Belgium
By Ed Crane
- 3149 reads
COMING ROUND THE LAST BEND ON THE A2, I get full view of Eastern Docks. The clock on the dash says, 11.21. The sun’s out and the English Channel looks like the Mediterranean. There’s a P&O ferry coming out the harbour, the white top’s bloody dazzling and its wake’s flashing in the sunshine.
The road curves sharply as it drops down from the not so white cliffs of Dover onto the Eastern Docks roundabout. I ease the motor to the right and just about squeeze the bleeder into a parking space outside the booking-hall. I ain’t pleased with the car.
‘It’s too flash,’ I told Harry when I went to pick it up.
‘Jess, if you wear a whistle, the customs won’t bother with a car like this.’
‘I wanted something more low-key. What’s wrong with an Audi or something?’
‘I chose this special. This is a classy car.’
‘Classy? Brassy more like. I can’t afford to stick out. I told you that, Harry.’
‘Listen, mate,’ he said, ‘this is a Chrysler 300SR import. It’s got a bloody great V8 lump, and it’s kosher. I’ll give yer all the papers. You won’t have no trouble.’
‘I don’t care if it’s got a fucking Spitfire engine, it’s too flash. Bloody thing’ll cost a bleedin’ fortune in petrol.’
‘You’ll have a monkey for the juice. That should be enough. It ain’t a jumbo-fuckin-jet.’
I kept looking at this bling-machine and shaking me head.
Harry put his arm around me shoulder. ‘You’ll need respect from those blokes in Antwerp. This car’ll be perfect, trust me, ‘sides it’s a left-hooker, it’ll make driving easier over there.’
‘I don’t need a car to get respect.’
‘Jess. These bastards are tough bleeders.’
I laughed. ‘Tough?’
‘Take the fucking wheels, Jess or I’ll get someone else.’
I looked up at the sky and whistled. He knew I was the only bloke who could do a job like this.
‘Do me a favour, Jess.’
‘ . . . I’m not happy with the jam-jar, Harry.’
THE BOOKING HALL SMELLS OF STALE FOOD AND A THOUSAND SWEATY TOURISTS. Inside there’s the usual white noise of everybody talking at once, punctuated by mothers snapping at their bored kids. After a lungful of piss-stink in the gents, I join the queue at the P&O desk. I buy a one-way ticket to Calais and a Club-Plus upgrade. Cash.
‘Don’t book on-line,’ Harry said – as if I needed bloody telling. ‘Go to the club-lounge its quiet. You can get yer head down. Take one of those priority tickets. They’ll bung the motor right up the front. You’ll be first off and y’won’t get no caravans getting in the fuckin’ way.’
Two hours later, I’m off the The Pride of Burgundy – out the trap like a greyhound at Walthamstow. In less than ten minutes, I’m past the empty police-hut and on the motorway. Harry was right, there weren’t no passport checks in Dover or on the French side. Border controls? Lazy bastards.
Although this car’s a bleeding maniac, I keep to the speed limit. It ain’t long before Brit plates are passing me like I’m standing still. Pricks think they’re immune because they’re in a foreign country. If they wanna get dumped in France with marked car and no fucking driving licence that’s up to them. Last thing I want is problems with the law.
Harry’s arranged a meet at the Antwerp Crown Plaza in the morning, but I’ve got a meet of my own planned for tonight.
Harry don’t understand the technicalities, see. Scaring shit out of people is one thing, but anything permanent: he don’t appreciate the risks. So far it’s been alright, but last time he wanted to send me girls from his one of his clubs as a thank you for doing some pervert who’d been stalking them. . . . Girls from the town where I did the job!
‘Can’t have that,’ I told him. I even threatened him.
Now, he only comes up with this motor don’t he? A bloody pearly-white yank-tank. Might as well stick a fucking sign on the roof saying: dodgy geezer inside. No. Don’t understand the technicalities, does Harry. That’s why the car’s gonna be parked up somewhere quiet – an airport or something – until I’m finished.’
FIRST STOP, VAN DER VALK HOTEL OOSTKAMP, near Bruges, just off the E40 Calais-Brussels motorway. Found it easy, couldn’t miss it really, they’ve got a ten-foot Toucan bolted on the bleeding roof.
‘Bonjour, J'ai une réservation. Jean Luc Compagnon.’
The the girl at the desk nods and starts tapping her key board. ‘Ah . . . em, votre identification s'il vous plaît ?’
I give her my ID card. When she clocks the insigia she colours up.
‘Excusez-moi, monsieur.’ She takes a key off the rack behind her. ‘kamer nummer twee— Pardon, chambre à deux cent quatre-vingt quatre.’
That old legion card works wonders and it ain't even my one.
When I get to my room I have a shower and change into jeans and a t-shirt. I switch on the box and watch some programme on National Geographic about plane crashes and wait.
At exactly six-thirty there’s a knock on the door. I open it. Guido van Ursel’s standing there. He looks straight at me – says nothing.
‘Legio Patria Nostra.’
He smiles. ‘Legio Patria Nostra. Good to see you, Jesse. . . . Shall we go?
Out in the car park, Guido goes over to a grey Peugeot, bloody thing looks the same as a million other cars in Belgium. He spots the Chrysler.
‘Yours?’
‘That’s it.’
‘Be careful, eh.’
‘Yeah I will,’ I say, ‘Harry’s idea. He thinks it’ll get me more respect.’
‘I mean be careful of this Harry, my friend.’
‘That’s why I’m here.’
Guido looks at me sideways. ‘If you are in trouble, Jess, I must leave this hotel alone.’
That pisses me right off. ‘Guido, mate, if you think I’d break, l'accord riprisal, fucking go.’
He gets in his car and closes the door. I’m standing there like a spare prick. After about thirty seconds, he starts the engine and opens the passenger door. I get in, nothing more needs to be said.
Guido takes small roads into the countryside. After, I don’t know how many miles, he pulls over and parks on the verge. We’re surrounded by fields. It’s so flat, if you stood on a chair you’d see twenty miles. There’s not a soul or building in sight. I don’t know why we’ve stopped, but I do know Guido could blow my fucking brains out and be in France before anybody finds my body. I feel like Cary Grant, except the maize is green.
‘Jess,’ he says, ‘you have worked for Harry for quite a while. So . . . why now?’
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Comments
Excellent. Deep and
Excellent. Deep and believable. Can't wait to read more!
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This is excellent writing, Ed
This is excellent writing, Ed. Great, and the pace was spot on. Heart-racingly fast.
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Great voice and dialogue,
Great voice and dialogue, hope there'll be more!
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cracking, sparky stuff, loads
cracking, sparky stuff, loads of personality, much enjoyed reading. would like to read more. dialogue was excellent and part. liked 'After a lungful of piss-stink in the gents'. re: above ^ didnt think there was too many f words at all. great, lively, gritty, pacy read. :-)
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