Colours of the Underground
By John Barber
()
About this ebook
A body is found in the English market town of Rutherford on a patch of waste land between a housing estate and the bypass. Detective Inspector Steve Winwood has one piece of good news in that the body is identified as Bill Gibson, a freelance artist from a town about twenty miles distant. There are no clues as to how or why Gibson was dumped there. The waste land soon becomes the centre of conflict between property developers and those that want the town to remain as it is. Winwood’s investigations are linked with those of local reporter Tony Meehan. Corruption in the local Council is at the centre of enquiries which are complicated with the suspicious death of a taxi driver who is linked with Gibson. The Green Man pub becomes the battleground as the Underground slowly reveal themselves as the only group that can stop the town centre being demolished to make way for a new shopping complex.
John Barber
John Barber was born in London at the height of the UK Post War baby boom. The Education Act of 1944 saw great changes in the way the nation was taught; the main one being that all children stayed at school until the age of 15 (later increased to 16). For the first time working class children were able to reach higher levels of academic study and the opportunity to gain further educational qualifications at University.This explosion in education brought forth a new aspirational middle class; others remained true to their working class roots. The author belongs somewhere between the two. Many of the author’s main characters have their genesis in this educational revolution. Their dialogue though idiosyncratic can normally be understood but like all working class speech it is liberally sprinkled with strange boyhood phrases and a passing nod to cockney rhyming slang.John Barber’s novels are set in fictional English towns where sexual intrigue and political in-fighting is rife beneath a pleasant, small town veneer of respectability.They fall within the cozy, traditional British detective sections of mystery fiction.He has been writing professionally since 1996 when he began to contribute articles to magazines on social and local history. His first published book in 2002 was a non-fiction work entitled The Camden Town Murder which investigated a famous murder mystery of 1907 and names the killer. This is still available in softback and as an ebook, although not available from SmashwordsJohn Barber had careers in Advertising, International Banking and the Wine Industry before becoming Town Centre Manager in his home town of Hertford. He is now retired and lives with his wife and two cats on an island in the middle of Hertford and spends his time between local community projects and writing further novels.
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Colours of the Underground - John Barber
Colours of the Underground
By John Barber
Second Edition
Copyright 2020 John Barber
Smashwords Edition
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction.
Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner.
Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Chapter 1 – The Green Man
Anyone who has travelled around England would recognise Rutherford as a traditional market town. Town centre buildings constructed during the sixteenth century onwards that appeared virtually unspoilt on the outside, had all but lost their historic interiors to modern commercial development
One such example was the Corn Exchange, an eighteenth century Georgian building. This is now home to the Head Office of the Rutherford Echo Group of Newspapers which shared desks, a computer network and occasionally journalists amongst the local daily and weekly publications.
At the end of the morning’s editorial briefing two staff remained; Brian Bennett the editor-in-chief and Tony Meehan the chief reporter for the Rutherford area. They sat opposite each other across Brian’s cluttered desk.
The two sat swilling warm coffee around the bottom of their mugs. Brian was by far the larger of the two. He insisted that this sudden explosion in weight was due to being tied to an office desk. Others recognised it as years of heavy drinking finally catching up with him. The tiny scratches and abrasions on his face caused by a blunt razor were left untreated and his chin rested on a comfortable layer of fat around his shirt collar.
"This is a group of people friendly titles Tony. We do what the owner says. We do local people rescuing drowning dogs, schools sending pupils to do good deeds overseas, retired railwaymen winning cups for converting derelict stations into a likeness of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. Our readers like that sort of thing. It makes them feel warm inside; like a cup of hot soup on a cold day.
"We do not do politicians granting planning applications in return for bungs, so called respectable businessmen running pornographic web sites or small time gangsters turning up dead on our doorstep. We might do serious if it happened. It doesn’t.
"Don’t waste your time trying to look for it because it isn’t there. If you happen to stumble on something then I’ll give you the front page gladly and you’ll be on the yellow brick road down to Wapping before the ink’s dry. In the meantime stick with grannies getting their hundred candles on a cake from the local baker.
People like to read stories like that; they buy the paper to see themselves and their loved ones in full colour on the front page. If they want scandal they can read the dailies or watch the soaps; there’s plenty of depression there.
About these phone calls?
Tony Meehan hardly had time to expand on his question before Brian interrupted him.
Cranks, Tony. Go and talk to a few of them if you must. But you and I both know they’ll turn out to have been on the drink all night and seeing things that aren’t there because they’ve topped up the booze by smoking an illegal substance readily available in any of the town’s less respectable hostelries. I’ll look at what you dig up and try and find a few paragraphs on page ten.
Brian had completed the circuit of the group’s newspaper titles. He had started as a junior on the local paper, moved to one of the bigger regional dailies, become editor and now Editor-in-Chief back where he started at the Rutherford Echo. Tony was just beginning this adventure.
Now at twenty nine the awkward frame of a gangling teenager had become stronger and muscular and even suits from the cheaper discount stores looked good on him. He always dressed well; preferring a suit, shirt and tie as it lent a professional touch to his career.
The gawkish, intellectual demeanour of the college student, more inclined to study than spend time in the bars and clubs had also faded to present to the world a self possessed young man with an easy tongue and a ready ear.
Small towns take a little time to accept newcomers and it was a measure of the respect in which he was held that businesses were willing to speak to him on local matters; and residents trusted him not to thrust them into the bear pit of scurrilous tittle-tattle.
He had recently moved to Rutherford and missed the buzz of modern bars that abounded in city centres where he had been sent to learn his trade. The slow moving market town ambience of Rutherford did not immediately attract him.
It was established on a Roman road. In past times travellers could disembark and enjoy a pie and a pint in one of the many coaching inns whilst the horses were refreshed. Then it was back into the carriage and the unmade and rutted highway.
Twentieth century travel meant new roads and electrification of the railway line which meant faster journey times to the centres of employment. The pinnacle of road building had brought with it the Rutherford bypass which took away the heavy vehicles and with them the vibrations and poundings that they inflicted on the historic market town architecture.
The thirteenth century market square remains; surrounded on all four sides by rows of shops, offices and bars. Market Square is the venue for the twice weekly market on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Shoppers can enjoy a drink or a light meal outside, seated at tables and chairs provided by many of the coffee houses and refurbished bars that were once hardware stores or fruit and vegetable shops.
For such a relatively small population it had a large number of traditional pubs which remained almost as they had been since the dawn of time, such as the Fleetwood Arms Hotel. And the Green Man.
The Green Man had two bars either side of the giant oak front doors that were always open during licensed hours. Just inside them were two traditional painted wooden doors with square window panes in the top half.
On the left was a smaller bar which over the years had been known as a snug, cocktail bar, family room and now returned to its former glory as a bar for groups of regulars who all knew each other and as such excluded any newcomer by erecting a natural barrier built of their own parochial gossip..
The longer right hand side bar started as a wide seated area but as fireplaces, stairwells and bar extensions had been added over the course of its four hundred year history, tapered into a much slimmer version up to the back door. This had been permanently shut and an extra table and benches put in its place. The side door now led to the garden and the sheltered smoking area.
Tony Meehan walked into the right hand bar. He hardly needed to speak for as he entered a pint of his favourite bitter was being poured into a glass.
Thanks Kerry.
The raven haired barmaid with the ample breasts and wide rear smiled and took his money. Behind her amidst the Island malts and VSOP brandies was a photo of her receiving the ‘Barmaid of the Year Award’. She was smiling at the camera; the marketing director of the Redbourne Brewery was on one side and the Chairman on the other, caught with his eyes looking downwards at the trophy held between her generous cleavage.
Tony turned around to look for an empty seat. Over here,
said the occupant of the threadbare but strangely comfortable large padded chair at the head of a long table.
Morning Bob,
said Tony and sat down on one of the more normal high backed pub chairs with a cushion flattened by the backsides of generations of drinkers.
Most of Bob’s wardrobe had seen better days. It was still of the best quality but bore the scars of too many trips to the dry cleaners. He was not of a remarkable build but his face bore testimony to his love of strong red wine with a slightly bulbous nose and fleshy folds on his cheeks. It was a well worn face underneath a head of grey hair that could do with being cut a bit more often.
Anything new in the life of the small town reporter this morning?
Nothing that is going to make the front page.
I have nothing for you either,
replied his drinking partner. He sipped at his glass of red wine.
Or at least nothing that has not already been sent to your office by the politburo.
Councillor Robert Ball was known to his colleagues and enemies alike as ‘Bouncing Bob’ owing to his ability to recover quickly from his frequent public faux pas. Although the longest serving District Councillor he rarely exhibited much warmth or respect to that institution.
He drained the last of his wine and smiled at Kerry. A large glass of house red was soon sitting on the bar’s polished wooden surface. Tony got up and handed it to Bob.
Thank you old boy. I was hoping the lovely Kerry would have brought it over. It’s the small things in life that brighten up my days.
She’d give you a heart attack Bob.
What a way to go. On my last check-up my GP informed me that a glass of red wine every day was good for the heart.
One glass and a small one. Not a bottle.
Never could do things by halves old boy.
It’s a bit early for you.
I’m carrying out my Leader’s instructions. She has decided as you are aware to streamline the Council’s working practices. No longer will our little band of hard working Councillors be welcome at the House of Fun. Our private rooms have been lost to the proles who have now been centralised and moved from all their little dens scattered around the county’s rural backwaters to the splendour of a modern Council office complex.
And where will you be meeting with your constituents now?
It is a new concept on me called ‘hot-desking’. We have common areas and instead of sitting in our well-appointed individual offices with tea making machines and packets of stale garibaldi biscuits in cellophane wrappers, we have to log in at reception and find if a meeting room is free.
And if there isn’t?
We have to take a raffle ticket from reception and wait our turn. And then inform the voting public at what time and day we will be available.
This is hardly public friendly.
I have decided after much soul searching that our Leader is right; it helps maintain a respectable distance from the great unwashed. Hopefully they will grow tired of waiting around for a sensible solution to sewage surging through knackered manhole covers, or their neighbour’s twenty foot high leylandii cutting out their natural light and resolve it themselves; thus saving the Council further expenditure on an ever increasing sub-contracted workforce.
I understand that everything is contracted out now anyway.
You are so right old boy. Only the cheapest will survive Tony. Get three quotes; give it to the cheapest and to hell with doing a good job. But it helps to balance the budget.
Isn’t it the opposition’s role to object to cost cutting?
There is no opposition. You will find that in small towns like this there is the local mafia on one side who like to control things so that nothing ever changes, and a less visible underground on the other who have no hope of changing anything.
And who might the underground be?
I don’t know Tony. Many of them do not know of its existence either. One day you say or do something and you meet a like minded lonely soul. Most of the time you stumble around in the dark. But they’re out there, scraping and chipping away at the cracks in the establishment, waiting like all optimists for the pillars that hold it up to fall away.
What about the mafia? I presume you do not mean families of Italian extraction given over to pizzas and settling disputes with a machine gun.
They would if they could Tony. They are a strange bunch. They make no attempt at disguising their allegiances. They are the senior party members, the remnants of old families who used to have their name over High Street shops, Trustees of our charitable societies, Secretaries and Treasurers of all the venerable organisations that exist for the good of the common man; that sort of person. You meet them every day without knowing who they really are. They greet you with a cheery ‘good morning’ but would never think of inviting you to enjoy a schooner of pale fino at Country Club bridge evenings.
And where do you stand in all this?
It does no good to advertise membership of either of these types of organisations. You never know when you might need them.
That’s the way forward now then is it?
There is only the ruling party now Tony. There was a time when Mohammed went to the mountain. That is an old fashioned concept. We have to accept the modern world so now Tony old boy, the mountain is coming to Mohammed. This is my own version of ‘hot-desking’.
Which Tony interpreted as sitting in the Green Man slurping the house red which was bought by the bottle and dispensed at the bar by the glass.
People know where to find me. If they want advice they can come here most times of the day. No need to make an appointment. What could be more democratic than that?
I assume Councillor Grey is aware of this.
It was her idea. Go out and meet the people our Leader said. We are their representatives. We also get an allowance for computer and broadband usage calculated from a rate card that none of us have seen. I am reliably informed that it’s cheaper than all of us having our own desktop and internet connection in our ten by ten foot prison cell at Castle Despair.
What happens when you go over your allowance?
You know how it is Tony. What do I know about Outlook Express and gigabytes of memory? If I make a slip up on the cost then some kind person in accounts will take pity on this silly old bugger and pay the claim like they always do.
They were quite a strange couple, the senior politician and the young reporter but a great deal of respect had been built up between them in the six months since Tony had arrived at the Rutherford Echo.
Tony had been told all about Bob Ball’s eccentric behaviour, his taste in very young ladies of a certain persuasion, his drinking and his slightly left of centre views on local issues that didn’t belong in a modern ‘middle right’ political party. They were just part of his own political armoury which manifested itself in public utterances in the Council Chamber and the town’s bars, that were less than flattering of the ruling elite. But he made Tony laugh and he was honest and Tony never repeated or revealed the source of anything that was said between them. As Bob knew there were ways of getting things in the public domain that many would prefer buried; and Tony was learning when and how to break a story.
They also shared with many others in town a strange magnetic pull towards the keeper of the bar at the Green Man.
Tony got himself another pint and another large glass of red wine for Bob and sat back down.
Anything happening in this town that I don’t know about?
asked Bob after both of them had taken a long drink from out of their respective glasses.
You haven’t got your front page yet?
Not yet. Brian and myself tend to look at life in this town from a different perspective. You live on the Crickle Wood Estate. Did you see anything unusual in the early hours?
What did I miss?
Did you happen to see any strange lights over the estate?
I’m in bed early these days. Out for the count every night. A couple of large brandies before the ten o’clock news always seem to do the trick. What strange lights?
"We got a few calls on the answering machine about strange