Authors: C. L. Taylor
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Contemporary Women
Frank shifts into a sitting position and nods towards Johan as though thanking him for his intervention. “Fine. If you want to know, Isaac, I’ll tell you. This place isn’t a retreat. It isn’t some idyllic haven for eco-warriors. It’s a fucking joke and a sham. What’s up, Isaac? Got small dick syndrome, have you? Is that why you need everyone to suck it? I know what you do to the girls. Don’t think I haven’t seen the marks around Paula’s wrists, and you’ve got the nerve to call me a fucking rapist!”
Isaac flies at him but Johan grabs him before he can reach Frank, scooping Isaac up round the middle and lifting him off his feet.
“Get your fucking hands off me, you Swedish twat.” Isaac twists in his arms and punches him in the side of the head, forcing him to let go.
“I’m going to the papers,” Frank continues, “as soon as I get back to the UK. They’ll have a fucking field day with you, and then MI5 or Scotland Yard or whatever fucking establishment deals with scum like you will come over here and drag your lying, kidnapping, violent arse to prison.”
Gabe angles the torch from Frank to Isaac. He’s standing sideways on to the group now, a wide smile on his face.
“What makes you think you’re going to go back to the UK, Frank?”
“Because I’m not staying here, you twat.” Frank squirms back onto his knees and the torchlight flashes back to him. There’s more blood on the side of his head now, his right eye puffy and closed.
“That’s funny, because you don’t look like you’re going anywhere in a hurry.”
“Isaac.” Johan shoots him a warning look then takes a step towards Frank. He crouches down in front of him, his elbows on his knees, his hands folded under his chin.
“You won’t say anything, will you, Frank? You’ll just quietly find your way back to Pokhara and disappear.”
Frank peers up at Johan through his good eye. A second passes, then another. Finally he clears his throat.
“Fuck you!” He spits straight in Johan’s face. “Fuck all of you.”
“Move,” Isaac says.
Johan turns towards him but stays on his knees.
“I told you to fucking move.”
“No.” He stands up and takes a step towards Isaac. The two men stand face to face, barely an inch separating them.
“If I have to take you out, Johan, I will.”
Gabe and Kane say nothing. They stare silently, their shoulders hunched with apprehension. Gabe’s arm is outstretched, the torch in his hand pointing towards the two founding Ekanta Yatra members, their silhouettes haloed with light.
“Let me go, you fucking prick,” Frank shouts from the ground, “or I’ll fuck that skanky skeleton of a sister of yours, too.”
Isaac moves like a blur. One minute Johan is in front of him, the next he is sprawled on the ground, unbalanced by a shove to the chest. Isaac leaps forward, the axe raised in the air. As he lands, he brings the axe down, and Frank screams.
It is the sound of an animal being slaughtered.
His body reels backwards and he slumps in the mud, his head turned to one side, a deep, black pool of liquid fanning out around him. His face is black, too, his features obscured by the blood gushing out of the gaping hole in the side of his skull.
“You fucking arsehole.” Johan springs to his feet and launches himself at Isaac, toppling him with a rugby tackle around the waist. The two men hit the ground with a thump then Johan is up again, astride Isaac, and he’s punching him in the head – once, twice, three times – and Isaac’s head rocks from side to side, but his right hand reaches for the axe and he lifts it into the air. My gasp of horror is masked by Kane’s shout.
As the two men freeze, Kane rips the axe from Isaac’s hand.
Isaac leaps to his feet and holds out his hand. “Give it to me.”
Kane shakes his head. “You fucking killed him, man.” He grabs Gabe’s wrist and points the torch at Frank’s body. “He’s dead.”
“And?” Isaac takes another step towards Kane, his hand still outstretched. “If you’ve got a problem with what just happened, you know where the front gate is.”
Kane shakes his head. “I just didn’t want you braining Johan, Isaac, that’s all.”
“Good.” Isaac reaches for the axe and takes it. He looks at Johan. “What about you?”
“You shouldn’t have killed him.”
“And what should I have done? Let him go down to Pokhara and contact the authorities? Let that dick weasel bring Ekanta Yatra to its knees?”
“No. But I could have talked him out of it. I just needed to get him on side. A few spliffs, a few beers, a few chats, ask one of the girls to fuck him. I could have turned him.”
Isaac laughs dryly. “Like you did with that fat dyke, you mean?”
He’s talking about Al.
“She’s still here, isn’t she?”
Isaac shrugs. “Until the next time she tries to leave. And how many people will she take with her then? I don’t like her and I don’t trust her. And if she smashes anything else up, I’ll kill her myself.”
“We need her, Isaac. You said yourself that we need more members.”
“Not if they’re going to cause trouble.”
“So what’s the plan? Are you going to send her to Pokhara like you did Ruth? Is that what happens to women who won’t sleep with you? You get Gabe to—”
“Don’t fucking go there, Johan.”
“Guys!” Kane raises his hands. “Let’s not—”
“Tell you what,” Isaac says as Johan crosses his arms over his chest and heads in the direction of the house, “you keep fucking who I tell you you can fuck, and keep your dick out of my business.” He raises his voice as Johan moves into the distance. “I’ll let you know when it’s your turn with Emma.”
It’s all I can do to keep breathing.
“Right, then.” Isaac strolls over to Frank’s body and prods his head with the end of the axe. It flops onto his shoulder and something thick and viscous oozes out of the wound in his skull. “What are we going to do with this fucker? I suggest we chop off his head and bring it to the next meeting. Tell everyone he tried to escape and the Maoists lopped it over the fence?” He laughs. “Who wants to do it?”
Gabe reaches for the axe. “Me.”
It’s been a week since I was knocked off my bike and, other than the yellowing bruises on my face and body, it’s starting to feel like a remote horrible nightmare. Will insisted I stay in bed for twenty-four hours after we drove back to his house, and he and Chloe took it in turns to bring me drinks, snacks and entertainment. He even popped over to my cottage to pick up my TV and DVD player so he could install them at the end of bed.
“Now you can finish watching
Battlestar Galactica
,” he said, whipping the DVD out from under his jacket and making me smile for the first time in what felt like forever.
He insisted that I hand my mobile phone over to him.
“You’ll drive yourself mad,” he said as he tucked it into his back pocket, “checking and re-checking it to see if there’s been any new messages or texts. The police said they’d be in touch once they’ve traced where the messages originated from.”
“But—”
“If CID ring, or you get any weird messages, I’ll give it back to you. And if there’s anything really dodgy, we’ll ring PC Barnham. I promise. But I don’t want you to worry, Jane. I just want you to get well. We both do.”
At first I welcomed the warmth and safety of Will’s cosy home, and the weekend filled with continuous re-runs of
Frozen
and lessons in how to create loom bracelets, but, after a week, I found myself yearning for Green Fields Sanctuary. I missed my dogs. I missed the clean, feed and walk routine of my days. I missed the freedom of walking them through the fields and the feeling of fresh air on my face and in my lungs. I started to feel stifled, as though whoever was responsible for the texts and messages had succeeded in taking me away from the one thing that made me feel content and fulfilled.
Will was resigned when I told him I was going back to work – he’d seen it coming – but he insisted on dropping me off on my first morning back. Not that I’ve got any other choice – my bike was a write-off and the alternative is a four-mile walk from Will’s house.
“You’ll take it easy, won’t you?” After parking outside Green Fields, he leans over and kisses me on the cheek. “If you feel unwell, just give me a call and I’ll come and collect you.”
“I’ll be fine. And if I’m not, don’t worry: Sheila or one of the others will run me home. Look, there’s Angharad.” I gesture at the black VW Polo pulling into the yard. “I’d better go.”
I open the passenger door then look back at Will. “And thank you, for everything.”
“Least I could do. We both love you, you know.” He glances away, his cheeks colouring as he registers what he just said. It’s the first time either of us have used the word “love”. Neither of us says anything for several seconds. “Anyway” – he turns the key in the engine – “I’ll pick you up later, Jane. Have a good day.”
“You too.” I slam the door shut and he pulls away.
I continue to stare after his car, long after it’s turned the corner and disappeared back down the lane. He’s not the sort of man to use a word like love in a throwaway context, but ten days ago, before Chloe’s summer fair, he was asking for space – some time to process everything. If I hadn’t had my accident, would we even be talking now? There have been moments, countless moments over the last week while he’s been looking after me, when I’ve felt perilously close to telling Will that I love him. But I’m too scared to. Not because I think he’s got anything to do with the accident or the messages, but because it’s been so long since I truly trusted anyone. My barriers have been up for so many years that I don’t know if I’m even capable of bringing them down any more. There’s a part of me that thinks it was wrong of me to accept Will’s offer to stay with him and Chloe. If PC Barnham is right and the person who ran me off the road was deliberately trying to harm me, then I’m putting Will and Chloe at risk.
I turn away from the road and return Angharad’s wave as she gets out of her car.
“Have you got a minute, Jane?”
I stop typing and glance round. Sheila is peering around the door of the staffroom. “What’s up?”
“Nothing urgent. I just want a chat, that’s all.”
“Do you want to read the advert I just wrote for Willow for our Facebook page? I’m desperate to find her a home. She’s been here too long.”
“I know. I’ll take a look at it in a second.” She nods towards reception. “Could you come with me? It won’t take long.”
“Okay.” I wheel the chair back from the desk and stand up. “Is this about the dry food order? I was going to put it in this morning but I needed to—”
“It’s not about the food.” Sheila takes me by the elbow and guides me down the corridor towards reception. I stop short when a dozen beaming faces stare back at me from across the counter. “It’s about you and how we wanted to do something to help after your accident.”
“Sheila—”
“No, don’t say anything.” She scans the crowd of faces in front of us and frowns. “Where’s Angharad?”
Everyone looks around blankly. Several people shrug their shoulders.
“Never mind,” Sheila says. “We’ll have to start without her. So, Jane” – she squeezes my elbow – “we know how much you loved your blue bike, so we had a little whip round and, well, it’s not exactly the same but we hope you like it.” She waves at Barry, who’s standing outside the double glass doors. He disappears around the corner then reappears pushing a beautiful blue mountain bike. Claire opens the doors for him and the crowd parts as he pushes it into reception.
“I put it together myself,” he says proudly. “It’s one of those kit bikes you can get. Made one for my grandson last Christmas. They’re very sturdy.”
“Barry, Sheila, everyone …” I press my hand to my mouth and inhale deeply through my nose to stop myself from crying.
“It’s okay.” Sheila clasps my shoulder and pulls me into her side. “You don’t have to thank us. We just wanted you to know how much we appreciate what you do for Green Fields, and it really hasn’t been the same without you over the last week. We have missed you, you know – especially Barry.” She winks lasciviously and everyone laughs.
“I missed you too, Barry,” I say, and everyone laughs again. “Seriously, thank you all so much.”
“Take it for a ride!” someone shouts.
“The bike or Barry?” someone else shouts and, as the room explodes with laughter, Sheila lifts up the reception counter and Barry wheels the bike towards me. Thirty seconds later I’m riding around the yard, being applauded like a five-year-old who’s just had their stabilisers taken off. Sheila has the biggest smile on her face as I ride round and round, but there’s tension in her cheeks and worry in her eyes. She told me when I came in that Gary Fullerton and Rob Archer both have alibis for the night that Green Fields was broken into, and the car that was recorded driving into the yard on the CCTV was later found abandoned in a layby on the outskirts of town. It had been stolen earlier that evening. Whoever broke into Green Fields that night is still out there.
My ears ring with the sound of applause and laughter as I walk back through reception and down the corridor, but it’s the worried look in Sheila’s eyes that haunts me. I was
sure
Gary Fullerton or Rob Archer must have been behind the break-in.
“Oh!” I stop short in the doorway to the staffroom and Angharad, sitting in the chair in front of the computer, visibly jumps then, lightning fast, shuts down whatever file she was looking at, snatches something from the USB drive and twists round to look at me.
“Sorry Jane, I was just … I was …” Her gaze flits around the room. “I was just checking my email. I … I … um … I’ve been waiting to hear back from a job I applied for, and with all of you out in the yard I thought … I …”
“But you know employed staff are the only ones allowed to use the computers, don’t you? It’s Green Fields’ policy. Sheila will have explained that to you in your induction.”
“She did and, yes, I do; I do know that. But I was just passing and the computer was on and …” She pauses and looks down at her hands. “I’m sorry, Jane. I was desperate. I haven’t been able to concentrate all morning.”
Her phone is on the table next to the mouse. It’s a top-of-the-range Android model; I remember her showing it to me on her first day when she was telling me what great photos it takes.
“Couldn’t you have checked your email on your phone? I thought you had 3G. That’s what you said.”
“I have but” – she reaches for her phone and shoves it into her pocket – “I’m out of data for this month.”
“There are some very sensitive files on the computer, Angharad. Case histories, evidence for court, reports from the animal behaviourist, that sort of thing. We can’t let just anyone—”
“I know, and I only accessed my Yahoo mail. I promise.” She jumps up from the chair and crosses the room towards me. “Please, Jane, don’t say anything to Sheila. It was a one-off. I promise.”
She holds out her hands, imploringly. Her cheeks are flushed and her eyes shining – either with excitement or adrenaline, I can’t be sure.
“I don’t know, Angharad.” I shake my head. “I really have to say—”
I’m interrupted by the tinkling tune of my mobile. I reach into my pocket and pull it out as Angharad continues to step from foot to foot, wringing her hands in front of her. The call is from an unknown number.
“Hello?” I press the phone to my ear.
There’s a pause then, “Emma, is that you? It’s Al.”
“Al?” The world stills and the only thing I’m aware of is the banging of my heart in my chest.
“Al?”
A look of curiosity crosses Angharad’s face and I wave her away. “I’ll see you back in the compound in five minutes. The blankets and dog toys need washing, if you could do that.”
“But …”
“Five minutes.”
I step into the staffroom and gesture for her to leave. She hesitates then slips past me, her eyes trained on the phone in my hand as she leaves the room. I close the door behind her.
“Sorry,” Al says in my ear. “Do you want me to ring back in five minutes, or something?”
“No, no.” I cross the room and drop onto the desk chair as my legs give way beneath me. “Fuck, Al. I can’t believe it’s you.”
“I know.” She laughs dryly. “It’s been a long time, Emma.”
“What … how … did you get my Facebook message?”
“Yeah, literally five minutes ago. I haven’t used my Facebook account in years, and then … what the fuck’s going on, Emma? Someone from CID called me this morning, that’s why I checked it. They said you’d been involved in an accident and they wanted to know where I was in the early hours of Tuesday morning last week. They asked if we’d been in touch. I said I hadn’t spoken to you for years.”
“Someone ran me over,” I say. “I was on my bike and a car hit me. They think it might have been deliberate.”
“And they think I did it?”
“No, I … they asked me to give them a list of people who might have grudges against me, and I …” I run a hand over my face. “We fell out about the article you sold, and—”
“Oh, for fuck’s sake, Emma.” She sighs heavily. “That was four years ago. Four years! I told you, the journalist twisted my words. You don’t seriously think I’d try and run you over because of an argument we had four years ago?”
“No, of course I don’t. I—”
“And what’s all this shit about Daisy being alive? Emma …” She sighs again, only this time she sounds exhausted. “I’ve tried so hard to put all that behind me. I’ve got a new life in Brighton. I’m with an amazing girl, Liz. We got engaged last month. I’ve got a good job with Amex and I don’t totally hate it, and life is … it’s okay. It’s good. That’s not to say I don’t think about what happened. I do. But sometimes I forget, too. And it feels good. I feel good. I feel …”
“Normal,” I say.
“Yeah.”
Neither of us says anything for several seconds.
“Someone’s been pretending to be Daisy,” I say. “They’ve been sending me messages on Facebook. They said they were cold, that I’d abandoned her, that I’d left her for dead. Then, after the accident, I got a text message from someone saying ‘Only the good die young, maybe that’s why you’re still alive.’”
Al says nothing.
“Al? Are you still there?”
“Yeah, I heard what you said. I was just … Emma, has it occurred to you that maybe it’s some sick internet troll? You hear about this sort of thing all the time – people writing sick things on the memorial pages for people who’ve been murdered or died tragically. They do it to get a reaction, and you’re giving them that.”
“I haven’t.”
“So you didn’t reply?”
“Well, yes. I asked who it was and why they were doing it.”
“So you reacted. And then they upped their game a bit and found your mobile number on the web and sent you that text.”
“How could they have found out my mobile number? I changed it when I came here, and I’ve never put it on the internet. Apart from in my direct message to you, which was private.”
“Doesn’t matter. There are sites that you can pay to get someone’s details. They masquerade as a service to help reunite you with long-lost family, but it’s basically a stalking service. If you’ve got someone’s name and date of birth, that’s all you need.”
“How do you know this?”
She sighs. “Remember Simone? How do you think I found out where her girlfriend lived? If you’ve got the money, Emma, you can find pretty much anyone.”
“But I didn’t receive any text messages until after the hit and run. It seems too much of a coincidence to get a text message about dying young on the same day as I’m knocked off my bike. ”
“Coincidences happen.”
“The police don’t seem to think so.”
“That’s because it’s their job to take this kind of shit seriously. Can you imagine the backlash in the press if something did happen to you and they’d dismissed your concerns? Listen, Emma.” Al lowers her voice. “You need to be careful about what you say to the police, especially what you say to them about me. I did what I did to protect you.” Her voice is little more than a whisper.
“I know.”
“Some sicko is trying to freak you out, and they’re succeeding. You’re jumping at shadows. The police have started asking questions and who knows where this will lead? I don’t want to go to prison, Emma.”