Born Bad: A gritty gangster thriller with a darkly funny heart. Marnie Riches

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Born Bad: A gritty gangster thriller with a darkly funny heart - Marnie  Riches


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whom she had led from the heart of darkness into the arms of a loving and forgiving Lord. Only right, then, that one day, she and the pastor should be together, instead of that ugly, fat wife of his, Kitty.

      Gloria knew that her strong point was her faith. She had faith that Kitty, who smelled of three-day-old chicken and who looked like a side of beef in Primark knitwear, would one day be history. She had faith that she would be able to break the bad news to her employees and safely lay the blame at Sheila’s pedicured, lazy, white-woman’s feet.

      ‘Sisters,’ she said, ushering her flock towards the vestibule of the Good Life Baptist Church, making sure the pastor got a good look at her legs and her shining, relaxed hair beneath her best fascinator, bought in the John Lewis sale. ‘Let’s go for coffee. We need to talk.’

      Being brave, like she had always been brave, winking surreptitiously at the pastor while Kitty Fried Chicken was shaking hands with an elder, Gloria led the group towards the harsh daylight streaming in through the ecclesiastical arched door. They piled out into the bustle of Parson’s Croft high street, thronging with satisfied church-goers, shoppers on a mission for bargains and gaggles of over-excited Muslim girls wearing hijabs and pretty sequinned salwar kameez, squealing with laughter into each other’s mobile phones.

      At first, she did not notice the tall, dark figure standing outside Clyde’s Caribbean Takeout. A figure, wearing a burnt orange padded gilet, a long-sleeved T-shirt and those jeans that they all wore with zips and too many pockets and silly logos. Trainers on his feet. No. There was no reason why she would have paid any attention whatsoever to this man, who looked like every other self-styled gangsta fool under the age of maybe thirty in Parson’s Croft. On his head, he wore a branded baseball cap. Stylish, sporty sunglasses with mirrored lenses hid his eyes. But ambling along towards the café, surrounded by her beloved Nigerian sisters whom she would let down gently, it barely registered with her that this was a familiar man, overly dressed as though to conceal his identity. There was something about the line of his nose and the almost delicate point of his chin. His build. His body language. The way he stepped off the stoop of Clyde’s with hands in pockets – hands that were empty of the delicious Caribbean offerings sold inside. The way he started to keep pace with her, though the wide pavement was four or five people deep. Kept shooting her glances from behind those creepy sunglasses. Now, Gloria had started to take note of this man, though he lurked in her peripheral vision.

      She sped up. ‘Come on, ladies. Cake beckons! My treat.’

      Protected by the laughter and the sheer number of bodies that surrounded her; there must have been twenty of her cleaners, bustling along that road. Maybe it was a coincidence and she was just on edge.

      But no. The man was still there. He took his hands out of his pockets. Extended a hand towards her. Opened his mouth to say something.

      Gloria stopped short. Held her handbag to her chest defensively, ready to clobber the scumbag with it if needs be before he had a chance to snatch it.

      ‘Get away from me!’ she yelled.

      Before her companions realised that an attack was afoot, the man pulled the sunglasses from his face to reveal soulless, sinner’s eyes she would recognise anywhere. Her own eyes.

      ‘It’s me, Mum,’ he said, reaching for her. Brushing her fingers with his.

      She snatched her hand away as though it had been burned and took a step back. Trod heavily on somebody’s foot, though she could not tear her gaze from her son’s anguished face to see who she had injured and offer apology. She was filled with a mixture of dread and fear and that old, familiar poison – hope.

      ‘Leviticus Bell. You treacherous, criminal toe-rag. What in the Lord’s name do you want?’

       Chapter 8

       Paddy

      ‘Don’t open your mouth,’ Paddy told Frank. ‘Let me do all the talking.’

      On the back seat of the XJ, in semi-darkness that was lit only by the street-lamps flashing by, Paddy saw his brother nod. Cock his head to the side, as if letting the simple words soak in.

      ‘Alright, Pad. No worries, man.’

      Paddy patted Frank’s knee, though even that felt like over-exertion since the heart attack. Frustrated, he was still very much King of the Alphas in his head, but now, his body had finally betrayed him. Katrina had been right. He was pushing his luck. Age and a hard, fast lifestyle had finally caught up with him, and boy, was he feeling mortal now. Vulnerable too, since he had been sent home from the hospital with nothing more than some poxy meds and a flea in his ear regarding his abysmal diet. Left to his own devices, the care of the medical staff now felt too far beyond easy reach.

      As Conky steered the gliding car from the opulent, leafy suburbs of Bramshott down the M56 towards Manchester, tension started to mount inside him, stiffening his limbs and the set of his jaw with ice. The pressure of the impending meet bore down on his shoulders; he felt he might simply disappear down the back of the leather seat.

      ‘I haven’t seen those bastards, Tariq and Jonny since 2005,’ he said to the back of Conky’s head. Met his gaze through the rear view mirror – a rare occurrence, since Conky only took those ridiculous Roy Orbison glasses off to drive, revealing his bulging eyes in all their frightening amphibian glory. The arsehole’s hair-piece was showing through the comb-over. He resolved to say nothing. ‘Do you remember?’

      ‘Aye,’ Conky said, slowing for a speed camera on Princess Parkway. ‘There were a lot of sawn-off shotguns, pointing at a lot of hard men in that tower. Troubled times.’

      Had he felt this vulnerable over a decade ago, standing in that half-built shell of the Hilton Hotel’s tenth floor, with the wind and the rain biting into his younger man’s skin? Calling a cease fire, after the turf war between the O’Briens and the Boddlington gang had escalated to the point where there were fresh bodies stacking up in the morgue every single day for more than a month. It had been madness, then. It was still madness now.

      ‘Are you tooled up?’ he asked Conky. He looked behind him through the rear window at the large black Mercedes four-wheel drive hugging their tail. It carried their small army of foot soldiers. ‘Your lads packing?’

      ‘You just leave all that to me, boss,’ Conky said, leaning over and patting the closed glove compartment. ‘I’ve taken care of everything. And Maureen’s arbitrating. Sure it’ll be fine.’

      The Jag slowed at the lights. An eerie tangle of shadows that was Southern Cemetery on the left, reminding Paddy of where he could so easily end up if tonight went badly. He tried to visualise swaying palms on a Thai beach to slow his heartbeat but could only think of that little Boddlington shit with the lightning flash shaved into his head, lunging at him with the knife in M1 House. Wondered if the lad would be there tonight and if he might have the opportunity to exact revenge on him in some way; Paddy’s forearm was not the only thing that had been punctured.

      Moss Side flashed by in vapour trails of neon light and bong smoke. Parson’s Croft beyond it. The streets would be filled with O’Brien girls and boys, he knew, doling candy out to the starving, unwashed masses. On the other side of the Mancunian Way, the Hilton Hotel’s Beetham Tower, long-since finished, punctuated the Manchester night sky like an exclamation mark without a point. A brightly lit, uncompromising phallus, reminding Paddy that in this tough place, men ruled. Men like him. Once he had grown old enough to realise he could shed the rough skin of the dirt poor that had been the crappy legacy of that snake, his father, this fine, hard city, and all that lay south of the dividing line, had become his very own playground. He was Manchester’s number one son. He knew all of her secrets. The thought calmed him.

      ‘Am shitting myself, me,’ Frank said, breaking the silence. ‘And why are we meeting in a gallery of all


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