1 ...6 7 8 10 11 12 ...78 Each haunting song that followed was a story, and when finally she bowed and thanked them, the audience gave her and the musicians the rapturous applause they deserved.
And so, the evening was finally over. As Steve Drayton watched the punters go, a celebratory cigar drooping from his mouth, his hands were itching to count the takings. “I reckon we’ve done all right,” he boasted, as Alice closed the outer door. “Now that Madeleine’s back, there’ll be no holding us.”
“If you want her to stay, you’d best mend your ways,” Alice declared. “You almost lost her because of your bullying. Next time, it might well be permanent.”
None too pleased at her unwelcome advice, he bit back, “When I need your opinion, I’ll ask for it. And if I find you’ve been trying to turn her against me, well now…” He nodded affirmatively. “I’ll have no choice but to deal with it… if you know what I mean?”
Alice knew well enough what he meant, but she played him at his own game. “Whatever makes you think I might try and turn Madeleine against you?” she asked sarcastically. “When you’re doing a perfectly good job of it yourself!”
“This is the last warning, Alice. Just keep your nose out of my business.” He caught the defiant look in her eye and shook his head. “You need to listen to what I’m saying! Oh, I won’t deny you’re worth your weight in gold here. But like I said before, you are not indispensable.”
“I never thought I was,” Alice said, beginning to empty the till. “Though you won’t find better than me.”
“Maybe I would, maybe I wouldn’t. We’ll just have to see, won’t we? So now, if it doesn’t go against your high principles, d’you think you could close up and see yourself off these premises? I’ll cash up tonight. Tell everyone they can go home – you’ve all done very well tonight.”
Steve sank into a reflective mood as he mechanically counted the takings. The sight of Madeleine on stage, her slim curves draped in silk, had reminded him of what he had been missing; twice he’d been to the flat he’d bought for her in Battersea, but there was no sign of her, and so he began wondering where she was, and who with. And yes, there had been others to satisfy him in Madeleine’s absence, but they were just filling in, until she came back… as he knew she would.
Hearing a noise behind him, he swung round. “What! Are you still here?” Alice had become a thorn in his side, and if he had his way, it would be a mere matter of time before she was permanently removed.
On his words, Alice picked up her handbag which she’d left by the till and hurried away. There was no need to antagonize him further, she wisely decided. But she vowed to make Madeleine see sense; if not today, then soon.
Before something really bad happened.
With that in mind, she set off in search of Raymond, a shy, bumbling giant of a man who worked like a dog, and was solely responsible these days for keeping the club clean and shipshape.
Being another fortunate “find” for Drayton, Raymond kept himself to himself, avoiding company and speaking only when spoken to. An orphan raised in a strict children’s home, he had been a wanderer sweeping the streets when Drayton came across him. Within a week, he had him working at the club.
Poor Raymond was forever grateful to his new boss. Given a windowless room where he could lay his head, free food from the club and a measly wage on a Friday, he thought himself a fortunate man.
“Ray, where are you?” Alice looked about, but could see no sign of him. Going to the bar, she asked one of the barmen there, “Jack, have you seen Raymond anywhere?”
Jack was genuinely friendly, honest as the day was long, and deeply fond of Madeleine – not in any sexual way, he was not that way intended – but he was prepared to stand up and defend her. Alice had seen the way his boyish features tightened whenever he saw Drayton bullying her. Hard-working and ambitious, Jack nevertheless remained untainted by the world of Soho; in fact, he wanted to run his own club one day.
In answer to Alice’s question, Jack gestured to the far side of the room. “Last time I saw him, he was clearing the back tables.”
Alice thanked him. “The boss is especially keen to have the club emptied and locked for the night.”
“Why? What’s got into him? Most nights he’s here till all hours, him and his cronies, gambling and drinking. What’s so different about tonight?”
“Sure, it’s no good asking me!” Alice rolled her eyes to the heavens. “Best do as he says though. Ye know what a vile bugger he can be.”
“Alice…” Jack lowered his voice to a whisper. “He doesn’t know, does he?”
“If you mean, does he know Madeleine was with you all that time, the answer is no – at least I don’t think so. He hasn’t said anything.”
Jack was concerned all the same, “You and I both know, he’d go mental if he found out. Not because anything would have happened between me and Madeleine.” He smiled a sad little smile. “He knows the way things are with me. It’s just that I care about her! When I caught her crying in the back alley that night, I knew she needed to get away from him… if only to send him the message that she’s not his sole property to do with as he pleases!”
Alice understood his frustration. “The trouble is, she loves him – though God only knows why.”
“I’m well aware of that,” Jack sighed. “It was plain enough – the way she kept mentioning his name, even wanting to get back to him from the minute she came in through the door.”
“Well, it was Drayton who put her up there in front of the crowds,” Alice conceded. “Unfortunately, she seems to think she owes him for that for all eternity, when all the time any self-respecting club owner would have cut his arm off for the chance. Anyways, all we can do is hope she comes to her senses, sooner rather than later.”
“I did right, didn’t I?” Jack asked worriedly. “I mean, offering her my spare room for a while?”
“Of course you did the right thing,” Alice assured him. “No way should we have let her come to me because, as we suspected, it was the first place he came looking.”
Jack pursed his lips, folded a bar towel and placed it over the pumps. “For her own sake, I wish she could see him for what he really is. A complete bastard!
He knew how fond Alice was of her. “She’s too trusting, and he knows it.” The anger trembled in his voice, “I tell you, Alice, if it wasn’t for her asking me not to, I’d have tackled him long before now. But she won’t have it. As it was I pleaded with her to stay on at my place – even offered to move out for as long as she wanted. I tried all ways to stop her from coming back here to him, but she wouldn’t be told.”
Alice chuckled. “That’s the way she is – headstrong and independent. But I’m keeping an eye on things, don’t you worry.”
“Alice, promise me. If he hurts her, you will tell me, won’t you? I can’t abide bullies.” Jack’s face darkened. “I swear to God I’ll swing for him if he touches her again.”
“I will.” Alice could lie convincingly when necessary.
And she was lying now.
The last thing she wanted was to involve Jack any deeper. He was a sensitive young man, albeit strong and able, and no doubt in a fair fight he could easily take on a man like Drayton. But there were others – ruthless criminals and villains who, if paid enough, would snuff his life out like a candle.
Alice could never risk that happening.
Losing no time, Jack went away to instruct the others, “The boss wants us off the premises – like now.”
“Why the hurry?” The old barman had been with Drayton these past four years.
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