Heathen/Nemesis (42 page)

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Authors: Shaun Hutson

BOOK: Heathen/Nemesis
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How many times had she done this when Chris had been with her?
 
She almost smiled.
 
They’d been coming to the shooting club in Druid Street for almost three years. As she thought of her husband she felt a familiar but fleeting twinge of sadness but it was rapidly replaced by anger.
 
She hated Julie for what she’d done. She hated Chris for his part in the deception. She hated The Sons of Midnight for what they too had done.
 
Someone had to pay for her anger; someone must be forced to suffer for her pain. It would be that organisation. Those who had tried to tell her that not only was her husband a liar and adulterer, he was capable of murder too.
 
Adulterer.
 
The word seemed peculiarly archaic.
 
Murderer
didn’t.
 
That was one of the things which
really
troubled her. She didn’t find it easy to dismiss the suggestion as effortlessly as she would have liked. Why would Dashwood lie? Some kind of psychological trick? But why taunt her about facts she could never prove or disprove? Why?
 
Why?
 
There were so many questions; she knew that she would never know answers to most of them.
 
She continued thumbing bullets into the magazine.
 
Why had Chris decided upon an affair with Julie?
 
There were ten in the magazine now.
 
What had been so wrong with their marriage to make him do such a thing?
 
Eleven. Twelve.
 
Had Dashwood been telling the truth? Had her husband not merely wanted to expose The Sons of Midnight? Had he joined their ranks?
 
Thirteen.
 
Had the man she’d loved been capable of murder?
 
Fourteen.
 
And there still remained the mystery of Suzanne Regan. If it had been Julie embroiled in the affair with Chris, then why had Suzanne Regan been with the writer when he died?
 
Was there no end to these mysteries? No end to the pain?
 
She pushed in the last bullet, slammed in the magazine and worked the slide, cocking the weapon. She raised it, drawing a bead on the centre of the target.
 
If there were answers she would find them.
 
And then?
 
What was there to live for after that?
 
Donna gritted her teeth and tried not to think about it. For now she had something to drive her on.
 
The desire for vengeance. And she would not stop until it was hers. Someone was going to suffer for her torment and she didn’t care who it was.
 
She fired off all fifteen rounds with remarkable rapidity and accuracy, the shots shredding the centre of the target, the pistol bouncing in her grip, empty shell-cases flying from the weapon until finally the slide shot back, signalling the weapon was empty. Donna lowered it, her breathing heavy, the stench of cordite strong in her nostrils.
 
Dark smoke surrounded her like a dirty shroud.
 
Eighty-Five
 
‘It has to be the place in Conduit Street.’
 
Donna prodded the sheet of paper with the locations on, her eyes moving swiftly back and forth over the names:
 
RATHFARNHAM, DUBLIN.
 
BRASENOSE COLLEGE, OXFORD.
 
REGENCY PLACE, EDINBURGH.
 
CONDUIT STREET, LONDON.
 
The meeting places of The Sons of Midnight.
 
‘How can you be sure?’ Julie asked. ‘What about Oxford?’
 
‘London would have been easier for them to reach after leaving Essex but,’ she exhaled deeply, ‘I can’t be
sure.
All we can do is check it out. If they’re not there, we’ll keep looking.’
 
Julie regarded her impassively across the table. The tension between the two women was almost palpable.
 
‘Didn’t Chris ever mention them to you?’ Donna asked, not looking at Julie. ‘Did he ever talk about his work to
you?’
 
‘No. He wouldn’t discuss something with me that he refused to discuss with you, would he?’
 
‘I don’t know. I thought I knew him up until the last few weeks. Now I’m not sure of
anything
he would or wouldn’t do.’ She looked at Julie irritably. ‘I thought I knew
you
too, Julie. Looks like I was wrong about both of you.’
 
‘Why do you want me around, Donna?’ Julie demanded. ‘You can’t stand me near you any more because of what happened. It would be best for both of us if I left.’
 
‘I told you why. You
owe
me your help,
because
of what happened between you and Chris.’ Her eyes narrowed. ‘Don’t think I enjoy looking at you and imagining what you and he used to get up to, but I’m damned if I’m going to let you walk away from what you did. You’d like that, wouldn’t you? To think it was over and you’d escaped the consequences.’
 
‘I’m not proud of what I did, Donna. If you think I am then you’re even more fucked up than I imagined.’ She spat out the words angrily.
 
Donna allowed her fingers to touch the butt of the .357 that lay on the table but she kept her gaze fixed on Julie.
 
‘Why don’t you use the bloody gun on me,’ Julie said challengingly. ‘That’d solve your problems, wouldn’t it?’
 
‘Don’t think I haven’t thought about it,’ Donna told her. ‘Don’t think I haven’t imagined how much I’d enjoy killing you.’
 
‘I can understand that. Revenge seems to be the most important thing in your life now, Donna,’ said Julie sardonically.
 
‘Perhaps it’s because there’s nothing else in my life any more,’ Donna told her. ‘Chris is gone, even my memories of him might as well be gone. You destroyed them, Julie. When I think of him I think of him with you. I think of his deceit.
Your
deceit. I
shared
him for ten months with you.’
 
‘I saw him once a week, if that,’ Julie said. ‘In all that time, if you add up the hours I spent with him it’s probably no more than two weeks.’
 
‘And that’s supposed to make it more acceptable, is it?’
 
‘Look, Donna, I thought you wanted to destroy this group of men. I thought you wanted revenge on them. That’s your
mission
now, isn’t it?’ She made no attempt to hide the sarcasm in her voice. ‘Then concentrate on
that.’
 
‘And forget everything else?’ She smiled thinly.
 
They sat in silence for what seemed like an eternity.
 
‘So what do we do?’ Julie asked finally.
 
‘We find them. All of them.’
 
‘And then?’
 
Donna looked down at the .357.
 
‘Kill them.’
 
‘I think the police might have something to say about that,’ Julie observed.
 
‘To hell with the police,’ Donna snapped.
 
‘Wasn’t there something in Chris’s notes about destroying the book?’ Julie asked.
 
‘“Destroy the book and you destroy
them”,’
Donna muttered, as if she’d learned the words by heart. ‘And you think they’re going to let us walk in and do that without a fight?’
 
The two women regarded each other across the table. Julie’s eyes roved over her sister’s outfit. The two shoulder-holsters she wore looked strangely incongruous.
 
Beneath one arm she carried the Beretta. As Julie watched, she slid the .357 into the other holster.
 
‘Mrs Rambo,’ Julie said almost scornfully. ‘Do you have any idea how ridiculous you look?’
 
Donna eyed her malevolently.
 
‘People are going to die, Julie,’ she said quietly. ‘Maybe you and me, too.’ There was angry resignation in her voice. ‘But who cares?’
 
She got to her feet, glancing at her watch.
 
It was 7.46 p.m.
 
Eighty-Six
 
The drive into Central London took less than fifty minutes. Traffic was relatively light, even in the centre, and Julie parked the Fiesta on the corner of Conduit Street and Mill Street.
 
‘It’s not too late to stop this bloody insanity,’ Julie said, looking at her sister.
 
‘We’ll leave the car here,’ Donna said, ignoring her.
 
She reached beneath her jacket and gently touched the butts of each gun in turn.
 
‘We don’t even know which house it is,’ Julie protested.
 
There weren’t many to pick from. Most of the buildings that occupied the street were shops or offices, their stonework grimy with years of accumulated muck. Donna gazed at the frontages of the buildings, her eyes finally coming to rest on a dark brick edifice sandwiched between a jeweller and a travel agent.
 
‘From Chris’s notes, it has to be that one,’ she said.
 
The house had three stone steps leading up to its black front door. There were two windows downstairs, three on the first floor. Shutters were pulled tight across all of them, preventing prying eyes from seeing in. A length of iron railings ran in front of the building, some of them rusted, the paint having peeled away. Stone steps led down to a basement.
 
‘What do we do? Just ring the doorbell?’ Julie asked cryptically.
 
‘There has to be a back way in,’ Donna mused, studying the other structures nearby. She saw what appeared to be a narrow passageway leading alongside a building about twenty yards down the street. ‘Come on,’ she said and swung herself out of the car, leaving Julie to follow.
 
They hurried across the street towards the passage, Donna pausing briefly before stepping into the dark walkway. It smelt of stale urine. Donna wrinkled her nose as she made her way along, with Julie close behind her.
 
The passageway opened out into a large, square yard. Surrounded on all sides by buildings, it had a claustrophobic atmosphere. Donna shivered involuntarily as she moved over the damp concrete towards the rear of the house.
 
Another heavy wooden door confronted them, and two ground floor windows. The building appeared to be in darkness. No sounds came from inside, either.
 
‘It’s not this house,’ Julie said flatly.
 
Donna moved closer to the window and slid her fingers carefully beneath the sash frame.
 
To her surprise it moved slightly.
 
She tried again and a gap about two feet wide opened.
 
Wide enough for them to slip through.
 
Donna hesitated.
 
This was a little too easy, wasn’t it?
 
Perhaps they were expected.
 
And yet, as she’d said to Julie before, as far as Dashwood and the others were concerned both women had died in the waxworks.
 
And yet ...
 
Could it be a trick?
 
‘Do we go in?’ Julie wanted to know, her heart thumping that little bit faster.
 
A trick?
 
They had to take that chance.
 
Donna eased the window up a fraction more, then swung herself over the sill and into the room beyond.
 
Julie followed.
 

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