David Peace - 1983

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1983: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Peace is a manic James Joyce of the crime novel… invoking the horror of grim lives, grim crimes, and grim times.” – Sleazenation
“[Peace] exposes a side of life which most of us would prefer to ignore.” – Daily Mail
“David Peace is the future of crime fiction… A fantastic talent.” – Ian Rankin
“British crime fiction’s most exciting new voice in decades.” – GQ
“[David Peace is] transforming the genre with passion and style.” – George Pelecanos
“Peace has single-handedly established the genre of Yorkshire Noir, and mightily satisfying it is.” – Yorkshire Post
“A compelling and devastating body of work that pushes Peace to the forefront of British writing.” – Time Out London
“A writer of immense talent and power… If northern noir is the crime fashion of the moment, Peace is its most brilliant designer.” – The Times (London)
“Peace has found his own voice-full of dazzling, intense poetry and visceral violence.” – Uncut
“A tour de force of crime fiction which confirms David Peace’s reputation as one of the most important names in contemporary crime literature.” – Crime Time
The intertwining storylines see the "Red Riding Quartet's" central themes of corruption and the perversion of justice come to a head as BJ the rent boy, lawyer Big John Piggott, and cop Maurice Oldfield, find themselves on a collision course that can only end in terrible vengeance.

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Shaw, the older brother of the Home Office Minister of State Robert Shaw, entered Labour politics through the Transport and General Workers’ Union. He rose to be a regional organiser and represented the T.G.W.U. on the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party .

A former Alderman and active for many years in West Riding politics, Shaw was, however, a leading advocate of Local Government reform and had been a member of the Redcliffe-Maud Committee .

Shaw’s election as Chairman of the first Wakefield Metropolitan District Council had been widely welcomed as ensuring a smooth transition during the changeover from the old West Riding .

Local government sources last night expressed consternation and dismay at the timing of Mr Shaw’s resignation .

Mr Shaw is also Acting Chairman of the West Yorkshire Police Authority and it is unclear as to whether he will continue .

Home Office Minister of State Robert Shaw was unavailable for comment on his brother’s resignation. Mr Shaw himself is believed to be staying with friends in France .

Read that front page, stare at photo of his face:

Face not smiling -

Remembering when it was always smiling, smiling and laughing, laughing and joking -

That trip to Spain, mornings on beach and siestas in his arms, evenings full of fine wines and dodgy bellies, nights of -

Nights of love:

His grey hair and gentle words, his firm kisses and soft caresses before -

Before BJ fucked it all, fucked it all:

All because of what and who BJ be .

Coach slows -

BJ lean into aisle -

Blue lights up ahead in grey:

Fuck .

Single-lane traffic, red sticks waving in dawn:

Fuck .

Driver has his window down, shouting: ‘What is it?’

‘IRA,’ comes a copper’s voice.

‘Not again?’

‘Irish bastards,’ says copper, but he waves coach through and coach picks up speed again.

Clare is staring at BJ, heavy rain against windows of coach.

‘We there?’ she asks, rubbing her black eyes.

‘Roadblock,’ BJ say.

‘Jesus,’ she says. ‘Where are we?’

‘Heading down into Manchester.’

She wipes window, but it doesn’t help.

BJ say: ‘Not very Christmassy, is it?’

‘Used to have good ones, did you?’

BJ sigh: ‘Not really. And you?’

She shakes her head: ‘I’d love to see the girls though.’

‘I bet,’ BJ say, thinking -

Poor, poor fucking cow .

‘Said I’d be back by Christmas, you know.’

‘Give them a ring,’ BJ say.

She sucks in her lower lip and nods.

BJ put newspaper back in bag as coach pulls into Chorlton Street Bus Station.

‘Be half an hour,’ shouts driver. ‘You getting off?’

‘Aye,’ shouts Clare and walks down aisle with BJ and jumps off.

It’s going up to eight and fucking freezing is Manchester.

BJ and Clare cross Portland Street into Piccadilly Gardens and go into first cafй BJ and Clare find:

Piccadilly Grill .

Clare has a breakfast and BJ have her toast, stomachs full of hot sweet tea.

At eight o’clock radio turns them stomachs, turns them inside out:

‘West Yorkshire Police today launched a massive manhunt following an armed robbery on a Wakefield pub last night which left four people dead and two policemen seriously injured .

‘The incident took place at approximately one a.m. last night at the Strafford Arms public house in the centre of Wakefield when a masked gang of armed men broke into a first-floor private party. Officers responding to initial reports of shots fired interrupted the robbery and were themselves attacked .

‘The gang are believed to have escaped with the contents of the till and some cash and jewellery stolen from customers .

‘Roadblocks were immediately set up across the county and on the M62 and M1 and initial reports that the attack might be linked to armed Irish Republican terrorists have yet to be discounted .

‘Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice Jobson, the man leading the hunt for the gang, asked members of the public with any information whatsoever to contact the police as a matter of some urgency, but he also cautioned the public not to approach these men as they are armed and extremely dangerous .

‘Mr Jobson admitted that the police were also taking very seriously suggestions that the attack upon the Strafford may be linked to a recent escalation in Yorkshire gangland violence which may also be behind the death early yesterday morning of local Wakefield businessman Donald Foster at his Sandal home .

‘Mr Jobson further confirmed that the two policemen injured in the attack were Sergeant Robert Craven and PC Robert Douglas, the two policemen who recently made headlines following their arrest of Michael Myshkin, the Fitzwilliam man charged with the murder of Morley schoolgirl Clare Kemplay. Mr Jobson described the condition of the officers as “serious but stable,” but he refused to release the names of the dead as police were still trying to contact a number of relatives .

‘Mr Jobson also added that he believed that some relatives may even have gone into hiding for fear of reprisals and he appealed for them to…’

Two steaming teas, two empty seats.

Chapter 10

Gotcha -

Dark night -

Day 11:

One in the morning -

Sunday 22 May 1983:

Yorkshire -

Leeds -

Millgarth Police Station:

The Belly -

Room 4:

James Ashworth, twenty-two, in police issue grey shirt and trousers, long, lank hair everywhere, slouched akimbo in his chair at our table, a cigarette burning down to a stub between the dirty black nails of his dirty yellow fingers -

Jimmy James Ashworth, former friend and neighbour of Michael Myshkin, child killer -

Jimmy Ashworth, the boy who found Clare Kemplay.

I asked him: ‘For the thousandth fucking time Jimmy, what were you doing in Morley on Thursday?’

And for the thousandth fucking time he told me: ‘Nothing.’

We’d had him here since five on Thursday night, got him riding his motorbike into Morley, head to toe in denim and leather, the words Saxon and Angelwitch stitched into his back between a pair of swan’s wings, had him here since Thursday night but hadn’t technically started the questioning until Friday morning at seven which gave us another six hours with the little twat, but he’d given us nothing, nothing except the clothes off his back, his boots and his motorbike, the dirt from under his nails, the blood from his arms and the come from his cock, so we’d been over to Fitzwilliam and we’d ripped up their house, their garage and their garden, had the washing from their basket and from in off their line, the dust and hairs from their floors, the sheets and stains off their beds, the rubbish out their bins, sent it all up to forensics, then taken his mam and his dad, his whole gyppo family in, the garage where he worked and the blokes he called mates, the lass he was shagging, had them all in but had got fuck all out of them, nothing – Yet.

*

Gotcha -

Long dark night -

Day 11:

Three in the morning -

Sunday 22 May 1983:

Yorkshire -

Leeds -

Millgarth Police Station:

The Belly -

Room 4:

We opened the door. We stepped inside:

Dick Alderman and Jim Prentice -

One with a greying moustache, the other one bald but for tufts of fine sandy hair:

Moustache and Sandy .

And me:

Maurice Jobson; Detective Chief Superintendent Maurice Jobson -

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