The Crooked Bullet - Rotimi Ogunjobi 4 стр.


Jay Winch had been a lucky find the next day. Jay, a software guy, was going off to do some better-paying gig in Chicago or wherever and needed someone to mind his flat for a couple of years. So with no reference and without a deposit, Frank had quite impossibly found himself the proud tenant of a two-bedroom flat in Hackney. The next day he called Nancy and quite maliciously told her how much he wished her and Thomas Pawney a miserable lifetime and a house full of retarded children together.

But somehow and quite impossibly Nancy Hughes had shown up at a rave party at Dalston a few weeks back, without her Thomas Pawney. Nancy had come along with two plump Scottish girls on a suicide mission from Glasgow, and who had spent the entire night knocking down Vodka shots, and the rest of the early morning vomiting them up on the sidewalk.

What happened to Thomas Pawney? Frank found a minute to ask Nancy during the night.

Not my type, he wanted to marry me, Nancy told Frank; leaving him with the conviction that most women are mad?

Thought that was what you wanted, Frank reminded her.

Yes with you maybe; not with Thomas Pawney. I dont love him, she ruefully smiled. Being afraid of what was coming up Frank took off but not quickly enough to prevent Nancy from getting his phone number. He now ruefully regretted he had not given her a wrong number.

And so, there on my phone was Nancy for the umpteenth time in a month asking him to return her call.

Lester was watching the television with Maureen since no other customer was yet about. They were watching a football match between Liverpool FC and Arsenal. Lester normally looked to Frank as a hopeless case in his plaid apron, but today Lester really did strike him differently and invoked respect. At least Lester had a job going for him.

You done guv? Lester asked. Frank gave him the OK sign, took out the money from his wallet, and bailed himself from the Hard Luck Cafe.

CHAPTER 4

Frank found Eagle Detective Training Institute on the second floor of the mall at Elephant and Castle. It was a sparsely furnished small office, with only one desk, behind which he found Mandy seated, quite engrossed with her OK magazine. An ornately framed black and white portrait of a distinguished-looking gentleman with handlebar mustache supervised his discussion with the giggly Mandy, who was the o.

I called you about one hour ago about the detective course, Frank explained to her.

Yes, you did. It is, of course, a home study course, and it normally costs four hundred pounds, but you can buy for only two hundred and forty-nine pounds and ninety-nine pence at the discount price if you buy today. , Mandy went straight to business.

Thats a lot of money, is there an installment payment option? Frank asked.

No, unfortunately. Its a bargain though, and there is a certificate inside the package. After you are done with your studying you just print your name on the certificate put it in a frame and hang it in your office to prove that you are a real detective, Mandy actually failed to see how ridiculous she sounded. She went into a store behind the office, came out with a box which she placed on the table in front of Frank.

Heck, I cant read all this, Frank told her. Mandy shrugged her shoulder.

In any case for ninety-nine pounds extra you could purchase the entire courses recorded on CDs and listen to be trained as a detective, she advised.

That sounds better. Okay, I will just have the CDs then. Frank happily offered. Mandy firmly shook her head.

No, the CDs must be bought together with the books, not alone. Dont be lazy with your studies; it is not easy to become a detective you know. she playfully scolded.

Thats a lot of money, Frank scratched his head thoughtfully.

Well, the advertisement did say that you could actually earn a hundred quid per hour as a private detective so this is cheap. You get all your money back in four hours. Mandy shrugged and giggled some more.

The man in the portrait appeared to glare at him with much disapproval. Frank handed his bank card to Mandy for payment. Mandy was glad to pass Franks card through a processing machine which dutifully deducted three hundred and forty pounds from his bank account. Mandy cheerfully wrote him a receipt.

Who is the bloke in the picture? Is that the owner of this business? Out of curiosity, he pointed to the portrait.

I dont know; I met him here, Mandy replied, returning to reading her OK Magazine.

Frank left Eagle Detective Training. He checked his phone again and found that he had another missed call. He called his voicemail; Nancy had left another message. Frank grimaced.

Lugging the parcel home took all the energy out of him. Nevertheless, back at home, he ripped open the seal of one of the boxes. He popped one of the CDs into a portable player. It was topic number two of the detective course and the title from the cover said: Tracing Missing Persons. Frank thought this could be the most interesting part of the entire course. He grimaced at the badly recorded voice of the instructor, who had obviously been reading from the course notes. He sat on the couch to listen nonetheless and was soon lulled to sleep.

When he woke up, it was around six oclock in the evening. Taking a quick shower, he decided to visit his girlfriend. He took a bus for Stratford Station, and at the station, exit bought a bunch of flowers, and walked up to a nearby block of flats. He took the lift to the second floor and pressed the bell at the second door to the right of the lift, which was where Sade Leigh lived Hers was a two-room job, a room of which she had converted into a garment design studio. Sade was a vivacious Nigerian dressmaker, with a very colorful taste, in clothes. Frank would often wonder what she admired in him since they seemed exactly opposite in almost every way.


Vegetables again, Sade groaned, taking the bouquet Frank had brought and putting it in a vase.

They arent vegetables honey, they are the best. They cost me a bunch at the station. Frank laughed.

Pity you cant eat them, which is even worse than paying so much of good money for a bunch of vegetables, Sade playfully nagged.

Oh, you impossible witch, Frank contrived an agonized groan.

Yes, Im now going to cast a spell on you and make you take me to dinner, Sade purred.

Yes, yes o wicked witch, I am under your evil spell. I will take you to dinner. Frank agreed with her.

A great film was showing that night at the Stratford cinema, and they decided to watch the film first, after which they went to Nandos; just a stone throw away. Sitting at a feast of flame-grilled chicken and baked potatoes, Frank had more than a bit of update for Sade.

You mean you were arrested for a bank robbery? Sade was incredulous.

Yes, my dear, I knocked off a high street bank all by myself and the police let me off on good behavior, Frank told her.

And before that, you lost your job; so how are you going to survive Frank? Not by weekend party gigs obviously.

Not enough to sustain me honey; and I couldnt certainly afford you by doing weekend party gigs. he laughed

So what are your plans, Frank? Sade sounded genuinely worried for him.

I was coming to that. Today I bought a detective course. I found that working as a detective isnt quite different from what I did as a journalist and it certainly looks like you could make a lot more in that business. Do you know that people actually fork out as much as a hundred and fifty pounds an hour to get a private detective? Frank told her.

And before that, you lost your job; so how are you going to survive Frank? Not by weekend party gigs obviously.

Not enough to sustain me honey; and I couldnt certainly afford you by doing weekend party gigs. he laughed

So what are your plans, Frank? Sade sounded genuinely worried for him.

I was coming to that. Today I bought a detective course. I found that working as a detective isnt quite different from what I did as a journalist and it certainly looks like you could make a lot more in that business. Do you know that people actually fork out as much as a hundred and fifty pounds an hour to get a private detective? Frank told her.

Wow! Sade sounded full of suspicion. A hundred pounds an hour? I dont believe that.

Better believe, because its true. So I am going to start building myself a new and enduring profession honey.

So what are you going to call yourself? What is your...erm.... handle going to be like?

Handle? I am not a mug, sister

You are a really smart dummy you know; what are you going to call yourself? Under what handle will you be working ...Sam SpadeColin Fetchit..? What is it going to be like? I personally am not going to employ Frank ODwyer to find even a lost cat., Sade was sincere.

Yeah, youve got a point there. I was thinking something like Frank Xero.

Xero? That sounds awful

No, it doesnt. Like a private investigator zeroes in on a crime and gets it solved real quick; Gerrit?

Well, its your business, not mine. It still sounds like a photocopy shop to me, like Xerox. Are you sure you arent going to get sued by some of these business creeps in black suits?

Never worry Sade. On the positive side, it is going to make me easy to remember.

No its crappy, and I dont like it Sade confessed Try something more sensible like Frank Wire. It is also easy to remember I think. And it sounds rather cool. Like you are the new British werewolf Frank Wire by day, MC Wire by night, she giggled.

Hey what will I do without you, o witch Frank nipped her ear with his teeth.

Dont Snoop Dog me dude; not here Sade pushed him away. I think you are forgetting something though. Dont you need a license for this?

Not as far as I know, Frank told her. He had indeed checked earlier on his computer. Anyone with the wish could become a private detective.

Sade had updates of her own.

I am happy for you then, and I hope you make a lot of money. I am participating in a fashion exhibition at the Barbican in a couple of weeks. It is an ethnic fashion show; I am so excited about the opportunity, Frank. It would be nice to have my designs break the ethnic barrier though. I am wishing for good contacts at the event, she told him.

I love your designs SADE, especially the Dashiki tops. Trevor absolutely loves them too. I hope you are going to have a lot of them on display. Very nice to wear in summer. Frank encouraged.

Yes, you both put a lot of business my way. I think it is time for me to break the ethnic barrier and something tells me the Barbican exhibition is going to be it, for me. , Sade was full of hopes.

Go for it then, girl. Youve got awesome talent in that lovely head of yours, and it is time for you to really make it big. Frank kissed her on the cheek. Sade put her arms around him.

Its not only about the money though. I am proud of where I came from, and I would wish to change some unfortunate mindsets along the way. I aim to have elegant girls black and white, modeling exquisite Yoruba fashion as youve never seen before. For me, this will not be just another clothing exhibition; I want it to be a major cultural statement. Sade said.

I believe you, honey. I am sure one day; you will make a statement that will be heard and remembered all over the world. Frank said to her.

Together they went to the Sainsburys supermarket for a couple of bottles of wine for the night..

CHAPTER 5

There had been more robberies than the bank job as Frank learned from the East End Mirror. A headline read:

CAMCORDER ROBBERS STRIKE AGAIN.

Pretty small-time stuff all the robberies had been but done in the same insanely ridiculous way. A jewelry shop near Eastham got hit; they even did a pizza shop. The thought made Frank chuckle. A pizza shop getting knocked off; certainly looked very desperate to him. Somehow these stories could only be found in the East End Mirror, which Frank still dutifully read every day primarily in the hope that one day, the front page would contain a goodbye message announcing the demise of the newspaper, preferably due to the death of the proprietor, Spencer Cowley. Frank longed to be able to get rid of that dangling piece of his life to see Spencer Cowley punished as the architect of his current unemployment situation.

But this never happened and the East End Mirror kept on. In any case, as Frank would wonder, East End Mirror was the only paper that reported these robberies, which gave the suspicion that something shady was afoot. Frank wondered whether Fernandez had at last strayed off the straight and narrow. But heck, the East End Mirror really wasnt his responsibility anymore. He didnt have a job with the East End Mirror anymore and therefore no business poking his nose into whatever went on there.

His payoff had dwindled very fast with bills knocking on his door daily. He had for a while swallowed his pride and tried a couple of those jobs he had previously rejected at the Jobcentre.

Frank tried the parking attendant job first, and it didnt last two weeks. He had quickly come in contact with some of the ugliest human beings in the world.

I know where you live, a huge bricklayer had one afternoon told Frank as he snatched the ticket off his van, which had exceeded its time at a meter near Trinity Square Garden. The errant bricklayers tree trunk size arms were covered with colorful serpent tattoos, and with a finger drawn menacingly across his throat, he emphasized his threat to Frank. The threat looked serious enough, but Frank wasnt going to make him believe that he was scared, so he flipped the man his middle finger, from twenty yards away, satisfied to see his jaw drop in both surprise and anger. Frank could feel the heat of the fellows anger on him till he turned a corner into another street, and off to hand in his uniform and equipment. He certainly couldnt risk coming back here anymore.

Next, he took an easier job as a security guard at the local Tesco. It was a relatively easier beat, and Frank was stationed near the liquor shelves of the supermarket. It suggested that a lot of booze got stolen in these places, Frank would initially think. He also thought what a waste of time and money his mission was because any theft would occur between the innocent removal from the shelf and the dishonest non-payment at the check-out counter; the stolen item having disappeared in-between, into a large pocket or into an old lad ladys bag. It was a drudge job. He thought to give the Warden job at the underground a try next; at least he would get some fresh air all day. He now had a job again and could afford not to worry about many of his regular bills, but again he had this awful feeling that his life was again definitely going down the drain.

He got a call on his phone mid-day one extremely depressing Monday.

Is this Frank Wire? a husky voice came to him. Frank was initially confused. Then he remembered that he had paid for a classified advertisement to run in the Loot advertisement pages, and yes he was indeed the one advertised as Frank Wire, private detective.

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