Framed
- eBook
- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
Fast paced and full of grit, this is the first crime novel from the UK''s most charismatic sporting genius.
WHEN THE GAME IS MURDER, YOU CAN''T AFFORD TO LOSE.
An innocent man.
Frankie James is a young man with a lot on his shoulders. His mother disappeared when he was sixteen; his father''s in jail for armed robbery; and he owes rent on the Soho snooker club he inherited to one of London''s toughest gangsters.
A brutal murder.
And things are about to get a whole lot worse when Frankie''s brother Jack is accused of killing a bride-to-be. He needs to find out who framed Jack and why; but that means entering the sordid world of bent coppers, ruthless mobsters and twisted killers.
But in the dog-eat-dog underworld of 1990s Soho, is he tough enough, and smart enough to come out on top?
If you like Martina Cole and Kimberley Chambers, you''ll LOVE this.
Release date: November 17, 2016
Publisher: Orion Publishing Group
Print pages: 352
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Framed
Ronnie O''Sullivan
1
Frankie James watched the mystery blonde getting dressed at the end of his bed. Nice figure. Nice smile. A good sense of humour too, from what he could remember from last night.
He’d met her in the 100 Club on Oxford Street. Some new Mancunian band touted as the next big thing in Brit Pop had been in town. His best mate Spartak had been running the door and had let him in for free.
Frankie had spotted her halfway through the gig. Six foot in heels. Nearly as tall as him. She’d caught him checking her out. Hadn’t even blinked. Just stared back. A challenge. He’d never been able to resist one of them.
He wracked his brains. Bollocks. What was her name? Michelle? Or Mary? Or even May? Christ. His head was throbbing. How much had he drunk? Bloody hell. He was slipping back into the bad old ways. Had been trying to cut down. Had screwed up again.
He glanced over at the crumpled up AA leaflet in the corner of his bedroom. He didn’t even remember where he’d got it from. It had been there for weeks . . . months . . . He didn’t believe in that group therapy shit. More willpower. That’s how he’d kicked the coke, wasn’t it? Just by saying no. But something still kept stopping him from binning that leaflet anyhow.
He buckled his belt over his pressed black suit trousers and took a dry-cleaned white shirt from his wardrobe and pulled it on. He stared at the girl.
‘Stop gawping,’ she warned him with a grin.
Hard not to. She was standing in just her black satin knickers and bra, with her hands on her hips.
‘You seen the rest of my clothes?’ she asked.
‘In the lounge,’ he said. ‘At least, I think . . .’
That was where they’d started, wasn’t it? He watched her sashay out through the door and down the short corridor. Blimey. She was a looker, all right. Fit. Maybe even a keeper, as his mum might have said. A couple of years back, Frankie would have made more of an effort. Cooked her a bacon sarnie. Asked her out for dinner. Got to know her properly. But he had way too much crapola on his plate for that now.
Narrowing his ice-blue eyes against the sun, he pulled up the blind and gazed down from the flat’s second-floor window. It was just gone eight and hardly any of the shops, bars, delis or clubs in Poland Street were open. Didn’t mean Soho was quiet though. Shopkeepers were busy moving the homeless from outside their doors. Junkies and wasted clubbers stumbled past. Commuters trudged miserably into work. In the distance, a siren wailed.
‘Our kingdom.’ That’s what Frankie’s dad had always told him. ‘And don’t let any other bastard ever tell you different.’
Frankie took his dad’s watch from the bedside table and slipped it on. A Rolex, a real one, with the old man’s name engraved on the back. Frankie loved how heavy it felt.
‘Think of it like an insurance policy,’ his dad had once said. ‘Even if everything else in your life turns tits-up, right here you’ve still got something you can cash in to start over.’
Frankie clenched his fist – a boxer’s fist, just like his dad’s. Just like the rest of his family, going right back.
Frankie’s granddad and great uncle had both been pros. ‘The Bloodthirsty James Boys’, people had called them, though never to their faces. No one had ever had the bollocks for that.
Neither brother had ever made the big time. Not through lack of talent, mind, more a lack of the right promoter. Rumour had it they’d both ended up working as enforcers for the Richardson Gang back in the ’50s.
Frankie’s was a family some people round here were still wary of, not just because of who his granddads were, but because of what they said his father had done.
Frankie turned to see the blonde standing in the bedroom doorway, wearing the same little black dress and heels he’d relieved her of last night.
‘I’ve written down my number,’ she said, pulling on a thigh-length, fake fur coat.
She swiped a bright pink lipstick across her mouth and blew him a small kiss. Her accent was expensive, educated. He tried to remember if he’d asked her where she was from, but nothing concrete sprang to mind. Probably somewhere posh like Berkshire or Surrey. The kind of place where girls like her rode ponies while their mums and dads hunted foxes. Somewhere far from here.
He said, ‘Thanks.’
She gave him that stare again. That challenge. What was she after? His number? He let the silence hang.
‘I’ll walk you out,’ he said, fishing out a pair of silver dice cufflinks from the old wooden box on the windowsill, another leftover from when his dad had been living here.
‘A bit formal for you, aren’t they?’ she said, amused, watching him thread them into his shirt cuffs.
He’d been wearing a designer T-shirt and jeans last night. Both fake. But work was different. If you wanted respect around here, you had to at least look the part. Especially when you’d just turned twenty-three and were half the age of every other club boss in town.
He pulled on his suit jacket and checked himself out in the mirror, combing his fingers back through his black hair. Italian ancestors, his mum had always claimed. All of them as crazy as the Emperor bleedin’ Nero. So said his dad.
‘You scrub up pretty well,’ said the blonde.
Frankie turned to face her. Was she being sarcastic? No, she was smiling. A warm smile too. Not the flirty one she’d used last night to hook him in. This was something softer, more personal.
He half-smiled back, but it was more of a reflex. He needed her gone, needed his head space back so he could work out how the hell he was going to convince his landlord to give him more time to come up with the rent he owed on the club. Then there was the problem of how to deal with his kid brother. Bloody Jack. He’d called last night. Had got himself in hock at poker to the Chinese. A-bloody-gain.
‘I’ll just get my shoes,’ he told her, walking past, knowing she was watching him every step of the way.
He scoured the debris in the lounge: a stacked ashtray, the remains of a bottle of red, two glasses, one with her lipstick tattooed onto its rim. A half-empty bottle of whisky too. He didn’t even remember opening that.
He’d hit the gym later. Soon feel less guilty. That, and an early night tonight.
He found his shoes by the sofa. Loafers. Italian leather. An indulgence from a few months back when he’d been feeling more flush.
The blonde was waiting by the flat’s reinforced front door. Didn’t look in a hurry. He wondered what she did for a job. The way she looked and acted, she could have been anything from a fitness instructor to an ad exec. Whichever, it was too late to ask her now.
He pulled back the door’s two deadlocks and its stainless steel bolt.
‘Looks like you’re expecting an army,’ she said.
‘Used to be my dad’s place,’ he told her. ‘He was very . . . security-conscious . . .’ Frankie didn’t know how else to explain. ‘Watch the steps,’ he warned. ‘They’re stupid steep.’
He followed her downstairs, careful himself. He remembered how one of the old man’s business associates had once taken a tumble here. Broke both his legs. Frankie had got back from Leicester Square Odeon with Jack to find the old man busy scrubbing bloodstains off the wall.
Two doors led off the small hallway at the bottom of the stairs. One into the club. The other onto the street. Frankie had to squeeze past the blonde to open the street door’s triple lock. It was the first time they’d touched properly since last night. The contact made her giggle.
‘Sorry,’ he said.
‘Don’t be.’ She threw him a knowing look. ‘I think we’ve been a lot more intimate than that.’
He smiled. Couldn’t help himself. Something contagious about the twinkle in her eyes.
They stepped out onto the street. The air was heavy with the stink of disinfectant, kebab wrappers and chips.
‘Cigarette?’ she said, sparking one up.
‘No. Thanks.’
She raised an eyebrow. They must have chugged through a whole two packs between them last night. He could feel it in the shortness of his breath. Something else he was meant to be cutting right down on. Shit.
‘So . . .’ she said.
‘So . . .’
A rock steady beat drifted down from a window up above. She was staring at him again, unblinking. Her expression said it all: your move.
‘It’s been . . .’
‘Memorable?’ she suggested.
‘Yeah, memorable.’
‘And fun?’
He smiled. ‘Yeah, that too.’
‘Memorably fun.’ She said it like she was trying it on for size. ‘I guess I can settle for that. But, you know, do feel free to call me as well . . .’
‘Sure,’ he said. ‘I will.’
She kissed him then. Quickly. On the cheek. Then walked away. He watched her as far as the end of the street, until she faded into the crowd.
‘Goodbye Martha, Megan, or Molly,’ he said under his breath, wondering if he’d ever see her again, and almost stepping into the street after her – before walking back inside, sick at the thought that if he didn’t play his cards right today, he was going to end up losing the club.
2
Frankie hadn’t so much inherited the Ambassador Club, as had it thrown at him like a ticking bomb from a speeding car. At least that’s what his dad’s cousin, Kind Regards, had told him five years ago – and that’s how it still felt today.
Hitting the light switch in the club’s main hall, Frankie breathed in the stale smell of smoke, chalk and beer, as he listened to the tink-tink of the strip lights flickering into life above the twelve tables.
He sighed. The hall’s worn carpet was scuffed and stained and its walls and ceiling were patchy with damp. Two of the frosted plate glass windows overlooking the street had been cracked by some passing pissheads a few weeks ago and he still hadn’t got round to fixing them.
Drumming his fingers along the edges of the tables as he walked to the bar, he was almost glad his dad wasn’t here to see it. After his dad had been banged up and Frankie had first taken over managing the club, he’d hoped to turn its fortunes round. Easier said than done.
He’d hit the same old chicken and egg problem the old man had. The only way to make enough money to tart the place up was to bring in more punters. But the only way to bring in more punters was to tart the fucking place up.
Frankie’s dad, Bernie, had taken out a thirty-year lease on the club over ten years ago, back in ’84, after winning big on the horses. His plan had been to put it on the map. Make it a hub for the game here in the West End. But he’d always come up short.
End result was that Frankie and his brother Jack had hung out here pretty much full time in their teens when they weren’t in school, being babysat by staff, while their mum and dad had gone out doing other jobs to make ends meet: managing brewery pubs, or running van-loads of tax-free cigarettes and booze back on the ferries from France.
Not that Frankie had minded. None of the rented houses they’d lived in at the time had ever felt as much like home as here. Frankie loved it. Soho. The club. The people. The free lemonades and crisps. And of course the snooker. He’d got the bug for it the instant he’d picked up a cue. Hadn’t been a day gone by since when he hadn’t fitted in a few frames.
He checked his watch. Still too early to go cap in hand to Daniel Listerman about the rent. Listerman was Tommy Riley’s lawyer and Riley was the big-time gangster bastard who owned the freehold on this building along with the rest of the street.
Listerman the Lawyer was an early riser. Some said he never slept at all. But turning up this early at his swanky Beak Street office would only make Frankie look even more desperate – and skint – than he was.
Might as well make himself useful here first. He changed out of his suit in the storeroom, coming back out in tatty blue overalls and black rubber boots, with earphones in, a Sony Discman clipped to his belt, and a bucket of warm soapy water and a mop in his fists.
He’d had to let the club’s regular cleaner go a month back, not having enough money to pay her. It didn’t bother him that much, to tell the truth. Apart from the khazis. Especially the gents. What the hell was wrong with blokes anyway? Why couldn’t a single bloody one of them manage to piss in a straight line?
He cleaned the bogs first to get them out the way, then the bar and the ashtrays, before starting on sweeping and mopping the floor. He worked his way round the tables in the same pattern he did every day. It somehow made it go faster, like doing circuits down the gym.
He hummed as he worked. A Northern Soul compilation. Everyone was into Blur and Oasis these days, but he reckoned the old tunes were still the best. His dad had been a proper mod back in the day. There was a signed Small Faces LP up above the bar. Used to be an old Bang & Olufsen record player and a stack of Al Wilson and Jimmy Radcliffe singles back there as well. But Jack had pilfered the lot on his nineteenth birthday two years ago and flogged them down Berwick Street market to pay for a night on the razz.
Frankie still hadn’t forgiven him, the little shit. Him and Jack had used to listen to those records as kids, dancing and larking about. They should have meant more to him than just some quick cash. Frankie remembered coming down here one night late when his mum and dad had still been together and seeing them slow-dancing round the empty club. He couldn’t believe how fucked up his family life had got since then.
His mum had gone missing in ’88, just after Frankie had turned sixteen. A year after her and his dad had started living apart, her at their rented house and him here in the flat above the club. She’d just vanished when Frankie and Jack had both been at school. No sign of a struggle. Nothing. Just gone.
Everyone else – Frankie’s father, Jack and the cops – all reckoned that Priscilla James wasn’t just missing, she was dead. Why else wouldn’t she have come back? Or at least contacted them? But Frankie didn’t believe it. He felt it in his guts. He just fucking knew that one day he’d see her again.
He checked his watch. Ten to ten. Nearly time to open up already. Nearly time to go see Listerman too, just as soon as Slim the barman got here to do his shift. Frankie headed back to the storeroom to get changed. The red light on the answerphone winked at him from the bar. He took his earphones out and hit ‘Play’.
‘Frankie?’ It was Jack, sounding well stressed. ‘For fuck’s sake, Frankie, pick up.’ Was he wasted? He was slurring. ‘I’m coming over . . . Fuck. I need you. I need help . . .’ A whisper, a hiss. ‘I’m coming over. Now.’
Frankie groaned. Hell’s tits, not again. How many fucking times already this year? Jack doing too much gear. Getting himself in a paranoid mess. Jack needing a lift back from some godforsaken club in the middle of piggin’ Essex. Jack running out of dosh and expecting Frankie to bail him out. Jack making the same stupid bloody mistakes over and over again.
Frankie’s heart thundered. Just pretend you’re not here. Don’t answer the door. Fuck off back upstairs and turn up the radio and get in the shower.
But all he saw in his head was his mum. That last morning he’d seen her, as she’d handed him his packed lunch in the shitty little driveway of that rented Shepherd’s Bush house.
‘Go catch him up and make up,’ she’d said.
She’d been talking about Jack. He’d just cycled off in a strop over some football sticker he’d nicked off Frankie the night before and which Frankie had just wrestled back off him.
‘He thinks he can take care of himself, but he can’t,’ she’d said. ‘You know that. And promise me, promise me,’ she’d said, squeezing his wrist so hard he’d winced, ‘you’ll always be there for him. No matter what happens. To me or your dad, or to anyone else.’
Even then, it had sounded off. Had she known? He’d asked himself the same question a million times since. Had she known that by teatime she’d be gone?
Crack.
What the fuck?
He turned to face the club’s front door. Someone had just given it an almighty smack.
3
Was it Jack? Already? He’d sounded so wasted on the phone. Could he really have got here that fast? Not like him to give the doors a leathering either. Debt collectors then? Had one of Frankie’s hastily negotiated streams of credit just dried up?
He reached under the bar for the cue he kept clipped there out of sight. Maybe not as tasty as a lot of other weapons when it came to a fight, but a hell of a lot easier to explain to the cops.
He flicked on the cctv, watching its squat screen shimmer into life. Relief, of a sort, flooded him. Forget debt collectors. A smeary, black-and-white image of his little brother loomed into view.
Jack was dressed in a black leather jacket and jeans, with his slicked back hair tied back in a ponytail. Smack. The door shook again as he shoulder-charged it. He glared wide-eyed up into the centre of the camera lens, his mouth flapping open and closed like a fish out of water.
‘Pack it in,’ Frankie yelled, ditching the cue and running between the tables, as – thump – Jack charged the door again.
Jesus. What the fuck was he on? Frankie hadn’t seen him for weeks. Apart from the call last night, hadn’t heard from him either. Jack had been working nights the last six months, running club nights with a bunch of DJ mates. Was it the Chinese? Was that why he was here? Or something worse? What the fuck kind of bother had he got himself into now?
Frankie jerked the metal crossbar up and flipped the deadlock round. The door burst open, smashing hard into Frankie’s head, sending him staggering back. Jack lurched in, slamming and locking the door behind him. He slumped down panting on the floor.
Frankie stared down at him, rubbing his head. Shit-a-brick. He was covered in fucking blood. Apart from his jacket . . . under his jacket . . . everywhere . . . His neck, hands, jaw and wrists were caked with the stuff. But not fresh. Dried.
‘What the fuck is going on?’
Jack stared up, shuddering. He was unshaven and baggy-eyed, like he’d been up for days. He looked like Frankie had used to. Before he’d got his shit together. Or at least before he’d got his shit together more than this.
‘It’s not what you think,’ Jack said.
The way he said it. The fucking guilt. ‘Oh, Jesus. What have you done?’
‘Nothing. I swear it, Frankie. I swear it had nothing to do with me.’
‘What didn’t?’
‘It . . . this . . .’ He was rubbing his hands together, spitting on them, trying to get them clean.
‘If it’s not yours,’ Frankie said, ‘then whose? Whose fucking blood is it?’
‘I dunno.’
‘How can you not know?’
‘It was just there. All over my bed when I woke up. Smeared . . . all stuck to me . . . all over my duvet and sheets . . .’
‘But how? How did it get there?’
Tears filled Jack’s eyes. ‘I don’t know. All I remember is I was down the Albion, drinking with Mickey . . .’
‘When?’
‘Yesterday.’
‘What time?’
‘Afternoon . . .’
‘And then?’
‘Nothing. I don’t remember anything.’
‘What else?’
‘What?’ Jack was shaking, snot bubbling from his nostrils.
‘What else were you fucking on? Apart from drink. Were you wasted? Is that why you can’t remember?’
‘I dunno.’
Jack started sobbing. Actually crying. Like a little kid.
But Jesus, even if he’d been totally off his head last night, how the hell could he have forgotten? Getting covered head to foot in someone else’s blood? How the hell could he just not know?
‘What about at your flat? When you woke up?’
‘What about it?’
‘Was there anything . . . I don’t know . . . anything that can fucking explain this?’
‘No. Nothing. It was just everywhere. All around me.’
‘And you don’t even remember getting home? Getting into bed?’
‘No.’
‘Do you even remember if you were on your own?’
‘No. I don’t know.’
‘You sure?’ He didn’t sound it.
‘There was something . . . this morning . . .’
‘What?’
‘A jonny.’
‘A what?’
‘A fucking condom.’ Jack clawed his hands back through his hair. ‘I trod on it next to the bed as I was running for the door. I got it stuck on my fucking foot . . .’
Frankie almost laughed. Apart from the blood. And how fucking much there was. Enough to maybe mean that someone somewhere was dead?
‘And you really don’t remember a thing?’
‘I swear, Frankie. The whole fucking night, it’s a blank.’
The condom . . . that meant someone must have gone back with him, right? Didn’t it? But who? And was this their blood? Had Jack somehow ended up getting in a fight with them? With a woman? No. He was no fucking woman-beater. No matter how wasted he got.
Jack pulled out a pack of fags and jerkily tried sparking one up. But his lighter just sputtered. Didn’t have enough gas. He crushed the cigarette in his fist and threw it away, gripping his head in his hands.
‘You said you were running,’ Frankie said. ‘When you put your foot in it, you said you were running for the door.’
‘Yeah.’
‘Why?’
‘Because of the call.’
‘What call?’
‘Someone rang.’
‘Who?’
‘A man.’
‘What man?’
‘I don’t fucking know. I didn’t recognise his voice.’
‘What did he say?’
‘He told me, you know . . . to get the fuck out . . .’
‘Of the flat?’
‘Yeah.’
‘What did he actually say? What were his actual words?’
‘That the cops were coming . . . That I had to get out of there. Now.’
The cops? Oh, Jesus. They were already on to this? Frankie felt sick.
‘I asked him what the fuck he was talking about,’ said Jack, ‘and that’s when I put on the light and looked round and saw all that blood . . .’
He started sobbing again.
‘And then you ran?’
‘If I hadn’t done, they would have got me,’ Jack said. ‘The second I reached the end of the street, there they were: fucking cop cars everywhere, a riot van too, lights flashing, sirens screaming . . . screeching right up outside the building . . .’
Jack was making out that whoever had made the call had done him a favour, but that was bollocks. Why would anyone call him anonymously like that? And how the hell would they know the cops were coming and he had reason to run?
Running had made him look guilty as hell.
‘Did anyone see you?’ Frankie said. ‘Leaving your building, I mean?’
‘No.’
‘You call anyone?’
‘Just you. From the phone box down the tube station. Then I came over. As fast as I could.’
Frankie was already doing the maths. Anyone could have seen him on the way over here. Hard fucking not to with him looking like an extra out of Halloween. Anyone could have called the cops.
‘We’ve got to get you out of here,’ Frankie said. ‘They’ll come looking.’
Even if no one had seen Jack coming this way, it wouldn’t take the cops long to work out where he’d gone. Both him and Frankie were well known. Because of the old man. The same went for the club. Once they realised Jack had split . . . once they’d seen all that blood at his flat . . . their next port of call would be here.
‘Get up,’ Frankie said.
He grabbed Jack by his collar and dragged him to his feet. Jack’s flat was over on Warren Street. Only two stops away. Less than five minutes in a fast car or van.
‘But can’t you just hide me?’ Jack pleaded. ‘Tell them I’m not here?’
‘They’ll tear this fucking place apart.’
Jack looked down at his hands again, appalled. ‘But I’ve got to get this off me . . . I’ve got to get myself clean.’
‘We’re getting you out of here. Now.’
Cleaning him up would help, but it wouldn’t solve anything. Not with that same blood all over his flat. First things first. Frankie had to get him somewhere safe before the cops showed up. Had to buy them both time to figure out what the fuck was going on.
‘Move.’
He dragged Jack quickly back through the club, checking the cctv monitor as he ducked behind the bar. The front of the club was still clear.
‘How much money you got?’ he asked, snatching the Small Faces LP down off the wall and quickly opening the safe behind.
‘Nothing,’ Jack said. ‘My wallet. It was gone. I swear it was in my jacket last night, but it’s not there now.’
First the condom and now this. Who the hell had Jack been with last night? And where the hell were they now?
Frankie took last night’s takings out and shoved them into Jack’s jacket pocket. He grabbed a cloth from the sink.
‘Wipe your fucking face.’
Jack did as he was told, then reached out to hand it back.
‘No,’ Frankie said. ‘In your pocket as well. If the pigs turn up here, I can’t have them finding anything. Or whatever the fuck this is, I’ll be in it right alongside you up to my neck.’
He marched Jack through to the back of the club and ducked into the storeroom and grabbed a set of overalls. He threw them at Jack to put on. A cop siren whooped outside the front of the club.
‘No time. Quick.’
Frankie unlocked the club’s back door and jerked it open. He checked up and down the service alley which ran along the back of the buildings. Just bins, graffiti and litter. No cops. Not yet. Didn’t mean they wouldn’t start funnelling down the alley any second.
‘Which way?’ Jack said.
‘Up.’
Jack stared uncomprehendingly at Frankie, but then a smile crossed his face as he realised what Frankie meant.
The roof. A cast iron fire escape zigzagged up the red brick wall leading up to it. Reach the top and you could crawl along right to the end of the street.
It was a game Frankie and Jack had used to play together as kids, pretending they were in The Great Escape, each of them squabbling over who’d get to be Paul Newman every time.
Keep out of sight and Jack could hide up there and bide his time, and wait for his chance to climb back down one of the other building’s fire escapes and slip away into the crowd. It was either that or run down the alley now and risk running right into the arms of any cops already closing in.
A flash of determination glinted in Jack’s dark eyes. Frankie gritted his teeth. Good. At least the little bastard still had some fight in him. He was going to need it.
‘Once you get away, you’re gonna have to lay low for a couple of days,’ he told him. ‘Then call Slim and tell him how we can get hold of you.’
Frankie’s dad had inherited Slim with the club. He’d been running the bar here for over twenty years and had known both boys since they were kids. Frankie trusted him with him life.
Jack wiped his nose on the back of his sleeve. ‘Thanks, bruv. I won’t forget this.’
‘You’re damn fucking right. Now get the fuck out of here and don’t you dare look back.’
4
Frankie stepped back inside and locked the door, quickly sticking the key on top of the doorframe out of sight.
Crack.
Sounded like a battering ram. Looked like one too. Frankie spotted two cops on the bar’s cctv monitor taking another massive swing as he ran past.
Crack.
A whole squad of them out there. Them. The enemy. Rozzers. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...