain came again, shooting up the left
arm and across the chest, doubling old Charlie over, prompting calls for
doctors in houses and screams of women and cries for help that
Julian Thorpe, city boy, fight lover,
quick mover answered. He got to the pay phone first, before the days of
mobiles. He did the free three nine business, and cool as a towel wafting a
face in the corner did what needed to be done. He had money on the fight.
Three-figure sum. Nine nine nine. Easy money, which he had to claim back when
the fight was cancelled. Can’t say he felt disappointed. One of those things,
old chap. He’d make more easy money in the City on the morrow, where he traded
in tailored suits and all-pink or blue striped shirts he always brought from
that first class tailor on Chancery Lane, the one that
Andy Brown tried to rob on another
night when he needed money and knew of a bloke in Barking who was after some
classy clothes like. Did he know anyone who could get hold of a nice drop of
satin, bit posh like? Andy said yeah, course, like, smooth, but he really meant
no. But not wanting to let a mate down, you know, and with a bit of experience
in the breaking and the entering and the taking line of business, nudge nudge,
he decided to do the job himself, and fings was going sweet as like till he was
disturbed by a
PC on patrol. City of London, quiet
night, all the sirens coming from Up West along Holborn. Plodding the deadbeat
as usual. Past the silver vaults, the high class off licences, the legal
offices. Then just saw a trailing black leg and bovver boot disappear through a
window. On to the radio quick, calling for backup. ETA five. Be done and gone
by then so it’s deep breath and in there alone. Torch on, stop police. In the
dark a flash of silver and cutlass motion. The shadow runs with a handful of 16
and a half-inched collars, leaving a U-bend scar for life on the face of PC
Danny Gibb.
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