Stone Cold Red Hot

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Book: Stone Cold Red Hot by Cath Staincliffe Read Free Book Online
Authors: Cath Staincliffe
There’s another lad as well, shaved head, overweight?”
    “Bunter, that’s what they call him. Darren is his real name. He lives next door but one. He’s a bit slow. They lead him on, that lot, take advantage of him and he gets into trouble. He doesn’t understand half of what’s going on - just wants to be part of the gang. Grown men.” I heard him sigh. “What, on god’s earth, makes them do this?” Frustration strained his voice.
    The songs and the chants went on, more cans were consumed. The empty ones were hurled at the house, the group cheered whenever a window was hit. They repeatedly went up and kicked the front door.
    “I’m going to ring the police now,” I said to Mr Poole, “I don’t want it to get any worse.”
    It took the police twenty minutes to arrive. In the meantime I filmed Darren peeing against the Ibrahim’s door, egged on by the others who cheered when he’d finished. I was shaking, my teeth gritted shut. Where was Mrs Ahmed and her three children? Settled in the kitchen as far as possible from the threats at the front? Could she get the children off to sleep and sit and listen alone? Or did she put the telly on to drown them out; try and follow the stories from the images, the babble of English hard for her to understand? Did the shouts and thumps bring back the horrors she had lived through in Somalia, swamping her with fear making her hands shake and her mouth dry? How did she cope?
    “Get a chair next time,” yelled Brennan, “do it through the letterbox.”
    “She might suck it for yer,” roared Whittaker.
    The group howled with laughter. The twins made wanking motions with their fists. Where were the bloody police?
    At last the squad car appeared and as it drove down the Close the gang became quiet. They moved nearer together, ribaldry over.
    The police got out of the car. I kept filming. Brennan greeted one of them by name. “Alright, Benny.” He said there’d been reports of a disturbance. Innocent faces were pulled.
    “Carl Benson,” Mr Poole whispered, referring to the younger policeman, “local lad.”
    “I live on here,” said Brennan, “this is my street. Can’t a man walk down his own street?”
    “Free country, innit?” asked Whittaker. “Used to be anyway, till we were swamped by immigrants, taking houses and jobs.”
    “Come on, now, time for home,” said the other policeman.
    “Why, eh? Why?” Brennan was all outrage, hands spread wide. “We haven’t done nothing, this is harassment, this is.”
    There was no reply. The police stood there. Implacable but not looking half as hard as the men they faced.
    It was Whittaker who gave the signal at last. “Freezin’ out here anyway. Funny smell an’ all. Like a farmyard.” One of the twins snorted. I saw Carl Benson’s face tighten, his adam’s apple bob.
    “Got a dirty movie back at the house, few more cans.” They began to walk away.
    “Darren?” A woman’s voice calling. “Darren, come on now.” Darren’s face fell, he turned away from the group, rolled his shoulders in an embarrassed shrug.
    “Go on, Bunter,” teased Micky Whittaker, “beddy-byes.”
    The police stood and watched until the group had gone into the houses at the bottom of the Close. The older man got in the car. Carl Benson crossed to Mr Poole’s. We went downstairs and Mr Poole let him in. I confirmed that I’d called the police and told him what I’d seen, he noted it all down in his book. I explained that I was video-recording events for a possible court case - it was all on tape. Yes, I would be happy to be a witness if required.
    “It’s Carl, isn’t it?” Mr Poole said.
    “Yeah,” he blushed a little.
    “How’s your Mum doing?”
    “Alright, they’ve put a ramp in now and a downstairs bathroom. It’s a lot better.”
    “‘Bout time and all. Give her my regards.”
    “Yeh, right. Best be off.”
    “Glad it was them,” said Mr Poole as we returned to the kitchen. “There’s one copper round

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