The Calling

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Authors: Neil Cross
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Crime
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confused. Henry cuffs him round the face a few times, then tosses him to the floor.
    ‘Just take some of the money,’ he says, ‘and fucking do it.’

 

CHAPTER 8
    Zoe and Mark met just over a year ago. He works for Liberté Sans Frontière; he was her designated liaison on the Munzir Hattem case.
    Mark’s handsome; slightly bohemian in tweed and cords; laid-back and sincere; a little earnest sometimes.
    The fourth time they met, he offered to buy her lunch. They sat somewhere outside, watching people go past.
    She talked about John.
    She always talks about John.
    In the end, Mark gave up and joined in. ‘So how did you two get together?’
    ‘How does anyone get together?’
    ‘I dunno,’ he said. ‘My ex-wife and I were childhood sweethearts.’
    ‘No!’
    ‘Yes!’
    ‘That’s so sweet .’
    ‘We went to primary school together,’ Mark said, ‘Stockwood Vale Primary. Emily Edwards. She had a ponytail. She could climb trees. All of it. The full package.’
    ‘So she was your first and only?’
    ‘Oh, God no. No, no, no. We went out for about, I don’t know, three years? Four years? Split up when sixth form came along. She got a bit political. Ban the Bomb, Socialist Workers. Greenham Common.’
    He laughed to remember it.
    A flicker of shared sadness passed between them. Zoe wanted to reach out and touch the back of his hand, to give comfort and to take it.
    Instead, she flicked back her hair, stirred her latte. ‘So what happened?’
    ‘Oh, we met again. This is years later. By coincidence really, some New Year’s Eve bash in Brighton. And when we saw each other it was just like old times. She’d gone through her phase and out the other side. And I’d gone through mine.’
    ‘And what phase is this?’
    He shrugged, sheepish. ‘Echo and the Bunnymen, basically.’
    ‘Echo and the what now?’
    ‘Bunnymen. You don’t know the Bunnymen?’
    ‘To my knowledge, I’ve never even set eyes on a Bunny Man.’
    ‘You ever hear of Eric’s?’
    ‘No.’
    ‘It was a club,’ he said. ‘In Liverpool, this was. Elvis Costello, I saw him there. The Clash. Joy Division. The Banshees. The Buzzcocks. You never heard of the Buzzcocks?’
    She shook her head.
    He sang her a few bars of ‘Ever Fallen in Love With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve’ .
    Realizing, he trailed off. There was an awkward moment.
    ‘It’s a good song,’ he said.
    Zoe got the bill and they stepped into the autumn, bundled up in their coats.
    Mark said, ‘I don’t feel like going back yet.’
    She said, ‘Nor me.’
    So they walked to the park, found a bench and sat down. She perched on the edge, spine straight. Mark sprawled, took tobacco from a flat tin in his pocket and began to roll a cigarette. ‘Do you mind?’
    ‘Not at all. Blow the smoke my way.’
    ‘You a smoker?’
    ‘Occasional.’
    ‘I can roll you one, if you like.’
    They sat in silence while he rolled her a cigarette, then passed it to her. She placed it in her mouth. The faint burn of unlit tobacco.
    He produced a lighter and she leaned into him, smelling him, then sat back, puffing on her first roll-up since she was a student. She liked the taste and the smell of it, wondered how it went with these clothes, these shoes, this hair.
    ‘So how long did it last?’ she said, picking a thread of tobacco from the tip of her tongue, aware that he was watching her do it.
    ‘What, me and Emily? Eleven years, all in.’
    ‘Kids?’
    ‘There’s Stephen. He’s sixteen. Chloe’s nine. They live with their mum. You?’
    ‘Me and John? God, no.’
    ‘What does that mean?’
    ‘What does what mean?’
    ‘That tone.’
    ‘I don’t know. Did I use a tone?’
    ‘You definitely did. There was definitely a tone in use.’
    She snorted, then covered her nose with the back of her hand, embarrassed. Mark was grinning at her.
    She said, ‘The thought of it. Me and John with kids.’
    ‘What’s so mad about that?’
    ‘We agreed not to. Back when we were kids

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