it never lasted. After a couple of months my mum would get a Sunday cleaning gig or pick a fight with the pastor or just lose interest. Then we’d go back to Sunday being a day I got to stay in and watch cartoons and change records on my dad’s turntable.
I got out of the car and into an eerie silence. The air was still, sounds were muffled, the shop windows were blind in the flat yellow glare of the street lamps and had the artificiality of a film set. The clouds were low and sullen with reflected light. The slam of the car doors was muffled in the moist air.
‘It’s going to snow,’ said Carey.
It was certainly cold enough. I could stick my hands in my pockets but my ears were starting to freeze. Guleed pulled a big furry hat with ear flaps down over her hijab and looked at me and Carey, bare-headed and frozen-eared, with amusement.
‘Practical and modest,’ she said.
Neither of us gave her the satisfaction of an answer.
We headed for the mews.
‘Where did you get the hat?’ I asked.
‘Nicked it off my brother,’ she said.
‘I heard it gets cold in the desert,’ said Carey. ‘You’d need a hat like that.’
Guleed and I exchanged looks, but what can you do?
For decades Notting Hill has been fighting a valiant rearguard action against the rising tide of money that’s been creeping in now that Mayfair has been given over entirely to the oligarchs. I could see that whoever had done the conversion on the mews had adopted the spirit of the place because nothing says I’m part of a vibrant local community quite like sticking a bloody great security gate at the entrance to your street. Guleed, Carey and I stared through the bars like Victorian children.
It was your typical Notting Hill mews, a cobbled cul-de-sac lined with what used to be the coach-houses of the wealthy, now converted into houses and flats. It was the sort of place that gay cabinet ministers used to stash their boyfriends back when that sort of thing would have caused a scandal. These days it was probably full of bankers and the children of bankers. All the windows were dark but there were BMWs, Range Rovers and Mercedes parked awkwardly in the narrow roadway.
‘Do you think we should wait for the Stephanopoulos?’ asked Carey.
We gave it some careful thought but not for too long since the religiously non-observant amongst us were freezing our ears off. There was a grey intercom box welded to the gate, so I pressed the number of Gallagher’s house. No answer. I tried a couple more times. Nothing.
‘Could be broken,’ said Guleed. ‘Should we try the neighbours?’
‘I don’t want to have to deal with the neighbours yet,’ said Carey.
I checked the gate. It was topped with blunt spikes, widely spaced, but there was a white bollard situated conveniently close enough to give me a stepping point. The metal was painfully cold under my hands but it took me less than five seconds to get my foot on the top bar, swing myself over and jump down. My shoes skidded on the cobbles but I managed to recover without falling over.
‘What do you think?’ asked Carey. ‘Nine point five.’
‘Nine point two,’ said Guleed. ‘He lost points for the dismount.’
There was an exit button on the wall just beyond arm’s reach of the gate. I pushed it and buzzed the others in.
Given that all three of us were Londoners, we paused a moment to carry out the ritual of the ‘valuation of the property’. I guessed that, given the area, it was at least a million and change.
‘Million and a half easy,’ said Carey.
‘More,’ said Guleed. ‘If it’s freehold.’
There was a ye olde carriage lamp mounted next to the front door just to show that money can’t buy you taste. I rang the doorbell and we heard it going off upstairs. I left my finger on it – that’s the beauty of being the police – you don’t have to be considerate at five o’clock in the morning.
We heard flat-footed steps coming down a staircase and a voice yelling