E-Book, Englisch, Band 6, 224 Seiten
Reihe: A Nick Sharman Novel
Timlin Zip Gun Boogie
1. Auflage 2014
ISBN: 978-1-84344-274-5
Verlag: No Exit Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, Band 6, 224 Seiten
Reihe: A Nick Sharman Novel
ISBN: 978-1-84344-274-5
Verlag: No Exit Press
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
In over twenty years as an author, Mark Timlin has written some thirty novels under many different names, including best selling books as Lee Martin, innumerable short stories, an anthology and numerous articles on diverse subjects for various newspapers and magazines.
Autoren/Hrsg.
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2
The hotel was located in a leafy avenue in Knightsbridge. There are still quite a few if you know where to look. It appeared to consist of a whole block of tall terraced town houses knocked into one. It had a new, green-tiled roof, the bricks had been scrubbed clean, and the paintwork sparkled in the sun. I drove slowly past the front entrance at 2.45 that afternoon. There was a gent in a brown uniform dripping with gold braid and wearing a brown top hat standing by the revolving door at the top of the stone steps that led up from the pavement. I kept going until I saw an illuminated sign that read: hotel parking, and an arrow that pointed to an arched alleyway that cut right through the hotel and must have been used for carriages in the old days. Twin iron gates had been pulled back to allow entry.
I turned slowly into the whitewashed tunnel and the exhaust of the Jaguar boomed in its confines. The tunnel opened into a cobbled mews that ran parallel to the avenue. There was another sign that directed me to turn left along the mews. I passed between the back of the hotel, scarred with black-painted fire escapes and water pipes, and the front of half a dozen bijou residences that had once been stables and were now pied-à-terres with brightly painted doors and shiny-leafed shrubs in tubs outside them.
I braked to a halt in front of a metal barrier that broke a link fence topped with razor wire. On the left of the barrier was a small, half-glassed booth. Inside was a black guy in a brown uniform complete with peaked cap. He was leaning against the back wall, looking bored. Outside stood two big white geezers in lounge suits. One held a clipboard. The one with the board said something to the other, who was carrying a portable phone, and walked through the narrow gap between the barrier and the fence and up to the driver’s window of my car. I lowered the window all the way. There was a name tag clipped to the lapel of his suit. Under a multi-coloured logo that read ‘Premiere Security’ was typewritten ‘Jack’.
‘May I help you, sir?’
‘I’m here to see Roger Lomax.’
‘Your name, please?’
‘Sharman. Nick Sharman.’
Jack consulted the clipboard. ‘Have you any ID, sir?’
I passed him my driver’s licence and he read it without moving his lips and handed it back. He glanced down at the paper on his board and walked around the front of the car to check the registration.
‘Fine, Mr Sharman,’ he said. ‘Drive straight in, across the courtyard and down the ramp. Park on the first level, please. Go through the fire door and someone will take you to Mr Lomax.’
‘Thank you.’
He signalled to the black guy who pushed a button and the barrier lifted. I engaged low drive and the car bumped across the ramp between cobbles and concrete, slid smoothly across the courtyard, through an entrance two car widths wide, and into a sodium-lit tunnel that dropped sharply away in front of the bonnet of the car. The tunnel was neatly divided in two by a kerbstone set into the middle of the road. On my side, large white arrows pointed downwards; on the other side, the reverse. I let the Jaguar coast until the road levelled and a sign above me read: level one. I found an empty space and parked.
I switched off the engine and all I could hear was my own blood pounding through my head and the ticking of the engine as it began to cool. I opened the driver’s door and stepped into chilly air that smelled of oil and petrol and cellulose. There was an orange exit sign above a grey-painted fire door about fifteen yards from where I’d stopped. I locked the door and dropped the keys into my pocket and looked at the six cars in the parking bays adjacent to mine. Six white Porsche 911 SE cabriolets, each one with a cream soft top. Beautiful. I figured there was close on half a million quid’s worth of automobiles parked there. And the numberplates were PB 1 to 6 inclusive. Not a bad life, I thought, being a rock star. Mind you, I wouldn’t have swapped any of them for my E-Type, old as it was.
As I stood there looking, the door under the sign burst open and two men and a woman came into the parking garage. One of the men was short, in his mid-forties, dressed in denim jeans and shirt, scuffed baseball boots, a down-filled waistcoat and a blue baseball cap, with NY printed on the front in yellow. Thin salt and pepper hair sprouted from under the cap, and down below his shoulders. The man with him wore a lounge suit like the guys on the gate. He looked like them too, but sans name plate. The woman was tall and blonde, about thirty and pretty good-looking under the artificial light. She was dressed in a short, spangled, red evening dress, even at that early hour. It was cut low at the back and front and exposed a mile of tanned flesh. The geezer in denim made straight for my car. ‘Great motor,’ he said. His accent was English tinged with American, just like Roger Lomax’s. ‘Want to sell it?’
‘No.’
‘Go on, you gotta. I’ll give you twenty grand.’
‘No.’
‘What do you mean, no?’ He sounded like someone who was used to having his every wish fulfilled. ‘Thirty.’
‘No,’ I said again.
‘Tell him, Pat,’ the guy in denim said to his male companion.
His companion shrugged, and I almost heard his muscles creak.
‘It’s up to him,’ he said. ‘It’s his car.’
‘Fifty grand,’ said the guy in denim.
That was so far over market value as to be a joke. ‘No,’ I said. ‘And I’m late. Thanks for the offer.’ I body swerved around the trio and made for the door. I pulled it open and two more huge geezers were standing in the tiny foyer. Again, both were wearing name tags. This time the portable phone was lying on a chair next to the lift door. The smaller of the two men held a clipboard. His tag read: ‘Ronnie’.
‘Sir?’ he said.
‘Nick Sharman to see Roger Lomax. I’ve an appointment with him at three.’
Ronnie didn’t have to consult his clipboard. Apparently the word was out. ‘Yes, Mr Sharman,’ he said. ‘Are you armed?’
‘No,’ I said back, and I wasn’t.
‘You won’t mind if we check?’
I did, but I knew I wouldn’t get past these two if I said no.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘Go ahead.’
The bigger of the two, who was extremely big, believe me, and whose name tag read ‘Big Phil’ just to drive the point home, gave me a quick and thorough search. He shook his head at his partner. ‘Thank you, Mr Sharman,’ said Ronnie. ‘My colleague will show you the way.’
So that’s what they called them now.
Big Phil pressed the button to summon the lift and the door opened immediately. ‘This way,’ he said and ushered me inside. It had recently been swept and sprayed with perfume. It was a bit different to most car-park lifts. My guide pressed the button marked 1, and the lift sped upwards. He aimed his stare at a spot two feet below the top of the lift door and kept it there. I stood behind him and aimed my stare at the suppurating boil between his hair-line and his stiff white collar and kept it there. I can play tough too. We were both silent during the short journey.
A bell rang, and the lift doors opened on the first floor as bidden. Big Phil stood to one side to let me out first. I found myself in a vaulted hall tastefully furnished in what was supposed to be Chippendale but probably wasn’t. The hall walls and ceiling were painted dusty pink and carpeted with a matching shag pile that was so thick it could have concealed a machine-gun nest. Big Phil walked me across the carpet to double doors with a discreet sign reading: bar.
‘Mr Lomax is waiting for you inside,’ he said and pushed the doors open for me. I entered but he didn’t follow. The room was in almost complete darkness. The only illumination was the oasis of light that was the bar itself. Behind it two barmen were conversing in muted tones, both polishing already gleaming glasses. Hidden speakers were playing Verdi at a volume so low as to be almost inaudible. I always reckon you get the muzak you pay for. I walked through the darkness and approached the bar. ‘Mr Lomax?’ I said with a question mark attached.
The taller of the barmen said, ‘On the upper level, sir, in the first booth.’ He pointed with one hand and I turned and allowed my eyes to get accustomed to the twilight and squinted in the direction he’d indicated. The bar area, which was huge and empty, was lined with screened-off booths. Tables and chairs were spaced across the floor just far enough apart for privacy. In the far corner of the room a pair of dark wood steps led to an area that resembled a large stage. At the back of the raised area were three more booths. The interior of the right-hand booth suddenly flared with light as whoever was sitting there struck a match and lit a cigarette. Roger Lomax I presumed and surfed across more shag pile, this time of a much darker shade, up the steps and across to the...




