lost. Thereâs no need for you to be part of this. Iâll get in touch with you as soon as I can.â I gripped his arm and propelled him towards the car trying to look like someone giving and receiving support. âNo fancy ideas either. Just do as I say!â
He nodded, got into the car, started it and edged forward. I went back to the house and no one stopped me from going inside. Annie was lying on the floor in the living room. The telephone, with the receiver off, was buzzing beside her head. She was wearing my towelling dressing gown and nothing else. The dressing gown had fallen open revealing her pubic hair and one small pale breast. Her hairwas wet. The right sleeve of the dressing gown was pushed and rolled up almost to the shoulder. There was an indentation and bruise in the soft flesh above the elbow and a puncture mark in the taut skin just below the crook of her arm.
Sheâd showered and scrubbed her face. With no make-up and the strain gone, with her wet hair drawn back she looked innocent, like one of the young swimming champions of the fifties. I looked at her and tried to figure out how old she was. Twenty something, not twenty-five, not that much.
The cops found the syringe and sachet in the bathroom along with the belt that had been used as a ligature. They put these things in plastic bags and also bagged all the contents of Annieâs pockets. They put her clothes in a bag and they put her in a bag too and took her away. I gave them a statement: when Iâd first met Annie and how; why she was in my house; what sheâd said. I gave them as much of the truth as I could and they appeared to believe me selectively.
The detective in charge, a heavy, thorough type named Simmonds, asked me if there had been any heroin in the house when Iâd left it that morning.
âNo,â I said.
âHow can you be sure?â
âI didnât have any and neither did she. I searched her stuff while she was asleep.â
âSo she went out and scored?â
âOr someone came by.â
âWhich?â
âI donât know.â
His shrug said it all: another dead junkie, who cares? Just as long as she doesnât have a famous nameâas long as she doesnât sing or dance or act and isnât somebody importantâs wife or daughter. Annie was none of those things. Simmonds didnât give me a hard time.
But itâs one thing to walk into a strange house and find a dead junkie and look for the quickest way to file and forget it and another to try to read the signs of what really happened. There were damp patches down the hallway to the front door but none beside the spare bed upstairs where Annie had dumped her clothes. The belt that had bit into her upper arm was hers. Annie had gone to the door after having her shower but she hadnât taken the belt from her pants unless sheâd done it before she went to the door. Why would she? She didnât have any smack.
So someone had given her the smack and fetched the belt for her. A friend? Some friend. I wasnât well up on the price of heroin and it really didnât matter because from the quick look Iâd got at the money the police had bagged it seemed that Annieâs twelve bucks were intact. I was sifting this through when there was a loud knock on the door. Feeling ridiculous, I got the .38 from its hiding place and went to the door. The outline through the misted glass panel was long and slope-shouldered.
âGreenway?â
âYes.â
I opened the door. âI thought I told you to piss off.â
âI did.â He shouldered past me. He was wearing a light cotton jacket over his striped shirt and I could see a bulge in the pocket. The Nomad, no doubt. I waved him on and we went through to the living and eating space at the back of the house.
âI saw them take her out,â he said.
âYeah? Then what did you do?â
âI caught a cab home. He
A Tapestry of Lions (v1.0)