reared back.
âSorry, Charlie, but you seem a bitââ
âDid you know our roadie is a dealer on the side?â Charlie said. âUppers, downers, blues, speed. Heâs a mobile chemist that lad.â
Hathaway waved the girls away.
âAlan is dealing drugs?â Dan said.
Hathaway turned back but said nothing.
âHeâs a right little wheelerdealer,â Charlie said. âHeâs just told me their roadie is offering us a deal on a hundred-watt Vox amp.â
âHundred watts?â Billy said. âThatâs bloody enormous. And a Vox? We gotta have it.â
âWeâd never get it in the van,â Hathaway said.
Charlie cackled, jerking his body in another weird jig.
âThey use an ice cream van. They nicked the amp from the Ready, Steady, Go studio last week. Itâs got the showâs name plastered all over it.â
âReceiving stolen goods?â Dan said. âWe canât do anything illegal.â
Charlie looked at Hathaway.
âYeah, right.â He cackled again. âThat Alan. His speed is bloody . . . speedy. Talk about m-m-my generation.â
The others all laughed at Charlie, though Dave, Bill and Roy probably shared Hathawayâs concern that a drummer on speed wasnât going to be exactly consistent keeping the beat.
Hathaway met a girl called Ruth that night. She was up for anything. The next day he took her to the open-air swimming pool at Black Rock. He spent time there when he could, usually chatting up girls rather than swimming. It was sheltered by the cliffs, so could be really hot in the sunshine. When he was a kid heâd often played in the rock pools there. Now he made Ruth shudder telling her how the head of the Trunk Murder victim had been found in a rock pool back in 1934.
He was surprised to see his father and Reilly walking around, deep in conversation with another two men. All of them looked overdressed in dark suits.
His father saw him and Ruth in their deckchairs. Ruth was wearing a skimpy bikini and Hathaway saw her self-consciousness as his father stared down at her.
âThe hard life of the working man,â Dennis Hathaway said to his son.
âIâm working tonight,â Hathaway said, getting out of his deckchair and tossing Ruth a towel. He nodded to Reilly. âWhat are you both doing here?â
He drew them away.
âConsidering a bit of business,â Dennis Hathaway said. âWhat do you think about this whole area becoming a marina? Berths for a few thousand boats, an oceanarium, an ice rink, a sports centre, tennis courts, apartments, a hotel, pubs â the works. Even a fishmarket.â
âThe fishmarket doesnât do anything for me but aside from that it sounds great,â Hathaway said. âWeâre involved?â
âWe could be. Iâve got a bit of money lying around. Couple of problems, though. Getting a road in here is tricky. And the porridge makers are being a right pain.â
âPorridge makers?â Hathaway said.
âYeah, the Quakers.â
Hathaway laughed.
âDo they still exist?â
âYou bet.â Dennis Hathaway pointed up at the cliff. âAnd they have a burial plot up near the gasometers. The plan needs that space.â
âThen thereâs the cliff itself,â Reilly said.
âYeah, we canât touch that. Full of fossils, apparently. Dinosaurs and all that.â
âReally?â Hathaway said.
âDonât get overexcited, John. Youâre such a bloody kid. Theyâre in the way, frankly.â
Hathaway gestured around.
âWill this go?â
âInevitably,â his father said. He took Hathawayâs arm. âMe and your mum are off to the theatre tonight.â
âThe Theatre Royal?â
âNah, the Palace Pier. Good bit of cabaret.â He looked over at Ruth. âWant to join us?â
Hathaway shook his head.
âNo, thanks, Dad.
Peter Geye
Louis Shalako
Margaret Wrinkle
Maureen O'Donnell
T. K. Madrid
Hailey Edwards
Heather McVea
Marjorie Farrell
Jeremy Laszlo, Ronnell Porter
Reggie Oliver