Authors: Dreda Say Mitchell
About the author
Dreda Say Mitchell, who grew up on a housing estate in
east London, is an award-winning novelist, broadcaster,
journalist and freelance education consultant. For more
information and news, visit Dreda’s website:
Follow Dreda on Twitter: @DredaMitchell
Also by Dreda Say Mitchell:
Running Hot
Killer Tune
Geezer Girls
Gangster Girl
Hit Girls
Vendetta
Snatched (an eNovella)
Death Trap
Dreda Say Mitchell
First published in Great Britain in 2015 by
Hodder & Stoughton
An Hachette UK company
Copyright © Dreda Say Mitchell 2015
The right of Dreda Say Mitchell to be identified as the Author of the
Work has been asserted by her in accordance with
the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any
means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be
otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that
in which it is published and without a similar condition being
imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance
to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978 1 444 78946 1
Hodder & Stoughton Ltd
Carmelite House
50 Victoria Embankment
London
EC4Y 0DZ
To all my readers on Facebook and Twitter who have supported my books and spread the word, a massive thank you for your time and energy.
And to my agent, the amazing Amanda Preston, for all those fruitful brainstorming sessions.
Contents
one
Day One
6:40 a.m.
Madam B:
I am going to kill them.
se15:
How???
Madam B:
Machete. No axe to the head. Quick. Bloody.
se15:
Nah gotta be nice n sloooow. Waterboarding. Pure agony.
Madam B:
Hahaha. Should Kung Fu chop ’em up to DEATH.
se15:
Too much body contact. Your fingerprints everywhere
?
Sixteen-year-old Nikki grinned as she stared at her iPad screen, dreaming up different ways to kill her parents. She sat crossed-legged on the bed, tablet in her lap, her trademark fingerless gloves covering her hands. She was on Yakkety-Yak, the latest social networking craze, chatting to user se15. Fantasising about how to take down her parents melted away some of the stress – bought that chill-thrill back into her life. Of course she didn’t really want to kill them, but she was sick to death of them going on and on and on at her all the time like a pair of rabies-ridden dogs just waiting to sink their teeth into her.
You can’t do that, Nicola . . .
You can’t do this, Nicola . . .
And, of course, there was the classic,
We didn’t do that in my day . . .
Nikki rolled her storm-grey eyes as the memory of her mum yelling that one at her – yet again – ricocheted in her mind, before she’d flipped a finger and banged out of the house yesterday evening.
But Nikki didn’t have to worry about moan-fest Mummy at the present; she was safely tucked up in the best spot in town – the cosy bedroom on the top floor of the large house in Surrey: her pod of peace. As soon as she entered the room, her routine was always the same. Shut the door, drop the blinds, pop on the side lamp and then flip up the lid of her iPad to start chit-chatting to people who hid behind images of alter-egos and false names. Her lips pulled into a long, quick smile as she thought of another fantasy deadly deed to dispatch her parents permanently out of this life.
Madam B:
Smother them with that mega size pillow they bought from Ikea . . .
Her fingers stopped moving when the door swung halfway open. A woman in her early twenties leaned her head into the room.
‘Nicola, breakfast is ready,’ she said in a gentle, Polish accent.
Nikki leaned back against the pillows as she answered Ania, the cleaner. ‘It’s too early too eat—’
‘You know they have an urgent appointment this morning,’ Ania smiled. ‘Come on. And don’t forget to take your gloves off.’
Then Ania was gone, but the door was left open.
Ping.
Hearing the sound, Nikki forgot about breakfast and went back to her Yakkety-Yak two-way conversation.
se15:
Thought you wanted something nice n quick. Smothering takes way too looooong.
Nikki’s fingers got ready to answer, but her head hitched up and forwards when she heard a noise from downstairs; like something falling over. Then silence. She shrugged, thinking it couldn’t be anything to worry about and turned her attention back to se15.
Madam B: Maybe I should cut out mum’s tongue . . .
Her head snapped as she heard a crashing sound coming from downstairs.
Pop. Pop.
Her heartbeat kicked into high alert as she froze at the strange sound. Before she could try to figure out what the popping sound might be, two screams ripped through the air accompanied by shouting. Nicola jumped up, her iPad bouncing off her lap and onto the bed. Something was going on downstairs. No one yelled in this house, no one screamed. That’s what she loved about it: the peace and calm, the way it made her feel like she was a person worth loving. Her body shook as quiet settled over the house again. But it didn’t soothe her; something was terribly wrong. But what should she do? Stay here? Go downstairs?
Ping.
Nikki looked over at her iPad on the bed. Grabbed it up. Didn’t look at the screen this time; instead shut the lid. Breathing way too high in her chest she moved towards the partially opened door. Stopped for a few seconds. Then used the fingers poking out of her right glove to ease the door – really slowly – further back. Nikki took a deep breath as she stepped into the small landing.
No one there. Her gaze settled on the corner that would take her to the remainder of the landing that led to the stairs. Her hand tightened around her iPad as she started to move forwards, slowly. Forwards again, and again. She reached the corner, turned, and crashed straight into another person.
Nikki staggered back. Automatically opened her mouth about to scream . . . A hand slammed over her mouth holding the noise back. She stared up into the wild, terrified eyes of Ania.
‘Shhh,’ Ania whispered.
Nicola nodded back. The other woman pulled her hand away. She twisted away from the teenager as she wildly looked around. Her gaze stopped on the doors of the airing cupboard. Quickly she turned back to Nicola and gestured with her hand at the cupboard. The girl stared back in confusion, not understanding what the cleaner wanted her to do. Her heartbeat pounded harder, and harder.
Ania grabbed her arm and hustled her towards the cupboard, which was opposite the room Nikki had previously been in. The double doors of the cupboard were the same height as the doors of the rooms around it, but with open wooden slats in the top half. Ania threw the doors open. The shelves were deep, with towels, bed linen and two duvets folded neatly on them.
‘Get. In,’ Ania shot out again.