I had worked for Mr. Maxwell since leaving school, and though it mightnât suit everyone, Iâd enjoyed the last twenty years. I like living where I was born, and small-town Scotland still places commerce a rung above the more recently-invented professions. I was already as good as manager of Mr. Maxwellâs shop, with a smooth path to succeeding him on his retirement, and in most ways life was good. I fished and shot, sailed, studied local history and took pictures, but never joined the clubs. I composed the local newspaper crossword, too, although very few people knew that. I had nothing to go away on holiday for, and I had never known serious illness. What sort of shop? A jewellerâs, and thatâs part of the story.
I wasnât quite a virgin. There had been a couple of farm-girls Iâd known from school â after weâd left, of course - with the ruddy-faced simplicity a man tires of, then a couple of âseriousâ girlfriends, till I realised it was lifestyle and status they were serious about. One was religious, while the other threw out hints of delights to come, and used the word âreliableâ a lot. Was there ever such a depressing word as that? Well, I
am
the reliable type, or could be, but I decided they werenât the type I wanted to be reliable for. Their relatives gossiped and Mr. Maxwell fretted, so as Iâm obsessive about privacy, I decided Iâd be like the fox who never touches the chickens close to home. They both have haggard-looking husbands by now, but I doubt if theyâre haggard from the right thing, and it has become all too plain how artfully-maintained had been the girlsâ grip upon good looks. They went for what they wanted, I suppose, and once it was security, but now it was food. Iâve come to understand how many a human female emulates the common cucumber, by being delicious in the virginal state, but bitter once pollinated.
Then there were the prostitutes, around the Anderston bus station in Glasgow. But that was a glimpse into a bleak, unwashed world of social misfits and falseness, which couldnât have held my interest long, even if my first sight of needle tracks hadnât killed it on the spot. I can understand the compulsive philanderer, but thereâs no more challenge in prostitution than in fishing for trained professional fish. Iâd have been perfectly glad to exercise moderation in the matter of philandering, but by the age of 37 the problem was getting to exercise anything at all. The odd thing was, I thought Iâd ended up detesting those girls until I knew Iâd never use them again, but after that my heart went out to them, for their awful predicament.
Not long ago, considering, I answered an ad in a photographic magazine:
LOCAL CONTACTS!
Penfriends, models, romance, fun relationships in all areas. Hundreds of photographs. Send for approval copy of
your
local edition now.
I donât know what I expected, exactly, but nothing like what I got. There were hundreds of photographs, all right, although small and badly printed, and mostly fit for âAmateur Gynaecologistâ, if such a thing exists. Iâve never even been a top-shelf magazine person, much, and some of their pictures would be beautiful if they were anywhere else.
What got to me, though, was the variety of the ads. A small minority, with ordinary snapshots, were from British and foreign teenagers seeking penpals, and others from ordinary women, obviously seeking Mr. Right. âBadly hurt in the pastâ is another phrase I find ominous, and if theyâd ever seen the magazine, they had chosen an unlikely way of doing better. I didnât think it was right to let them in for the replies they must have been getting. Not surprisingly a lot were males, some with a strip of white tape blotting out strategic areas. Why some and not others? You could judge by the angle.
That left a lot that intrigued me. Attractive bored housewives, desperate for uncomplicated sex? Ah well, one hears of such things⌠But their numbers seemed improbable, especially when I had always assumed that like Rolls-Royce, they Do Not Advertise. What could they be? Masquerading homosexuals? People driven by some morbid compulsion? Burglars doing research? HIV victims who believe a trouble shared is a trouble halved? Anything seemed possible, and not much of it good. Then there were the couples, more than half of them looking for other couples, a lot for bisexual females, and a sprinkling for single men. They didnât, I noticed, claim the bored housewivesâ preponderance of DD cup bra sizes. I had always thought that to be a rarity, and I still think it.
It was cheap enough to try on an off-chance, so I paid for a six-month subscription, and the forwarding fee for letters to a wide selection of advertisers. Jewellers are cautious, so I used postal orders and my first Christian name, which I hadnât used locally since deciding I preferred James to Matthew J.
To most I got no reply, unless you count a rash of junk mail for pornographic videos and sexual aids. What I found annoying, after paying ÂŁ2 a time for forwarding, were the photocopied âpersonalâ letters from females, offering a set of photographs to advance our relationship, if I would just send ÂŁ10 cash for help with printing and postage. Just one was handwritten and seemed perfect, until she started explaining how irrelevant it was that sheâd been born a boy. The person who agreed might find her beyond price, I thought, but it was relevant to me.
Only from the couples I nearly always got polite apologies, saying theyâd heard from more single men than they could ever meet. Looking at the magazine again, I had a better eye for deviousness, but I thought I saw an air of normality and decency about the couples, which most of the others didnât have.
The biggest shock came from an ad I never answered at all. Not many people would have recognised the procurator-fiscal and his wife, Scotlandâs equivalent of a district attorney, who lived just fifteen miles away. I had known Gwendolyn at primary school, before I was frightened off by the beginnings of her legendary bosom. Phillip was a much older boy, of the sort who would have appealed to her family, around the time they put her into quarantine from those with nothing but mongrel vigour to offer. They were well-known for âcountyâ parties which I never attended, and others, thought to be professional reunions, which only strangers ever did. If they had not disguised their identities under Pip and Gwennie, their childhood nicknames, as well as the domino masks, I would never have recognised them.
This I wanted. I became absorbed by thoughts of once-unattainable portions of Gwendolyn, and I envisaged Phillip, who had worn less well than I had, becoming aware of certain comparisons. But there they were, with an ad which stated âno single malesâ. Part of a couple was obviously the thing to be. That, however, brought me back to square one.
I badly needed a girl you donât take home to mother. I donât think Iâm immoral, or even amoral in the all-round sort of way, but in that situation, I believe, a young manâs fancy turns to duplicity. It came to me in a flash one evening, with what kind of girl a man was justified in being a predator. One who was an active predator herself, of course. The ideas flooded in on me, but it was typical, I suppose, that I started out in the area I knew best.
I had to travel up to Glasgow to make some purchases from Greenbergs the tool and fittings suppliers. After the firmâs goods, I bought two nine carat ring castings, one white and one yellow, and two synthetic cubic zirconias. The jewellery chainstoresâ staff would need a thermal conductivity tester to tell those from exceptionally good 2½ carat diamonds, and while I can tell by the refraction, it would take good light. I paid for those personally, saying I had to copy an acquaintanceâs ring for security purposes. They laughed at me for forgetting both the colour and my personal chequebook. But the idea was to pay cash. Nobody should ever check my bank statements over this plan, but if they did, they wouldnât find any transaction with Greenbergs.
I made up those rings myself, and removed the castings manufacturerâs hallmark. I do a nice job, and you donât often see claw-work that good on cubic zirconia. If you ever buy jewellery retail, you probably donât want to know how little they cost. Itâs funny that I never thought of using them the way randy jewellers traditionally do. We all have our standards, I suppose. As for what I planned, the prisons would be overflowing if that was a crime.
The next stop was Dumfries, and the loft where the local newspaper keep a century and a half of back issues. Iâd consulted those before, and nobody knew I wasnât looking for local history this time. I spent two evenings there, compiling a list of girls under twenty who had been convicted of minor offences in the last year. The age was not my preference, specially, but to increase the chances of their being single and childless. I excluded anything suggesting drugs, alcoholism, a man, motherhood or irrational aggression, and I checked the old school photographs for appearance. There wasnât, unless Iâd missed something, any prostitution in Dumfries. Back home again, I started searching the U.K.-Info Disk computer programme, which is a database of the complete U.K. electoral register.
At last I had Tiffany Blair, Charlene Iredale and Melanie-Jayne McGrure, all convicted of petty theft, all with previous convictions and all on the phone. Tiffany, aged nineteen, seemed the best, for she lived alone, Charlene with two unrelated females, and Melanie-Jayne with a male and female McGrure, of whom the former was born in 1948. Tiffany, it was true, had struck a store detective while fourteen Wonderbras cascaded from her false pregnancy, but that hardly proved a violent disposition. The names grated a bit, since I can find no record of my family using anything but the four evangelists and a few Old Testament females. I hoped I wouldnât end up with anybody named Melanie-Jayne.
I made the first call in Ayr, from a callbox outside the security camera zone.
âHello. Is that Tiffany?â
âAye. Whaâs that?â I almost panicked and hung up, but I knew all was lost if I let that show.